Any C.S. Lewis Essay Fans Out There?

muddle's picture

The blog section here has been slow, and I figured, hey, nothing livens up the party like a twenty page philosophical treatise!

This is a "popular level" version (i.e., written for normal people, not philosophers) of one of the arguments I posted here some time ago (back before I was made to drink the hemlock). I've just finished it.

Consider it an updated and expanded version of the sort of argument that C.S. Lewis urged in various books and essays: the phenomenon of morality provides reason for believing in God.

This essay, however, takes into account what I take to be the most forceful objections to such an argument, and defends the argument despite those objections. It also takes a pretty close look at what Darwin actually had to say about the origins of morality.

I don't care if you disagree with my arguments so long as you laugh at my jokes.

[WARNING: The essay includes the word "horny" (after a discussion by atheist Michael Shermer). If you are offended by this, I am sorry to say that I do not presently have an employer to whom you might complain. Nor do I have a dog whom you might get to bite me. Perhaps you can persuade my wife to leave me or my children to spurn me.]

The Moral Poverty of Evolutionary Naturalism

Darwin’s account of the origins of human morality is at once elegant, ingenious, and, I shall argue, woefully inadequate. In particular, that account, on its standard interpretation, does not explain morality, but, rather, explains it away. We learn from Darwin not how there could be objective moral facts, but how we could have come to believe—-perhaps erroneously—-that there are.

Further, the naturalist, who does not believe that there is such a person as God, is in principle committed to Darwinism, including a Darwinian account of the basic contours of human moral psychology. I’ll use the term "evolutionary naturalism" to refer to this combination of naturalism and Darwinism. And so the naturalist is saddled with a view that explains morality away. Whatever reason we have for believing in moral facts is also a reason for thinking naturalism is false.

I conclude the essay with a brief account of a theistic conception of morality, and argue that the theist is in a better position to affirm the objectivity of morality.

A Darwinian Genealogy of Morals

According to the Darwinian account, given the contingencies of the evolutionary landscape—i.e., the circumstances of survival—certain behaviors are adaptive. And so, any propensity for such behaviors will also be adaptive.

Such explains the flight instinct in the pronghorn, the spawning instinct in the cutthroat salmon and my instinctual aversion to insulting Harley riders in biker bars.

Insofar as such propensities are genetic (at least the first two examples would seem to qualify here), they are heritable and thus likely to be passed down to offspring.

Imagine, for example, a time in the early history of hominids when the circumstances of survival prompted an early patriot (and kite-flying inventor, perhaps) to advise, “We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all be torn apart by ravenous wolves.” Insofar as such cooperation depends upon heritable dispositions of group members, those dispositions will confer fitness.

Darwin speaks of “social instincts” that are at the root of our moral behavior. These include a desire for the approbation of our fellow humans and a fear of censure. They also include a general sympathy for others. He explains,

"In however complex a manner this feeling may have originated, as it is one of high importance to all those animals which aid and defend one another, it will have been increased through natural selection; for those communities which included the greatest number of the most sympathetic members, would flourish best, and rear the greatest number of offspring."

A favored “complex manner” of the origin of such feelings involves an appeal to two varieties of altruism: kin altruism is directed at family members--chiefly one’s offspring–and reciprocal altruism is directed at non-family members and even to strangers.

The former is an other-regarding attitude and behavior–particularly concerning one’s own children, but extending in descending degrees to other family members—that does not seek any returns.

The advantage, of course, is in the reproductive success. The sense of parental duty that is possessed by, say, a female sea turtle ensures only that she lay her eggs somewhere above the high tide mark. From there, her relatively self-sufficient offspring are quite on their own against daunting odds—something like a one in ten thousand chance of reaching maturity.

Those odds are offset by the sheer numbers of hatchlings, so that a fraction manage to survive the elements and elude myriads of predators.

Such a numbers strategy would hardly work for the human species, given the utter helplessness of the human infant. Babies tend to suffer an inelegant fate if left untended.

The probability that a human infant will die if left to its own resources at, say, just above the high tide mark, is a perfect 1. And those same odds would prevail for each of ten thousand similarly abandoned babies. (Word would spread quickly in the wild: “Hey, free babies!”)

Human parents possessed of no more parental instinct than sea turtles would find that their line came to an abrupt end. Thus, a strong sense of love and concern is adaptive and heritable, and has the same function—a means to reproductive success—among humans that hatchling self-sufficiency and sheer numbers have among turtles.

Reciprocal altruism, on the other hand, is rooted in a tit-for-tat arrangement that ultimately confers greater reproductive fitness on all parties involved.

Consider, for instance, the symbiotic relationship that exists between grouper and cleaner shrimp. Though the shrimp would certainly make a nice snack for a hungry grouper, and is busily flossing the fish’s teeth from the inside, the benefit of long-term hygiene (Whiter teeth! Fresher breath!) outweighs that of short-term nourishment, and so the fish is programmed to pass on the prawn.

The shrimp, of course, benefits from a delectable meal of the gunk otherwise responsible for halitosis in grouper.

Similarly, there is benefit to be gained from cooperative and altruistic behavior among humans. For example, Darwin observes,

"A tribe including many members who, from possessing in a high degree the spirit of patriotism, fidelity, obedience, courage, and sympathy, were always ready to aid one another, and to sacrifice themselves for the common good, would be victorious over most other tribes; and this would be natural selection."

And membership in such a victorious tribe has its advantages. To attempt a metaphor, when a baseball team functions like a well-oiled machine, say, with a Tinker, Evers and Chance infield, the likelihood that all of the members will sport World Series rings is increased.

Thus, the human moral sense—-conscience—-is rooted in a set of social instincts that were adaptive given the contingencies of the evolutionary landscape.

Of course, there is more to the moral sense than the instincts that Darwin had in mind. All social animals are possessed of such instincts, but not all are plausibly thought of as moral agents. According to Darwin, conscience emerges out of a sort of “recipe.” It is the result of the social instincts being overlain with a certain degree of rationality. He writes,

"The following proposition seems to me in a high degree probable—namely, that any animal whatever, endowed with well-marked social instincts, the parental and filial affections being here included, would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as soon as its intellectual powers had become as well, or nearly as well developed, as in man."

Wolves in a pack know their place in the social hierarchy. A lower ranked wolf feels compelled to give way to the alpha male. Were he endowed with the intellectual powers that Darwin had in mind, then, presumably his “moral sense” would tell him that obeisance is his moral duty. He would regard it as a moral fact that, like it or not, alpha interests trump beta or omega interests.

And our grouper, if graced with rational and moral autonomy, might reason, “It would be wicked of me to bite down on my little buddy here after all he has done for me!”

Of course, such a “recipe” is precisely what we find in the human species, according to Darwin. We experience a strong pre-reflective pull in the direction of certain behaviors, such as the care for our children or the returning of kindness for kindness, and, on reflection, we conclude that these are our moral duties.

Evolutionary Naturalism and Moral Knowledge

It is not clear that the resulting account of the origin and nature of human morality does full justice to its subject.

For one thing, it is hard to see why anyone who accepts it is warranted in accepting moral realism—-the view that there are objective, mind-independent moral facts that we sometimes get right in our moral beliefs. For it would appear that the human moral sense and the moral beliefs that arise from it are ultimately the result of natural selection, and their value is thus found in the adaptive behavior that they encourage.

But then it seems that the processes responsible for our having the moral beliefs that we do are ultimately fitness-aimed rather than truth-aimed. This is to say that, in such a case, the best explanation for our having the moral beliefs that we do makes no essential reference to their being true.

If we have the moral beliefs we do because of the fitness conferred by the resulting behavior, then it appears that we would have had those beliefs whether or not they were true.

Some writers have taken this to imply that ethics is “an illusion fobbed off on us by our genes in order to get us to cooperate.” This is to suggest that there are no objective moral facts, though we have been programmed to believe in them.

A more modest conclusion might be that we are not in a position to know whether there are such facts because our moral beliefs are undercut by the Darwinian story of their genesis.

This is because that story makes no essential reference to any such alleged facts. Thus, our moral beliefs are without warrant. But if our moral beliefs are unwarranted, then there can be no such thing as moral knowledge. And this amounts to moral skepticism.

If the argument developed here succeeds, its significance is in its implications for the naturalist, who maintains that reality is exhausted by the kinds of things that may, in principle, be the study of the empirical sciences.

The naturalist’s wagon is hitched to the Darwinian star. Richard Dawkins was recently seen sporting a T-shirt that read, “Evolution: The Greatest Show on Earth, The Only Game in Town.”

Perhaps Dawkins’ shirt reflects his more careful comment elsewhere that, “Although atheism might have been logically tenable before Darwin, Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist.”

Before Darwin, the inference to Paley’s Watchmaker seemed natural, if not inevitable, given a world filled with things “that give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose."

Naturalism without Darwinism is a worldview at a loss for explanation.

Further, to appeal to natural selection to explain libidos and incisors, but to withhold such an explanation for human moral psychology is an untenable position.

Moral behavior is not the sort of thing likely to be overlooked by natural selection because of the important role that it plays in survival and reproductive success.

But if naturalism is committed to Darwinism, and Darwinism implies moral skepticism, then naturalism is committed to moral skepticism.

Darwinism and Normativity

In The Descent of Man, Darwin asks, “Why should a man feel that he ought to obey one instinctive desire rather than another?”

His subsequent answer is that the stronger of two conflicting impulses wins out. Thus, the otherwise timid mother will, without hesitation, run the greatest risks to save her child from danger because the maternal instinct trumps the instinct for self-preservation. And the timid man, who stands on the shore wringing his hands while allowing even his own child to drown out of fear for his own life, heeds the instinct for self-preservation.

What Darwin never asks—-and thus never answers—-is why a man ought, in fact, to obey the one rather than the other.

The best that he offers here is the observation that if instinct A is stronger than B, then one will obey A.

What he does not and, I suggest, cannot say is that one ought to obey A, or that one ought to feel the force of A over B.

That is, whereas Darwin may be able to answer the factual question that he does ask—-why people believe and behave as they do—-this does nothing to answer the normative question of how one ought to behave or of what sets of instincts and feelings one ought to cultivate in order to be virtuous.

It is, of course, one thing to explain why people believe and behave as they do; it is quite another to say whether their beliefs are true (or at least warranted) and their behaviors right.

As it stands, it appears that Darwin has precious little of moral import to say to the timid man.

One could, I suppose, reply on Darwinian grounds that the father who lacks a strong paternal instinct is abnormal, lacking traits that are almost universally distributed throughout the species and are, perhaps, even kind-defining. Darwin refers to the man who is utterly bereft of the social instincts as an “unnatural monster.”

Doesn’t this observation lend itself to a normative evaluation of behaviors? Who wants to be a monster, after all?

But it is not at all clear that this can give us what is needed. After all, departure from a statistical average is not necessarily a bad thing.

If the average adult’s IQ is around 100, Stephen Hawking is something of a freak. And, presumably, the first hominids to use tools (Hawking’s direct ancestors, perhaps?) or to express themselves in propositions were unique in their day.

Indeed, the Gandhis and Mother Theresas of the world are certainly abnormal—enough that one evolutionary naturalist refers to them as “variations”—yet we tend to like having them around.

I suppose that the evolutionary naturalist could go on to observe that, not only do we notice that the timid father is different in that his parental instinct was not sufficient to prompt him to rescue his child, but it is a difference that naturally elicits negative moral emotions. We disapprove of him and think him blameworthy.

Indeed, perhaps the man later experiences some negative moral emotions himself, such as “remorse, repentance, regret, or shame.” According to Darwin, the sense of guilt is the natural experience of anyone who spurns the prompting of any of the more enduring social instincts, and it bears some similarity to the physical or mental suffering that results from the frustration of any instinct of any creature.

Darwin considers the suffering of the caged migratory bird that will bloody itself against the wires of the cage when the migratory instinct is at its height. Indeed, he considers that conflict between the migratory and maternal instincts in the swallow, who gives in to the former and abandons her young in the nest. He speculates,

"When arrived at the end of her long journey, and the migratory instinct has ceased to act, what an agony of remorse the bird would feel, if, from being endowed with great mental activity, she could not prevent the image constantly passing through her mind, of her young ones perishing in the bleak north from cold and hunger."

Like the moral sense in general, guilt is the yield of a sort of recipe: one part spurned instinct to one part “great mental activity” that permits remembrance and remorse.

And so, when our timid man’s own personal danger and fear is past so that the strength of his selfish instinct has receded, the scorned paternal instinct will have its revenge.

Also, because we are social animals, we are endowed with sympathies that make us yearn for the approbation of our fellows and fear their censure. The cowardly father is thus likely in for a long bout of insomnia.

Further, Darwin may explain that the experience of remorse may result in a resolve for the future, with the further result that the paternal instinct is bolstered and stands a greater chance of being the dominant of two conflicting instincts. Thus, “Conscience looks backwards, and serves as a guide for the future.”

But even if we are assured that a “normal” person will be prompted by the social instincts and that those instincts are typically flanked and reinforced by a set of moral emotions, we still do not have a truly normative account of moral obligation.

There is nothing in Darwin’s own account to indicate that the ensuing sense of guilt—a guilty feeling—is indicative of actual moral guilt resulting from the violation of an objective moral law.

The revenge taken by one’s own conscience amounts to a sort of second-order propensity to feel a certain way given one’s past relation to conflicting first-order propensities (e.g., the father’s impulse to save his child versus his impulse to save himself).

Unless we import normative considerations from some other source, it seems that, whether it is a first or second-order inclination, one’s being prompted by it is more readily understood as a descriptive feature of one’s own psychology than material for a normative assessment of one’s behavior or character.

And, assuming that there is anything to this observation, an ascent into even higher levels of propensities (“I feel guilty for not having felt guilty for not being remorseful over not obeying my social instincts…”) introduces nothing of normative import.

Suppose you encounter a man who neither feels the pull of social, paternal or familial instincts nor is in the least bit concerned over his apparent lack of conscience. What, from a strictly Darwinian perspective, can one say to him that is of any serious moral import? “You are not moved to action by the impulses that move most of us.” Right. So?

The problem afflicts contemporary construals of an evolutionary account of human morality. Consider Michael Shermer’s explanation for the evolution of a moral sense—the “science of good and evil.” He explains,

"By a moral sense, I mean a moral feeling or emotion generated by actions. For example, positive emotions such as righteousness and pride are experienced as the psychological feeling of doing 'good.' These moral emotions likely evolved out of behaviors that were reinforced as being good either for the individual or for the group."

Shermer goes on to compare such moral emotions to other emotions and sensations that are universally experienced, such as hunger and the sexual urge. He then addresses the question of moral motivation.

"In this evolutionary theory of morality, asking 'Why should we be moral?' is like asking 'Why should we be hungry?' or 'Why should we be horny?' For that matter, we could ask, 'Why should we be jealous?' or 'Why should we fall in love?' The answer is that it is as much a part of human nature to be moral as it is to be hungry, horny, jealous, and in love."

Thus, according to Shermer, given an evolutionary account, such a question is simply a non-starter. Moral motivation is a given as it is wired in as one of our basic drives.

Of course, one might point out that Shermer’s “moral emotions” often do need encouragement in a way that, say, “horniness,” does not.

More importantly, Shermer apparently fails to notice that if asking “Why should I be moral?” is like asking, “Why should I be horny?” then asserting, “You ought to be moral” is like asserting, “You ought to be horny.” As goes the interrogative, so goes the imperative. But if the latter seems out of place, then, on Shermer’s view, so is the former.

One might thus observe that if morality is anything at all, it is irreducibly normative in nature. But the Darwinian account winds up reducing morality to descriptive features of human psychology.

Like the libido, either the moral sense is present and active or it is not. If it is, then we might expect one to behave accordingly. If not, why, then, as a famous blues man once put it, “the boogie woogie just ain’t in me.” And so the resulting “morality” is that in name only.

In light of such considerations, it is tempting to conclude with C. S. Lewis that, if the naturalist remembered his philosophy out of school, he would recognize that any claim to the effect that “I ought” is on a par with “I itch,” in that it is nothing more than a descriptive piece of autobiography with no essential reference to any actual obligations.

A Naturalist Rejoinder

A familiar objection to my line of argument is that it assumes what is almost certainly false: that all significant and widely observed human behavior is genetically determined as the result of natural selection.

Daniel Dennett refers to this assumption as “greedy reductionism.” Dennett observes that all tribesmen everywhere throw their spears pointy-end first, but we should not suppose that there is a “pointy-end first gene.” The explanation rather resides in the “non-stupidity” of the tribesmen. And when C.S. Lewis’s character, Ransom, was at first surprised to discover that boats on Malacandra (Mars) were very similar to earthly boats, he caught himself with the question, “What else could a boat be like?’” (The astute Lewis reader might also have noticed that Malacandran hunters throw their spears pointy-end first, despite being genetically unrelated to humans, just as Dennett might have predicted.)

Some ideas are just better than others and, assuming a minimal degree of intelligence, perhaps we have been equipped to discover and implement them.

One might thus insist that perhaps all that evolution has done for us is to equip us with the basic capacities for intelligent decision-making and problem-solving, and the enterprise that is human morality is the product of human rationality; not the mere outworking of some genetic program.

If the process that has led to our having the moral beliefs we do has involved conscious rational reflection, then we have reason for optimism regarding our facility for tracking truth. We have no more cause for moral skepticism than we do, say, mathematical skepticism.

The same greedy reductionism might be thought to plague my argument that Darwinian accounts of human morality are merely descriptive.

I have said above that, “unless we import normative considerations from some other source,” we are left with a merely descriptive rather than a normative account. My critic may insist here that we do bring in normative considerations from elsewhere, namely, from moral theory. If there are true moral principles that yield moral directives and values, then, regardless of how one does feel and behave, it will remain the case that he ought to behave in a certain way.

For example, should it prove true that humans have a natural propensity for xenophobia as a part of their evolutionary heritage, we might nevertheless conclude that, say, a respect-for-persons principle requires that they overcome such fear and potential mistreatment of strangers. The mere fact that people have a propensity for a behavior does not entail that it is justified.

I plead not guilty to the charge of greedy reductionism. The argument in no way supposes that well-formed moral beliefs are somehow programmed by our DNA.

Richard Joyce considers the belief, “I ought to reciprocate by picking up Mary at the airport.” He then asks, “What does natural selection know of Mary or airports?” Or consider a mother’s belief, “I ought to ensure that my child gets plenty of fruits and vegetables.” There is, of course, no imperative regarding the dietary needs of toddlers that may be read off of the DNA.

One might as well suppose that there is a genetically programmed human tendency directed specifically at popping bubble wrap.

But Darwin’s account certainly does imply that the basic predisposition for repaying kindness with kindness or for caring for one’s offspring is programmed, and that such programs run as they do because of the reproductive fitness that is—or was for our remote ancestors—achieved by the resulting behaviors.

Philosopher Mary Midgley speaks of instincts as “programs with a gap.” Consider, for instance, the migratory instinct of the sandhill crane. The basic drive to follow the sun south every winter is genetically programmed. But there is a “gap” that allows for variations in the itinerary. Midgley notes that the more intelligent the species is the wider is the gap so that room is available for deliberation and rational reflection.

Less psychologically complex creatures may be strictly determined in their behavior by their genetic hardwiring.

As P.G. Wodehouse’s newt-loving character, Gussie Fink-Nottle explains to Bertie Wooster, “Do you know how a male newt proposes, Bertie? He just stands in front of the female newt vibrating his tail and bending his body in a semi-circle.”

Assuming Gussie’s description is accurate, we may also safely assume that newt courting behavior, unlike that observed in aristocratic British bachelors, is genetically choreographed. In humans, the “gap” allows for countless ideas and beliefs that clearly are the products of culture rather than biology.

Still, the basic programming itself is, on Darwin’s scheme, determined by our genetic makeup, and, therefore, so is the range of rational options in that “gap” of deliberation.

Given the perennial problem of tribal warfare, early tribesmen reasoned that thrown spears are far more effective than thrown bananas. But had humans evolved to be non-aggressive herbivores, spears might have been, well, pointless. Had the course of human evolution been such that human infants, like baby sea turtles, were self-reliant, the human maternal instinct might never have evolved as a means to the end of reproductive fitness.

Indeed, Darwin thought that, had the circumstances for reproductive fitness been different, then the deliverances of conscience might have been radically different.

"If … men were reared under precisely the same conditions as hive-bees, there can hardly be a doubt that our unmarried females would, like the worker-bees, think it a sacred duty to kill their brothers, and mothers would strive to kill their fertile daughters, and no one would think of interfering."

As it happens, we weren’t “reared” after the manner of hive-bees, and so we have widespread and strong beliefs about the sanctity of human life and its implications for how we should treat our siblings and our offspring.

But this strongly suggests that we would have had whatever beliefs were ultimately fitness-producing given the circumstances of survival.

Given the background belief of naturalism, there appears to be no plausible Darwinian reason for thinking that the fitness-producing predispositions that set the very parameters for moral reflection have anything whatsoever to do with the truth of the resulting moral beliefs.

One might be able to make a case for thinking that having true beliefs about, say, the predatory behaviors of tigers would, when combined with the understandable desire not to be eaten, be fitness-producing. But the account would be far from straightforward in the case of moral beliefs. [A lengthy explanatory footnote, beginning with, "Here's why," appears in the original. The note cites a brilliant article by philosopher Sharon Street: "A Darwinian Dilemma For Value Realism."]

And so the Darwinian explanation undercuts whatever reason the naturalist might have had for thinking that any of our moral beliefs are true. The result is moral skepticism.

If our pre-theoretical moral convictions are largely the product of natural selection, as Darwin’s theory implies, then the moral theories that we find plausible are an indirect result of that same evolutionary process.

How, after all, do we come to settle upon a proposed moral theory and its principles as being true? What methodology is available to us?

By way of answer, consider the following “chicken-and-egg” question. Which do we know more certainly: the belief, It is wrong to stomp on babies just to hear them squeak, or some true moral principle that entails the wrongness of baby-stomping?

In moral reflection, do we begin with the principle, and only then, principle in hand, come to discover the wrongness of recreational baby-stomping as an inference from that principle? Or do we begin with the belief that baby-stomping is wrong and then arrive at the principle that seems implicated by such a belief?

Pretty clearly, it is the latter. We just find ourselves with certain beliefs of a moral nature, and actually appeal to them as touchstones when we engage in conscious moral reflection.

Indeed, if we were to conclude that some philosopher’s proposed moral principle would, if true, imply the moral correctness of recreational baby-stomping, then we might say, “So much the worse for that proposed principle.” As philosopher Mary Midgley has put it, “An ethical theory which, when consistently followed through, has iniquitous consequences is a bad theory and must be changed.”

This methodology, which begins with deep-seated, pre-reflective moral beliefs and then moves to moral principles that are implicated by them, is sometimes called reflective equilibrium.

Presumably, reflective equilibrium, employed by bee-like philosophers in those worlds envisioned by Darwin, would settle upon moral principles that implied the rightness of such things as sibicide and infanticide.

Thus, the deliverances of the moral theories endorsed in such worlds are but the byproducts of the evolved psychologies in such worlds. But, again, this suggests that our pre-theoretical convictions are largely due to whatever selection pressures happened to be in place in our world.

If this is so, then the deliverances of those moral theories that we endorse, to which we might appeal in order to introduce normative considerations, are, in the final analysis, byproducts of our evolved psychology. The account, as it stands, thus never takes us beyond merely descriptive human psychology.

A Theistic Alternative

The worry, then, is that our efforts at moral reflection are compromised by
features of our constitution that are in place for purposes other than the acquisition of truth.

As philosopher Sharon Street puts it,

"If the fund of evaluative judgments with which human reflection began was thoroughly contaminated with illegitimate influence … then the tools of rational reflection were equally contaminated, for the latter are always just a subset of the former.”

In order to inspire confidence in those initial evaluative judgments of which Street speaks, the moral realist owes us some account of their origin that would lead us to suppose that they are reliable indicators of truth.

What we need is some assurance that our original fund is not "contaminated." And so our question is, what reason have we for supposing that the mechanisms responsible for those judgments are truth-aimed?

What we seek is what Norman Daniels calls “a little story that gets told about why we should pay homage ultimately to those [considered] judgments and indirectly to the principles that systematize them.”

It is just here that the theist may oblige us in a way that the naturalist may not. Robert Adams, for example, has suggested that things bear the moral properties that they do—good or bad—insofar as they resemble or fail to resemble God. He goes on to offer the makings of a theistic “genealogy of morals.”

"If we suppose that God directly or indirectly causes human beings to regard as excellent approximately those things that are Godlike in the relevant way, it follows that there is a causal and explanatory connection between facts of excellence and beliefs that we may regard as justified about excellence, and hence it is in general no accident that such beliefs are correct when they are."

The theist is thus in a position to offer Daniels’ “little story” that would explain the general reliability of those evaluative judgments from which reflective equilibrium takes its cue.

Certain of our moral beliefs—-in particular, those that are presupposed in all moral reflection—-are truth-aimed because human moral faculties are designed to guide human conduct in light of moral truth. The moral law is “written upon the heart,” the apostle Paul wrote to the church in Rome.

Conclusion

A century ago, the philosopher Hastings Rashdall observed,

"So long as he is content to assume the reality and authority of the moral consciousness, the Moral Philosopher can ignore Metaphysic; but if the reality of Morals or the validity of ethical truth be once brought into question, the attack can only be met by a thorough-going enquiry into the nature of Knowledge and of Reality” (Rashdall , 1907, p. 192).

We have seen that both the evolutionary naturalist and the theist may be found saying that certain of our moral beliefs are by-products of the human constitution: we think as we do largely as a result of our programming.

Whether such beliefs are warranted would seem to depend upon who or what is responsible for the program. And this calls for some account of the metaphysical underpinnings of those beliefs and the mechanisms responsible for them. Are those mechanisms truth-aimed? And are they in good working order?

The sort of account available to the evolutionary naturalist ends in moral skepticism. The theist has a more promising story to tell.

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Submitted by benjdm on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 12:50pm.

"In particular, that account, on its standard interpretation, does not explain morality, but, rather, explains it away."

Only if you already have a non-naturalist view of morality. Similarly, theistic morality seems to me to not be an explanation of morality. It instead explains it away as an arbitrary set of 'oughts' chosen by one amoral being.

muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 1:08pm.

Thanks for the reply, which reflects philosophical sophistication regarding these issues.

But did you read the essay or just the little summary at the beginning?

I don't understand why you would say "only if you already have a non-naturalist view of morality." For example, I cite a paper by Sharon Street that is, in many places, confluent with my own.

Indeed, here, I am arguing against a naturalist conception of morality on epistemological grounds: given the overall metaphysical framework of naturalism, plus its essential appeal to Darwinism, there is no good account as to how moral beliefs could be warranted. I am not assuming a non-naturalist view.

As for the problem that you cite regarding a theistic grounding for morality, this, of course, is a reference to the issues surrounding Plato's Euthyphro Dilemma.

I do not address this in this paper, and, in fact, do not need to. Myh argument here is compatible with the supposition that morality is grounded in something apart from and distinct from God. Again, the argument is epistemological in nature, in that a theistic conception provides an account of human moral faculties that is unavailable on naturalism.

For my own discussion of the Euthyphro, see my (Mark D. Linville) "On Goodness: Human and Divine, American Philosophical Quarterly April 1990. See also my popular-level discussion of this in Is Everything Permitted? Moral Values in a World Without God--a "Critical Questions" booklet published by Ravi Zacharias International in 2001.

To anticipate what I say there, I'll just say here that your charge applies only in the event that the theist embraces some variety of Divine Command Morality. I, in fact, reject such a view.

Again, thanks for the reply. Are you local to the area served by this paper/website?

____________________

Hodeehodeehodeeho


ManofGreatLogic's picture
Submitted by ManofGreatLogic on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 5:07pm.

Your first paragraphs are about the essay itself. SIX PARAGRAPHS!

Listen, friend. Get a tape recorder and talk for an hour, then listen to it over and over. That'll do the trick.

I have no idea what your essay was about. I quit after the first six paragraphs that were basically saying, "This esssay, this, this essay that........"

???


muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 6:03pm.

Sorry. It should have come with instructions on how to read it.

The "essay itself" does not begin until the title (in bold.

First words: "Darwin's account...."

That being the case, what you say is false.

So, if you did happen to care about the contents of the essay, the basic thesis is stated (concisely) in the first two paragraphs--before the first major (italicized) sub-heading.

Does that help?

____________________

Hodeehodeehodeeho


Submitted by Bonkers on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 5:33pm.

Man made codes, ideal codes--determined by special men, and ethical codes--rules, rules and more rules.

that will sum it up for you, I think.

Oh, and throw in the exceptions to the rules, when they are needed for such things as murder.

Us idgits couldn't kae it wifout sum rail rules!

Submitted by benjdm on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 1:20pm.

"But did you read the essay or just the little summary at the beginning?"

I read most of it. The part where it said

"Robert Adams, for example, has suggested that things bear the moral properties that they do—good or bad—insofar as they resemble or fail to resemble God."

IS Divine Command Morality, as far as I can tell. The determination of whether an action is moral or immoral involves consulting God's opinion. If God likes stomping on babies, then stomping on babies would be good, since it would resemble God.

"I, in fact, reject such a view."

Then I'm thoroughly confused.

"Are you local to the area served by this paper/website?"

I doubt it - it would be a coincidence. I found the article through a google news search. What area does it serve?

muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 1:36pm.

A county south of Atlanta.

I was getting my hopes up. This stuff should be discussed over a brew.

For want of a better term, I'll contrast Divine Command Morality with Divine Nature Morality. This might characterize what Adams is up to. Adams does not subscribe to Voluntarism of the sort that you find, say, in Wm. of Ockham. I think one of the best developments of the view to date is in a paper by William Alston, titled "What Euthyphro Should Have Said." I think that, thus far, it has only been published in a Routledge volume, Reading in Philosophy of Religion (or similar), edited by William Lane Craig. Alston's paper might profitably be read in conjunction with Thomas V. Morris, "Duty and Divine Goodness" APQ....uh...mid-1980s.

I haven't the time to go into the details now (I do in my own published stuff that I mentioned), but I'll simply assert that the resulting view comes out far different from Divine Command Morality--particularly in discussing the modality of moral propositions (and tracking them across possible worlds).

I'm often surprised that people who challenge a theistic conception of morality--and here I mean very sophisticated philosophers--seem unaware of this possible move that the theist may make. David Brink, for instance, has an essay in the recent Companion to Atheism on "The Autonomy of Ethics" that scores points against views that no one I know would defend. Similarly, Russ Shafer-Landau in his splendid little Whatever Happened to Good and Evil? takes on Voluntarism with very convincing arguments that, unfortunately, leave the ADams-Alston-Morris view unscathed--at least IMHO.

Cheers.

___________________

Hodeehodeehodeeho


Submitted by benjdm on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 11:52pm.

"For want of a better term, I'll contrast Divine Command Morality with Divine Nature Morality."

Googling "divine nature morality"...nothing promising.

"a paper by William Alston, titled "What Euthyphro Should Have Said.""

Googling 'What Euthyphro Should Have Said William Alston'...A-ha! It's on Google books. Reading....ugh, skimming, this is intellectual noodling of the first order...

From the essay:

"...But God can still be called good by virtue of his lovingness, justice and mercy, qualities that are moral virtues in a being subject to the moral ought..."

So things are considered good based on how much they resemble God. These particular qualities are considered good in people, therefore declaring God is good because he has these qualities is non-arbitrary?

Riiiiiiiiiight.

"Since he is perfectly good by nature,"

Uh-huh. How is this determined, please?

"Where this view differs from its alternative is in the answer to the question, 'By virtue of what are these features of God good-making features?' The answer given by this view is: by virtue of being features of God.'

There is no significant difference between this and divine command theory. The only thing this is doing is stipulating that God has reasons for his commands / opinions / declarations / whatever you want to call them. I always took that as a given. If I am considering the morality of some action , under this conception, I need only compare it to 'features of God.' If the idea that 'stomping babies is good' happens to be a feature of God it satisfies the criteria for being good - my particular feelings about the matter are not part of the criteria.

Even if I became convinced a God existed (very doubtful), and that this God was actually concerned about humans (next to impossible), I wouldn't care what his moral opinions were any more or less than I care about anyone else's. At least not as far as informing my own opinions.

muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Wed, 08/20/2008 - 9:14am.

It is unclear to me whether the "noodling" comment is descriptive of your mere skimming of a Google sample (and thus mistakenly assuming that you've grasped the main point of the article), or directed at Professor Alston's work.

If the former, then your humility is becoming. If the latter, then your arrogance is astounding--particularly considering the caliber of the philosopher whose work you peruse.

Given the tenor of your comments to follow, I lean toward the latter interpretation. (Why do self-proclaimed atheists so often assume the smarter-than-thou posture? It is tiresome. Really.)

There is not a lot I can do for you at this stage of the discussion, as it is evident that you have not understood Alston enough to see why it is thought to be plausible by not a few bright people who have given this stuff a lot of thought.

But I'll offer a few observations.

[Indeed, this has gotten long—ponderously long--as I am using this as an occasion to think through some of this stuff. I’m also assuming some philosophical background (e.g., Kripke) on your part.]

The first is a bit of prolegomena. Any account such as Alston's must be understood within the dialectical context in which it appears. That is, it is a defensive move, offered in reply to charges of incoherence. When such defenses are made, it is perfectly legitimate for the defender to appeal to any or all of the resources permitted on his/her belief system. He could quote the Bible here if it was of help in establishing the coherence of his view, and this would be a reasonable thing to do even in a dispute with someone who utterly rejects biblical authority.

By the time we get to Alston, the discussion has gone something like this:

Theist: If God does not exist, everything is permitted.
Atheist: But an attempt to make God the author of morality results in arbitrariness. (Here, he trots out the Euthyphro....)
Alston: Not necessarily.....(Here he trots out an argument aimed at establishing the coherence of such a view despite the challenge...)

Now, the core problem that Alston is working on is this: How can we say both that God is himself the source of morality and that God is good?

Bertrand Russell put the Euthyphro by saying that if morality is due to God's "fiat" then morality does not apply to God and so we cannot say that he is good. Indeed, if you persist in saying that he is good, then this invokes some standard that is not identical to God in virtue of which God is measured.

But is this a problem that is unique to a theistic way of framing things? I don't think so.

J.S. Mill observed, in Utilitarianism that supreme moral principles (such as his principle of utility) do not admit to direct justification, but only indirect.

Meaning?

Consider this question (faintly echoing Moore's naturalistic fallacy):

"I know that the Principle of Utility (PU) entails that I ought to do A, but is it right to follow the dictates of the PU?"

Or...

"Is the PU a morally good principle to follow?"

Mill's point about the impossibility of direct justification is just this. To directly establish the goodness of PU is to show that it conforms to a standard in virtue of which something is good.
Here, you have two choices: the PU itself or some super-principle--call it Super-PU--to which PU nicely conforms.

To appeal to PU here is to invite vicious circularity. I ask,

"Is PU good?"

You say,

"Of course! PU entails the goodness of PU!"

Hardly helpful. Presumably the Principle of Baby-Stomping (PBS) entails the goodness of PBS, but that is no reason for thinking it good.

But to appeal to Super-PU is to launch an infinite regress.

"Is PU good?"
"But of course! Super-PU entails the goodness of PU."
"Thanks very much. So now Super-PU is of interest to me. Is Super-PU good?"
"Thanks for asking. I can answer that. Super-PU is condoned by Super-Duper-PU."

And Super-Duper-PU is, of course, found righteous in the eyes of Supercalifragi--PU, and so on.

The upshot: Direct justification of a purported Supreme Moral Principle is futile.

If there is to be any moral justification of such a principle, then it will have to be indirect. And this is pretty much a matter of our assessing that principle in light of whatever relevant beliefs we have—-reflective equilibrium or the like.

Let me do a bit of subtotaling here before I move on. This bit about the futility of indirect justification is not determined by the contents of this or that preferred principle. It has nothing to do with content (e.g., utility, respect-for-persons, baby-stomping, etc.) and everything to do with form. That is, it has everything to do with the role that the principle itself plays in justification--namely, its purported supremacy or ultimacy.

But this is precisely the claim that the theist makes regarding the nature of God. God’s nature plays the role, in a theistic conception of morality, that the PU plays for utilitarianism and Respect-for-Persons plays for, well, a Respect-for-Persons ethic.

So let’s reconsider the problem that I suggested arises from Russell’s observations. Alston says, “A thing is good insofar as it resembles God.” You ask, “Yes, but is God good?”

The options, as above, are either vicious circularity (“God is good in that God resembles God”) or infinite regress (“God is good in that God is like Super-God, who is like Super-Duper-God….”), or indirect justification.

Part of what Alston is up to involves the latter—-he appeals to our considered judgments in order to make sense of the assertion “God is good.” If this is a problem for Alston, then it is also a problem for any theorist propounding any normative theory whatsoever. And so your "Riiiight" is simply misplaced.

Moving on. You say, “There is no significant difference between this and divine command theory.”

Now, it is one thing to understand a philosopher’s views and arguments, but to think the views incoherent or the arguments unsound. It is another thing altogether simply to misunderstand the views and the arguments, and to go on and offer an “assessment” that is the product of that misunderstanding.

What the theist needs is an account that does full justice to the notion of morality and does not reduce it to the arbitrary will or commands of some deity.

Consider, as a paradigmatic example, a Platonic notion of The Good. Here, the criterion for discerning the moral sheep from the immoral goats is not found in the predilections of Someone atop Olympus, but in the relation that a thing (act, institution, person, character trait, etc) bears to The Good.

We may say with Plato that good things have their goodness insofar as they resemble (participate in, instantiate), in one way or another, The Good.

Suppose, further (as Plato did, in fact, suppose), that our term, “The Good”rigidly designates a standard that is thus fixed across possible worlds. This being the case, those morally relevant resemblances are also fixed in this way.

The result is that moral propositions entailed by The Good and its resemblances are necessarily true. That is, it is not the case that The Good is correctly characterized in different ways in different worlds, such that, say, someone exactly like our Hitler resembles The Good in some world.

Alston thinks of God’s nature as functioning in precisely the same way. The divine nature is fixed across worlds, such that there is no possible world in which someone exactly like our Hitler resembles God and is therefore virtuous.

Divine Command Moralists, on the traditional, voluntarist understanding of DCM, reject the proposition expressed in the sentence just before this one.

On DCM, while it may be true that God commands X in the actual world, there is a possible world in which he commands not-X. As Wm. Of Ockham put it, though such things as theft, adultery, rape and the like currently fall under a wrong-making divine prohibition, it is perfectly possible that God should actually command such things, in which case they are obligatory and even meritorious.

Indeed, Ockham speaks instructively of moral properties as being “annexed” to the respective deeds, depending upon the way in which they are related to an actual and current divine command.

I say “instructively” because this serves to highlight a feature of DCM: All moral properties are extrinsic and relational rather than intrinsic or inherent.

This is to say that the rightness or wrongness of an action is found in the relation that the action bears to an actual divine command, rather than in its intrinsic nature.

Alston’s view, on the other hand, entails that moral properties are inherent rather than relational. The wrongness of rape, for instance, is grounded in the intrinsic nature—-the essence-—of the action rather than in the relation that is bears to something that God happens to think or feel or say. The act is essentially wrong on Alston’s view, which is to say that it has the property of wrongness as one of its essential (all possible worlds) properties.

Alston’s position is to Ockham’s what east is to west.

The point may also be put as follows. The Euthyphro dilemma urges the question, “Are right acts right because they are commanded by God, or does God command right acts because they are right?” The divine command moralist is committed to the first disjunct: right acts are right because they are commanded by God. This is the essence of DCM.

Alston’s view, on the other hand, maintains that God commands right acts because they are right, and this prior rightness refers to the divine nature itself as the ground for making the distinction. (This is not to preclude the importance of actual divine commands on Alston’s view. But it does preclude saying that God lacks an antecedent moral reason for commanding as he does.)

Alston’s God is no more arbitrary than is Plato’s Good. But he does have one feature that Plato’s Good lacks, i.e., he is causally efficacious.

In an attempt to disabuse you of your anti-theistic prejudices for the moment, imagine, if you would, Plato’s Good being such that, not only does it, in a rather “inert” way, stand as the Ultimate Criterion for moral evaluations, but it also plays an active role in bringing about a world in which things may bear morally relevant resemblances to itself. Indeed, it brings it about that there exist moral agents with moral faculties capable of contemplating The Good and discerning those resemblances.

This is to imagine a world in which The Good remains the ultimate moral criterion, and it is also responsible for the existence of the very moral “intuitions” to which agents appeal in recognizing it as that criterion as well as grasping the way in which finite things participate in it.

Note that the resulting view invites an age-old distinction—that between ordo essendi (order of being) and ordo cognoscendi (order of knowing). On such a view, though the moral intuitions of agents are epistemically prior to their understanding of the Good, the Good is ontologically prior to those intuitions.

Because this is so, a skeptical philosopher in such a world will not have a successful skeptical argument simply by virtue of observing that the “autonomous practical reason” of agents must first be consulted before anything meaningful may be predicated of the Good.

Of course, if we substitute “the divine nature” for “the Good,” we have Alston’s view. God is both the ultimate criterion of morality and the author of the very intuitions to which we appeal in judging him to be good. And since, according to Alston’s position, the “good-making” attributes of God are essential to him, none of the bizarre results that are gotten from DCM follow. No trouble comes of a thought experiment involving a world in which God commands, say, rape, and in which our built-in moral intuitions lead us to “see” the “rightness” of such commands. (Alas, the evolutionary naturalist does suffer the full force of parallel thought experiments, given Darwin’s“hive bee” thought experiment that I cite in the essay that tops this thread.)

Perhaps someone will be able to detect a fatal flaw in the view. But you have not said anything that even approaches that.

____________________

Hodeehodeehodeeho


Submitted by Bonkers on Wed, 08/20/2008 - 3:00pm.

I'll comment on the above just to get it printed again for others to read.

Muddle, unless I had a PhD in religion of some sort and had read the bunch of books you had to read to write your "paper,' I would have no hope of understanding what you have written here. I like simple answers when they say what one thinks. Errors, fallacies, illogical statements, and scores of comparisons aren't helpful to most.

muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Wed, 08/20/2008 - 3:10pm.

I know.

As I said in my reply, I was assuming in this person some philosophical sophistication. You know what assuming does.

___________________

Hodeehodeehodeeho


Submitted by benjdm on Wed, 08/20/2008 - 12:42pm.

"If the latter, then your arrogance is astounding--particularly considering the caliber of the philosopher whose work you peruse."

He may be the best philosopher in the history of the world. Almost all of the philosophy I've ever tried to read has been, like this, of the 'how many angels can dance on the head of a pin' kind of stuff.

"Is PU good?"...The upshot: Direct justification of a purported Supreme Moral Principle is futile.

Exactly. Morality is inherently subjective, changing with the changing values of the subjects. A morality that does not involve consideration of a subject's values doesn't seem like a morality at all to me. Put together some similar subjects and you can get some inter-subjective agreement.

If that puts me in the "moral skeptic" circle, whatever that is, that's fine.

"Alston thinks of God’s nature as functioning in precisely the same way. The divine nature is fixed across worlds, such that there is no possible world in which someone exactly like our Hitler resembles God and is therefore virtuous."

In order to make this claim, Alston would have to know (or at least have a good idea about) the nature of God already, a claim I find absurd. Thought experiment: God appears to every sentient being in the universe 5 minutes from now. He declares that the people on list A (instantly provided) are pure evil and need to be killed. God is able to convince every sentient being he is 'the one Supreme Being, the creator and ruler of the universe.' Does this falsify Alston's position or would Alston deny that this would be God? If the latter, he is only going to accept a God that (what a coincidence!) subscribes to his own ethical ideas. If the 'Platonic Good / Divine Nature' contradict his own ethical ideas, he won't recognize them, and will stick to his own. (I agree with him on this, but I admit that my own ethical ideas are my own ethical ideas. Not some ideal.) If the former, Alston is only talking about one particularly small set of possible Gods, a set that (what a coincidence!) subscribes to his own ethical ideas.

"The act is essentially wrong on Alston’s view, which is to say that it has the property of wrongness as one of its essential (all possible worlds) properties."

I understand this as basically saying that the former interpretation is correct. Alston is only talking about one particularly small set of possible Gods, a set that (what a coincidence!) subscribes to his own ethical ideas.

"Alston’s God is no more arbitrary than is Plato’s Good."

100% agreed.

"And since, according to Alston’s position, the “good-making” attributes of God are essential to him"

There is no reason whatsoever that 'the one Supreme Being, the creator and ruler of the universe' entails that this Being matches up to a Platonic Good. Only a small subset of possible Gods would match up to any particular 'Good.'

Let me try and summarize why I find philosophy so tiresome - why I call it 'intellectual noodling.' Humans' efforts at finding out about the world around us have met with a lot of failure. We have been very good at coming up with ideas about how things worked and with great confidence in those ideas (sacrifice virgins to ensure a good crop, humours cause disease, heavier objects fall faster than lighter objects, etc.) Only after we admitted a fundamental ignorance did we start to make any real progress. Any idea we propose now, even if it fits all the observations we already have, is still probably wrong, and we know this. We have to go out and test it. Philosophizing like the stuff I read here has no ability to test its ideas. It's as likely to be correct as the sacrificing of virgins, humours, heavier objects falling faster than lighter objects, or string theory.

muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Wed, 08/20/2008 - 3:05pm.

So, you enter the fray by arguing that a theistic conception of morality must be reducible to a (philosophically) implausible variety of divine command morality.

Now, upon encountering the only possible kind of defense to your challenge, you disparage “that sort of philosophy.” Very convenient. Please explain to me how this tactic is possible for anyone engaged in honest inquiry.

And you embrace moral subjectivism with the assertion, “Morality is inherently subjective, changing with the changing values of the subjects.”

First, I suppose I should say thank you. You see, my thesis in the essay that leads this thread was rather modest. I was simply arguing that the naturalist cannot offer us anything more than moral skepticism—where “moral skepticism” includes this sort of subjectivism. You do realize, don’t you, that there are plenty of metaphysical naturalists who would wish to take you on? (Here, I’ll refer you to the so-called Cornell Realists—Boyd, Brink, Sturgeon, etc.)

Second, the implausibility of divine command morality—-which makes morality dependent upon a divine mind-—seems to me diminished when viewed through the lens of the moral subjectivism that you endorse. I mean, your view then is that morality is, well, mind-dependent. And, of course, it will be “arbitrary” in precisely the same sense. Doubt this? Here, I’ll point you to Russ Shafer-Landau’s fine little book, Whatever Happened to Good and Evil;?

Third, would you mind telling me which “test “—of an empirical nature, I assume—-waits in the offing for your assertion, “Morality is inherently subjective, changing with the changing values of the subjects”? Do you suppose that this is anything other than a philosophical thesis, the merits of which are assessed by means of philosophical argumentation?

Finally, I would be interested to hear your principled way of closing the door of legitimate reasoning on the sort of stuff that Alston is up to without also shutting out the kinds of issues that you deem legitimate and important. Alternatively, I wish to see how you can keep it open for whatever empiricist programme you may endorse without, at the same time, permitting metaphysical and theological consideration in through your ankles. Here’s one observation: Your subjective distaste for the latter does not qualify here.

My expectation is that you shall find yourself hoist with your own petard. Really! I’ve seen it happen over and over again to people drawn to exclusive varieties of empiricism or scientism. It isn’t a pretty sight.

The last word is yours.
___________________

Hodeehodeehodeeho


Submitted by Bonkers on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 2:14pm.

I'll sure obey it.
I think?
Maybe if it said to waterboard someone..........

ManofGreatLogic's picture
Submitted by ManofGreatLogic on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 5:10pm.

I'll weigh in on morality and how it relates to God's will: There are a lot of people who say, "I'm a Christian," and yet they hate those who are not.

Sorry, it doesn't work that way.

If you don't love each and every human being, then you're not paying attention in Church.

So you love the people who love you? Even Tax Collectors do that.

Stop me if you've heard this before.

I love Osama Bin Laden.

And Mother Theresa.

And Jimmy Carter.

And Hitler.

And John McCain.

And you.

Christians love all. They have no choice.


Submitted by Bonkers on Mon, 08/18/2008 - 5:26pm.

Some Christians love everybody---I think. Most don't.
They also horde together on occasion and kill off a lot of people, violating the do not kill thingey!
There doesn't seem to be any pious people any more--that is they have a halo all of the time. I hear some of the best of them continuously saying that they "fall short" all of the time, but get up and keep trying!
Isn't that kinda like taking on a great big fighter after bragging how you can whoop his rear but backing out at the last minute, saying you aren't doing too well today?
I have never understood "sometimes" religion. Sounds too much like a "hedge fund."
I think either I will make it or I won't!

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