This question arose while I was reading Josh Bachynski's book The Zombies, subtitled
On Morality.
Josh explains subjective-predictive morality as follows:
“You all know and have seen it (and used it too!). It is the
simple morality we commonly use when giving a gift, throwing a party, or trying
to predict and ensure how well things will end up for others. When we are
practically good. When we seek to help and not hurt others, for no other reason
than this is good. What we currently call being courteous or nice, for the sake
of just being courteous or nice. When we are not trying to do what’s “Right”
per se. When we are trying to do what’s right by them”.
Doing right by others is encompassed in the ethics of doing
right by yourself. What is good feels good. Josh explains the process of subjective
evaluative judgment as involving (1) pleasant or unpleasant feelings (2) cognitive
reactions concerning the value of those feelings (3) predictions as to whether
we will have reason to regret the action contemplated. Josh suggests:
“This is the way we naturally insert quality control into
our valuations.”
He goes on to observe:
“As it turns out, in searching for the moral, we have
actually made a powerful discovery. And this is in what is also rational or
prudent”.
I suggest that readers who are interested in learning more
about Josh’s philosophy should read Leah Goldrick’s review at Common Sense Ethics, which contains a link to her interview of Josh, and then begin to read
the book itself. This is a long book. I found the authors chatty writing style entertaining
at first, but tedious after the first few chapters.
Josh Bachynski’s ethics of doing what is right by oneself
and others seems quite similar to the template of responsibility, advocated by Douglas Den Uyl and Douglas Rasmussen in The Perfectionist Turn. The ethics of responsibility is based on “the existential fact
that we must make something of our lives”. This is explained in a passage I
have quoted previously:
“For the template of responsibility, the basis for
determining worthiness is human flourishing or wellbeing of some sort. Its
ultimate value is integrity. Integrity expresses itself interpersonally in
honour but when applied to the agent herself, the term ‘integrity’ signifies a
coherent, integral whole of virtues and values, allowing for consistency
between word and deed and for reliability in action”.
There are some differences between the two approaches. Pleasant and unpleasant feelings are not given a great deal
of prominence in Den Uyl and Rasmussen’s view of human flourishing. They
define human flourishing as consisting of “activities that both produce and
express in a human being an actualization of potentialities that are specific
to the kind of living thing a human being is and that are unique to each human
being as an individual”. At one point, Den Uyl and Rasmussen suggest that “an
objective account of human flourishing can be characterized as a life of right desire”. They argue that the value
of something to a person “is not necessarily a mere matter of “its being
desired, wanted, or chosen” because a person “is more than a bundle of passions
and desires”. That is still consistent with the view that emotions such as joy
and disgust provide important information to help us to decide what we value.
Another possible source of difference is in respect of
naturalism. From my reading of The
Zombies, it seems likely that Bachynski would be suspicious that Den Uyl
and Rasmussen’s teleological naturalism could be seeking to perpetuate ancient
errors about human nature that scientific advances have given us reasons to
question. I don’t think such suspicions would be well-founded because Den Uyl
and Rasmussen present a view of human flourishing that is explicitly
individualistic, agent-relative and self-directed.
As I see it, the differences between the philosophical
approaches discussed above have parallels in the differences between some
psychological therapies. Subjective predictive morality seems to have much in
common with rational emotive approaches (REBT) in which people use reasoning to
moderate their emotional responses. The template of responsibility seems to a
lot in common with an acceptance and commitment approach (ACT) in which people ask
themselves how they can actualize their potential in the given situation to act
in accordance with their values, whatever their current emotional states might be.
Perhaps there may also be parallels in the differences between philosophic approaches
of the Stoics and Aristotle.
Subjective predictive morality and the template of
responsibility both involve the use of practical reason. The question of which
approach is better should probably be viewed as an empirical matter. In your
experience, which approach has been of greatest help you in doing the right
thing by yourself and others? The correct answer could well be different for
different individuals.
In the light of similarities between subjective-predictive
morality and the template of individual responsibility, it may come as a surprise
to some readers that the authors have vastly different political perspectives. Josh
Bachynski describes himself as “a left-leaning liberal democrat” and his book
begins with a rant to the effect that he sees “ecological/economic disaster” as
“disturbingly likely” because of “wasteful and self-destructive profit
structures”. Douglas Den Uyl and Douglas Rasmussen are classical liberals who have
proudly given one of the chapters in their book the title: “The entrepreneur as
a moral hero”.
I find it impossible to believe that those vast differences
in world view stem from differences in their philosophical views about ethics. There
may be some differences in the value they place on individual liberty, but they
don’t seem to be huge. Their different world views must stem from different
perceptions about the way the economic system works and the likelihood of
ecological/economic disaster. It is a matter of who is right and who is wrong
about relevant aspects of the real world.
For what it is worth, I think there is a very high probability
that Josh is wrong, but I acknowledge that we shouldn’t be ignoring low
probability outcomes that would be disastrous for humanity. Unfortunately, as I
observed in my comments on Nassim Taleb’s book, Skin in the Game, when it comes to consideration of potential Black
Swan events that threaten the survival of humanity, the political systems we
have inherited do not ensure that political leaders have enough skin in the
game for their minds to focus appropriately. Political leaders tend to focus on
their survival at the next election rather than on the survival of humanity. It
is up to citizens who are concerned about potential Black Swan disasters to
initiate appropriate action themselves.
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