Eleven articles appear below in which Dr Mark Newbrook challenges "Anonymous" on the topics of
Divine Command, Utilitarianism, the meaning of moral goodness, and the Bible:
CAN GOD MAKE SOMETHING
MORALLY GOOD OR EVIL BY DECREE?
(Investigator 177, 2017 November)
Comment on final paragraph of 'Anonymous', 'Corruption', Investigator Magazine 176, p 49
I
would argue that even if God exists his 'guidance' cannot help
here. As I have said before, contrary to the assumptions of many
believers there appears to be no secure grounding for ethics even
within a religious world-view. Either a) the statement that what
God says is morally good or bad is thereby to be deemed morally good or
bad is a tautology, a matter of definition, with which those with other
meta-ethical views might legitimately disagree ("That's not what we
mean by 'moral'"), or b) treating God's statements/commands on morality
as correct and thus as binding involves assessing them against an
independent standard of good and evil. The notion that God could
actually 'make' something moral or immoral by decree appears to embody
a category error.
Mark Newbrook
MORAL GOODNESS
Anonymous
(Investigator 178, 2018 January)
Mark Newbrook writes:
I would argue that even if God exists … there appears to be no secure grounding for ethics even within a religious world-view.
Either
a) the statement that what God says is morally good or bad is thereby
to be deemed morally good or bad is a tautology… or b) treating God's
statements/commands on morality as correct and thus as binding involves
assessing them against an independent standard of good and evil. (#177,
p. 4)
I agree with Mark Newbrook and base my agreement with him on the Bible.
The
Bible does not offer a definition of "good" (or of other moral words)
that explains what all good actions have in common to identify them as
good. The Bible is also correct in not offering such a definition, for
the following reason:
Suppose
the Bible defined a "good action" as, for example, "Any action that
saves a person's life." This definition would be refuted by cases of
frail elderly persons getting operations they don't want because the
operations won't cure them, merely prolong the dying process.
Whatever definition of "good" we might think of, situations can be imagined where the defined "good":
• Either becomes something unwanted, in effect "evil",
• Or fails to include actions everyone considers "good".
Biblical position
The biblical position is analogous to a parent who tells his child, "Be good and stay off the road when you play."
The
child might not be aware that an unexpected speeding car can injure him
but the parent knows this and has it in mind. The parent's decree is
justified by his greater knowledge. The child will also be motivated to
obey, although not fully understanding the reason for the decree,
because he knows his parent cares about him.
The
Book of Proverbs repeatedly mentions various benefits that generally
follow if we base our conduct on the proverbs. The benefits include
longer life, better health, prosperity, peaceful relationships, respect
from peers, contentment, and success in one's goals.
These
are consequences most people would consider "good". Yet most people
ignore the proverbs because they don't know about them or about the
potential benefits. Others know at least some of the proverbs but lack
the motivation to obey.
The idea that humans need to rely on God to make right decisions first appears in Genesis 3 where we read:
The
woman said to the serpent, "We may eat of the fruit of the trees in the
garden; but God said, 'You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that
is in the middle of the garden, nor shall you touch it, or you shall
die.'"
But
the serpent said to the woman, "You shall not die, for God knows that
when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God,
knowing good and evil." (3:2-5)
The
rest of the Bible can be viewed as a record of humans inventing their
own standards in ignorance of God and suffering for it. Genesis 19 —
the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah — is a hint of what human
rejection of God will mean for the entire world thousands of years
later.
Put
concisely, it is not God's decree by itself that makes something
morally good, but God's decree based on His superior knowledge of what
benefits humans, which humans often cannot work out for themselves and
may lack motivation to follow if they do work it out.
Rejoinder to Anonymous, 'Moral Goodness',
Investigator Magazine 178, pp 17-18
Mark Newbrook
(Investigator 179, 2018 March)
Anonymous responded to my short piece on p 4 of Investigator Magazine 177 in reply to his own earlier material.
Anonymous
is very clear in this article, and his earlier use of the term guidance
with respect to God's pronouncements makes more sense in the light of
his comments here. The (initially surprising) fact that he agrees with
what I said in Investigator Magazine
177 arises from his very unusual interpretation of metaethics from a
Christian standpoint. In my experience, thoughtful Christians very
generally accept the view that God actually creates moral truths, i.e.
makes actions (etc.) morally good or bad by decree. This stance might
appear, prima facie, to be preferable to both Position a) and Position
b) as specified by me (both of which are unacceptable to Christians);
but Anonymous and I agree that it does not hold up (in my own view, it
embodies a category error).
As
Anonymous says, the Bible does not itself explicitly offer or endorse
any particular metaethical theory; thus this is a matter of
interpretation, generalising across specific Biblical passages (and
then deciding whether or not one accepts the theory one finds is
implied by the text as a whole).
Anonymous'
view is that God's decrees about morality are not 'performative' (as if
they really did create moral truths) but merely 'informative'; God,
with his superior knowledge and wisdom, reports to us on independently
existing matters of fact. These matters of fact are not themselves
genuinely ethical facts existing outside of God's will (as in my
Position b), which Christians would struggle to accept, to say the
least); they are matters of benefit (advantage). Although he is
sometimes reported as presenting his decrees as genuinely moral in
character, God actually tells us to do X and not to do Y because
obeying these commands will confer advantages upon us. (God might
be criticised in this context as duplicitous!)
This
position has some similarities with the metaethical theory known as
'utilitarianism'. Utilitarianism is itself a position involving many
issues; but the main issue here is that utilitarianism in its various
forms relates to the consequences of our actions in respect of the
advantage or disadvantage of humanity as a whole, or at any rate to the
consequences of one's actions for others – not to the consequences of
one's own actions for oneself. But the consequences of one's own
actions for oneself must be included here if Anonymous' general
interpretation of ethics in terms of advantage is to hold up, and
indeed Anonymous includes references to self-advantage. And most moral
philosophers (and many other people) would hold, in contrast, that the
consequences of one's own actions for oneself alone – and I realise in
saying this that the notion of 'oneself alone' is compromised somewhat,
even for the single and childless, by the 'welfare state' and other
such institutions where these exist – are one's own business and are
not a legitimate target for moral judgments. The advantage or otherwise
to oneself arising from a given action is one thing; the morality or
otherwise of that action is another – even if it should turn out that
the two sets of actions largely overlap.
Thus,
the metaethical question of the status of ethical precepts per se is
not resolved, or even really addressed, by Anonymous' account. In
my view, his position leaves him with no account of what morality
actually is, or of which acts really are moral or immoral (as opposed
to advantageous or disadvantageous).
Maybe
on this account there is no such thing as an ontologically independent
objective system of ethics per se; this is the position which i)
scientifically-oriented philosophers such as Sam Harris and ii) moral
subjectivists would uphold. However, Harris' position is
philosophically controversial, and the problems associated with moral
subjectivism are well known. And of course Anonymous' own position is
different from both i) and ii) (though closer to i)).
As
noted above, most Christians would surely adopt a very different view
from that of Anonymous here; but naturally that is not to say that they
are right and he wrong. Whatever the strengths or weaknesses of the
metaethical theory attributed by Anonymous to the Bible, that theory
might indeed be what the words of the Bible, properly interpreted,
proclaim.
There
are further problems with this metaethical theory. For example, is it
really the case that one set of general quasi-ethical rules based on
advantage will benefit all? Even within one culture, humans are very
diverse; what goes well for one person (psychologically, for instance)
may not go at all well for another. In addition, some of the reported
decrees of the Christian or Muslim God involve the arbitrary
prohibition of harmless (and in some cases advantageous) acts, such as
the pursuit of knowledge (as in the Eden myth), engaging in consensual
gay sex (even if in a stable loving relationship) and drinking moderate
amounts of beer. In such cases a reasonable person, even a believer,
might prefer (in the continuing absence of a coherent objective basis
for moral rules) to run with the 'pagan' principle 'As long as you harm
no-one else, do as you will', which is itself not wholly trouble-free
but prima facie makes excellent sense. The more arbitrary reported
pronouncements of a deity are, it seems, 'trumped' by this principle
and can thus be ignored (unless they are followed out of sheer fear of
divine retribution on the part of a tyrannical deity, which pace Pascal
is surely an unworthy motive).
My
main point here, however, is (as I said above) that in my view (and I
think in that of many if not most others) the morality (or immorality)
of an action, on the one hand, and the benefit/advantage (or
disadvantage) derived from it, on the other, are conceptually distinct,
and that Anonymous' account of morality is thus incoherent. This is
simply not what I think is meant by terms such as morally good/bad.
DIVINE HELP NEEDED
FOR MORAL GOODNESS
Anonymous
(Investigator 181, 2018 July)
Dr Newbrook, responding to my position on morality, wrote:
Anonymous'
view is that God's decrees about morality are not 'performative' (as if
they really did create moral truths) but merely 'informative'; God,
with his superior knowledge and wisdom, reports to us on independently
existing matters of fact. These matters of fact are not themselves
genuinely ethical facts existing outside of God's will (as in my
Position b), which Christians would struggle to accept, to say the
least); they are matters of benefit (advantage)...
Utilitarianism
is itself a position involving many issues; but the main issue here is
that utilitarianism in its various forms relates to the consequences of
our actions in respect of the advantage or disadvantage of humanity as
a whole, or at any rate to the consequences of one's actions for others
– not to the consequences of one's own actions for oneself. But the
consequences of one's own actions for oneself must be included here if
Anonymous' general interpretation of ethics in terms of advantage is to
hold up....
In my
view, his position leaves him with no account of what morality actually
is, or of which acts really are moral or immoral (as opposed to
advantageous or disadvantageous).
...
the morality (or immorality) of an action, on the one hand, and the
benefit/advantage (or disadvantage) derived from it, on the other, are
conceptually distinct, and that Anonymous' account of morality is thus
incoherent.
RESPONSE
I did
not wish to imply that God's commands benefit only the individuals who
obey them. Commandments advocating generosity and charity, for example,
benefit many others.
Furthermore,
commands that enhance peoples' lives in one type of society can
sometimes kill them in another type. For example, the prohibition on
idol worship sometimes got Christians who obeyed it in ancient Rome
executed. Important benefits came later when idol worship declined and
this in turn promoted the coming of modern science.
Individuals
who rejected idolatry therefore set an example that would benefit
humankind long after their own deaths. Benefit for themselves was
initially psychological, the satisfaction of agreeing with the God who
knows best and who would ultimately be vindicated. Any further
advantage to executed Christians depends on the validity of their
belief in the resurrection.
And
here is the crux of the problem, the reason why conclusions in
normative ethics and meta-ethics should upon analysis turn out
inadequate. The reason is that we cannot calculate the future with
accuracy. Utilitarianism, to which my position, as Newbrook notes, has
similarities, relates to the consequences of our actions. But who can
calculate consequences accurately into the future? "Chaos" theory
reveals that tiny events, including seemingly inconsequential
decisions, can over time have huge consequences. Consider renewable
energy from solar power. Augustin Muchot (1825-1912) demonstrated solar
power at the Paris Exhibition in 1878 and used sunlight to convert
water to ice, but his funding was cut because coal was cheap. Today
global warming from overuse of coal and oil has started, and some
countries already have a "heatwave problem". In Russia in 2010 a
heatwave killed 55,000 people (Coghlan 2018) which the people who cut
Muchot's funding failed to foresee.
Our
inability to foresee long-range consequences reduces utilitarianism,
sometimes described as "the decisions that produce the greatest good",
to a platitude.
Relying
on God's "superior knowledge" for guidance on what is best may not
constitute "genuine ethical facts", as Newbrook puts it, but it is
doable whenever "God" supplies the necessary information. I know people
who follow the Bible and have never had any confrontations with the
police and also avoided debt, sexually transmitted disease, gambling,
smoking, illegal drugs and many other problems that reduce the quality
of life.
When I
enrolled to study basic ethics at university my expectation that
students will not learn to distinguish right from wrong was soon
confirmed. The lecturers explained each theory of conduct and quoted
philosophers who advocated it, and then quoted other philosophers who
refuted it. Students who wanted to find out which acts are moral
remained confused.
EVERYONE IGNORANT
Biblical
guidance is often vindicated, as its opposition to idolatry has been,
by its later general acceptance, and by afflictions suffered by
ignoring it.
In
Australia AMP shares: "crashed to a six-year low ... wiping more than
$600 million from its market capitalisation." (May 12-13, 2018) This
occurred because the banking royal commission exposed a
"fees-for-no-service scandal" and 310,000 customers received
$219million in compensation. "Fees for no service" sounds similar to
theft and lies, which are both condemned in the Bible. Executives who
endorsed the practice could have known better by consulting the Bible.
Consider also "corruption" including "bribery" which I discussed in Investigator 173 and now comment further on:
In
1938-1939 Britain and France appeased i.e. bribed Hitler to keep the
peace by giving him Czechoslovakia. From Czechoslovakia Germany
confiscated 7000 tracked armored fighting vehicles. Tucker-Jones (2006)
writing about "Hitler's Great Panzer Heist” says: "At the height of his
military success, over 25% of the German tank fleet was of foreign
origin..." Hitler's ultimate aim was world rule, world domination!
(Bell 2014) Bribery, even huge bribes of giving away whole nations,
does not make bad men good and could in Hitler's case have led to
enslavement of the entire world!
Plenty of people, however, have not yet learned:
The
former president of South Korea was recently sentenced to 24 years in
prison for corruption i.e. "bribery, abuse of power, extortion and
other charges." In Brazil another former president started a 12-year
sentence for receiving bribes.
In
Iraq: "Iraq's leaders have done deals that guarantee most parties a
share of power and its spoils. This has led to corruption and
stagnation, not unity. Jobs are handed out by sect and ethnicity, not
merit, and ministries are plundered. The state is so dirty that many
Iraqis have come to doubt the merits of democracy."
In Afghanistan:
"Afghans paid bribes of nearly $US2.5 billion—worth almost a quarter of
the country's GDP... Bribes were requested and taken by politicians,
prosecutors, tax officers… US officials have long maintained that
public outrage over government corruption and inefficiency has driven
Afghans into the ranks of the insurgents…" (The Australian,
January 21, 2010, p. 10)
The
book Bribes (Noonan 1984) mentions over 100 U.S. judges and legislators
indicted for corruption in the 1970s and U.S. presidents also used to
take bribes, although the Constitution states that the President and
civil officers could be impeached for, "treason, bribery or other high
crimes and misdemeanors."
The
Constitution writers probably included bribery because they knew the
Bible. A review of Noonan's book in Time (February 25, 1985) says:
Bribery
… is a betrayal of the public trust necessary for society's survival.
Beyond that, he sees a theological principle at work: "The imitation of
God lies at the root of the bribery prohibition. God 'does not take
shohadh' the book of Deuteronomy proclaims."
Bribery
has pervaded all human history and reduced the quality of life in all
nations. People who followed the Bible and acted differently rarely got
rewarded. The benefits would come long after their own lifetimes when
biblical principles progressively became part of modern law. In 1977,
for example, the U.S. initiated a "World War on Bribery" — See
Investigator #173.
EVERYONE WRONG
Other
commonly practiced evils include sexual promiscuity, kidnapping, female
genital mutilation, gambling, smoking, dishonesty, tax evasion, child
abuse, illegal drugs use, rape, robbery, dangerous driving, murder,
etc.
McNeil
(1968) wrote: "unreported taxable income is about 7% of the total". The
Bible, however, opposes taxation cheats. The Advertiser in 1984
reported: "...9 p.c., or 462,700 of Australia's households, experienced
a break and enter or a property theft." (December 22, 1984, p. 3) The
Bible, however, condemns burglary and theft. The German Tribune in a
report titled "Legal system paved way for Third Reich" says: "In 1933 a
majority of German judges, public prosecutors and court officials were
quick to accept anti-semitism, exaggerated German nationalism and
obedience to authority. They had arguably paved the way for the Nazi
takeover…" (6 March, 1988, p. 4) The Bible, however, is against
anti-Semitism, "exaggerated nationalism" and unqualified "obedience to
authority". In the USA: "In 2013, 10,076 people died in drunken-driving
crashes... Some 290,000 people were injured by drunks." (Hamill 2015)
The Bible, however, opposes drunkenness.
We could go on and on and discover that no one knows right from wrong.
BIBLE ETHICS
The
Law of Moses has 613 commands which consist of 365 prohibitions and 248
positive commands many starting with "If" or "When" and describing
specific situations. At the centre were the Ten Commandments and two
more — to love "God with your whole heart" and "your neighbor" — which
Jesus called the "greatest" commandments. The other 600 commands showed
how the basic twelve applied within ancient Israel and its setting and
culture.
The
New Testament focuses on the two greatest commands along with qualities
of character and dispositions consistent with them such as compassion,
patience, kindness, joy, generosity, peace, self control, gentleness,
etc. With qualities like these, large numbers of rules become
unnecessary; but without such qualities we could not obey the
incontrovertible "theory of conduct" even if philosophers discovered it.
If the
Bible is trustworthy then the morality of an action and the
benefit/advantage derived from it correlate — imperfectly in the
present world, but 100% considered over eternity.
REFERENCES:
Bell, K. Axis Visions of Victory, World at War, Jun-Jul, 2014, 34-46
Coghlan, A. Extreme heat for Russia, New Scientist, 24 March, 2018, 12
Hamill, D. http://www.pressreader.com/usa/new-york-daily-news/ 20150721/ 281616714059145.pdf
McNeil, A. 1968 World of Crime, Hodder & Stoughton, 103
Noonan, J.T. 1984 Bribes, Macmillan
The Weekend Australian, Another $600m wiped off value, May 12-13, 2018, 20
The Weekend Australian, Ex-president Park gets 24 years in jail, April 7-8, 2018, 14
The Weekend Australian, Iraq has a chance to be normal, March 31-April 1, 2018, 11
Tucker-Jones, A. Military Illustrated, March 2006, 9-15
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustin_Mouchot
Rejoinder to Anonymous, 'Divine Help Needed
for Moral Goodness', Investigator Magazine 180, pp 15-20
(Investigator 182, 2018 September)
Anonymous has not offered a persuasive response to my last article.
I
never said or implied that Anonymous meant that obeying God's commands
benefits only those who obey them. If obeying them were said to
benefit only others, or if only the benefitting of others were seen as
relevant, Anonymous' position might be a prima facie plausible
(utilitarian-type) theory of morality. But in so far as they do
benefit those who obey these commands (in cases where there are no
morally-relevant upshots for others with a legitimate stake in the
issue at hand), they are simply not about morality as normally defined,
but rather about prudence. In my view, Anonymous should stop
talking as if he were discussing morality here – or else he should
offer an entire new definition of the very words/notions ethics and
morality (which others would then be free to accept or reject).
Maybe
Anonymous misunderstood my comment that God's reports to us on
independently existing matters of fact (as per his account) are not
about 'genuinely ethical facts'. His rejoinder that relying on
God's guidance is nevertheless 'doable' misses the point. My comment
concerned the metaphysical status of such facts, if facts they
be. As I have, I think, made clear, in so far as they relate to
the consequences of one's actions for oneself alone they would not be
genuinely ethical in character (on normal definitions of this term; see
above) but merely (intended as) prudential (real meaning: 'You'd better
do X, because you'll be in a better state if you do'). (This says
nothing about whether or not each such recommended action would
actually be 'doable' or, if 'doable', genuinely advantageous to the
individual actor.) And thus Anonymous is indeed left without any
coherent account of what morality actually is, or of which acts really
are moral or immoral (as opposed to advantageous or disadvantageous).
Further:
because they are expressed as having general application rather than
directed at individuals, God's commands (despite his supposed superior
factual knowledge about the world) might in some cases not even be
factually correct in respect of what would benefit some particular
individuals, regarded either as actors or as experiencers of the
actions in question. As I noted, human beings and their
circumstances are surely too varied in such respects for this approach
to work reliably. Even behaviour-patterns identified as 'God's best for
humanity' simply will not work for some. This is why even those who
believe, for example, that God condemns homosexual behaviour as sinful
generally accept that some people are temperamentally unable to live as
heterosexuals. For these people, the option of abstinence – much less
satisfactory for most – will be necessary if they accept these
injunctions and wish not to 'sin'.
I
acknowledge that Anonymous recognises the issue of varied circumstances
as applied to the consequences of actions performed in different
situations and under different human regimes, for example when he makes
his point about the various consequences of rejecting idolatry; but I
am (obviously) not here discussing such cases but rather whether or not
a command of God inherently suits each individual in the sense that
obeying it would benefit her/him.
In any
case, even if God's commands were more sensitive to individual
differences they would still not be about morality in so far as they
related to the effects of actions on the actors themselves as opposed
to others.
I did
not suggest that the tradition of work on normative ethics and
metaethics has yielded adequate solutions to metaethical or general
ethical issues – whether one favours or tries to develop a specifically
utilitarian metaethics or not. (I myself do find some forms of
utilitarianism, seen in the light of the 'pagan' principle to which I
referred, relatively promising in this respect; in my view, Anonymous
is tendentiously overstating his case by regarding utilitarianism as
platitudinous.) Some non-Christian philosophers adopt subjectivist
accounts of morality; some do seek objectivist accounts but simply find
no satisfying solution; some (such as Ayn Rand and Sam Harris) propose
objectivist accounts in non-religious terms but typically without
strong persuasion. And, because of the issues which I have rehearsed in
this exchange and elsewhere, it seems clear that Christianity itself –
either as idiosyncratically interpreted by Anonymous or as interpreted
more generally – provides no valid metaethical principle either.
Its claim to do so does not hold up; the idea that a creator-god is
entitled to lay down 'moral' laws for created beings to obey is, as
Bertrand Russell and many others have observed, incoherent. And on
Anonymous' account Christian 'ethics' is (as noted above) not even
squarely addressing ethical matters as such where it deals with the
effects of actions on the actors themselves as opposed to others.
The
fact that basic metaethical issues remain unsolved – to the confusion
of many beginning ethics/philosophy students (as mentioned by
Anonymous) who are over-optimistically seeking authoritative guidance
as well as theoretical understanding – does not justify the adoption of
a fatally weak religion-grounded 'solution'. (But teachers
obviously should assess each ethical theory discussed, not merely
present it.)
This
is not to deny that people in general would do well to follow many of
the specific recommendations stated or implied in the Bible; and
Anonymous rehearses various examples of this. But thoughtful
unbelievers (or indeed misotheists) can come to each such position on
their own, just as well as believers can. The reported words of God are
not an essential factor in such considerations.
In
addition, Anonymous has not addressed my point that some of the
reported decrees of the Christian (or Muslim) God involve the arbitrary
prohibition of harmless (and in some cases advantageous) acts.
There are also various cases where the Bible, as quoted by Anonymous
here, positively advises us to do things which some of us would regard
as unjustified; for example, some of us hold that income tax is a
counter-productive and indeed a tyrannical institution which should be
replaced by fairer taxes and in the meantime should be resisted as far
as possible. Furthermore, some of God's own reported acts appear far
from ethical; on the Biblical account, he provides us with a very poor
model for moral behaviour, for instance by threatening to punish future
generations for the 'offences' of the current generation.
Furthermore,
many patently evil deeds have been perpetrated in the name of
Christianity over the centuries. It is of course open to Anonymous to
say that the people involved were confused and were not behaving in a
genuinely Christian manner; but the onus is upon him to support this
analysis.
In
fact, thoughtful human beings of good will appear morally superior to
the God of the Bible in many respects. They should rely on their
own moral sense rather than on the Bible.
Anonymous'
closing statement that following the Bible's moral precepts would be
100% effective 'over eternity' is, obviously, only a matter of
doctrine. But he does acknowledge this by beginning his comment
with a conditional clause.
MAKING MORAL GOODNESS DOABLE
Anonymous
(Investigator 183, 2015 November)
INTRODUCTION
In his initial article Dr Newbrook pointed out:
"Either
a) the statement that what God says is morally good or bad is thereby
to be deemed morally good or bad is a tautology… or b) treating God's
statements/commands on morality as correct and thus as binding involves
assessing them against an independent standard of good and evil."
I
agreed and chose "b". I also argued that the "independent
standard" or "standards" (plural) are those that promote
goods or ends such as health, long life, prosperity, peaceful
relationships, knowledge, security, respect from peers, happiness, and
similar.
Conduct
biblically advocated and likely to produce such results include
truthfulness, generosity, tolerance, industry, knowledge, wisdom and
virtue, combined with avoiding idolatry, murder, envy and laziness.
This
makes biblical ethics testable. Finding out, for example, whether
prosperity correlates with knowledge, peace and work becomes a matter
of statistics and observation.
PRUDENCE, BENEFIT, MORAL GOODNESS
I previously argued that:
The Bible does not offer a definition of "good" (or of other moral words)... (#178, p. 17)
Relying
on God's superior knowledge for guidance on what is best may not
constitute "genuine ethical facts", as Newbrook puts it, but it is
doable whenever "God" supplies the necessary information. (#181, p. 16)
Newbrook writes that this "misses the point" and is not coherent because:
My
comment concerned the metaphysical status of such facts, if facts they
be. As I have, I think, made clear, in so far as they relate to
the consequences of one's actions for oneself alone they would not be
genuinely ethical in character (on normal definitions of this term; see
above) but merely (intended as) prudential (real meaning: 'You'd better
do X, because you'll be in a better state if you do')… And thus
Anonymous is indeed left without any coherent account of what morality
actually is, or of which acts really are moral or immoral (as opposed
to advantageous or disadvantageous). (#182)
What does "Coherent" mean? The Standard English Desk Dictionary says: "Cohering; consistent; not rambling or inconsequent."
However,
I'm not trying to define "moral goodness" since the Bible doesn't
either. What the Bible supplies are standards which benefit oneself and
if widely adopted also the wider society and the future.
Moral
goodness, prudence and conduct that benefits oneself or others, are not
necessarily mutually exclusive since behavior can exhibit just one of
these features or all three, or combinations of two. [Think of three
intersecting circles where one circle represents moral goodness,
another prudence, and the third conduct that benefits.]
GET PRACTICAL
If a
person behaves by standards such as listed in my Introduction would
Newbrook accuse him of not being "a moral person"? Alternatively, if
another person kills, lies, rapes and lives off crime would Newbrook
call him a "moral person"?
Here,
the Bible's discussion about faith and works is helpful. Some 1st
century Christians concluded that they have "faith" and therefore works
or conduct is irrelevant. However, James 2:18 says: "Show me your faith
apart from your works, and I by my works will show you my faith." (2:18)
We can paraphrase this, "Show me your morality apart from anything you do, and I will show you my morality by what I do."
One of
my reference books at university was Human Conduct (Hospers, 1972).
This book has 450 pages of densely packed analysis, yet ultimately left
students baffled regarding how to conduct themselves.
I'm
not trying to provide a coherent account of "what morality actually is"
— I'll let Newbrook do that. I suggest that Biblical standards are
prudential and beneficial, and practical because they're empirical and
doable, and by their nature should often coincide with "what morality
actually is".
PEOPLE EVERYWHERE WRONG
Fang
and Casadevall (2013) discuss various types of cheating such as
performance-enhancement drugs, financial scams, and fabricating the
results of experiments, and argue that cheating is harmful:
Despite
its ubiquity, cheating can be quite detrimental to individuals and to
society. Cheaters are stigmatized and may lose their jobs. Resources
are squandered on fraudulent work. Individuals who play by the rules
are deprived of rewards that they deserve. There is also collateral
damage... Dishonest scientific research can misdirect other
investigators, lead to misguided public policy and harm patients when
clinical decisions are based on faulty information...
Even
single acts of dishonesty can have serious and lasting consequences.
One famous example is a retracted 1998 article in the Lancet ... that
suggested a link among autism, bowel disease and vaccination [and]
helped to fuel the modern antivaccine movement that ... leads to cases
of infection that could have been prevented....
The
Bible doesn't say "Don't cheat" but does oppose lies, greed and deceit
without which cheating is hardly possible. Newspaper reports of cheats
appear virtually every day. For example:
False,
stolen identities costing 1bn a year — Identity fraud is costing the
nation [Australia] more than $1 billion a year… (The Advertiser,
November 15, 2003, p. 50)
Dentists
put the bite on Germany — Almost 500 dental surgeries have been accused
of fitting cheaply manufactured Chinese dentures and passing them off
as high-quality German products… (The Weekend Australian, September
11-12, 2004, p. 17)
Electricity
theft is a problem in Brazil ... some nations see as much as 40 per
cent of their supply siphoned off... (New Scientist, 30 September,
2017, p. 16)
A
South Australian software designer who stole the identity of dead
children was among welfare cheats from whom the Federal Government has
recouped $1.4 billion over the past 18 months. (Smethurst 2018)
Former
El Salvador president Tony Saca pleaded guilty yesterday to embezzling
hundreds of millions of dollars in public funds during his 2004-9
tenure. (The Weekend Australian, August 11-12, 2018, p. 11)
China's
second largest producer of vaccines, Changsheng Bio-tech cut costs by
using expired materials ... and faked the results of tests. It's
estimated the company produced almost half a million substandard
vaccines ... given to hundreds of thousands of babies. (Korporaal 2018)
The
Supreme Court of Queensland last week found directors of MPS had
breached 217 laws and illegally shifted $147.5m of investor funds, then
forged and backdated documents to cover up the crimes. (Klan 2017)
CHANGE OF "HEART"
Jeremiah predicted:
The
days are surely coming says the LORD, when I will make a new covenant
with the house of Israel and the house of Judah. It will not be like
the covenant that I made with their ancestors...
I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts...
(Jeremiah 31; Hebrews 10)
The
New Testament directly condemns lies, theft, immorality, murder, and
idolatry. Otherwise the emphasis is on acquiring motivations,
dispositions and character-traits such as kindness, hospitality,
honesty, compassion, wisdom, gentleness, love (Greek: "Agape"), peace,
generosity, truth, forgiveness, gratitude, humility, etc. Hebrews 10:22
refers to "our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience" and
James writes "Cleanse your hands, you sinners, and purify your
hearts..."
People
like this would be morally excellent without studying "theories of
conduct" such as egoism, hedonism, utilitarianism and whatever, because
their "pure hearts" guided by rules that bring benefit would
demonstrate if not "what morality actually is" certainly something
close.
REFERENCES:
Fang, F.C. & Casadevall, A. Why We Cheat, Scientific American Mind, May/June2013, 31-37
Klan, A. The Weekend Australian, June 17-18, 2017, p. 7
Korporaal, G. The Weekend Australian, August 18-19, 2018, p. 12
Smethurst, A. Nabbed: Bludgers who pilfered $1.4bn, Sunday Mail, February 11, 2018, p. 2
Rejoinder to Anonymous, 'Making Moral Goodness Doable',
Investigator Magazine 183, pp 50-54
(Investigator 185, 2019 March)
I think we are getting somewhere at last!
What
Anonymous is talking about, in so far as it involves the effects of
one's actions on oneself, is not what I (and, I believe, most others)
would call morality/ethics. I regard the promotion of one's own
well-being as a matter of prudence, not of morality/ethics.
On the
other hand, in so far as Anonymous' theme involves the effects of one's
actions on others it is about what I would call morality/ethics. Thus I
would agree with Anonymous by answering 'No' to the second question in
his section headed 'Get practical' (p 51), and also to the first
question in so far as the behaviour in question affects other persons.
Anonymous'
notion of ethics is thus broader than mine, in that it includes
prudence (self-interest). His notion of ethics is one which was totally
unfamiliar to me before this present exchange of views, despite my wide
reading etc. in this area. And, even though I think I have now grasped
what it is, I still find it bizarre; it runs against my
educated-native-speaker grasp of the words morality and ethics.
If I
had understood this earlier there would have been much less to say. But
I will not myself adopt Anonymous' notion of morality/ethics; from my
standpoint, it is confusingly broad and worse. If Anonymous and I
discuss this further, we will need to bear in mind our divergent uses
of these terms, or perhaps use prefixes or the like (A-ethics vs
N-ethics?).
Anonymous
did indeed miss my point when he discussed 'doability', probably
because he and I have such different understandings of what can and
cannot be regarded as a matter of morality/ethics. But I did not say
that this discussion, specifically, was 'not coherent', as he suggests.
And, if one could accept Anonymous' own view of what can and cannot be
regarded as a matter of morality/ethics, his general account of
morality/ethics (which was the target of my comment about coherence)
would be arguably coherent – and his discussion of 'doability' more
relevant. (Given my own view, his account of morality/ethics would
indeed be incoherent in part, not in the sense of the word coherent
which he rehearses but in the more relevant sense that it would embody
a category error.)
I
never suggested that the same act might not be both moral (which on
most accounts usually involves benefitting others or at least not
harming them) and prudential (for oneself). But on my view the prudence
is a separate thing from the morality (which Anonymous in his
Venn-diagram conceptualisation described on p 51 appears to
acknowledge) and prudence is certainly no part of the definition of
morality; and many acts might have one feature and not the other (again
as Anonymous appears to acknowledge on p 51).
I am
now confused by Anonymous' treatment in this description on p 51 of
morality/ethics and benefit as also overlapping, rather than
equivalent; but I will not press that point here.
A few points remain to be addressed:
On
Anonymous' interpretation of the Bible (p 51), it does not try to
define 'moral goodness'. But does he think that it actually says what
it is doing when it deals with ethical matters? I suggest that it
does not. So: is he so confident that his own interpretation of the
Bible's meta-ethical approach to morality/ethics – which, as I have
noted, is a most unusual interpretation of morality/ethics, to say the
least – really does represent the thrust of its message, as understood
by generalising across the individual cases recounted?
The
question of 'what morality actually is' (p 52) is ambiguous: are we
talking of meta-ethics (the metaphysical status of ethical statements),
or of general principles at a less abstract level which determine
whether particular acts are morally good or bad? (The discussion
on p 54 does not resolve this ambiguity.)
Although
I now accept that Anonymous has an account (a near-utilitarian one) of
what morality is and of which general kinds of acts are moral or
immoral as far as the consequences of one's actions for other persons
is concerned, his account still appears to require the addition of more
specific ethical principles aimed at the resolution of morally
contentious issues such as the acceptability or otherwise of abortion.
Those who find themselves in doubt on such issues (for Christian
believers, this arises especially where no specific and unequivocal
injunction is provided in the Bible) will find the need for
ethical/meta-ethical theories, which Anonymous (over-optimistically, I
suggest) regards as unnecessary for the 'pure-hearted' (p 54) – or else
they must be willing to remain in doubt.
In
this context: Is Anonymous saying on pp 53-54 that the 'pure-hearted'
(how defined?) will never disagree on morality and will always behave
with moral excellence (as judged by him)? This position is very
strongly-stated; can it be justified?
Anonymous
has still not addressed my points about: a) the fact that obedience to
God's commands (as reported in the Bible or extrapolated from same)
would not appear advantageous for all, b) the fact that thoughtful
non-Christians, including unbelievers or indeed misotheists, can
readily come on their own to moral stances similar to those which he
cites the Bible as endorsing, c) the fact that some of God's reported
decrees involve the arbitrary prohibition of harmless acts, d) the fact
that some of God's own reported acts appear far from ethical – all of
which undermine his God-based account of morality/ethics.
DIVINE COMMAND and UTILITARIANISM
Anonymous
(Investigator 186, 2019, March)
In Investigator 176, Dr Newbrook criticized the ethical position known as "Divine Command":
Either
a) the statement that what God says is morally good or bad is thereby
to be deemed morally good or bad is a tautology, a matter of definition
… or b) treating God's statements/commands on morality as correct and
thus as binding involves assessing them against an independent standard
of good and evil.
I accepted "b" — God's commands conform to "an independent standard of good and evil":
The
Book of Proverbs repeatedly mentions various benefits that generally
follow if we base our conduct on the proverbs. The benefits include
longer life, better health, prosperity, peaceful relationships, respect
from peers, contentment, and success in one's goals. (#178)
UTILITARIANISM
Newbrook noted the similarity with Utilitarianism:
Anonymous'
view is that God's decrees about morality are not 'performative' (as if
they really did create moral truths) but merely 'informative'; God,
with his superior knowledge and wisdom, reports to us on independently
existing matters of fact...
I agreed, and explained that intended benefits are not always solely for oneself nor realized fully in the present life:
Furthermore,
commands that enhance peoples' lives in one type of society can
sometimes kill them in another type. For example, the prohibition on
idol worship sometimes got Christians who obeyed it in ancient Rome
executed. Important benefits came later when idol worship declined and
this in turn promoted the coming of modern science.
Individuals
who rejected idolatry therefore set an example that would benefit
humankind long after their own deaths. Benefit for themselves was
initially psychological, the satisfaction of agreeing with the God who
knows best and who would ultimately be vindicated. Any further
advantage to executed Christians depends on the validity of their
belief in the resurrection.
And
here is the crux of the problem, the reason why conclusions in
normative ethics and meta-ethics should upon analysis turn out
inadequate. The reason is that we cannot calculate the future with
accuracy. (#181)
By
these words I implied that my position is a variation of Utilitarianism
in which Divine command is "informative" and motivational. It is
"Informative" because it informs people on what they often cannot
calculate, and "motivational" because when they recognize benefits from
some commands they can feel confident (by inductive inference) of
further benefits from other commands.
ADDITIONAL POINTS
After further discussion in #182 and #184 Newbrook wrote in #185:
Although
I now accept that Anonymous has an account (a near-utilitarian one) of
what morality is and of which general kinds of acts are moral or
immoral as far as the consequences of one's actions for other persons
is concerned, his account still appears to require the addition of more
specific ethical principles aimed at the resolution of morally
contentious issues such as the acceptability or otherwise of abortion.
Those who find themselves in doubt on such issues (for Christian
believers, this arises especially where no specific and unequivocal
injunction is provided in the Bible) will find the need for
ethical/meta-ethical theories, which Anonymous (over-optimistically, I
suggest) regards as unnecessary for the 'pure-hearted' (p 54) – or else
they must be willing to remain in doubt.
In
this context: Is Anonymous saying on pp 53-54 that the 'pure-hearted'
(how defined?) will never disagree on morality and will always behave
with moral excellence (as judged by him)? This position is very
strongly-stated; can it be justified?
Anonymous
has still not addressed my points about: a) the fact that obedience to
God's commands (as reported in the Bible or extrapolated from same)
would not appear advantageous for all, b) the fact that thoughtful
non-Christians, including unbelievers or indeed misotheists, can
readily come on their own to moral stances similar to those which he
cites the Bible as endorsing, c) the fact that some of God's reported
decrees involve the arbitrary prohibition of harmless acts, d) the fact
that some of God's own reported acts appear far from ethical – all of
which undermine his God-based account of morality/ethics. (#185)
The
"pure hearted" — who strive to do good out of a caring disposition —
may still, due to differences in knowledge and experience, disagree.
Furthermore, hypothetical situations can be imagined in which evil
cannot be avoided. For example, suppose a student fails an exam and
feeling peeved confronts his lecturer with a rapid-fire gun and the
ultimatum: "If you kill one other lecturer I'll let everyone else live;
if you refuse you will all die."
When
no "unequivocal injunction is provided in the Bible", but circumstances
make decision necessary, believers might have to estimate for
themselves the relative utility of choices confronting them. I still
call this "Divine command" instead of "Utilitarianism" because the
intention behind Divine command, i.e. to maximize the long-term good,
is retained, and the Bible still gets first consideration and
independent assessment comes second.
Regarding queries a), b), c) and d):
(a)
Obedience to "Divine command" won't maximize benefits in a demonstrable
way on every occasion. Sometimes we have to trust the command and
inductively infer its long-term beneficial role. We previously
considered cases, such as idol worship and corruption, where Divine
command requires believers to set an example that may get them hurt but
contributes to social changes that will later enrich the world. The
full benefits to the example-setters depend on the Bible being correct
about judgment, salvation and eternity.
(b)
Unbelievers often conform to biblical morality unknowingly, having
worked it out themselves. (Romans 2:15) The downside is that
self-reliance will also get many important things wrong.
(c)
Commands that prohibit what seems harmless could instead be ahead of
their time (as with the prohibitions on idolatry and corruption). They
seem arbitrary because scientific discovery may not have caught up with
God's greater wisdom.
(d)
What about when God's actions appear "far from ethical"? This was
considered years ago when Dr Potter and Mr Straughen brought it up. The
answer lay in considering broader contexts wherein "God" prevents
greater evils than the evils suffered.
IS DIVINE COMMAND FOR EVERYONE?
Another question by Newbrook not yet answered is:
There
are further problems with this metaethical theory. For example, is it
really the case that one set of general quasi-ethical rules based on
advantage will benefit all? Even within one culture, humans are very
diverse; what goes well for one person (psychologically, for instance)
may not go at all well for another. (#179)
The New Testament is addressed to believers who ideally undergo conversion and teaching with the result:
For the love of God is this, that we obey his commandments. And his commandments are not burdensome... (I John 5:3)
Divine
command overlaps with laws enacted by Parliament. The main difference
is that the Bible is often more demanding than secular law. This is
evident in matters of sexual morality. The Bible opposes all unmarried
sex, whereas Western secular laws permit almost everything except rape,
sexual harassment, sexual enslavement, and child abuse. Nevertheless,
although these remaining secular proscriptions are few and apply to
everyone, they are flouted by people in hundreds of millions, causing
much suffering.
EFFECTIVE
To
demonstrate potential benefits of Divine command I packed previous
articles with reports of people who ignored the Bible and caused harm.
Here are some more:
•
Sunday Mail: "Facebook culls 2m bully posts...two million abusive
posts in three months alone." (November 18, 2018, p. 22)
•
Sunday Mail: "More than 12,000 scams have been reported to
Scamwatch by South Australians in the past 11 months." (December 9,
2018, p. 14)
•
Sunday Mail: "... identity fraud is on the rise and one in four
Australians have had their personal information misused." (December 30,
2018, p. 9)
•
Sunday Mail: In 2016, "one in six Australians put themselves or
others at risk of harm while under the influence of alcohol." (January
20, 2019, p. 21)
• "45 per cent of principals were threatened with violence in 2018, and 37 per cent were attacked..."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-02-27/school-principals-attacked-by-students,-parents-says-acu-report/10850336
•
"women 53% (5 million) [and] men 25% (or 2.2 million) had
experienced sexual harassment during their lifetime."
https://www.humanrights.gov.au/our-work/sex-discrimination/ projects/sexual-harassment.htm
•
Sunday Mail: "Impact of Cybercrime... $45 billion+ the cost to
Australian businesses in 2017." (April 28, 2019, p. 2)
ONE MORE POINT
Newbrook
wrote: "The advantage or otherwise to oneself arising from a given
action is one thing; the morality or otherwise of that action is
another – even if it should turn out that the two sets of actions
largely overlap..." (#179)
To
divorce the intended consequences of conduct, whether benefits or
injuries, from the notion of morality, would let us (similar to the
Nazi leaders and ISIS) ascribed decency and morality to ourselves
merely for acting on a flawed and deadly ideology.
If Dr
Newbrook can amend his understanding so as to regard law-abiding people
who consistently act in ways generally considered good and beneficial,
to be moral people acting morally we'd be in agreement.
Rejoinder to Anonymous, 'Divine Command and Utilitarianism',
Investigator Magazine 186, pp 24-25, 28-30
Mark Newbrook
(Investigator 187, 2019 July)
Apart
from caveats regarding the notion 'law-abiding' (not all laws deserve
to be obeyed), it would obviously be difficult to disagree with
Anonymous' final paragraph (p 30). And I do not have to 'amend' my
understanding of anything in order to agree with him at this point; I
myself already agree with him. The fact that Anonymous imagines that I
might have to amend my views in order to agree with him suggests that
he has still failed to grasp my most major point. And this
interpretation of his words is supported by his totally irrelevant
reference to the Nazis and ISIS just above.
I repeat my main point: as I understand the notion of morality/ethics,
one's actions can be judged in ethical terms in respect of their
consequences for others (and indeed, as Anonymous indicates, these
consequences cannot be 'divorced' from such judgments); but the
consequences of one's actions for oneself alone, or indeed for any
other competent adults who specifically seek or welcome these
consequences, cannot be judged in ethical terms. Ethics is irrelevant
to them; in these respects one's actions cannot be regarded as either
moral or immoral, and one can be under no moral obligation to alter
one's behaviour or to seek 'forgiveness' for it.
If Anonymous does not accept this, then he and I really are working
with different notions of what counts as morality; and I for my part am
not willing to adopt his wider notion, as it clashes with my
philosophically-informed native-speaker understanding of the concept of
morality. We can still discuss these matters, but each of us needs to
bear in mind this basic difference of conceptualisation and usage.
On my
understanding of these things, I therefore stand by my view that
Anonymous' version of Christian meta-ethics has nothing legitimate to
say about the morality of actions inasmuch as they concern oneself or
one's willing associates alone. God may tell us, for example, that two
unmarried people should not engage in consensual sexual activity, but
on Anonymous' account this is purely a piece of advice offered on the
basis of prudence as perceived by God (involving factors which exist
independently of the pronouncements of God). We may or may not (see
below) come to grief if we disregard God's words in such cases –
through lack of interest in his words, lack of concern for the
consequences of our actions for ourselves, or considered disagreement.
But this 'disobedience' cannot be deemed immoral, and there can be no
legitimate punishment for 'disobedience' to such pronouncements (as
there might possibly be if the pronouncements genuinely had an ethical
character, as they do have to the extent that one's actions affect
others).
I
remain unsure, to say the least, as to whether Anonymous'
interpretation of the message of the Bible is actually correct in this
respect. The wording used in the Biblical texts generally suggests
moral imperative (often with threats of punishment), not prudential
advice (God is usually quoted as saying, in so many words, 'You must
[not] do X' rather than 'You'd better [not] do X'). And that is
certainly the most popular view of Christian meta-ethics. Anonymous
might think of seeking to defend his alternative interpretation, and
should certainly be more 'up-front' in acknowledging the difference
between his ideas and those of most Christians.
Anonymous
continues (p 24) to discuss the disadvantages which may arise in some
particular societies from obedience to Biblical moral rules – but, as I
made clear, this point (while of course valid) is unconnected with my
argument that obedience to Biblical moral rules is, as it seems,
inherently un-prudential/disadvantageous for some people, because their
temperament and feelings clash with these rules. This was my
point (a) in my previous piece, in Investigator 185.
Neither
is the threat of future punishment (failing to obtain salvation, etc.),
as is implied by Anonymous on p 28, relevant to my point here. In
any case, on my view (as noted) such punishment would itself be an
illegitimate and indeed an immoral act on God's part. (The whole idea
of a further life after physical death, where salvation might apply if
obtained, is of course heavily disputed. For those who reject it,
such as almost all atheists, consideration of the meta-ethical and
ethical points in question here must be restricted to physical
life. Naturally, such people might conceivably be mistaken in
rejecting the idea of life after physical death, but as far as
(meta-)ethics is concerned they can only be expected to 'run with'
their existing world-view unless it is shown to be mistaken – and even
then they might be uninterested on principle in modifying their
behaviour in the hope of salvation or the like; see below on
'misotheism'.)
On
p 28 Anonymous urges us to trust God's 'commands' in managing our own
lives, but he gives us no adequate moral or even prudential grounds for
doing so in cases where these commands appear to be arbitrary and where
it seems unlikely that we will come to grief by behaving as we
do. What harm is actually done to us – or indeed to others who
are influenced by our behaviour – if we worship idols (stupid as that
might be), or engage in consensual non-marital sexual activity with
people of the same or the opposite sex? In this and in some other
such cases, the Biblical rules are indeed 'more demanding', as
Anonymous states on p 29 – but the extra demands often appear not to be
justified, and indeed are burdensome to many (contrary to the quotation
provided). And we cannot reasonably be 'obliged' to give up our
harmless activities (gay sex for example) and behave all our lives in
ways which do not suit us at all, merely so that we can set an example
that supposedly contributes in a general and indirect way to the
'enrichment' of the world.
As
far as my point (b) is concerned: on p 28 Anonymous acknowledges that
unbelievers can arrive on their own at moral stances similar to those
enjoined by the Bible, but claims that they will also 'get many
important things wrong'. It will be clear from my previous para
that in my own view unbelievers, who deny the authority of the Bible on
such matters, are in general terms just as likely to get things right
where the Bible gets them wrong, notably where the Bible makes
unjustified demands. For example, they may arrive at the 'liberal' or
'pagan' stance that all actions are morally acceptable unless they
actually inflict harm on others or on the world; and this stance
appears to have much in its favour.
On my
point (c): Anonymous' claim (pp 28-29) amounts to no more than special
pleading. Again, he gives us no grounds for believing that future
scientific discoveries will support the Bible's injunctions against
acts which currently appear harmless.
On my
point (d): again, Anonymous gives us no grounds for believing that God
prevents greater evils by himself acting in ways which appear
immoral. In any case, an omnipotent God could surely prevent
these greater evils in other, non-harmful ways; on Anonymous' account,
he clearly chooses not to do so. And what good can possibly be
achieved, for example, by 'punishing' innocent people for what their
now-deceased ancestors did?
All in
all, my points (a)-(d) stand as undermining Anonymous' God-based
account of morality/ethics. (But I am glad that Anonymous now
acknowledges (p 28) the need for believers to arrive at their own moral
judgements in cases, especially complex cases, where they cannot obtain
unequivocal injunctions from the Bible.)
It is
no secret that I myself am an atheist, and I am glad that I find no
reason to believe in a God resembling the God of Anonymous, whom I
judge to be self-indulgent (if he existed, he would have had no need to
create beings in the human condition), immoral and tyrannical. If
I did come to believe that such a God exists, I would become a
'misotheist' (a 'God-hater') and would adopt and advocate a policy of
rebellion against God. But I am glad that Anonymous and I,
despite our very profound differences on this front, can discuss these
present matters in a rational and civilised manner.
DIVINE COMMAND and UTILITARIANISM CONTINUED
Anonymous
(Investigator 189, 2019 November)
EUTYPHRO DILEMMA
I'll begin by recalling what's gone before.
In the
ancient Greek dialogue Eutyphro, Socrates asks: "Is that which is
pious, pious because the gods love it, or do the gods love that which
is pious because it is pious?"
We can replace:
• pious with morally good or morally right, and
• gods with God or society, and
• love with command or approve
We
then get the question: "Is something morally right because God commands
it, or does God command what is morally right because it is morally
right?"
In Investigator #177 Dr Mark Newbrook explained:
Either
a) the statement that what God says is morally good or bad is thereby
to be deemed morally good or bad is a tautology, a matter of
definition, with which those with other meta-ethical views might
legitimately disagree ("That's not what we mean by 'moral'), or b)
treating God's statements/commands on morality as correct and thus as
binding involves assessing them against an independent standard of good
and evil.
Both Newbrook and I rejected the first alternative:
In my
experience, thoughtful Christians very generally accept the view that
God actually creates moral truths, i.e. makes actions (etc.) morally
good or bad by decree ... but Anonymous and I agree that it does not
hold up (in my own view, it embodies a category error). (#179)
The
second alternative, that "God commands what is morally right because it
is morally right", implies a method of assessing moral rightness
independently of God.
INDEPENDENT ASSESSMENT
Although Newbrook and I had agreed, disagreement followed.
The
notion of moral rightness that I presented is that biblical standards —
now using "biblical standards" as equivalent to "God's commands" — are
such as to generally result in benefits if obeyed. The "benefits"
include health, long life, respect from peers, prosperity, peace,
happiness, contentment, etc, and ultimately "salvation" and eternal
life.
Newbrook correctly noted that this is a form of Utilitarianism which Dictionary of Philosophy (2005) defines and explains:
...a
moral theory according to which an action is right if and only if it
conforms to the principal of utility... An action conforms to the
principal of utility if and only if its performance will be more
productive of pleasure or happiness, or more preventative of pain or
unhappiness, than any alternative. Instead of 'pleasure' and
'happiness', the word 'welfare' is also apt: the value of the
consequences of an action is determined solely by the welfare of
individuals. (p. 636)
Humans,
I argued, often cannot work out the actions that will benefit
themselves and others, or how to balance immediate benefits against
future benefits. God's commands, therefore, are
informative/educational, telling us what we otherwise have to guess.
An
example is the Bible's story about Eden. The first humans were
commanded to not eat from a particular tree because eating from it
would kill them. (Genesis 2 & 3) The command was utilitarian (for
human benefit), and informative (since the humans could not have worked
it out), and it was, according to Genesis, God's command.
My
replies to Newbrook cited many newspaper reports about people who acted
contrary to God's commands and ended in prison, in poverty, in despair
or dead, and/or their victims did. I picked mainly people of high
position and education to show that even superior people cannot
consistently work out and follow beneficial standards.
SOME MORE REPLIES
I failed to convince Newbrook that biblical standards are beneficial, therefore finished my article in #186 in general terms:
If Dr
Newbrook can amend his understanding so as to regard law-abiding people
who consistently act in ways generally considered good and beneficial,
to be moral people acting morally we'd be in agreement.
Newbrook at last found disagreement "difficult":
Apart
from caveats regarding the notion 'law-abiding' (not all laws deserve
to be obeyed), it would obviously be difficult to disagree with
Anonymous' final paragraph (p 30). And I do not have to 'amend' my
understanding of anything in order to agree with him at this point...
(#187)
Newbrook next repeated his "main point":
...one's
actions can be judged in ethical terms in respect of their consequences
for others ... but the consequences of one's actions for oneself alone,
or indeed for other competent adults who specifically seek or welcome
these consequences, cannot be judged in ethical terms. Ethics is
irrelevant to them; in these respects one's actions cannot be regarded
as either moral or immoral, and one can be under no moral obligation to
alter one's behaviour or to seek 'forgiveness' for it...
And we
cannot reasonably be 'obliged' to give up our harmless activities (gay
sex for example) and behave all our lives in ways which do not suit us
at all, merely so that we can set an example that supposedly
contributes in a general and indirect way to the 'enrichment' of the
world...
Newbrook
is saying that behavior that does not hurt others and the consequences
of which the competent doer welcomes for himself is OK — it's neither
moral nor immoral. He implies that some biblical commands prohibit what
is harmless and are therefore arbitrary:
However,
my standpoint that God's commands are utilitarian implies that the
consequences of flouting those commands are indeed hurtful in the long
run, and if foreseen by "competent adults" might not be welcomed.
Newbrook adds:
Anonymous ... gives
us no grounds that future scientific discoveries will support the
Bible's injunctions against acts which currently seem harmless.
Our
disagreement at this stage is empirical. Settling it involves examining
biblical commands one at a time for their likely effect on health,
longevity, prosperity, soundness of mind, and the future of
civilization and planet Earth.
Consider
immorality: There's emotional trauma; negative impacts on people's
assets; and 1.5 billion cases of sexually transmitted disease per year.
Worse consequences were prevented by antibiotics but that could change
if "superbugs" evolve faster than science discovers methods to destroy
them. When AIDS became widespread it killed immoral people including
practicing homosexuals by millions.
Consider
bribery: That bribery in politics, justice and commerce slows the
economic growth of nations became knowledge in the 20th century. ("The
Bible Versus Corruption" #173) Now that this is known it supports the
Bible's prior injunctions against bribery as being injunctions for our
benefit.
Both
immorality and bribery have inflicted horrific financial loss on all
nations. This brings up the question of "opportunity costs" — wealth
wasted on bad conduct means lost opportunities because it is
unavailable for other things. On a worldwide scale the costs of evil
conduct, or what the Bible calls evil, may leave the human race unready
to prevent climate change or deflect a world-threatening asteroid. Both
immorality and bribery therefore are harmful in ways people didn't even
anticipate.
Confirming
biblical ethics sometimes requires generalizing from past to future
i.e. reasoning inductively. The Bible has often turned out correct in
its moral, scientific and historical statements, from which we can
inductively anticipate more confirmations in the future.
Newbrook points out:
The
wording used in the Biblical texts generally suggests moral imperatives
(often with threats of punishment), not prudential advice (God is
usually quoted as saying, in so many words, 'You must [not] do X'
rather than 'You'd better [not] do X').
Australian
law does similar. It defines dangerous, lethal, fraudulent, and unfair
actions, and also inaction or negligence, and stipulates penalties.
People who want to definitely avoid the penalties "must" do as the law
says although the word "must" is rarely employed. Australian law also
avoids the word "prudent" although to avoid penalties it is prudent to
observe the law.
The
Book of Proverbs speaks in terms of "wisdom" rather than morality, and
informs readers of conduct that is "wise" because of benefits it
brings.
Newbrook
also queries biblical teaching of "future punishment". Obedience to
biblical standards is supposed to be motivated by "love of God" and by
the benefits, not by fear of punishment. However, this would take us
outside of the topic of Divine command as a valid ethical theory.
Newbrook
says there are: "no grounds for believing that God prevents greater
evils by himself acting in ways which appear immoral. In any case, an
omnipotent God could surely prevent these evils in other, non-harmful
ways..." We touched on this topic years ago when arguing about why
there is evil if God is both good and powerful and I may elaborate
another time.
CONCLUSION
Whenever
we hear of serious crime such as "Ex-union boss gets six years for
rape" (The Weekend Australia: February 23-24, 2019) it's certain that
the criminal ignored "God's commands".
I linked God's commands to Utilitarianism — what is right is whatever is beneficial and does good.
I
answered the "Euthyphro dilemma" with the biblical point that God's
commands are informative. They inform people on what they often can't
work out, i.e. the conduct and standards that are ultimately
beneficial. My general statement with which Newbrook found it hard to
disagree expressed this as, "law-abiding people who consistently act in
ways generally considered good and beneficial, are moral people acting
morally".
I thank Dr Newbrook for his many helpful comments.
Rejoinder to Anonymous, 'Divine Command and Utilitarianism Continued',
Investigator Magazine 189, pp 11-15
(Investigator 190, 2020 January)
It is
encouraging that Anonymous and I do agree on a number of important
issues, including our rejection of the solution most commonly offered
by religious believers to the 'Euthyphro Dilemma'.
Another
of Anonymous' points with which (as I said before) I agree is his point
that 'moral' behaviour in one's relations with others (including
obeying the law except where the law itself is clearly immoral) is
behaviour of a type which generally has beneficial consequences. But
this is not a position that I came to 'at last'; I would never have
disputed Anonymous' point here. So I repeat that his comment about my
(actually or possibly) 'amending' my understanding is irrelevant to the
issues that continue to separate us. He must not imagine that he has
induced me to change my mind here.
What
certainly is relevant is my view that morality is not in question where
one's actions affect only oneself (or other competent adults who are
happy to be so affected). Anonymous obviously still disagrees
with me here, and he now attempts to justify his stance in empirical
terms, by supporting his view that it is reasonable to expect that
future advancements of knowledge will demonstrate that some actions
which are at present deemed harmless are in fact harmful and are
therefore rightly proscribed by God. In fact, he argues that it is
already clear that some such actions are harmful. But he has failed to
convince me of this, and more particularly he has failed (as he notes)
to convince me that biblical standards of morality, specifically, are
systematically beneficial to all or fair.
And
the examples which Anonymous uses here in attempting to justify his
stance do not actually help his case. Firstly: bribery usually involves
not only the one who bribes, nor even only the one who bribes and the
person who is bribed, but also those who suffer unfairly as a
consequence of bribes being taken, and arguably entire
communities. In respect of such cases, I have at no stage
disagreed with Anonymous, and I do not think many would. Bribery, as
normally understood, is clearly not harmless to others. Whether or not
it harms the one who bribes – which would relate to my main current
disagreement with Anonymous – is thus irrelevant.
Anonymous'
other example involves 'immorality'; but the question of whether an act
should or should not be deemed immoral is precisely what we are
discussing. Anonymous seems here to be, to a degree, 'begging the
question'. He refers to 'immoral people including practising
homosexuals'. I am not sure whether he means here to label as
'immoral' all practising homosexuals or only some practising
homosexuals, presumably those whose promiscuous lifestyles and
carelessness with 'protection' expose them (and their partners) to
illnesses such as AIDS. (I grant that Anonymous words do not exclude
heterosexuals from being labelled 'immoral' in this context, but he
does not discuss heterosexual activity here.) Now some non-promiscuous
homosexuals – and heterosexuals – have contracted AIDS through bad
luck. But in any case I do not see how homosexuality per se can
be labelled 'immoral' without argument (many homosexuals are caring and
faithful to their partners). And even promiscuity is not always
transparently immoral. In this context, indeed, I suggest that
promiscuity is not immoral unless one's sexual partners are being
deceived or one is recklessly or knowingly infecting others once one
knows that one has the AIDS virus or some other STD.
Indeed,
I urge once again that people cannot reasonably be 'obliged' to give up
their normally harmless activities (gay sex, for example) and behave
all their lives in ways which do not suit them at all, merely because
God disapproves of what they do, perhaps because certain risks are
increased for others by the lifestyle in question combined with
carelessness. On this interpretation, in fact, heterosexual
activity could also be deemed immoral and needing to be avoided,
because it too may involve the spreading of deadly diseases (including
AIDS) and (unlike gay sex) may also lead to unplanned pregnancy with
all the ensuing moral dilemmas and troublesome consequences.
In any
case: my claim that it is not reasonable to expect that future
advancements of knowledge will demonstrate that actions at present
deemed harmless are in fact harmful was only part of my case against
Anonymous, and indeed by no means the most important part. Even
if it were indeed shown that various actions at present deemed harmless
are in fact harmful to the person performing the action, this would
still not overthrow my own view of the scope of morality. As I
see it, people are free to harm (or even kill) themselves if they so
decide, as long as no unwilling parties are genuinely harmed thereby,
and such actions cannot be regarded as immoral – or indeed as
positively moral – as I understand the notion of morality. Morality
simply does not apply in such cases.
If
Anonymous still rejects this position, I think we are at an
impasse. Our ideas of what does and does not come under the scope
of morality (however defined) are deeply different. (But at least
we now know this.)
I
grant, of course, that if it were shown that actions which are at
present considered to have no effect on other (unwilling) parties are
in fact harmful to other parties these actions would now come under the
scope of morality. But in most cases this appears unlikely.
For example, what harm could idol-worship per se possibly do to other
(unwilling) parties?
Anonymous'
paragraph about the parallels between biblical wording on morality and
the wording of legal codes supports my view that his interpretation of
biblical morality in terms of prudence is mistaken, or at least
involves an odd focus. Much of the time, as I noted, the God of
the Bible talks like a law-giver. But, conceptually speaking,
morality is one thing and law is another – especially, I would urge,
where the actions in question are private and affect no unwilling
party. (And in my view prudence is yet a third thing.)
I
stand by my point that some of God's own reported acts, notably (but
not solely) his threats to 'punish' innocent parties, appear far from
ethical. Together with my other points, this fatally undermines any
account of morality/ethics based on the God of the Bible, who is
represented as an immoral and indeed a most unpleasant character.
Indeed, Anonymous has not been able to convince me to retreat from any
of my previous claims. But I am glad that our discussion has been so
civil.
<>"Anonymous" has defended the Bible in Investigator Magazine for more than 30 years. Most of his articles are on this website:>
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