I would respond to more of you, but I would just be repeating myself much too often, if I did. Hopefully, most of you will read everything I wrote for everyone else, not just responses to your own posts.
A question for the Harrisites: What if science determines that a society attains maximal well-being when it is mono-racial?
A good question! But, here's the thing:
If (hypothetically speaking) it turns out that mono-racial societies truly are more successful at achieving well-being, it would be difficult to argue that they shouldn't be mono-racial. If (again, hypothetically), the Nazis were right, and eliminating Jews really could bring about a utopia for superior beings, it would then be more difficult to claim that what they did was evil. BUT...
It turns out that, in reality,
it doesn't work out that way. Relative fitness matters more in evolution, than absolute fitness. Folks like Jared Diamond have demonstrated this is true for races as well as species. The Nazis, for example, got that wrong: Jews are perfectly capable of being good, productive members of society, etc.
This looks like a reprehensible position to take, to us, because we already know how and why eugenics was not going to work, from a scientific perspective, and find it hard to imagine a world that is any different being any better.
But, I argue that if nature was different: If the world was sooooo different, that eugenics would actually be an unqualified success at improving overall well-being for everyone: The folks in that twisted, alternative universe would think that we were the reprehensible ones.
Maximize pleasure? OK, hook everyone up to a pleasure-centre stimulator...
There is no single way one can define 'good health'. If you measure only their mental capacity, you could overlook an unhealthy body crumbling around that mind. If you only measured physical health, you could overlook a mind that is turning to delusional mush.
For similar reasons, there is no one way to define 'well-being'. If we only measured wealth, we would end up amassing fortunes by generating great suffering and misery. If we only measured happiness, we could continuously stimulate our pleasure centers, ignoring other responsibilities required to maintain our bodies.
Once we decide to act on improving the well-being of a society, we can take a multi-pronged approach that addresses all of the reasonable ways one can be well.
Science is not making moral decisions in this case. It's the tool we use to help us obtain the facts once we've made the moral decision, which is the first step you described.
I am talking about cases where
the decision has NOT been made, yet. Science can answer moral questions, or at the very least, help us answer them.
It would be unscientific to make the decision first, and justify it later. The idea is to use science to discover what the best answer is likely to be, before we reach any final conclusions. (Though, we are allowed to make predictions.)
Other than this, yeah, big freakin' deal. I don't think most people are claiming that this is a big deal. Just that it's wrong, plain wrong, to claim that the first step is scientifically arrived at.
Why would it be wrong? What if David Hume is outdated?
Some of the science of consciousness seems to be indicating that all "oughts" start out as "ises" in the brain, anyway. According to that line of research: We just forget the original "is" state, and classify it as an "ought" in a later process. Perhaps it is too early to be confident about these sorts of discoveries. But, I suspect we will see more of these types of arguments, in the future, that erode the very difference between "is" and "ought" in various ways. I think it is less likely that these distinctions will become any stronger in the future.
Indeed, I think the biggest worry of Sam Harris and those who take his side in this debate is that they are concerned with how the Taliban can be condemned if there are no moral facts. They seem to want to say something like "Sorry dudes, but it's a scientific fact that forcing people to wear burkas is wrong". It is perfectly possible to condemn the morality of the Taliban, but it is not possible to do so with the help of moral facts, because there are no such facts.
The Taliban is detrimental to the well-being of the people under its power. They live in a society unable to grow economically, and sustain wealth, unable to achieve new heights of health and happiness, etc. Unable to express themselves fully. Small businesses and innovation do not thrive in that environment. The list goes on and on. Each way you can reasonably measure well-being is hurt.
And, there is no reason for it. Lift people out of that situation, and they can thrive better.
The Taliban even hurts its own leaders in these ways. Yes, the upper ranks of the Taliban have lots of power, and perhaps lots of money. But, they do not live with the same opportunities as even a middle-class American has, to live as good and as full of a life.
Those are facts that can be empirically deduced, in various ways.
Yes, you CAN condemn the Taliban WITHOUT science. You do NOT need science to see them as rotten.
But, there are also liberal extremists who would defend such existence by saying things like "Well, maybe that is better for them! Who are we to judge?" Science can refute such claims.
And I must say that I'm very, very disappointed that Dawkins and Shermer buy into Harris' idea. They if anyone ought to see just how flawed it is.
I wonder if it takes a certain type of mentality to see this through. Shermer promoted provisional lawmaking in several of his early books. Dawkins is very big on breaking the tyranny of discontinuous minds.
My early hypothesis is that those who think in terms of gray-areas and provisional everything are more likely to see the sense in Sam's arguments. But, those who think more in terms of black-or-white, and definitive versions of everything are less likely to get it through their skulls. But, I could be wrong about that.
And, whatever the reason, this is certainly a non-intuitive concept to get across. I will grant you that!
-It seems to me that both sides agree that science can't decree that people should do things that they do not (at any level) want to do. Am I wrong in saying this?
Assuming the person is sane and responsible. (An insane person could, for example, decide not to ever breathe, even when in clean air. Science might say they probably really ought to do that.)
-It seems to me that both parties agree that science CAN tell people what they should do given a set of preferences. Am I wrong about this?
I can agree with this. But, those preferences could also, themselves, be potentially scientifically demonstrated, I suppose.
-It seems to me that both sides disagree on what it takes for science to be considered able to "answer a moral question", and that this is the main source of disagreement. That one side defines moral facts in such a way that they cannot exist, and then conclude that science cannot provide them, while the other concludes that if moral facts are defined in a useful way, then science can provide them. Am I mistaken, here?
That seems like a reasonable summary where most of us disagree. Though, I think some of us disagree in different ways than that.
I think the most useful question in this debate is whether discussions about what morality is can be replaced by using neuroscience to directly measure people's preferences and see what is considered moral (seeing how morality necessarily comes from the preferences/ideals of thinking beings. No one argues anything for another source of morality as far as I can tell). I would say that the answer to this is yes in principle...
I think other lines of investigation, other than neuroscience might be useful when making conclusions. But, on the whole, I agree with this.
Either way, I suggest that the most important thing right now is that we narrow down where people really disagree with one another.
Good idea. My earlier semantic post attempts to do away with the sillier aspects of what we might disagree on. Hopefully, some real meat will emerge.
Let's get this straight at the outset: this argument is only about what you call the "First Mile".
This assumes Sam Harris was really building a First Mile case. After re-reading parts of his book, it does not seem that way. Though, I will re-read the whole thing later in the month, when I finish my current book I am into.
It's the way of the future, dude!
From what I've read of Harris' book, his argument is basically "utilitarianism is right, because it's obviously right".
I don't think well-being is strictly utilitarianism. Utilitarianism could be one aspect of well-being, but not the sole factor.
If I recall correctly, Sam Harris argues that there is a lack of satisfaction inherent in strictly sticking to what is utilitarian. I might also add that arts and leisure could be components of well-being not inherently covered by utilitarianism.
One thing I am glad of though, as someone who cares about animals, is that Harris and his fans will surely be moving toward veganism based on their "well being of conscious creatures" moral principle.
Well-being would balance our nutritional needs against vegetarianism, though vegetarianism is still a viable option for someone to choose.
Also, if it turns out that other creatures have a consciousness, they might not have
as much of a consciousness nor the
same type of consciousness as humans. The decision of how much to eat of them might be weighed against that.
Their opinion is not as important as mine, in my conception of well-being.
For this to work as a science, your own conception must be empirically weighed against others. Can you demonstrate, reliably to independent parties, that getting the most fish, specifically, is the most effective way to achieve health and well-being for most folks in your society?
Good character is a hallmark of well-being defined how? Some argue that good character is shown through hardship when pleasure is denied.
Yeah, I can see that. (Though there might be a subtle difference between good-character-out-of-necessity in a situation of hardship, versus the good-character-out-of-expectation that emerges from a well-off society, it probably does not mean much.)
I do not think "good character", alone, can cut it as a moral objective. It can, as I implied, emerge as one part of well-being. But, it does not cover health, economic needs, environmental sustainability, and happiness, etc; that the word "well-being" can bring into it.
The issue we are trying to point out is that it is your first mile that is the issue. Science can intercede at all the other points, and I don't think that is controversial at all.
Lucky for you, I am not going to bother debating the First Mile much, anymore.
Would covering the Middle Distance and Last Mile still contradict Hume, in some way? That is what I would like to know. If not, then the debate has ended. If so, then perhaps Hume is outdated.
Regarding the self-evident nature of well-being -- I was arguing that Sam Harris was wrong in calling it self-evident. He thinks that it is; I disagree. There are many things that different people think are self-evident. When others argue with them, as you point out, it should be obvious that what they think is self-evident simply isn't.
I agree that it might not be self-evident. But, it is still defendable.
I will have to re-read the book to see if Harris truly thinks it must be self-evident, because that might not be accurate. If he thought it was self-evident, why spend so much of the chapters harping on what a good life is, versus a bad one?
The problem with well-being as the ultimate goal is that it sometimes becomes impossible to decide what to do when one person's well-being comes into conflict with another's.
This is going to be an issue, no doubt. But, not an insurmountable one. We can use science to deduce who is right or wrong, or where compromises can be formed, if one is appropriate. We can develop answers. We have the methodology.
Do you stop a rapist who might feel that he is maximizing his well-being in the act? I think we would all say, yes, because he is hurting someone else. How do we decide between the two, though?
The rapists can also be said to be hurting themselves, in the long run, even if they do not think that way or realize it, at the time of the attack. Rape might work under certain conditions where society had not developed certain expectations of freedoms and rights for its citizens, yet. (And, indeed, for much of human history rape had been acceptable.)
But, the circumstances change when people
expect a certain level of control over their bodies. Then, rape ceases to benefit anyone in the long run, not even the rapists themselves. Not even if they feel it is better for their well-being, at the time.
We can show these trends through history, scientifically. And, after such, we would most likely conclude, scientifically, that the rapist should be stopped.
The harder case, if we want to get into the problems with utilitarianism is scapegoating -- one can easily maximize the happiness of many people by sacrificing one in certain situations (the classical case is a pure thought experiment, but you can think of one of those old Star Trek episodes). But that just doesn't seem fair. That is the problem with utilitarianism. It doesn't answer all ethical questions for us. We have more than one way to answer our moral dilemmas.
Historically, scapegoating has NOT shown to be effective or productive in actually solving problems. It only provides a superficial, temporary sense of relief. (I doubt scapegoating would even be considered utilitarian, though that might be a different debate.)
The problems we face, as a society, will often need innovative approaches to solve, which takes more science. Not easy answers or quick, inefficient fixes.
Harris assumes utilitarianism as the ultimate morality, and then proceeds to tell us how science can help us achieve utilitarian goals.
As I stated in an earlier reply: I do not think utilitarianism really covers it. It would only be one facet of well-being, not the whole thing.
What is well-being? If it is happiness, then it seems to encourage us to all be blissfully ignorant, i.e. sated fools. If it encompasses something more than mere happiness, then I would love to hear those other things as long as they are not subjective and unquantifiable...
As I stated at the top of this post, there needs to be multiple ways to define 'well-being'.
But, there are some objective, quantifiable, deeper ways we can do it, aside from the simple, obvious ones like wealth and longevity. One could also measure such things as environmental sustainability, disaster response effectiveness, violent crime rates, ability to sustain and generate economic growth, education prospects (ability to generate and spread knowledge), opportunities for innovative enterprises to flourish, effectiveness of healthcare systems, etc.
People who say that science is all that is needed for ethical decisions seem to regard the philosophical, fundamental underpinnings of ethics as ultimately decided and not very productive.
Those philosophical underpinnings were useful for much of human history. And, to a certain extent, they might still be useful. But, over time, they will become more and more quaint and outdated, as science takes over more and more of the process of thinking about ethics.
Perhaps even more disturbingly is that some studies such as the one reported by the Economist here suggest that those who can apply utilitarian thinking most consistently appear to score highly in psychopath tests.
Blatant fallacy.
First of all, as I argued above, utilitarianism is only one aspect of well-being. Not the whole thing.
Second of all, just because we might promote utilitarianism does not automatically mean we are raising psychopaths.
If remorse is valued as part of building a good society, psychopaths would be picked out and dealt with.
We know a lot, today, about how psychopaths operate, and what is going on in their brains neurologically. We also know something about how they emerge evolutionarily, as a small percentage of the population. We know so much that we are in the early stages of designing treatments for the disorders associated with them. (Only a few years ago, it was considered completely untreatable.)
What evidence or data can resolve the issue of which one that is correct?
Sophronius answered this fairly well:
The correct one, if by "correct" efficaciousness is meant, I imagine to be consequentialism. I don't know if any studies were done in this area, but I strongly anticipate that it could be shown that consequentialism is more effective in increasing wealth and welfare in a country.
Deontology is more like the old fashioned religious dogma. It implies we value strict adherence to rules, and does not imply that those rules should change. We show that the world changes over time, so the rules must change over time. We also know that no rules can cover all situations, even in the short term. So, that goes out the window as possible gold standard.
Virtue ethics seems naïve and unrealistic, and inherently unstable. Any society built on straight virtue would likely find themselves evolving into a consequentialist or deontologist society before long, depending on leadership.
We do things because we ultimately want to, not because they are good in a way that is separate from our desires. There is no "intrinsic good". This doesn't mean that science can't tell us what we should do (given what we want), just that it cannot provide nonsensical "just so" morality. It seems quite impossible to me for science to give 100% objective morality. But it seems silly to me to insinuate that this means that ethics is purely relative and all ethical views are equally good.
In short, you are yielding the First Mile to something other than science.
Fine. Whatever.
The following answers are available...
None of those actually applied. See above.
If evolution has given humanity a tendency toward certain cooperative behaviors, that can provide a basis for morality that isn't objective but isn't relative, either.
Nice of you to join us!
I think this covers a lot of what some of us are trying to say.