fast
Contributor
I would discourage speaking of "ought" as being uppercase or lowercase. Instead, accept that there is ambiguity such that the term can be legitamately used in other ways. When you place your hand over an open flame and find that the consequences are detrimental to your well being, then notwithstanding good countervailing reasons to do otherwise, you should remove your hand from the open flame, and that "should" corresponds to the "means to an end" ought where what we should do is predicated on the results we're after. When there is a moral component, what we should do is dependent on what's right (or what makes for a better world, despite opinions). It's better to help a child from being burned than otherwise, and even if there is a lesson worthy argument for allowing the sufferage to materialize, that can be objectively weighed.
What's interesting is that the idea that we should do X and should not do X is only seemingly contradictory. If I want to rob the bank when it's dark, then I should not plan for robbing the bank during daylight hours. Should I plan to rob it during nighttime hours? Well, remember, there's ambiguity at play, so in accordance to the "means to an end" should, I ought to rob it at night, and that's true, but the truth that I should not rob the bank because morally, it's makes for a worst world is not contradictory.
What's contradictory is when the same sense is in opposition.
What's interesting is that the idea that we should do X and should not do X is only seemingly contradictory. If I want to rob the bank when it's dark, then I should not plan for robbing the bank during daylight hours. Should I plan to rob it during nighttime hours? Well, remember, there's ambiguity at play, so in accordance to the "means to an end" should, I ought to rob it at night, and that's true, but the truth that I should not rob the bank because morally, it's makes for a worst world is not contradictory.
What's contradictory is when the same sense is in opposition.



