There are two views of the relationship between moral judgment and motivation. First of all, internalism argues that the relationship between moral judgment and motivation is internal and necessary. They insists that it is a conceptual truth that if an agent judges that it is right to x in certain circumstances C, then that person is motivated to x in C, at least absent of a weakness of will. Externalism, on the other hand, contends that the relationship between moral judgment and motivation is external and contingent. The motivation to do x does not directly follow the judgment that doing x is right. Thus, the externalist argues that there is a person who judges that doing x is right but is not motivated to do x although he does not ha...