>>14360953It's best to get into meta-ethics first because you get an overview of the different branches: realism (natural and non-natural), anti-realism (subjectivism, relativism, error theory, ...) and other non-cognitivist theories (emotivism, quasi-realism, prescriptivism, ...).
And then you can look at arguments for entire branches rather than individual theories. That way you learn how to reject dubious premises from the start without bothering to go into any specific theory in detail.
And once you find a sensible branch, you start looking into individual theories to see which makes most sense.
See you in like 1-2 years.