As I understand it, some are either arguing for utilitarianism, or that is being attributed to them. I cannot really sort out which. Utilitarianism is usually summarised as the pursuit of the greatest good for the greatest number. If that is a fair representation of the position it is clearly absurd. The idea is dealt with in Ursula K LeGuin's story "The ones who walk away from Omelas" and for me this settles it. It does leave open the question of whether walking away is enough (live and let live or some such form) and the issue of resistance remains. But Utilitarianism won't do for me for this reason
Yes, LeGuin's story is the most cogent critique of Utilitarianism to date, just as
The Dispossessed is the cleverest treatment of the idea of Radical Libertarianism.
But the problem is that we cannot walk away from Omelas, nor can we guarantee that no child will, as a consequence of our society, live in suffering.
Also, Omelas is not really an instance of Utilitarianism because it assumes that people could be happy after they have seen the child. If not, then the system would not deliver happiness.
Finally it is no good walking away from Omelas unless you can walk to some circumstance that would help the child.
That is the messy circumstance we find ourselves in - Omelas everywhere.
Also in this thread there seems to be a strand which bases morality on "harm reduction" and this seems to be a variation on Utilitarianism. It seems to say that maximising happiness is inadequate, but minimising misery is better.
Not at all, the two are inextricably entwined. If there is harm then happiness cannot be maximised unless the harm is reduced. Would not the family of the comatose patient be happy knowing that strict procedures were followed within the nursing home to ensure that abuse of patients can never take place?
Both of those kinds of utilitarianism seem to focus on society as the unit to which morality is to be applied. If that is correct then therein lies a big problem, as I see it. Societies do not cry: people do.
This is plain wrong, Utilitarianism focusses on society as a collection of individuals, Bentham's shopkeeper for example.
Kant does not place his morality at the level of society, but rather he focuses on the individual, and founds on "duty". One way of summarising his position is to say that one must accept the full moral agency of the other: and therefore it is not permissible to use the other as an object but to respect them as subject instead. But the main thing which Kant gave us was the idea that morals must be universalisable. At least that is how I see it, and I do accept this. "What would the world be like if everybody did that" is a good thought to have when considering what principles to adopt; and I take this from his position. Problem I have with Kant is that although he discusses what we should do he does not consider what we should be. This seems to me to be a big part of what we should be considering, because like it or not we do think about it when making moral decisions.
How is asking "what would the world be like?" focussing morality at an individual level???? Is the world an individual?
If you say we should focus on individuals and not focus on consequences then we should certainly never ask "what would the world be like?"
The example you have been discussing of nurse and the coma patient is interesting.
Maximising the happiness is immediately seen to be useless in this case since we can only measure the happiness of the nurse and so his decision is trumps by definition. So utilitarianism as commonly presented does not bring us to what seems to be the agreed moral outcome (if anyone is arguing that this is the correct outcome I have missed it and I apologise)
No objective harm can be demonstrated, as Herzblut has pointed out.
I wish people would stop saying that sexually abusing a comatose patient does not result in harm.
Or at least I wish they would back up this statement with some kind of rational argument.
As I have pointed out, the nurse could only get away with his actions by going to extreme measures to keep it secret. So he
knows that objective harm would be revealed if the act were revealed. If revealing the act would reveal objective harm, then, clearly and unambiguously, objective harm would be done.
As I have also pointed out a society that was trying to maximise happiness would have this man doing hard time. It would enforce procedures in nursing homes that would prevent this from happening.
This is all clear an unambiguous.
So I am utterly bewildered as to how anybody could suggest that any version of Utilitarianism would condone his actions any any way.
n order to bring in the concept of harm you have to spread it so wide it loses meaning and this cant be good.
No, Utilitarianism explicitly refers to individual happiness. It also accepts that you will never have a society in which everybody is happy.
It seems to me that those who are bringing in the concept are working from some other moral intuition and then trying to make the situation fit with the concept of harm reduction. That does not fly, I think
I am puzzled as to why you think you could disentangle the idea of happiness from harm reduction.
Again we do seem to have an agreed moral outcome and this negative utilitarianism does not get us there
Utilitarianism gets us there fine, as I have demonstrated.
Treating the other as a subject not an object does seem to get us there and so Kant is more helpful in this case: and his concept of duty is very apposite here, too. Insofar as this example goes I think Kant is sufficient
Again, it is not enough to merely state this is so. You have to explain it. As I pointed out before the nurse can fully universalise his maxim, just so long as he does not personally mind being insensately buggered.
If you say "you are not treating her humanity as an end in itself" then the concept is so vague and nebulous that the nurse could easily just say "Yes I am" and even think that he means it. Sex offenders are, as I pointed out before, known for their capacity for self-deception.
The litmus test is that if the nurse were caught and asked the question "who has been made unhappy?" it could be very easily and convincingly answered with empirical evidence. If you asked "did you universalise your maxims and treat her humanity as an end in itself" you would just be at the start of a long metaphysical debate and we all know how quickly metaphyscally debates are settled, don't we?
Do you really think that it is realistic for the man in the street to base his moral decisions on the the understanding and acceptance of the treatment of ends and means by an 18th century metaphysician that most moder philosophers do not completely understand, less accept?
The objection to the principle was raised in the context of the plumber, and it was suggested that the use of the other as object is necessary, or at least acceptable, in that kind of situation. I do not wholly agree, because I am persuaded by experience in the work place and also by the concept of alienation, People are not just their role, even when performing their role, and it is perfectly possible to get the work done while recognising this. But it is true that is not entirely clear if we just take kant's ideas and there is a real problem here
People are indeed more than their role, and we often treat them as such - I personally know a great deal about the hopes and dreams of my preferred plumber. But this is not necessarily the case. If the taxi driver cannot get me from a to b then I will quickly find another taxi driver rather than explore any layers of his humanity that do not encompass taxi driving.
And if I treat the taxi driver as merely a means to an end, and he treats me the same, then it would not be true that we were as morally culpable as the nurse in the example.
Again it seems absurd and certainly meaningless to say that we necessarily treat a taxi driver's humanity as an end in itself or the plumber's humanity as an end in itelf.
For me that problem is resolved by addressing the agent and not just the action. We cannot just look at the outcome for those we act on nor just at the intrinsic properites of the act itself: we must always also think about the implications for the self of acting in such a way. We have a notion of who we want to be, and actions that we take impact on that too. This seems to be missing from this whole discussion so perhaps this is a silly point and everyone will immediately explain to me why it is irrelevant. But morality is for me as much about my own standards of behaviour as it is about the effects of those standards on other individuals or on society
On the contrary it is not missing, I have introduced it, you only have to understand that it works both ways. The person I want to be might not be the person I ought to be.
People have been suggesting that if I cheat a taxi driver of his fare then I have treated him as though he did not have rights. They have insisted that to say otherwise is ignorant idiocy.
But they have forgotten one part of the deal. Me.
I am treating the taxi driver as a person who has a right to payment, and treating myself as a person who avoids the consequent obligation. The actual fiduciary outcome of the transaction will then depend on how quick and big he is.
If we are only to care about whether my treatment acknowledges the humanity, the rationality, the rights of the taxi driver then I have done nothing wrong.