mmcirvin: (Default)
mmcirvin ([personal profile] mmcirvin) wrote2006-09-29 07:01 pm

Morality

John Scalzi posted an outraged post about the MCA, and some way down the thread somebody named Paul posted a defense of the law that included the following sentence:
7. I find it interesting that people who profess no faith in God or any other higher power can be so dogmatic about "morality". Morality is simply a recognition that some things are right and others are wrong based on some accepted standard. On what do you base your morality? Who sets the rules for you? How do you "know" that something is wrong?
I'd just been reading Fred Clark (who is a Christian, and... let's just say he wouldn't agree with Paul) talking about related subjects and was having warm fuzzy tolerant feelings about ways in which religion could be constructive, and this guy goes and ruins it for me. For Paul, apparently, religion isn't so much a source of moral insight as it is the admission ticket you need to lecture people about right and wrong. He's a God-believer and John and I are not, so what right do we have to tell him it's wrong to torture people? It reminds me of something I read from, I think, Orrin Judd a few years ago, complaining that atheists who behaved decently were free riders, mooching off of God-derived morality without acknowledging its divine author. He seemed almost disappointed that atheists weren't all monsters, as if we were using up his precious morality supply.


On the other hand, I do have to admit that I've been wrestling with Paul's particular question for a long time. Sometimes I think I'm almost a utilitarian and sometimes I think I'm almost a Kantian, and sometimes I almost agree with Raymond Smullyan's cheerful pseudo-Taoist take that axiomatized moral systems (as opposed to ethical feelings) are a dreary and monstrous waste of time, but all these positions seem unsatisfactory to me for various reasons. There are hard moral questions, and even a few easy ones, on which I've made decisions I later decided were wrong, and a more clear-cut moral system might have helped me.

Nevertheless, I find that there are many subjects on which I have no uncertainty whatsoever, such as whether half-drowning prisoners to extract information from them is right or wrong. If you ask how I know these things, I suppose the most honest thing to say is "because I was brought up that way". My parents and society inculcated certain values in me from childhood, and instilled in me, among other things, the idea that empathy is important, that you should treat people as you'd like to be treated, that some rules exist for a reason, but that injustices should be resisted; and that certain things are still right or wrong even if nobody is going to reward or punish me for them. These values do come into conflict with one another, but they have generally served me well. It's not a terribly satisfactory answer, but in practice, that's pretty much all anyone has. And, I suppose, more than some have.


I do know enough to get all Euthyphro on people who think it helps to bring God into it. If there is a God and God likes good things because they're good, then they must be good for some other reason, and theists and atheists are in the same boat morally, except possibly as regards enforcement. If good things are good just because God likes them, and if God decided tomorrow he wanted you to eat babies, that would become good—well, that may be internally coherent, but it seems hardly less arbitrary than saying good things are good for no particular reason, except, again, as regards enforcement. The angle that really makes my head hurt is that it leaves no way to exclude the possibility that God is lying to his prophets and followers about what he wants us to do, just for kicks; if God did it, it would be perfectly OK!

I suspect that what enthusiasts of divine command sometimes really mean is the more pragmatic argument that there's no reason for you to be good unless you're going to be rewarded or punished in the afterlife, but that's not how I was brought up at all.
jwgh: (Default)

[personal profile] jwgh 2006-09-30 12:09 am (UTC)(link)
Part of the problem with saying that God defines morality is that it makes the idea that God is good vacuously true, which I don't think is what most religious people have in mind.

(Worshipping a god because you think he's good makes more sense to me than worshipping a god because you think he defines what good is, although neither makes a whole lot of sense to me, so I should probably just shut up about it.)

[identity profile] mmcirvin.livejournal.com 2006-09-30 01:17 am (UTC)(link)
C. S. Lewis wrote some stuff that suggested to me that he took the first option: worshipping God not because he's a deontological bully who gets to say what good is, but because he is both good and wise, seems to have deep understanding of good and can teach us how to be good. Of course that's assuming one believes that in the first place.
jwgh: (Default)

[personal profile] jwgh 2006-09-30 01:42 am (UTC)(link)
I was gonna say that I thought this was the Catholic position, but then I realized that my primary source on this was a detective story, so what do I know?

[identity profile] mmcirvin.livejournal.com 2006-09-30 03:59 am (UTC)(link)
Lewis was an Anglican, but I'm not sure how orthodox his position was.

[identity profile] paracelsvs.livejournal.com 2006-09-30 07:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, worshipping a god because you think he's good sort of implies there are other options, which would often imply the existence of other gods. Some religions are just fine with this, and just claims theirs is the best, but Abrahamic religions seem to somewhere along the way have picked up the idea that even the existence of other gods is to be forbidden, which leads to all kinds of problems and inconsistencies with older material that doesn't believe this. It all ends up sort of neurotic.

Which incidentially is why I can't stop giggling when I think of Shinto. Shinto has "innumerable" gods, and you just pick and choose convenient ones to worship, such as those who happen to be within hearing distance, or whatever. And at some point the Buddhists show up and say, hey, you should worship the Buddha instead! And the Shintoists go, OK, he sounds pretty awesome, let's do that! And they keep worshipping their innumerable gods and also Buddha. And next, the Christians show up and say, hey, you should worship Jesus instead! And, of course, the Shintoists go, awesome, let's add him too!

I was discussing this with a Japanese friend, and the result is pretty much that as a modern Japanese person, if you're going to pray, you might very well call upon the gods in general, Buddha, and Jesus to listen to your prayer. Because hey, the more the merrier.
jwgh: (Default)

[personal profile] jwgh 2006-10-01 04:40 am (UTC)(link)
I think you could believe in a god but choose not to worship him (or her or whatever) because you think he (or she, etc.) is a jerk. That seems like a reasonable thing to do to me. I suppose you might have concerns about retribution though. Suffering the WRATH of the ASSHOLE GOD!

I am told that my grandmother stopped talking to God (which I think means she stopped praying) for a while after she lost her third or fourth child to cystic fibrosis, because she was really mad at Him. I don't know if that counts or not as an example of what I'm talking about. (Apparently she and God are on reasonably good terms again these days.)