GODLESS BUT GOOD
by
TROY JOLLIMORE
___________________________________
Troy
Jollimore is a poet, literary critic and professor of philosophy
at California State University, Chico. His first book of poetry,
Tom Thomson in Purgatory, won the 2006 National Book
Critics Circle Award. His latest book is On Loyalty (2012).
A
couple of years ago, the idea of God came up, in an incidental
way, in the Contemporary Moral Theory course I teach. I generally
try not to reveal my particular beliefs and commitments too
early in the semester, but since it was late in the course,
I felt I could be open with the students about my lack of
religious belief. I will never forget the horrified look on
one student’s face. “But Professor Jollimore,”
he stammered, “how can you not believe in God? You teach
ethics for a living!”
I
shouldn’t have been surprised by this reaction. But
I always am. We were 12 weeks into a class that discussed
a great variety of recent moral theories, none of which made
the slightest reference to any sort of divine power or authority,
but this made no difference. After 20 years of living in the
US (I was born in Canada), I still tend to forget how many
people here assume, simply as a matter of common sense, that
the very idea of ‘secular ethics’ is an abomination,
a contradiction, or both.
I
don’t want to suggest that this attitude is influential
only in the US. It is simply more prominent here. In polls
and studies, a majority of Americans don’t trust atheists
and say they would not vote for a presidential candidate who
did not believe in God. ‘Religion’ and ‘theology’
are still frequently cited in the American media as if they
were the sole aspects of human existence responsible for matters
of value. ‘We need science to tell us the way things
are; we need religion to tell us the way things ought to be,’
as people around here like to say. I have spent my career
studying the way things ‘ought to be’, outside
of the scaffolding of any faith or religious tradition. No
wonder I find such sentiments rather frustrating.
More
than that, I find them perplexing. Perhaps it seems natural
for a person who was brought up in a religious tradition to
place their personal moral views in a framework of faith.
But I’m skeptical whether religion can provide genuine
knowledge of any sort — and I can’t help noticing
the level of disagreement and difference that still exists,
sometimes violently, between believers of different faiths.
Given this, I find it dubious that we can, let alone must,
go to religion if we want knowledge about how to live. The
fact that ethical commitments, in some people’s lives,
find a natural place in the context of religion does not imply
that such commitments can only be grounded and motivated in
religion, nor that a universe can only contain morality if
it also contains God.
Moreover,
when actual arguments (not just good plain common sense) are
offered against the possibility of secular morality, they
tend to be deeply unconvincing. One common argument is that
if there is no God, moral views are merely subjective opinions
and nothing more: God is said to be required to make morality
objective. A second argument is that divine authority is necessary
to give morality its motivational force: without the threat
of reward or punishment hanging over them, people will supposedly
murder, rape, rob, and in every other way give in to their
inherently sinful natures.
Neither
of these arguments should persuade us. Let’s take the
second: that if there were no God to punish bad behavior,
people would run wild, robbing, raping, and murdering. This
claim is pretty easy to prove false. After all, there are
plenty of people in this world who don’t believe in
God but nor do they behave like sociopaths. Of course, one
might reply that such atheists are confused: given that they
don’t believe in divine punishment, they should act
like sociopaths, whether they realize it or not. But this
is both uncharitable and inaccurate. What explains their behavior
is not logical error, but rather the belief — which
they share with pretty much all non-sociopaths, including
religious believers — that there are plenty of good
reasons for doing things that are not in one’s own self-interest.
The
idea that murdering innocent people is perfectly fine unless
there is a God and he disapproves is not only deeply implausible,
but positively immoral
The
first argument — that without God, moral opinions would
be entirely subjective — is also flawed. The classic
response to this argument is known as ‘the Euthyphro
dilemma,’ after the Socratic dialogue in which Plato
first presented the argument. Suppose — as we presumably
all believe — that killing an innocent person on a whim
is morally wrong. Since it’s wrong, God, if he exists,
surely disapproves of it. Now, is this action wrong because
God disapproves of it, or does he disapprove of it because
it’s wrong? The first option is unattractive for a number
of reasons. It makes God seem arbitrary: if there really isn’t
anything wrong with murder in itself, prior to God’s
disapproving of it, then he might just as well have disapproved
of wearing white socks after Labor Day. And if God’s
moral rules are arbitrary in this way, then why is it important
to follow them? Besides, it seems not only implausible but
downright nasty to think that there is nothing wrong with
murdering an innocent human being other than the fact that
a very powerful observer disapproves of it — as if irritating
or upsetting God were more important than the harm done to
the innocent victim. The second option, then, is to be preferred:
God disapproves of murder because murder is wrong —
which implies that murder is wrong in itself, and so doesn’t
need God’s disapproval to make it wrong.
The
basic point in both cases is simple, but profoundly significant:
if there isn’t already objective morality in the world,
it isn’t at all clear how adding God to the picture
would bring such a morality into existence. Adding God would
give us divine rewards and punishments, but that’s only
to add self-interested reasons to be ethical, not genuinely
moral reasons. Similarly, adding God gives us a divine observer
who can disapprove of murder and other wrong actions; but
unless these actions are already morally wrong, it’s
not at all apparent how God’s existence would magically
transform them from permissible to forbidden. The idea that
murdering innocent people is perfectly fine unless there is
a God and he disapproves is not only deeply implausible, but
positively immoral in its own right. To think such a thing
is, in my view, a kind of moral failing in itself.
We
are left, then, with a bit of a mystery: why do so many people
believe that morality needs to be grounded in religion, when
the arguments in favour of that view are so unconvincing?
I suspect that something else is going on, and that in most
cases these arguments are just rationalizations for the belief
that morality depends on faith in God. The actual explanation,
I believe, is something else.
The
reality is, no system of secular ethics has managed to displace
religious approaches to ethics in the contemporary popular
imagination. It is worth asking why. We can start with the
fact that the secular approaches that have dominated Western
thought since the Enlightenment tend to share certain features.
The two most significant post-Enlightenment secular theories
are those derived from the work of the Prussian philosopher
Immanuel Kant, and utilitarianism, which originates in the
work of the British philosophers Jeremy Bentham, James Mill,
and John Stuart Mill.
Utilitarian
ethics claims that the right thing to do is always the one
that will maximize happiness or well-being among the general
population. The answers to our moral questions are, thus,
to be determined by empirical research — what will make
people happiest or best-off, on the whole? Kantian ethics
— to put a highly complex theory into a very small nutshell
— says that reason commands us to behave morally. Moral
truths are, in essence, logical truths, so that the content
of morality can and ought to be determined from the philosopher’s
armchair.
Many
religious believers feel skeptical about modern secular ethics
because they cannot see any possibility for this sort of integration
between theory and experience, between moral principles and
how life is actually lived
Kantian
and utilitarian approaches have been both fruitful and influential,
and they get a lot of things right. But they share an impersonal,
somewhat bureaucratic conception of the human being as a moral
agent. The traits that are most highly prized in such agents
are logical thinking, calculation, and obedience to the rules.
Personal qualities such as individual judgment, idiosyncratic
projects and desires, personal commitments and relationships,
and feelings and emotions are regarded as largely irrelevant.
Indeed, Kant argued that actions that were motivated by emotions
— acts of kindness performed out of compassion, for
instance — had no moral worth; a worthy action was one
motivated simply by the logical judgment that it was the morally
correct thing to do. For utilitarians, meanwhile, each moral
agent is only one among a great multitude, and the kind of
impartiality the theory demands prevents the individual from
giving personal emotions or desires any special consideration.
A person’s feelings, preferences and commitments are
supposed to play almost no role in decision-making.
This
is in stark contrast to most religions, which tend to preserve
the deep connection between the ethical and the personal.
This is true even in those religious traditions that emphasize
obedience to God’s will; the moral view of the Old Testament,
for instance. And the connection is further emphasized in
many streams of both Christianity and Buddhism, which place
great emphasis on the cultivation of the virtuous personality
and on moral emotions including love and compassion. When
I talk with religious believers about their faith and their
morals, I am struck by how closely and deeply connected both
their faith and their morality tend to be to their deepest
personal concerns, how richly interwoven these things are
into the general fabric of their lives.
Many
religious believers feel skeptical about modern secular ethics
in part because they cannot see any possibility for this sort
of integration between theory and experience, between moral
principles and how life is actually lived. Such theories neglect
the personal: they privilege rationality over emotion, the
abstract over the particular, obedience to rules over individual
judgment. And, on the whole, they have had little to say —
and have sometimes actively resisted having anything to say
— about such old-fashioned notions as character and
virtue.
That’s
the bad news for secular ethics. The good news is that this
somewhat negative assessment of its strengths and satisfactions
is based on a limited historical perspective. The dominant
secular theories of ethics since the Enlightenment might be
largely guilty of neglecting the personal — but there
are exceptions. Theorists such as Samuel Butler and David
Hume, for instance, saw moral character and virtue as significant,
and John Stuart Mill attempted to make a place for it within
his utilitarian system, as have some contemporary utilitarians.
And in any case, there are other places to look for an ethics
beyond religion, both more recently and in the distant past.
Indeed, to my mind the most interesting work in secular ethics
has been done by people whose project is inspired by and rooted
in the distant past — and in particular, by the philosophers
of ancient Greece.
Two
central figures here are Iris Murdoch, especially her book
The Sovereignty of Good (1970), and John McDowell,
professor of philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh, and
in particular his influential paper Virtue and Reason (1979).
In addition to being a philosopher, Murdoch was of course
a magnificent novelist, and this fact is not incidental. For
Murdoch, the most crucial moral virtue was a kind of attentiveness
to detail, a wise, trained capacity for vision, which could
see what was really going on in a situation and respond accordingly.
The sort of psychological insight and attentiveness to detail
necessary for writing fiction was also, for Murdoch, what
enables a person to live a morally good life. “It is
obvious here,” she wrote, “what is the role, for
the artist or spectator, of exactness and good vision: unsentimental,
detached, unselfish, objective attention. It is also clear
that in moral situations a similar exactness is called for.”
Ethics
is built not on a system of rules, but on individual human
beings who possess character, judgment, and wisdom
For
Murdoch, what so often keeps us from acting morally is not
that we fail to follow the moral rules that tell us how to
act; rather, it is that we misunderstand the situation before
us. When we describe the situation to ourselves, we simply
get it wrong. To get the description right — to accurately
grasp the nature of the motivations at play, to see the relevant
individuals in their wholeness and particularity, and to see
what, morally speaking, is at stake — is to grasp the
‘shape’ of the situation, in the words of Jonathan
Dancy, professor of philosophy at the University of Texas
at Austin. It is to see things in the right way, from the
proper angle, and with the correct emphasis. Once this is
achieved, according to Murdoch and Dancy, it will be apparent
what needs to be done, and the motivation to do so will follow
naturally. Faced with a situation that demands compassion,
the virtuous person responds, spontaneously, with compassion;
she doesn’t need to reason herself into it. As Dancy
once described it, to give one’s justifications for
responding in a certain way “is just to lay out how
one sees the situation . . . The persuasiveness here is the
persuasiveness of narrative: an internal coherence in the
account which compels assent. We succeed in our aim when our
story sounds right.” Murdoch the novelist would have
approved.
This
emphasis on being attentive to concrete reality tallies with
the idea that it is the emotions (compassion and sympathy
in particular), rather than abstract rational principles,
that are doing the motivating when it comes to ethical behaviour.
Together they embody a critique of moral views, such as Kant’s,
which rely on inflexible ethical principles allegedly derived
from logic itself. In the work of McDowell, this critique
is developed into a position called ‘moral particularism,’
which rejects altogether the idea that we might one day compose
or possess an ethical rulebook that would define the right
thing to do in any conceivable situation. After all, what
can count as a moral reason in one context might fail to be
a reason in another, or might even be, in certain contexts,
a reason pointing in the other direction.
Take
happiness as an example. For the classical utilitarian, the
fact that something increases happiness is always a reason
to do it. But the particularist will point out that in the
real world things are more complicated: the enjoyment of the
sadist, for instance, is actually a further argument against
an act of cruelty, not an argument in favor of it, or even
a consideration that mitigates its badness. Conversely, refusing
to make someone happy is sometimes morally right, as in cases
of ‘tough love:’ sometimes, as the Nick Lowe song
has it, one must be cruel to be kind. To see that a person
who appears to be acting cruelly is actually motivated by
kindness, and indeed is being genuinely kind, is to grasp
the correct shape of the situation, to latch onto the accurate
description. And this accurate perception, again, tells us
what we need to do to respond properly: it conveys what the
situation demands, for, on the particularist view, these demands
are quite literally part of the situation itself.
Indeed,
happiness is complicated in other ways as well, many of which
are beginning to be articulated by psychologists and other
happiness researchers. Early utilitarians such as Bentham
held a very simple view of happiness, equating it with pleasure
and assuming it was a unitary substance that could be empirically
and objectively measured. However, more recent investigators
tend to prefer a picture in which several distinct and perhaps
incommensurable factors make contributions to a person’s
happiness. This fits in well with the particularists’
view that evaluation is always a holistic matter. It is worth
remembering, too, that Aristotle understood eudaimonia,
which is frequently translated into English as happiness,
as something considerably broader and less subjective than
pleasure or momentary satisfaction. Instead, it has to do
with the general quality of one’s life as a whole.
For
particularists, then, individual perception and judgment are
always necessary to decide difficult ethical questions: there
is no theoretical ethical system that can do the work for
us. Principles are useful, perhaps, but only as rules of thumb,
practical guidelines that hold for the most part, but to which
there will always be exceptions. At the foundational level,
ethics is built not on a system of rules, but on individual
human beings who possess character, judgment, and wisdom.
Particularism
re-opens the door to the idea of wisdom. It is an idea that
Kantian and utilitarian ethics — and, for that matter,
the modern world in general — have great trouble taking
seriously. Wisdom, as opposed to knowledge, might seem a somewhat
quaint notion in the contemporary world. (Indeed at this point
even the word ‘knowledge’ sounds quaint to many
people, who prefer to talk about ‘data’ or ‘information.’)
The modern desire to replace individual wisdom and judgment
with more objective, scientific methods of decision-making
and evaluation has had profound effects on many aspects of
our lives. In the field of education, where I work, it has
led to ever-increasingly complex systems of rules and standards
for professional conduct, for assessing teaching effectiveness,
for making promotion decisions, even for designing courses
and course curricula. The prevailing attitude is that we need
a system of rules and principles to make and justify every
decision, because we cannot trust the individuals involved
enough to leave it up to their good judgment — even
when the individuals involved are highly trained experts and
just the sort of people capable of discerning how rules and
principles should be implemented, and when they should be
ignored or adapted. Similarly, the current plague of standardized
testing inflicted on students leads to the slighting of skills
and traits that are difficult to quantify: artistic talents,
creativity, and moral attributes, among many others. This
prevailing attitude is one that many Kantians and utilitarians
would applaud, and one that Aristotle would deplore.
For
Aristotle, practical wisdom meant the kind of sophisticated
and judicious individual judgment that is necessary to deal
with the world’s moral complexity. The virtuous person
is the person who is capable of judging well, and on this
sort of view the only possible definition of moral rightness
makes explicit reference to such a person. Since there is
no set of rules that dictates right action in all situations,
we can only say that the right thing is what the ideally wise
and virtuous person would do. “Actions, then,”
Aristotle taught, “are called just and temperate when
they are such as the just or the temperate man would do; but
it is not the man who does these that is just and temperate,
but the man who also does them as just and temperate men do
them.” Even if a set of rules could pick out the right
action in every situation — something Aristotle denies
— we would still need individuals possessed of great
practical wisdom to understand why the right action in any
given case is the right one, to know with what attitude it
ought to be performed, to know precisely what motive should
be lying behind the action and prompting us to act. (Morally
speaking, an act performed out of self-interest is not necessarily
the same as one performed out of compassion or loyalty, even
if they all look precisely the same from the outside.)
Given
this, it is not surprising that on Aristotle’s view
the cultivation of virtue and wisdom — the development
of one’s own moral character and powers of judgment
— is all-important. Developing practical wisdom is,
for Aristotle, a matter both of acquiring knowledge and experience
and of training one’s responses, including the emotions.
We begin by imitating the virtuous, and end up becoming virtuous
ourselves. “The things we have to learn before we can
do,” he taught, “we learn by doing, for example
men become builders by building and lyre-players by playing
the lyre; so too we become just by doing just acts, temperate
by doing temperate acts, brave by doing brave acts.”
Since much of the formative work happens in the first years
of life, early childhood education and training is of vast
importance. “It makes no small difference, then, whether
we form habits of one kind or another from our very youth,”
he tells us. “It makes a very great difference, or rather
all the difference.”
Altruistic
feelings and behavior, it appears, really do have substantial
psychological benefits
This
then is a secular ethics that emphasizes the significance
of self-cultivation, individual judgment, and emotions such
as compassion, as well as recognizing the usefulness of moral
exemplars — teachers who are paradigms of wisdom, who
inspire us and whom we can try to imitate. It is a secular
ethics that shares some important common ground with religious
tradition. The idea that morality stems from strong character
rather than from obedience to a strict set of rules, for instance,
is very much in line with the moral reorientation proposed
by Christ in the New Testament, from a view centered on obedience
to God’s commandments to one in which love and compassion
take centre stage.
This
reorientation has also been identified as desirable by some
Buddhists. In his book about secular ethics, Beyond Religion
(2011), the Dalai Lama writes that, in his view, “ethics
consists less of rules to be obeyed than of principles of
inner self-regulation to promote those aspects of our nature
which we recognize as conducive to our own well-being and
that of others.” Indeed, the Dalai Lama’s description
of moral deliberation contains several elements that are recognizable
from Murdoch, McDowell, and even Aristotle: