Re: Nick and dishonest behavior
Posted by
Eric Charles on
URL: http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/Re-Nick-and-dishonest-behavior-tp3117309p3129797.html
Bringing something from a P.S. up to the
front:
Nick's ethical
stance would
be based on treating things that act in certain ways as equal to all other
things that act in certain ways, and it wouldn't get much more prescriptive
than that. The
acts he would be interested in would be very sophisticated actions, or
combination of actions - such as "contributing to the conversation". This may
seem strange, but again, it is
really, really, really, not that different from a stance that treats all things
that "experience in a certain way" as equal.
----
To elaborate
that, it cannot be the case, pragmatically speaking, that we let other people
live because they have an inner life. We all know this cannot be true (Russ
included), because one of the axiomatic assumptions for these conversations is
that you cannot directly know someone else's mental life. If you cannot know
whether or not someone has a mental life, you can't decide whether or not you
can kill them based on their having a mental life. Is there any way to make
that more obvious?!?
The way this is problem is normally dealt with is
for people to say that we can gain insight into people's mental lives by
observing their behavior. The logic goes 1) we see people act a certain way, 2)
we infer that they have a mental life, 3) we decide that we cannot kill them
(barring them being jerks
or believing in the wrong
god). Now, the irony of a
dualistic philosophy is in step 2, where their inner life somehow comes to be
entirely in our heads, not in theirs! Its crazy talk.
Philosophers have spent
millennia trying to connect steps 2 and 3, and getting no where.
Much better to just look at
the part of the equation that is actually observable, steps 1 and 3 - the
relation between the actions and the ethical decision. When you do that, you
see that we aren't allowed to kill people who act in certain ways. That's what
its always been, despite all the smoke and mirrors created by point 2. The
obvious, but totally unasked, empirical question is "What are the ways that
people act that distinguish whether or not we can kill them." We just don't
need to talk about inner lives at all to have that conversation. We just
don't! The same applies to all sub-categories of interest. We judge
someone a "murder" based on some aspect of their actions and the circumstances
within which the actions took place. Period. It cannot be that we judge them a
murder based on their inner-mind.
Thus, while Nick's position does have
something to say about the form of rules in moral systems (i.e., that they
relate behavior to consequences), it does not have implications for what the
content of the rules should be. In that sense, it IS morally neutral. Whether
or not people have inner-lives has never, at any point, effected ethics in
practice. Certainly Nick could elaborate his own moral views, by suggesting
some rules, but that is completely tangential to this
point.
This may seem terribly abstract, but it is not to be taken lightly. Judge Posner (appellate judge for the Federal 7th Circuit) has an excellent book, and quite a lot of legal precedence arguing that talk of an inner mental life adds nothing to law, and in fact seriously detracts from it. Here are two quotes from him:
"Obviously most adults and older children can and do speak without vocalization (that is, can "conceal their thoughts") and form mental images. But this barebones concept of mind, which essentially equates mind to consciousness, is different from the idea that there is a something, the "mind", which is the locus of intentions, the invisible puppeteer, the inner man or woman. It is that idea which may have no consequences for law and shou!
ld perhaps be discarded, despite the law's emphatic... commitment to it."
"Our understanding of the mind may improve - maybe we will learn to read minds. But maybe there is nothing to read, or maybe we are not interested in what the murderer was thinking when he pulled the trigger. If we take seriously the actor's adage that no man is a villain in his own eyes, we can expect to find, if we ever succeed in peering into the murderer's mind, an elaborate, perhaps quite plausible, rationalization for his deed. But so what? We would punish him all the same."
Eric
On Sun, Jun 21, 2009 01:49 PM,
Russ Abbott <[hidden email]> wrote:
Nick,
I'm still curious about your answer to a challenge you raised. You wrote,
As one of my graduate students used to [cheerfully] say, "but Nick, if you don't have an inner life, it's ok to kill you, right?"
Now, my wisest response to this
line of argument would be to go all technocratic and to deny that I
have any ethical dog in this fight at all. One can, after all, be a
moral naturalist and assert that reasoning and argument only come into
play when people are trying to violate their ethical impulses and that,
on the whole, people are designed by nature so that they don't kill each other. Just as I don't think it makes any difference whether you believe in evolution or creation whether you are a good person, I don't think it makes any difference to being a good person whether you
believe others have an inner life or not. Thus, I escape the argument
by asserting that it has no MORAL consequences. I reassure Russ that
my absence of an inner life does not make me dangerous, and, once he
takes that reassurance seriously, he doesn't have to kill me. Peace is re-established.
It seems to m that you didn't answer your graduate student's challenge. Is it ok to kill you?
The implication of the challenge is that murder is a moral issue only when it is performed on a being with an inner life. Simply terminating the functioning of something (like a robot) is not murder. We use the term "murder" when the thing murdered is understood to have an inner life like our own.
It may be as you say that we have evolved to have that perspective. (I think that's correct.) But so what? Do you have any (moral) grounds for objecting to your graduate student killing you? Given your statement "
it has no MORAL consequences" apparently your answer is that from your perspective there is no moral reason for him/her not to kill you. Is that correct?
-- Russ
============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at
http://www.friam.org