Ichneumonwasp
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2006
- Messages
- 6,240
But you know that even "utilitarians" have a strong aversion when they are asked the same question, but they have to push a fat guy on the tracks to save 5 people rather than flip a switch... this is true no matter what the religion or age or religion of the person asked... the only people whom it is not different for is people who have had a portion of their brain damaged so that they don't have a revulsion connected with their decision making activities. (google Marc Hauser if you are unclear of the studies I'm talking about)
So what is really going on is that we are wired to behave a certain way... and so we think to codify and justify why we are choosing what we do... we want to see ourselves as behaving rationally. If someone doesn't have an emotional reaction to the trolley question and sees it entirely in terms of lives saved without considering how he/she feels about themselves having to do the deed--then they are not a utilitarian--they are a person who has a small portion of the "conscience" damaged. We evolved to have a revulsion about causing harm to others... and it's hard to over ride that revulsion even when more lives are at stake. We know exactly what part of the brain is involved and how damage to that part effects the reasoning... it keeps the "emotions" out of the equation.
Culture can dampen or elevate that effect. Making men into soldiers that can kill other people requires this. You have a handicapped army otherwise. Moral systems would hopefully broaden whom we feel empathy and kinship with... whom we feel more willing to protect. But there is no illusion required for that at all.
Yes, that is one of the examples where utilitarianism doesn't seem to work well but other explanations do.
But let's be clear. There is a difference between the way that we make moral decisions individually and what we should do as moral creatures.
We have been provided (really, we are) an emotional heritage bequeathed us through the evolutionary process. As a result we do feel revulsion when we are forced to kill an innocent standing next to the tracks -- I use the example all the time to show that utilitarianism doesn't fit with our moral intuitions in some situations. This is also the reason why they only show one kid at a time in those "give us money to keep these poor African children from starving to death" commercials. One child on screen elicits our sympathy and our internal feeling that we can save that one child from a terrible fate. When they show large numbers of kids on screen you'd think it would elicit more sympathy/outrage and turn into more money donated. But it doesn't. We feel lost when there are so many who need help and think -- well someone else, some government somewhere will help them.
But that is not morality in its full form. That is proto-morality. That is where our morality begins and needn't consist of what we should do. The rest of morality for the individual largely does consist of rationalization -- using either deontology or utilitarianism. But we are not necessarily stuck in that situation. We can override our initial intuitions and arrive at a moral decision that may be opposed to our original feeling.
Take, for instance, the issue of slavery. We find it easy, natural, and emotionally satisfying to oppose slavery in all its forms because we do not feel the economic need for it. In the past there were many elaborate justifications/rationalizations for slavery even when philosophers could see that slavery should be wrong from a human perspective -- I mentioned Aristotle earlier who flirted with this but shied away because he lived in a slave owning society. If he had stuck to his guns he could have fully realized that his gut reaction -- that slavery is OK -- was wrong. We are in a similar situation with one of John Peter Singer's favorites -- animal rights. Animal rights seems silly to many of us because we like steak. We live as omnivores, so we feel that eating animals is right. At the same time anyone who has a dog or cat knows that their pet is conscious, rational, feeling, and intelligent (except for cocker spaniels). We don't want to deal with the reality that we are killing intelligent beings because of our economic situation -- much like slave-owners in the past.
If we are to make moral progress -- if that is not just a pipe dream -- we must be willing to see beyond our gut moral intuitions handed to us through our evolutionary heritage and stick to rational principles, whatever the consequences of those ideas. The only other option is to progress economically to the point where our gut feeling is placed in a new situation -- make it possible to grow meat in a vat and we will see the slaughter of animals as wrong.
I am not sanguine about our ability to see beyond gut instinct and act on rational principles, though. I know that is how I should act/see things. But, in the case of vegetarianism, I am a dedicated omnivore because I like meat and I'm just an a**hole. Morality is supposed to consist not just in the moral sentiments but in the rational alterations we make upon those sentiments -- through language and through interaction with others.
It may be that we are simply stuck with intuition and rationalization. But that's a bit sad, don't you think? I think there is more to us than just that, that we can rise above that level alone to some more elevated level of discourse. If we were able to universalize an ethical framework, this would allow us to chastise others who do not fit that ethical framework. Honor killing, for instance, makes perfect sense in Arabic communities where property is dealt with in the way that it is there. There is an economic reason why that institution exists. But we find it horrendous. Why can we not stand on a moral high ground and denounce the practice? If it's just gut feeling and rationalization, then moral relativity at the level of individual societies is all we can hope for, and we must put up with that practice (if we want them to put up with our practices).
Last edited: