Morality for the Modern World

in #philosophy8 years ago (edited)

Is it possible to be moral in a world without God? Is a respect for different cultures incompatible with a belief in objective right and wrong? Can there be a universal truth in a world where we disagree about so much?

This article will explore how we might find common ground for a morality that is at once universal but still flexible enough to allow reasonable people to disagree.

Shared Perspective

I believe that morality is best viewed through a variety of lenses. Moral claims are only sensible when viewed through the correct philosophical lens. Though they are in some ways contradictory, all the lenses are true from a certain point of view.

Lets discuss some basic lenses that are useful for this discussion and illustrate them with the moral question: Is capital punishment justified?

Universal

This is the “god’s eye view.” From this perspective, we are all fundamentally connected. My life is the result of a myriad of events that happened before my birth. My actions have ripple effects that will last far into the future. What counts as fundamentally "me" and "not me" is unclear.

Distinctions between self/other, good/bad, and right/wrong don’t make sense in this lens. Moral ideas are all just two sides of the same coin.

This perspective is powerful but not very useful when negotiating the day-to-day concerns of life. We can’t make moral claims of right and wrong in this lens, but we can find inspiration to be more moral.

We can take refuge in this perspective when we face difficulties like death, pain and loss. We do this by no longer identifying with the limited concept of self that experiences those things. As we will see later, seeing the world from this perspective can help inform our morality in a profound way.

From this lens, capital punishment is never justified. In fact, the very idea of punishment makes no sense. Everyone is connected and so punishing you is punishing myself. Crimes are only perpetrated by the self on the self.

Humanistic

Through this lens we recognize the identity of separate perspectives. I am one consciousness and you are another.

Once we accept the idea of different conscious entities, we can start making claims about how they ought behave and be treated. If we value conscious beings, we can use that to approach a foundation of morality. Something along the lines of: All conscious beings are worthy of respect and ought have the opportunity to flourish. In the humanistic lens we are different, but equal.

From this lens, capital punishment is hard to justify, because it implies a lack of respect for the life of a person. At best, it is a practical question. You could only justify capital punishment if it would help more people to flourish on balance(i.e. via deterrance of future crimes). Since there is little evidence to support capital punishment as a deterrant, it is near impossible to justify from a humanistic lens.

Personal

Through this lens we recognize our own perspective as unique, and our emotional landscape as one that is inherently individual. We love some people and things more than others and have the full range of hopes, fears, etc. that are a natural part of the human experience.

In this lens, we have different moral considerations like loyalty, honor, and family that don’t make sense in either of the other lenses. This is where life gains passion and vibrancy. This is also where harmful and selfish motivations arise.

Capital punishment gains most of its justification from the personal lens. If someone I loved was murdered, I would want the perpetrator to die. If I'm honest with myself, I'd want to personally be involved in making sure the murderer suffered and then died slowly. I can think in a humanistic way about capital punishment when we are talking about it in the abstract, but when it is personal my feelings change dramatically. I doubt I am alone on this.

The Foundations of Morality

Fundamentally, I think the project of trying to tie morality to something external to conscious experience is doomed to failure. I agree with David Hume that our sentiments are what create value and moral judgment. Just as chocolate cake is only tasty because people like to eat it, so too is murder only wrong because people don’t want to die.

It is hard for me to even conceive of another source from which morality could spring. An all-powerful God would still seem evil to me if she chose to cause pain and suffering for its own sake.

The lack of an external grounding outside of sentiment does not mean, however, that we can’t make meaningful universal claims about morality. Not all sentiments are universal, but some are.

In other words, just because we can’t agree on everything doesn’t mean we can’t agree on some things. In fact, we humans agree on quite a bit, though we only tend to focus on the areas of disagreement.

Universal Moral Truths

There are some truths that every rational person agrees with.

We all agree the following are Bad Things

suffering
death
disability

We all agree the following are Good Things

pleasure
gaining ability
avoidance of bad things

Take a second to appreciate how much we agree on by establishing the above lists. Except in the most extreme of cases (brought up almost exclusively in philosophical arguments), everyone you speak to will be glad to get any of the Good Things above and strive to avoid all of the bad things above. Everyone can agree that a world which contained only Bad Things would be less Good than a world that contained at least some Good Things. These claims are trivial to make, but they point to a vast foundation of morality - the judgment of good and bad- that we universally share.

Many people object to the above claims, citing examples of cases where someone will voluntarily hurt or kill themselves, or where they view suffering as a good thing. These objections do not negate the universality of the good and the bad, but only point to the fact that people rank them differently. Every example of perceiving a Bad Thing as Good (or vice-versa) involves a justification from another good or bad thing. Here are some common examples.

suicide may be justified to prevent pain
enduring the pain of an injection may be justified to save your life from a disease
enduring boredom my be justified to learn a new skill
Sacrificing your life may be justified to save another.

Sometimes, people will voluntarily seek out bad things, but this is only because they value other good things instead (including the avoidance of even worse Bad Things). No one will choose a bad thing without justification. And, the only valid justifications are good things.

In one sense, this seems trivial. In another, it is profound. There is so much we agree on when it comes to basic questions of good and bad and this gives us the hope of establishing a universal morality. In fact, we only disagree on three fundamental questions.

How, Who, and What

We differ in moral judgments in only 3 ways:

  1. How we rate good and bad things against each other (e.g. pain vs. death)
  2. Who we choose to include in our sphere of moral concern (e.g. animals, the unborn)
  3. What is true about the world (e.g. is there an afterlife, will a vaccine work)

In making moral choices we wrestle with those differences:

We may choose to steal from others to help a loved one
We may choose to die so that we can gain eternal bliss in the afterlife
We may choose to torture and slaughter animals for food, clothing or product testing

We can have moral discussions about what is good and evil within the humanistic or personal lens. Within these lenses, we can condemn a sociopath who likes to torture babies. We can also make arguments that one course of action is better or worse than another based on the harm or good it does.

The Fuzzy Cloud Of Morality

This may not be the “robust” morality that many people look for, because it does not guarantee that every moral question has a single right answer.** I believe this search for certainty is misguided. Any practical universal morality must allow for reasonable people to disagree.** It requires only that we have a common ground within which we can make moral claims. Thus, we can agree universally that torturing babies for fun is wrong, even while we might disagree about whether a mother has the right to abort her fetus.

Morality in this sense is like the particles in a cloud- there are some things clearly outside or inside its bounds, but there are many things along the edges for which it is unclear where they stand. For many moral questions, there is no single right answer- but that does not mean that all answers are equal.

We shape the boundaries of morality through discussion and persuasion. Because of this, morality can evolve over time as the sentiments of humanity evolve. And this, I believe, is where the Universal lens comes in handy. The more we can get people to see the world through the non-dualistic universal lens, the less attached they are to their personal perspective and the more they can be persuaded to adopt a humanistic morality. We are all confused and struggling in this world. It is much easier to have compassion for our fellow conscious beings when we realize that we are in fact all connected.

Toward a More Moral World

Within this paradigm, we can thus work to create a more moral world. How do we do this? Through skillful discussion and cultivating perspective.

Skillful Discussion

Understand that other people have fundamentally the same ideas of good and bad that you do. Try to use language that will appeal to those ideas, while being understanding of the Who, How, and What of reasonable disagreement. Try to persuade people rather than judge them as “evil” or “stupid.”

Cultivating Perspective

Take the time to experience universal connectedness. This can be done through meditation, music, and being in nature. Seek out experiences of awe and wonder. Experiences of awe are experiences of something far greater than ourselves, and this helps shake us out of the personal lens which can cause so much harm when used unskillfully. By connecting ourselves to something bigger than ourselves we can cultivate a moral sentiment that is more compassionate and inclusive.

Practice and cultivate compassion. Help others. Play with puppies. Create art. Give lots of hugs. Spend time with loved ones. Try to remember that everyone out there is someone else’s loved one.
Surround yourself and others with beauty, love, and wonder. Through these things, we can cultivate the sentiments that will fuel our moral growth and make this world a better place.

Conclusion

I don’t view this perspective as an atheistic one. Whether there is a god or not, we need a morality that can stand on its own. By accepting uncertainty and the power of our sentiments, we gain solid ground upon which we can build a better world.

(pictures above sourced from pixabay.com)
(this post originally appeared on my blog here. It has been modified and updated exclusively for steemit)

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@jg02
Photographs used here are very good.
4th pic seems like it will come true.

Thank you. I hope so!

Man had a depraved nature as far as I am concerned. The anarchy in the world attests to this. Any attempt by him to formulate a morality subjectively is therefore futile, and impossible.

Thanks for the comment. I respect your opinion on this, but it seems to me that man has both depraved and noble elements to his nature. If you look objectively at the world today, it is more safe, more prosperous, less violent, and more respectful of human rights than at any time in history. Yes, our society has problems and yes there is violence and anarchy, but it seems that there is plenty of evidence that moral progress is possible.

I'm sure you know this already, but Sam Harris tackles this subject as well. He is a neuroscientist who wrote a book on it. Nice post, I enjoy reading about objective truth and morality

Thanks for the reply! I am a big Sam Harris fan. His conception of objective morality viewed as "Maximizing the well-being of conscious creatures" is certainly compatible with my view. I felt that the maximizing part of his claim is a bit harder to justify as an objective standard, thus I went with my somewhat weaker claim that "All conscious beings are worthy of respect and ought have the opportunity to flourish"

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