For example, Alexander Hamilton cited the following moral propositions as self-evident in the Federalist No. 37:
All versions of Epistemological Moral Skepticism hold that we are unjustified in believing any moral proposition.
Seen that way, a new calendar naturally looks like a moral proposition.
There it appears as illustrating a moral proposition: 'People frequently begrudge something to others that they themselves cannot enjoy.
Second, a moral proposition is universalizable, or an instance of a larger truth (like the general concept of charity as a virtue) that applies to virtually everyone.
The alethic thesis: Some moral propositions are in fact true.
"Purely as a moral proposition, I think segregation is wrong," he said in 1959.
To Harris, moral propositions, and explicit values in general, are concerned with the flourishing of conscious creatures in a society.
Chiefly, this moral proposition served as the backbone of California's argument.
In other words, the moral relativist need not deem all moral propositions as necessarily subjective.