Abstract
The Frege-Geach problem is a central issue in
metaethics, challenging expressivist theories to justify
logical inferences involving moral expressions. Expressivists
argue that moral statements express attitudes
rather than truth-apt propositions, yet this position
struggles with preserving logical coherence in contexts
where moral claims are unasserted. Solutions to
this problem include Simon Blackburn’s approach involving
higher-order attitudes, Mark Schroeder’s ”being
for” framework, and Allan Gibbard’s theory of
factual-normative worlds. Each framework contributes
insights, yet a comprehensive resolution may necessitate
combining linguistic and pragmatic analyses with
metaethical perspectives to clarify inference patterns in
expressivist reasoning.