Metaethical constructivism holds that a judgement is normatively compelling for an agent if that judgement follows from within the standpoint of the judging agent. Christine Korsgaard, a Kantian constructivist, holds that there are constitutive standards of agency––the categorical and hypothetical imperatives––and that, due to these constitutive standards, substantive moral values follow necessarily from the standpoint of agency. In contrast, Sharon Street argues for a Humean constructivist view, which denies that substantive moral values follow from the standpoint of agency. Thus the debate between Humean and Kantian constructivists revolves around the question of whether anything substantive follows necessarily from the standpoint of any ...