| | Steve,
Thanks for the response, and for trying to clarify your own position. It's the kind of response that allows some genuine discussion on the topic.
Alas, I disagree with your approach pretty thoroughly. I've been thinking hard about this topic for years and I hope I can communicate at least some of my objections.
Let me start by trying to find some common ground. I'll quote Rand:
Man must choose his actions, values and goals by the standard of that which is proper to man—in order to achieve, maintain, fulfill and enjoy that ultimate value, that end in itself, which is his own life. I like this quote because it ties together the ultimate value, man's own life, with the abstract concept of "that which is proper to man". You can't achieve, maintain, fulfill, or enjoy your ultimate value, your own life, without understanding understanding the kind of life that is proper to man in general. I think we both recognize the importance of these abstract principles in allowing us to understand what kind of life, at least in the abstract, that we should live. We still need to take those abstractions and apply them to our own specific lives, but without those abstractions we would be essentially blind. Making it more concrete, take the trader principle. By understanding that there is a harmony of interests, and that we can achieve mutual value by mutual trade, we can have a clearer vision of the kind of life that is appropriate. We should look to achieve value by creation and trade. We should value others as potential trading partners. We should seek a harmonious life with others by always asking ourselves how we can offer values to others and gain values in return.
These abstractions are useful, but the question is what purpose do they fulfill? From the quote above, the purpose is to "achieve, maintain, fulfill, and enjoy that ultimate value, that end in itself, which is his own life". Your life, not life in general, is your goal. Your ultimate value. The abstraction "man's life" is not the goal or the purpose. It is a cognitive tool that allows us to more clearly see what kind of life we should live. But we need to be clearer here. We're trying to choose our actions, values, and goals. We're trying to direct the course of our lives. We're not living our lives so that we can be compatible with "that which is proper to man". That's not the purpose. The purpose is to live our own lives well. Understanding the nature of man in the abstract allows us to more clearly see our full range of needs or desires, as well as capabilities. It's abstract knowledge that allows us to more readily see the entirety of our lives.
This is a tricky point, because it can easily be viewed in the reverse order. You could imagine that we start with this abstraction "that which is proper to man" or "life qua man" or whatever you want to call it, and we are simply judging whether our own lives are compatible with it. It would be like picking an arbitrary set of values, declaring them "good", and judging whether people conformed to it. The focus would be on the value-set, and your life would be supposed to follow it. This is like a moral code where your life is judged by how well it conforms to the moral code, instead of judging the moral code by how well it promotes your own life.
The alternative approach is to take your own life as the starting point, and to ask how can you promote it. Life is self-generated, self-sustaining action. What allows you more capability to self-generate your actions, and to make them more self-sustaining. Having food is good. Being able to produce food is better. Producing food is even better. Producing other life enhancing wealth is even better. Enhancing your mind, which is your primary means of survival, is even better. And it goes on and on. And it turns out, by understanding the nature of man in the abstract, we can more readily grasp our own individual needs and capabilities. "That which is proper to man" is not an arbitrary set of moral rules that we must obey, but an incredibly complex integration of facts about human needs, human interactions, human capabilities, our place in the world, and on and on. It is an integration of an incredible amount of abstract knowledge about the best methods humans have for survival.
To summarize so far, my position is that your own life is your ultimate value, and "that which is proper to man" is simply abstract principles that allow you to see more clearly how to pursue your own life by the standard of survival. This abstract information is not the goal of your life. It's a tool to better see what choices actually promote your life and which don't.
Now on to the standard of value. It's pretty clear that taking an abstraction like "man's life" allows us to formulate abstract principles. But is morality just a bunch of abstract rules that constrain our actions? It shouldn't be. The whole point of morality is that we need a method of guiding our choices. All of them. Every single one of them. Morality that just constrains our choices still leaves us with the need for a method of choosing. It's only doing a part of the job, and not very well. We need a way of making concrete choices. We need something much more specific than "that which is proper to man" or "life qua man".
"Hmmm...what should I work on today?"
"Hey! I know! You should be productive!"
"Can you be a little more specific!"
An abstract moral standard might be fine for generating abstract rules of thumb, or even moral principles, but it does nothing for your actual decisions except constrain them. To actually choose what you should do, you need to focus on your own life. You can say "I need to go to work today and try to accomplish Task X because, to my knowledge, this path leads my life in the best direction in the long term". And to do that you need to weigh your alternatives by how they actually impact your specific life, not whether they are merely compatible with life qua man. They do need to be compatible with life qua man. You can decide you're going to go on a killing spree for a few hours and hope that it won't have any long term consequence on your life! But merely being compatible with life qua man is not enough. There may be many actions that are compatible with "life qua man" and not at all compatible with your own specific life.
This whole post so far is just trying to show that your own life is the significant point, and "man's life" is simply one tool to help you choose more optimally in pursuing your own life. There's no reason to put the cart before the horse. My approach recognizes the need for the abstraction "man's life", along with all of the other abstract principles that make up the Objectivist morality. But all of these are simply tools to help you understand your choices so you can choose the one that is most optimal for your own life. You don't live in order to be moral. Your moral principles help guide your choices so you can live more optimally.
How do we know if an action is more optimal than another? Yes, we need a standard. Your own life is not technically a standard. A standard is a means of measurement. You need a way to measure the degree to which an action benefits or hurts you. Survival is that standard. We can measure whether an action increases our ability to survive, or decreases it. But it's not survival in some abstract sense. It's your own survival that matters. Does this action further your life or not, and to what extent? Does this other action benefit your life more or less than the first one?
So far, I haven't discussed any need to measure all men by the same standard. For me, moral judgment is not a primary. Choosing our own actions is the primary purpose of morality. Judging other people is simply another tool.
If judging people is primary, the purpose of morality is reversed and so is the method. If you're primarily interested in judging other men, then you need a different kind of moral standard. You need something that deals with only those needs or relationships that are true for all men. You need an abstract set of moral rules or values by which you can judge everyone. "Man's life", far from being too abstract, is now sufficiently abstract. Anything more specific would be useless.
But again, I don't see this is the primary purpose of ethics. At best, it's a narrow subdivision of ethics called moral judgment. We have to differentiate that from our own individual moral choices. When we're making choices, our goal should be to further our own life, not to achieve a moral status. The moral status may be useful, as we want people to trust us and live peacefully with us. But that's only one of many possible values. But confusing these makes people think that our method for choosing values or actions is rooted in moral judgment. We pick those value or actions that others (or ourselves) would consider "moral" or allow us to achieve a moral status. Moral status would then be the standard by which we choose our actions. It would be all flipped around. Instead of choosing the actions that best promote our lives, we'd be choosing the actions that best promotes our status as moral people.
Now from your posts, it appears it's this second function of morality that you're focusing on. When you say:
Then is it possible to have an act that is in a person's self-interest AND immoral? It appears that you are focusing on the role of moral principle to judge other people (or yourself). But I maintain that moral principles are first and foremost guides to your own life, providing you additional means of making optimal choices. In this role, morality is not about status, but about guiding your choices. And to try to combine these two features (choosing and judging) would lead to judgment being primary, and choices being selected for the sake of the judgment. This is how people can suggest that it is moral to act against your rational self-interest, and immoral to act for your rational self interest. The two functions are confused.
And as I pointed out before, there's a good reason why there is this confusion. Morality is traditionally viewed as a means of moral judgment. It is not viewed as a means of choosing your actions, except to the extent you want to achieve a moral status. Traditional morality tells you all kinds of things you shouldn't do, but when it comes to deciding among all of the rest of the possibilities, it ignores that real human need. That's only the "practical" instead of the "moral". Morality doesn't provide you guidance for how to live. That's viewed as either unimportant or too obvious to be concerned with.
I think this is why there's such confusion about the rapist being "morally justified". It's viewed as saying that he should be judged by others as being moral, when that's not the case at all. He should be condemned from the beginning! But that's the view of morality as a form of judgment. As a form of choosing, his action is that which promotes his own life. If he were to apply a morality of self-interest, we would have to say that his morality justified it. Only the confusion about the two uses of morality confuse the topic so much.
If you understand these two different roles, and accept that they are different, then you should be able to understand the arguments Bill and I have made. Our focus has always been on the method of choosing, not on judging the status. If you can see that choosing actions comes first, and is based on our capability of surviving, instead of on our "moral status", you can see why our own lives are primary, and abstract principles or methods are simply tools and not ends.
|
|