Shafer-Landau is a leading defender of a non-naturalistic
moral realism, holding that moral statements are not reducible to natural terms. For example, the term 'good' cannot be described in terms of what is pleasurable and painful, nor conclusions within science. This view is established in his major work
Moral Realism: A Defence, which, as one reviewer expressed it, "defends an unorthodox combination of claims, including anti-
Humeanism about reasons for action, mind-independent moral realism, moral non-naturalism,
moral rationalism, and reliabilist moral epistemology." Shafer-Landau is also the author of two other introductory books,
Whatever Happened To Good And Evil? and
The Fundamentals of Ethics. Besides editing the annual
Oxford Studies in Metaethics, he also has co-edited
Reason and Responsibility: Readings in Some Basic Problems of Philosophy, an anthology covering many aspects of ethics with the late
Joel Feinberg and two Blackwell anthologies,
Foundations of Ethics (with Terence Cuneo), and
Ethical Theory. ==References==