Philosophy 211 - ethics - Humanities
Requirements:No outside resources – only the document that I will send you.No plagiarismGood grammar- complete thoughts Deep response- Good arguments Minimun 100 words per question.A CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT?Wenz reports that the Kerrigan and Mock lawsuit contends that Connecticuts constitution implies a right to same-sex marriage. How is that possible? Certainly no one would claim that the constitution implies a right to brother/sister marriage, (would they?)The Range of Relativism, RevisitedTo what extent do the accounts of MacIntyre, Bellah et al., and Newton support a generalized relativism i.e. a relativism that spreads always and everywhere?THE RANGE OF RELATIVISMWhy is so much of the debate over multiculturalism concerned with the literary canon, with ethics, with religion? Why is so little of it concerned with science, with engineering?RELATIVISM IN HABITS OF THE HEARTIn commenting globally on what they make of the Brian Palmer case study, the authors of Habits of the Heart say the following:Despite the combination of tenderness and admiration he expresses for his wife, the genuine devotion he seems to feel for his children, and his own resilient self-confidence, Brians justification of his life thus rests on a fragile foundation. Morally, his life appears much more coherent than when he was dominated by careerism, but, to hear him talk, even his deepest impulses of attachment to others are without any more solid foundation than his momentary desires. He lacks a language to explain what seem to be the real commitments that define his life, and to that extent the commitments themselves are precarious.So Brian is cast as a certain kind of relativist. Interestingly, Margaret, Joe, and Wayne are also supposed to be somehow caught up in relativism. Well, Margaret certainly. But Joe and Wayne?
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A Disquieting Suggestion
Imagine that the natural sciences were to suffer the effects of a
catastrophe. A series of environmental disasters are blamed by the
general public on the scientists. Widespread riots occur,
laboratories are burnt down, physicists are lynched, books and
instruments are destroyed. Finally a Know-Nothing political
movement takes power and successfully abolishes science teaching
in schools and universities, imprisoning and executing the
remaining scientists. Later still there is a reaction against this
destructive movement and enlightened people seek to revive
science, although they have largely forgotten what it was. But all
that they possess are fragments: a knowledge of experiments
detached from any knowledge of the theoretical context which
gave them significance, parts of theories unrelated either to the
other bits and pieces of theory which they possess or to
experiment, instruments whose use has been forgotten, halfchapters from books, single pages from articles, not always fully
legible because torn and charred. Nonetheless all these fragments
are reembodied in a set of practices which go under the revived
names of physics, chemistry and biology Adults argue with each
other about the respective merits of relativity theory, evolutionary
theory and phlogiston theory, although they possess only a very
partial knowledge of each. Children learn by heart the surviving
portions of the periodic table and recite as incantations some of the
theorems of Euclid. Nobody, or almost nobody, realizes that what
they are doing is not natural science in any proper sense at all. For
everything that they do and say conforms to certain canons of
consistency and coherence and those contexts which would be
needed to make sense of what they are doing have been lost,
perhaps irretrievably.
In such a culture men would use expressions such as neutrino,
mass, specific gravity, atomic weight in systematic and often
interrelated ways which would resemble in lesser or greater
degrees the ways in which such expressions had been used in
earlier times before scientific knowledge had been so largely lost.
But many of the beliefs presupposed by the use of these
expressions would have been lost and there would appear to be an
element of arbitrariness and even of choice in their application
which would appear very surprising to us. What would appear to
be rival and competing premises for which no further argument
could be given would abound. Subjectivist theories of science
would appear and would be criticized by those who held that the
notion of truth embodied in what they took to be science was
incompatible with subjectivism.
This imaginary possible world is very like one that some
science fiction writers have constructed. We may describe it as a
world in which the language of natural science, or parts of it at
least continues to be used but is in a grave state of disorder. We
may notice that if in this imaginary world analytical philosophy
were to flourish, it would never reveal the fact of this disorder. For
the techniques of analytical philosophy are essentially descriptive
and descriptive of the language of the present at that. The
analytical philosopher would be able to elucidate the conceptual
structures of what was taken to be scientific thinking and discourse
in the imaginary world in precisely the way that he elucidates the
conceptual structures of natural science as it is.
Nor again would phenomenology or existentialism be able to
discern anything wrong All the structures of intentionality would
be what they are now. The task of supplying an epistemological
basis for these false simulacra of natural science would not differ
in phenomenological terms from the task as it is presently
envisaged. A Husserl or a Merleau-Ponty would be as deceived as
a Strawson or a Quine.
What is the point of constructing this imaginary world
inhabited by fictitious pseudo-scientists and real, genuine
MacIntyre: “A Disquieting Suggestion” Page 1 of 3
philosophy? The hypothesis which I wish to advance is that in the
actual world which we inhabit the language of morality is in the
same state of grave disorder as the language of natural science in
the imaginary world which I described. What we possess, if this
view is true, are the fragments of a conceptual scheme, parts which
now lack those contexts from which their significance derived. We
possess indeed simulacra of morality, we continue to use many of
the key expressions. But we have — very largely, if not entirely
— lost our comprehension, both theoretical and practical, of
morality.
But how could this be so? The impulse to reject the whole
suggestion out of hand will certainly be very strong. Our capacity
to use moral language, to be guided by moral reasoning, to define
our transactions with others in moral terms is so central to our view
of ourselves that even to envisage the possibility of our radical
incapacity in these respects is to ask for a shift in our view of what
we are and do which is going to be difficult to achieve. But we do
already know two things about the hypothesis which are initially
important for us if we are to achieve such a shift in viewpoint. One
is that philosophical analysis will not help us. In the real world the
dominant philosophies of the present, analytical or
phenomenological, will be as powerless to detect the disorders of
moral thought and practice as they were impotent before the
disorders of science in the imaginary world. Yet the powerlessness
of this kind of philosophy does not leave us quite resourceless. For
a prerequisite for understanding the present disordered state of the
imaginary world was to understand its history, a history that had to
be written in three distinct stages. The first stage was that in which
the natural sciences flourished. The second that in which they
suffered catastrophe and the third that in which they were restored
but in damaged and disordered form Notice that this history, being
one of decline and fall, is informed by standards. It is not an
evaluatively neutral chronicle. The form of the narrative, the
division into stages, presuppose standards of achievement and
failure, of order and disorder. It is what Hegel called philosophical
history and what Collingwood took all successful historical writing
to be. So that if we are to look for resources to investigate the
hypothesis about morality which I have suggested, however bizarre
and improbable it may appear to you now, we shall have to ask
whether we can find in the type of philosophy and history
propounded by writers such as Hegel and Collingwood — very
different from each other as they are, of course — resources which
we cannot find in analytical or phenomenological philosophy.
But this suggestion immediately brings to mind a crucial
difficulty for my hypothesis. For one objection to the view of the
imaginary world which I constructed, let alone to my view of the
real world, is that the inhabitants of the imaginary world reached a
point where they no longer realized the nature of the catastrophe
which they had suffered. Yet surely an event of such striking world
historical dimensions could not have been lost from view, so that it
was both erased from memory and unrecoverable from historical
records? And surely what holds of the fictitious world holds even
more strongly of our own real world? If a catastrophe sufficient to
throw the language and practice of morality into grave disorder had
occurred, surely we should all know about it. It would indeed be
one of the central facts of our history Yet our history lies open to
view, so it will be said, and no record of any such catastrophe
survives So my hypothesis must simply be abandoned. To this I
must at the very least concede that it will have to be expanded, yet
unfortunately at the outset expanded in such a way as to render it,
if possible, initially even less credible than before. For the
catastrophe will have to have been of such a kind that it was not
and has not been —except perhaps by a very few —recognized as
a catastrophe. We shall have to look not for a few brief striking
events whose character is incontestably clear, but for a much
longer, more complex and less easily identified process and
MacIntyre: “A Disquieting Suggestion” Page 2 of 3
probably one which by its very nature is open to rival
interpretation. Yet the initial implausibility of this part of the
hypothesis may perhaps be slightly lessened by another suggestion
History by now in our culture means academic history, and
academic history is less than two centuries old. Suppose it were the
case that the catastrophe of which my hypothesis speaks had
occurred before, or largely before, the founding of academic
history, so that the moral and other evaluative presuppositions of
academic history derived from the forms of the disorder which it
brought about. Suppose, that is, that the standpoint of academic
history is such that from its value-neutral viewpoint moral disorder
must remain largely invisible. All that the historian — and what is
true of the historian is characteristically true also of the social
scientist — will be allowed to perceive by the canons and
categories of his discipline will be one morality succeeding
another: seventeenth-century Puritanism, eighteenth-century
hedonism, the Victorian work-ethic and so on, but the very
language of order and disorder will not be available to him. If this
were to be so, it would at least explain why what I take to be the
real world and its fate has remained unrecognized by the academic
curriculum. For the forms of the academic curriculum would turn
out to be among the symptoms of the disaster whose occurrence
the curriculum does not acknowledge. Most academic history and
sociology —the history of a Namier or a Hofstadter and the
sociology of a Merton or a Lipset — are after all as far away from
the historical standpoint of Hegel and Collingwood as most
academic philosophy is from their philosophical perspective.
It may seem to many readers that as I have elaborated my
initial hypothesis I have step by step deprived myself of very
nearly all possible argumentative allies. But is not just this required
by the hypothesis itself? For if the hypothesis is true, it will
necessarily appear implausible, since one way of stating part of the
hypothesis is precisely to assert that we are in a condition which
almost nobody recognizes and which perhaps nobody at all can
recognize fully. If my hypothesis appeared initially plausible, it
would certainly be false. And at least if even to entertain this
hypothesis puts me into an antagonistic stance, it is a very different
antagonistic stance from that of, for example, modern radicalism.
For the modern radical is as confident in the moral expression of
his stances and consequently in the assertive uses of the rhetoric of
morality as any conservative has ever been. Whatever else he
denounces in our culture he is certain that it still possesses the
moral resources which he requires in order to denounce it.
Everything else may be, in his eyes, in disorder, but the language
of morality is in order, just as it is. That he too may be being
betrayed by the very language he uses is not a thought available to
him. It is the aim of this book to make that thought available to
radicals, liberals and conservatives alike. I cannot however expect
to make it palatable, for if it is true, we are all already in a state so
disastrous that there are no large remedies for it
Do not however suppose that the conclusion to be drawn will
turn out to be one of despair. Angst is an intermittently fashionable
emotion and the misreading of some existentialist texts has turned
despair itself into a kind of psychological nostrum. But if we are
indeed in as bad a state as I take us to be, pessimism too will turn
out to be one more cultural luxury that we shall have to dispense
with in order to survive in these hard times.
I cannot of course deny, indeed my thesis entails, that the
language and the appearances of morality persist even though the
integral substance of morality has to a large degree been
fragmented and then in part destroyed. Because of this there is no
inconsistency in my speaking, as I shall shortly do, of
contemporary moral attitudes and arguments. I merely pay to the
present the courtesy of using its own vocabulary to speak of it
Alasdair MacIntyre From After Virtue
MacIntyre: “A Disquieting Suggestion” Page 3 of 3
After Virtue
Chapter 2
The Nature of Moral Disagreement Today and the Claims of Emotivism
The most striking feature of contemporary moral utterance is that
so much of it is used to express disagreements; and the most
striking feature of the debates in which these disagreements are
expressed is their interminable character. I do not mean by this just
that such debates go on and on and on — although they do — but also
that they apparently can find no terminus. There seems to be no
rational way of securing moral agreement in our culture. Consider
three examples of just such contemporary moral debate framed in
terms of characteristic and well-known rival moral arguments:
1
(a) A just war is one in which the good to be achieved
outweighs the evils involved in waging the war and in which a clear
distinction can be made between combatants — whose lives are at
stake — and innocent non-combatants. But in a modern war
calculation of future escalation is never reliable and no practically
applicable distinction between combatants and noncombatants can be
made. Therefore no modern war can be a just war and we all now
ought to be pacifists.
(b)
If you wish for peace, prepare for war. The only way to
achieve peace is to deter potential aggressors. Therefore you must
build up your armaments and make it clear that going to war on any
particular scale is not necessarily ruled out by your policies. An
inescapable part of making this clear is being prepared both to fight
limited wars and to go not only to, but beyond, the nuclear brink on
certain types of occasion. Otherwise you will not avoid war and you
will be defeated.
(c) Wars between the Great Powers are purely destructive; but
wars waged to liberate oppressed groups, especially in the Third
World, are a necessary and therefore justified means for destroying
the exploitative domination which stands between mankind and
happiness.
2 (a) Everybody has certain rights over his or her own person,
including his or her own body. It follows from the nature of these
rights that at the stage when the embryo is essentially part of the
mothers body, the mother has a right to make her own uncoerced
decision on whether she will have an abortion or not. Therefore
abortion is morally permissible and ought to be allowed by law.
(b) I cannot will that my mother should have had an abortion
when she was pregnant with me, except perhaps if it had been
certain that the embryo was dead or gravely damaged. But if I
cannot will this in my own case, how can I consistently deny to others
the right to life that I claim for myself? I would break the so-called
Golden Rule unless I denied that a mother has in general a right to an
abortion. I am not of course thereby committed to the view that
abortion ought to be legally prohibited.
(c) Murder is wrong. Murder is the taking of innocent life. An
embryo is an identifiable individual, differing from a newborn infant
only in being at an earlier stage on the long road to adult capacities
and, if any life is innocent, that of an embryo is. If infanticide is
murder, as it is, abortion is murder. So abortion is not only morally
wrong, but ought to be legally prohibited.
3 (a) Justice demands that every citizen should enjoy, so far as
is possible, an equal opportunity to develop his or her talents and his
or her other potentialities. But prerequisites for the provision of
such equal opportunity include the provision of equal access to health
care and to education. Therefore justice requires the governmental
provision of health and educational services, financed out of
taxation, and it also requires that no citizen should be able to buy an
unfair share of such services. This in turn requires the abolition of
After Virtue: “Chapter 2 Page 1 of 5
private schools and private medical practice.
(b) Everybody has a right to incur such and only such obligations
as he or she wishes, to be free to make such and only such contracts
as he or she desires and to determine his or her own free choices.
Physicians must therefore be free to practice on such terms as they
desire and patients must be free to choose among physicians;
teachers must be free to teach on such terms as they choose and
pupils and parents to go where they wish for education. Freedom
thus requires not only the existence of private practice in medicine
and private schools in education, but also the abolition of those
restraints on private practice which are imposed by licensing and
regulation by such bodies as universities, medical schools, the A.M.A.
and the state.
These arguments have only to be stated to be recognized as
being widely influential in our society. They have of course their
articulate expert spokesmen: Herman Kahn and the Pope, Che
Guevara and Milton Friedman are among the authors who have
produced variant versions of them. But it is their appearance in
newspaper editorials and high-school debates, on radio talk shows
and letters to congressmen, in bars, barracks and boardrooms, it is
their typicality that makes them important examples here. What
salient characteristics do these debates and disagreements share?
They are of three kinds. The first is what I shall call, adapting
an expression from the philosophy of science, the conceptual
incommensurability of the rival arguments in each of the three
debates. Every one of the arguments is logically valid or can be easily
expanded so as to be made so; the conclusions do indeed follow from
the premises. But the rival premises are such that we possess no
rational way of weighing the claims of one as against another. For
each premise employs some quite different normative or evaluative
concept from the others, so that the claims made upon us are of
quite different kinds. In the first argument, for example, premises
which invoke justice and innocence are at odds with premises which
invoke success and survival; in the second, premises which invoke
rights are at odds with those which invoke universalizability; in the
third it is the claim of equality that is matched against that of
liberty. It is precisely because there is in our society no established
way of deciding between these claims that moral argument appears
to be necessarily interminable. From our rival conclusions we can
argue back to our rival premises; but when we do arrive at our
premises argument ceases and the invocation of one premise against
another becomes a matter of pure assertion and counter-assertion.
Hence perhaps the slightly shrill tone of so much moral debate.
But that shrillness may have an additional source. For it is not
only in arguments with others that we are reduced so quickly to
assertion and counter-assertion; it is also in the arguments that we
have within ourselves. For whenever an agent enters the forum of
public debate he has already presumably, explicitly or implicitly,
settled the matter in question in his own mind. Yet if we possess no
unassailable criteria, no set of compelling reasons by means of which
we may convince our opponents, it follows that in the process of
making up our own minds we can have made no appeal to such criteria
or such reasons. If I lack any good reasons to invoke against you, it
must seem that I lack any good reasons. Hence it seems that
underlying my own position there must be some non-rational decision
to adopt that position. Corresponding to the interminability of public
argument there is at least the appearance of a di ...
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