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11' Morality and Reason

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Title: 11' Morality and Reason


1
11. Morality and Reason
  • Antti Kauppinen
  • PY 3702 Value and Normativity

2
I Morality and Reason
3
Do We Have a Reason to Be Moral?
  • There are two different sorts of question about
    moral justification
  • Epistemological How do I know what I morally
    ought to do? What does morality demand of me?
  • Practical Supposing that morality requires me to
    x, what reason do I have to x? Why should I be a
    moral person?
  • To answer the practical question, we need to take
    a stand on what practical reasons are in the
    first place
  • The question about the rationality of being moral
    may not be quite the same, as well see

4
Reasons
  • There are two senses of reason that should be
    kept well apart
  • Motivating reasons, or reasons why
  • Why did Doug open the fridge?
  • The reason why Doug opened the fridge was that he
    wanted some beer
  • Motivating reasons are psychological states that
    feature in rationalizing explanations of an
    agents action explanations that reveal the
    favourable light in which the agent saw the
    action
  • Normative reasons, or reasons to
  • Why should I go to Paris?
  • The fact that I could learn something about art
    history at the Louvre is a reason to go to Paris
  • Normative reasons are considerations that count
    in favour of a course of action or attitude
  • The practical question about the justification of
    morality asks for normative reasons

5
Moral Rationalism
  • Moral rationalism is the view that we have good
    reasons to be moral, or that moral obligations
    are grounded in rationality
  • The second formulation is different and stronger,
    if reasons and what it is rational to do can come
    apart
  • The main motivation for moral rationalism is the
    belief that moral demands have genuine authority
    over us
  • Moreover, this authority isnt merely arbitrary
    or conventional, but inescapable

6
II Internal and External Reasons A Challenge to
Moral Rationalism
7
Normative Reasons
  • We give and ask for reasons in a variety of
    contexts
  • Justifying our behaviour I had a good reason to
    leave early I needed to catch a plane
  • Criticizing others You had no reason to treat
    her like that!
  • Advising others Theres a good reason for you
    to join the army theyll give you a great
    pension!
  • There can be reasons simultaneously for and
    against a course of action
  • Reasons can be stronger or weaker
  • Reasons can be overridden or silenced
  • Plausibly, what one has most reason to do is what
    one ought to do

8
The Grounds of Reasons
  • What is it that makes something good advice for
    you? Alternative answers include
  • Its a way to get you what you want (desires and
    goals are grounds of instrumental reasons)
  • Its what is good for you (self-interest grounds
    prudential reasons)
  • Its the most fitting response to your situation
  • Its what any rational agent would do

9
Hume on Reasons
  • On Humes picture, famously, reason is and ought
    to be the slave of the passions
  • Reason can only tell us what the best means for
    satisfying our passions is, but it cant tell us
    which passions to have
  • Tis not contrary to reason to prefer the
    destruction of the whole world to the scratching
    of my finger. Tis as little contrary to reason
    to prefer even my own acknowledged lesser good to
    my greater
  • This is because reason only judges matters of
    fact and relations of ideas, and passions, being
    original existences, are not in the business of
    representing how things are

10
Williamss Challenge to Moral Rationalism
  • According to Bernard Williams, there is a
    connection between motivating and normative
    reasons for action
  • Very simply, normative reasons must be capable of
    motivating, or theyre not genuine reasons for
    the person in question. Such normative reasons
    are internal reasons, and the thesis that they
    are the only kind of reasons is reasons
    internalism
  • This must not be confused with judgment
    internalism, which we discussed earlier
  • It follows that what normative reasons people
    have is relative to what is capable of motivating
    them
  • So, people who would not be motivated by moral
    considerations have no reason to be moral

11
Internal Reasons
  • Williams begins with a simple sub-Humean model
  • A has a reason to f iff f-ing would further some
    of As present ends, where ones ends are
    determined by ones subjective motivational set S
    consisting of desires, projects, plans, and so on
  • So, Jim has a reason to be polite if he wants
    people to like him
  • This is too simple, because ones actual ends may
    be based on false beliefs
  • Jim wants to mix the stuff in the bottle that
    says Gin on it with tonic, because he wants a
    gin and tonic and believes that there is gin in
    the bottle. But in fact, the stuff in the bottle
    is petrol, so he has no reason to mix it with the
    tonic.
  • So, A has a reason to f iff f-ing would further
    some of As present ends, and neither As ends
    nor her belief that f-ing would further them is
    based on a false belief

12
Internal Reasons and Deliberation
  • Importantly, what someone has reason to do
    depends not only on their present ends, but what
    they would want as a result of deliberation
  • Williams has a broad understanding of
    deliberation
  • Finding out what would be the most convenient,
    economical, or pleasant way to satisfy some
    existing motive
  • Someone who want to shop might decide that Paris
    is the most pleasant place to shop, and
    consequently acquire a new desire to go to Paris
  • Figuring out how to combine various ends or
    organize them over time to make sure as many as
    possible get achieved, or finding constitutive
    solutions (what makes for a romantic evening)
  • Deliberation also includes imagining the outcomes
    of various choices
  • A consideration is in the relevant sense capable
    of motivating A to f iff there exists a sound
    deliberative route from her current S to one that
    includes f-ing
  • F-ing is deliberatively accessible for A

13
Internal Reasons and Criticizability
  • Internal reasons are meant to be normative
    reasons, and one essential mark of the normative
    is that the notion of a mistake makes sense
  • Williamss internal reasons allow for mistakes
    that is, it can be true of someone that she has a
    reason to f even though she at present does not
    want to f or believe she has a reason to f
  • Were the person to form correct beliefs, she
    would want to f
  • Were the person to engage in correct
    deliberation, she would want to f
  • So, you may have a reason to take a break from
    studying for Christmas, even if you want to keep
    doing it

14
External Reasons
  • External reasons, if such exist, are
    considerations that favour courses of action even
    if they are deliberatively inaccessible to the
    agent
  • The story of Owen Wingrave
  • There is a family tradition of serving in the
    military. In the name of family pride, the father
    urges Owen to join, but he feels no inclination
    to do so. In fact, he hates everything about the
    military, and no amount of true beliefs and
    deliberation would change his mind. His father
    says Owen has good reason to join up, but does
    he?
  • First problem
  • To insist that Owen has a reason seems like
    browbeating

15
The Impotence of External Reasons
  • Explanatory constraint coming to believe that
    one has a reason to f must give rise to some
    motivation to f
  • This makes rationalizing explanations possible
  • If Owen comes to believe that he has a reason to
    join the army, he will have some motivation to do
    so, which may explain his action
  • Coming to believe that one would have motivation
    to f were one to deliberate correctly does
    intelligibly give rise to some motivation in
    itself
  • But, according to Williams, belief in an external
    reason couldnt do that
  • For the external reasons theorist, if the agent
    rationally deliberated, then, whatever
    motivations he originally had, he would come to
    be motivated to f ... but ... ex hypothesi,
    theres no motivation for the agent to deliberate
    from
  • For Williams, deliberation as it were channels
    motivation from existing ends to new ends

16
Internal Reasons and Blame
  • Williams argues that if there were external
    reasons, a plausible connection between reasons
    and blaming would be broken
  • Blaming someone implies they had a reason to do
    something else
  • This may be a controversial premise
  • The point of blaming someone is to get them to
    change what they do
  • If reasons didnt motivate, blaming them wouldnt
    change what they do
  • Since on an externalist picture reasons need not
    have a connection to motivation, blaming would
    thus be pointless, since their becoming aware of
    reasons to do otherwise wouldnt motivate them to
    change

17
Rationality, Reasons, and Morality
  • The internal reasons story keeps an agents
    reasons and rationality close together
  • Insofar as rationality is a matter of internal
    coherence, adjusting ones ends in the light of
    ones beliefs and other ends, one has an internal
    reason to do what it is rational for one to do
  • For Williams, a person may be cruel or selfish or
    just not nice without being irrational
  • It is bluff to call such an agent irrational
  • So, moral evaluations and what it is rational to
    do come apart

18
Reasons and Oughts
  • As discussed earlier in lecture 6, Joyce picks up
    an error-theoretical thread from Williamss
    argument
  • If what we ought to do is what we have most
    reason to do, and if our reasons are relative to
    our contingent motives, then what we ought to do
    is relative to our contingent motives
  • But according to our commonsense conception of
    morality, what we ought to do is not relative to
    our contingent motives
  • Hence, Joyce argues that accepting internalism
    leads to an error theory about our commonsense
    conception of morality

19
II Defending Moral Reasons
20
Korsgaards Response
  • Korsgaard points out that even internal reasons
    motivate agents only to the extent that theyre
    rational
  • If youre irrational, you wont take the means to
    your end either
  • So, the thesis should really be that A has a
    reason to x iff A would be motivated to x insofar
    as she is rational
  • This leaves open the possibility that there are
    certain reasons that all rational agents have,
    because they must have certain motives in order
    to be rational agents in the first place

21
Shafer-Landau on Melancholia
  • Some people are melancholy and miserable. They
    just want to be left alone by the world, and mope
    in their room.
  • Yet they would be much happier were they to get
    out and do things with other people. But because
    of their melancholy, they cant see this, and
    would not reach the conclusion by any sound
    deliberative route.
  • Intuitively, such a person has a reason to leave
    the room
  • If so, reasons internalism is false, since it
    implies that she has no such reason

22
McDowells Response
  • McDowells response to Williams questions the
    need for external reasons to become
    motivationally effective through deliberation
  • Instead, one could be brought up in the right
    way, or convert to seeing things aright
  • Transition to being so motivated is a transition
    to deliberating correctly, not one effected by
    deliberating correctly effecting the transition
    may need some non-rational alteration such as
    conversion.
  • So, the melancholy person may have a reason to go
    out, even though there is no way to argue her
    from her existing motivations to doing so

23
Shafer-Landau on Blaming Himmler
  • According to internalism, people have no reason
    to do whats deliberatively inaccessible for them
  • People dont deserve blame for what they have no
    reason to do
  • So, if internalism is true, people cant be
    justly blamed for failing to do whats
    deliberatively inaccessible for them
  • But there are people, like Himmler, who deserve
    blame whether or not the desire to stop what they
    did was deliberatively accessible for them
  • Hence, internalism is false, and moral reasons
    are not constrained by peoples desires and goals

24
Dancy on Desires and Reasons
  • Jonathan Dancy argues that merely having a desire
    or goal to x doesnt mean one has any reason to x
  • If x-ing is silly or not very sensible, wanting
    to x doesnt make it any less silly or sensible
  • Nor does wanting give any reason to do something
    that would be a means to x
  • Rather than desires giving us reasons, we
    generally desire something because we take there
    to be a reason to do so
  • If the desire is based on a reason, it does not
    add to the reasons one has
  • If the desire is not based on a reason, there is
    no reason not to give it up
  • So, rather than there being only internal reasons
    in Williamss sense, on Dancys view, there are
    no internal reasons
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