Ethics For Everyday Life
Ethics For Everyday Life
Ethics For Everyday Life
Drifting or thinking?
Most of us drift through life without asking difficult questions. We re not very i
nterested in what knowledge is, or about what is real, or whether you can ever f
ind the answers to moral problems. But philosophers are restless. They can t stop
asking questions, even though the answers are often hard to find. They examine v
ery odd problems like What is reality? or What is a good person? They are like child
ren in a way impossibly curious, sometimes about what seems totally obvious. ( Wha
t is real? Are you having a laugh? )
The first great philosopher was
hink for themselves. He said it
eople tell you. Life is usually
it s lazy. We all need to think
It s one of the things that makes us fully human. Socrates asked awkward questions
and was eventually killed for voicing his opinions. Everyone now admires him fo
r sticking to his beliefs. So part of being a good person means not obeying the r
ules but thinking for yourself .
Do philosophers have the answers?
Nobody is quite sure what philosophy is these days, especially philosophers. Som
e say it tries to answer the questions that science has given up on. What are th
ese questions that baffle science?
A scientist can tell you what stem cell
people, but he can t tell you, for sure,
can examine a moral problem like this in
e end of the day, she can t tell you the
You have to decide for yourself whether stem cell research is right or wrong, in
your opinion. Notice those last three words. No one can prove that stem cell re
search is good or bad. You can only ever have opinions.
That doesn t mean we can t make very confident guesses or have strong moral views. I
t s just that philosophers will always want to know how you know. Some of us will
say that we rely on something we call our conscience
but what s that? Some rely on o
thers
parents, experts , or the man next door. Some of us may have firm moral views
already, because we ve been taught them in church or at the mosque. But philosoph
ers aren t happy with Someone told me or I read it in the Great Book . They want reason
s, evidence, a logical argument.
Changing morality
Morality gets passed down from generation to generation without being questioned
much. But it can change. At one time most people thought that there was nothing
wrong in watching a bear being ripped to pieces by a pack of dogs. It made a sp
lendid day out for all the family. Nowadays we re more alarmed and distressed by n
eedless cruelty to animals and we think that bear-baiting was wrong.
A lot of us now think that fox hunting is probably cruel as well. And most peopl
e no longer think that homosexuality is wicked. It looks as if society has progr
essed. But we shouldn t be too smug. Human beings aren t necessarily getting nicer,
year on year. We still do bad things. And new moral problems keep surfacing that
we don t know how to deal with. Should we allow the government to lock people up
without trial, in case they are terrorists? Should we allow them to torture susp
on Facebook
in my humble opi
property ? Every individual has t
owners themselves didn t like
came up with ridiculous excu
that slaves were slaves by na
Question:
Are there any moral rules that you think are always non-negotiable and compulsor
y? What are they?
Reply:
Torture of any kind is always wrong and never justified (IMHO). Being cruel to c
hildren is too. You can probably think of a few more.
Question:
Reply:
Whatever moral issue you feel strongly about, like stem cell research, make sure
that you know all the facts first, and think hard about it. Don t just say, It s wro
ng because it s wrong .
Question:
Which of these moral issues do you feel most strongly about? (Mark them from 1 t
o 10.)
Abortion
Animal rights
Bankers greed
Global warming
Euthanasia
Reply:
This ranking of moral issues is your own. It might tell you some interesting thi
ngs about your personal moral beliefs.
Question:
Where do you think your moral beliefs come from? Your parents? Your friends? TV
and newspapers? Your conscience? Somewhere else?
Reply:
Moral beliefs come from all over the place. Everyone is influenced by different
things. Your parents tell you the basics
don t lie, steal or be cruel. Newspapers
and TV are usually good sources of information but may be suspect when it comes
to moral pronouncements. At the end of the day, you have to think for yourself a
nd then decide.
Question:
An ancient tribe in New Guinea practises cannibalism enthusiastically. They beli
eve that when they eat a grandfather, or an enemy slain in battle, they are also
ingesting the strength, wisdom and courage of these people. Should we intervene
and stop them?
Reply:
Do we stop other people s cultural practices? Personally I can t see anything wrong
about eating a grandfather who died of natural causes, although I wouldn t want to
do it myself. I m less happy about eating defeated enemies. I might try to encour
age this tribe to settle boundary disputes in a less aggressive way. As a sophis
ticated modern European who has read some anthropology and sociology, I would al
ways be reluctant to impose my own morality and etiquette onto others. So in thi
s case I m a relativist. It s their morality, not mine. But if they also went in for
compulsory widow-burning, then I would try to stop them. Burning people against
their will just seems wrong to me
always. So in that instance I m an absolutist.
Who said morality was easy?
I met Matt down at the pub and he was furious. What was the problem? Apparently
his employer had suggested that all his employees donate 2 per cent of their wag
es to a Third World charity. Matt thinks he s worked hard all week and deserves al
l of his pay. Why should he give 6 a week to help people he s never even met? What
has any of this got to do with him? Charity begins at home, he says. Whose side
are you on? Matt s? Or his employer s?
The philosopher Peter Singer (b. 1946) says that if Matt saw a starving child ly
ing on the pavement outside the pub, then he d feel morally obliged to give him mo
ney for a meal and tell the authorities about him. But there are thousands of st
arving children in Africa and elsewhere. Just because Matt can t see them doesn t me
an he shouldn t have to think about helping them. Does geographical distance make
them less worthy of help?
And it s not as if 6 is a huge amount out of 300. What Matt seems to be objecting to
more is his loss of autonomy
his own freedom to choose, and he s right that no on
e should be forced to donate money to charity. Matt has to make a personal decis
ion.
1. Moral philosophy: a very rough history
At the very beginning
So when did moral philosophy begin? Codes of behaviour have always existed, ever
since human beings started living together to hunt, forage, grow crops and keep
domestic animals. Tribal chiefs and priests insisted that individuals abstained
from anti-social activities like murder and theft. These things are called antisocial because no society can get off the ground if they are widespread. It s impos
sible to keep tribes, cities or societies intact if there s a moral free-for-all.
So, on the whole, people carried on believing what their parents believed. Every
one frowned on unorthodox views or unusual behaviour. Nothing much changed. Ther
e was no such thing as modern . You used the same tools, built the same huts and py
ramids, went through the usual reaching puberty rituals, married, had kids, taught
them what you d been taught, and so it went on for thousands of years. Technology
changed flint tools got replaced by bronze and then iron ones
but most people s
till distrusted ethical or political innovation. Anyone who challenged orthodox
moral or religious beliefs got laughed at or severely punished. Morality, religi
on and politics were all interwoven into one unavoidable system. No one ever tho
ught to ask where moral rules came from or why they had to be obeyed. They were
usually just too tired or frightened.