To make a statement on the ethical goodness or badness about some action can be neither true nor false due to the fact that this statement is merely an opinion of mine and not actually based on facts. This opinion is an extension of my expression that this action performed is wrong. I can express my opinion in many different ways such as body language or speech but none of these will make the opinion I have, or in this case the statement I make, true or false. There are also those statements in which we express our moral standards to others.A large part of morality involves assessing people's conduct and pronouncing judgments, such as "Ted is a good person," "Bob did the right thing," and "Feed the starving." When we make these assessments, we rely on key terms such as "good," "right," "ought," and "should." Sometimes we use language to describe things, such as "the door is brown." Other times we use language to accomplish something, such as "get away from that hot stove!" This is also the case with moral utterances such as "We should all feed the starving" which attempts to describe the notion of giving, and also attempts to accomplish something, such as to motivate us to feed the starving.Lets say for example I see a homeless person on the street and the friend I am walking with tosses him a dollar. I turn to my friend and say, “ it is right to feed the starving”. By making this statement I am implying two things: 1. I am expressing my personal feelings of approval that it is ethically right to feed the starving, 2. That others ought to feed the starving. ," you are describing the starving being fed as a good thing. You might also be describing feeding as the kind of act that makes people happy, or that increases the quality of your life. In either case, though, you are describing feeding by linking it to some quality.This view is that of a subjectivist. "Subjectivity" is a term used to denote that the truth of some cla...