Title: The Scottish Philosopher David Hume (1711-1776):
1The Scottish Philosopher David Hume (1711-1776)
- An Introduction into the ethical theory of David
Hume. - If you want truth look to science or mathematics
ethics is ultimately based on our feelings
Natural moral sentiments is where moral
decision-making is grounded.
2Consider the following quote
- Tis not contrary to reason to prefer the
destruction of the whole world to the scratching
of my finger. - A Treatise on Human Reason, edited by L.A.
Selby-Rigge (Oxford Clarendon Press, 1988), 416.
3Consider the following quote
- Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the
passions, and can never pretend to any other
office to serve and obey them. - A Treatise on Human Reason, edited by L.A.
Selby-Rigge (Oxford Clarendon Press, 1988), 416.
4Consider the following quote
- Take any action allowed to be vicious willful
murder, for instance. Examine it in all its
lights and see if you can find that matter of
fact, or real existence, which you call vice.
You never can find it, till you turn your
affection into your own breast, and find a
sentiment of disapprobation, which arises in you,
towards this action. Here is a matter of fact
but it is the object of feeling, not of reason.
It lies in your self, not in the object. So that
which you pronounce any action or character to be
vicious, you mean nothing, but that from the
constitution of your nature you have a feeling or
sentiment of blame from the contemplation of it. - A Treatise of Human Nature, Everymans
Library (New York E.P. Dutton, 1956) 2177.
5Consider the following quote
- When we run over libraries, persuaded of these
principles what havoc must we make? If we take
in our hand any volume-of divinity or school
metaphysics, for instance-let us ask, Does it
contain any abstract reasoning concerning
quantity or number? No. Does it contain any
experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact
and existence? No. Commit it then to the
flames, for it can contain nothing but sophistry
literalism and illusion. - Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding,
12.3.173.
6I. Major Tenets
- (1) Reason alone cannot be a motive to the will,
but rather is the slave of the passions In
other words, reason alone cannot motivate to
action the impulse to act itself must come from
moral sentiments. - (2) Morals are not derived from reason they are
derived from the experience of people. - (3) Morals are generated from moral sentiments
feelings of approbation (approval, esteem,
praise) disapprobation (disapproval,, blame)
felt by spectators who consider a character
trait or action
7I. Major Tenets
- (4) While some virtues and vices are natural,
others, including justice, are artificial. - (5) The human psychological makeup of man is
similar. Therefore, moral judgments will tend
to be similar. - (6) Since morals will tend to be similar,
moralities may be conceived in terms of social
utility
8I. Major Tenets
- (7) Humes ethics comes out of the worldview of
empiricism only matters of fact are those
discernible by the senses. - (8) Moral facts do not exist rules of morality
are not derived from reason. - (9) Vice and virtue are perceptions in the mind
and that is all that is needed to regulate moral
behavior. - (10) Moral distinctions are constituted by their
pleasantness and usefulness (he did not
synthesize how the relate to each other).
9II. Overview of Significant Points
- 1. Primacy of feelings over reason as a guide to
ethics - 2. Hum was profoundly influenced by Newtonian
scientific revolution - 3. Empirical science nor science can offer us
ethical truths only genuine knowledge comes from
pure mathematics or empirical science. It is not
because reason is flawed, but because basic
ethical preferences are generated from feelings
passions - 4. Factual knowledge arises exclusively from the
data supplied by the senses and is extended in
usefulness by means of inferences based on a
belief in cause-and-effect relations.
10II. Overview
- 5. Feelings cannot provide an objective
foundation for ethics In fact, feelings are not
subject to reason. - 6. Hume attacks the idea of a necessary
metaphysical connection between cause and
effect. - 7. The basis of moral assertion is sourced in
feelings of approval (pleasure) or disapproval
(pain or uneasiness). - 8. Hume is a compatibilist regarding free-will
and Newtonian determinism (he is a strict
empiricist).
11II. Overview
- 9. Hume agrees with the moral sense theorists
such as Shaftesbury and Hutcheson (moral sense)
and Butler (conscience) that all requirements to
pursue goodness and avoid evil as consequent upon
human nature, which is so structured that a
particular feature of our consciousness (whether
moral sense or conscience) evaluates the rest. - 10.Because we are the kinds of creatures we are,
with the dispositions for pain and pleasure, the
kinds of familial and friendly interdependence
that make up our life together, and our approvals
and disapprovals of these, Hume believes we can
escape radical relativism, generate natural and
artificial virtues are socially agreeable.
12II. Overview
- Natural and Artificial Virtues
- Artificial virtues are dependent upon social
structures (justice fidelity to promises,
chastity, modesty, duties to sovereign states) - Natural virtues originate in nature and are more
universal (compassion, generosity, gratitude,
friendship, fidelity, charity, benevolence,
clemency, equity, prudence, etc).
13On Justice
- On Justice
- It is natural for justice to arise, but we will
come together and establish conventions of
justice.
14II. Overview
- 11. This view of moral grounding in moral
sense, emotions, or passional nature is
contrary to rationalists like Locke, Hobbes, and
Clarke, who believed that good and evil were
discovered by reason. - 12. Locke, Hobbes, and Clarke believed, in some
moods, that moral standards or requirements are
requirements of reason.
15II. Overview
- 13. Hume takes an intermediate view regarding
whether morality is conventional (Hobbes) or
natural (Locke). Hume thinks natural impulses
of humanity and dispositions to approve cannot
entirely account for our virtue of justice a
correct analysis of that requires the thesis
that mankind, an inventive species, has
cooperatively constructed rules of property and
promise.
16II. Overview
- 14. Hume disagrees with Hobbes regarding the
following - a. Necessary psychological Egoism
- b. Necessary violent view of a state of nature
whereby without an organized state all is in a
war against all
17II. Overview
- 15. Hume disagrees with Locke (and Rawls) about
the idea of humanity being involved in a highly
cooperative domain of law- governing citizens for
the following reasons - a It is a hypothetical condition in which we
would care for our friends and cooperate with
them - b. Self-interest and preference for friends
over strangers would make any wider
cooperation impossible. - One of the central themes of Humes political
philosophy is that we are both fundamentally
loving and selfish.
18II. Overview
- 16. Turning from reason to sentiment Hume
believes that has avoided radical relativism or
mere subjectivism. - a. Since people have the same psychological
makeup, their moral responses will be similar. - b. If provided the same data, people will tend
to respond similarly. That does mean that all
people will agree about the moral worth of an
action. -
- c. Ethical disagreements generally stem not from
differences in our passional nature or
feelings but from (a) misunderstandings
regarding circumstantial evidence or from (b)
incomplete analyses.
19II. Overview
- 17. Study of individual assessments reveal that
socially useful acts are approved while those
which are socially detrimental are disapproved. - 18. Since we judge acts generally by their
conformity to social utility (rather than by
immediate, personal preferences), impartiality
will tend to prevail in moral judgments.
20II. Overview
- 18. Conjoined events do not prove they are
causally connected any more than there is a
causal connection between the rooster crowing
and the sun rising. All one can do is
extrapolate based on oft-repeated occurrences.
He does not deny the principle of causality he
denies the basis on which some people try to
prove causality. - 19. All objections of human inquiry are relations
of ideas (mathematics definitions) or matters of
fact (everything known through one or more of the
senses).
21II. Overview
- 20. Laws of nature are habits formed in our minds
on what has occurred in the past and the
expectation of similar experiences will occur in
the future.
22The Nature of Moral Judgment3 Textual
Interpretations
- 1. Non-propositional View a moral evaluation
does not express any proposition or state any
fact. Either it gives vent to a feeling, or it is
itself a feeling. (A more refined form of this
interpretation allows that moral evaluations have
some propositional content, but claims that for
Hume their essential feature, as evaluations, is
non-propositional).
23The Nature of Moral Judgment3 Textual
Interpretations
- 2. Description of the Feelings of the Spectator
Hume is describing the feelings of the
spectator, or the feelings a spectator would have
were she to contemplate the trait or action from
the common point of view.
24The Nature of Moral Judgment3 Textual
Interpretations
- 3. Dispositional interpretation Evaluated trait
or action is so constituted as to cause feelings
of approval or disapproval in a (suitably
characterized) spectator. On the dispositional
view, in saying some trait is good we attribute
to the trait the dispositional property of being
such as to elicit approval.
25IV. Moral Sentiments
- 1. Moral sentiments are emotions which possess
unique phenomenological quality, and special set
of causes. - 2. Moral Sentiments are caused by contemplating
the person or action. - 3. Moral sentiments tend to be clarified or
brought into focus by social utility which is a
common moral sentiments or similar responses
(collectively).
26IV. Moral Sentiments
- Moral sentiments are the sort of pleasure
uneasiness which are associated with 4 passions - 1. Pride
- 2. humility
- 3. Love
- 4. Hatred.
- Some argue that pleasure and pain cause these 4
passions others believe these 4 passions make up
the pleasure or pain. - Thus, when we feel moral approval we tend to
love or esteem, and when we approve a trait of
our own we are proud of it.
27IV. Moral Sentiments
- Because we share a similar psychological makeup,
thus share common moral sentiments, we are able
to generate or invent artificial virtues because
we find them to be pleasant and not painful
(e.g.,) - 1. Justice with respect to property,
- 2. Allegiance to government,
- 3. The laws of nations,
- 4. Modesty, and
- 5. Good manners), which (Hume argues) are
inventions contrived solely for the interest of
society.
28IV. Sentiments Sympathy and Benevolence.
- Sympathy is not seen as a mental capacity in the
Inquiry as it is in the State of Nature (as a
mirror to yourself). - Rather he replaces sympathy with a general
benevolence in Inquiry. We care about our
species of such but not as a mental capacity. - Example, in Human Treatise, he states, there is
no such passion in human minds, as the love of
mankind, merely as such, independent of personal
qualities, of service, or of relation to ourseit
Tis true, there is no human, and indeed no
sensible, creature, whose happiness or misery
does not, in some measure, affect us when brought
near to us and represented in lively colours
(pg. 13). - But in Inquiry he doesnt talk about a mental
capacity as a mirror to yourself but we have a
benevolence which is part of our species.
29V. Kant vs. Hume
- 1. Similarity Hume and Kant recognized the
difference between pure reason (understanding)
from practical reason (work of the will). In
other words, they both recognized an important
difference between judgments of facts and
judgments of value. - 2. Difference Kant was a rationalist in his
conception of morals Hume was an empiricist. A
rationalist derives principles of morality from
metaphysical assumptions. Stated differently,
Kant grounds his morality in rationalism and Hume
on natural moral sentiments. - 3. Difference According to Kant, no matter how
unpleasant the command makes you feel, you are
obligated to fulfill it.
30VI. Kant vs. Bentham and Mill on utility
- Jeremy Bentham argued that the standard of
goodness in the greatest amount of happiness for
the greatest number of persons is intrinsically
valuable. - 1 While Hume and Bentham agree that happiness is
good, Hume does not admit that it is the only
thing that is good. Human beings are complex
organisms, and their total welfare includes more
than the satisfaction of the one need for
happiness. - 2. Mill recognizes the cultural, intellectual,
and spiritual pleasures are of greater value
than mere physical pleasure. While Hume will
agree that we are complex humans, he would reject
Mills finite godism and would reject his
utilitarianism because he grounds morality not
in utility but in moral sentiments which all
humans share.
31VII. Hume on Justice
- 1. The purposes of justice can be realized only
by adapting the methods that are used to the
particular situation that is involved. - a. Justice is a relative virtue in contrast to a
deontological version of justice, one that is
not influenced by the situational setting. - b. He believes our human understanding of
justice does vary from one time to another and
that the application of the principles of
justice will vary with the circumstances under
which they are applied. - c. Hume implies that there is an unchanging
element in justice The purpose is always that
of meeting the needs of society.
32VII. Hume on Justice
- As justice evidently tends to promote public
utility and to support civil society, the
sentiment of justice is either derived from our
reflecting on that tendency, or like hunger,
thirst, and other appetites, resentment, love of
life, attachment to offspring, and other
passions, arises from a simple original instinct
in the human breast, which nature has implanted
for like salutary purposes. - An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of
Morals, (Chicago Open Court, 1966), 35.
33VII. Hume on Justice
- 2. Justice is dynamic
- a. Justice is expressed in laws and customs
which are generated when the need arises for
them. - b. The nature of justice varies in view of
situational setting (illust. Sexual morality may
vary depending upon setting).
34VII. Hume on Justice
- 3. In view of his appendix on justice in An
Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals that
there are certain principles which may be
recognized that can advance justice - A. Avoid giving special privileges to some but
not others - B. Take into account the long-range interests of
others rather than immediate satisfactions
personal and immediate needs may need to be
sacrificed in order to achieve the well-being of
society. - C. Seek to meet the needs of society as a whole.
35VII. Hume on Justice
- 4. On Distributive Justice
- Justice exists for meeting the needs of society
- Justice will be stated in general rules of
conduct but particular situations and other
factors may arise whereby the needs and meeting
those needs will mean change (e.g., war). - Distributing justice is quite impossible to meet
every need. - Justice is for the purpose of distributing goods
in an equitable manner there is no exact formula
for doing this that will meet the needs of every
situations that comes about. - Neither extreme wealth or poverty are in the best
interests of others. - Believes in a moderate view of property rights.
- Justice is a relative virtue nothing remains
constant about the nature of justice. - In dire circumstances, scarce resources, there is
no justice and no benevolence. - Because of our human nature we have limited
benevolent and limited justice.
36VIII. Hume on Altruism and Selfishness
- 1. Altruism and selfishness are not necessarily
opposed to one another. - 2. We possess a humanitarian sentiment which
naturally approves of what is beneficial and
useful to society. - 3. Since we share a common morality derived from
our nature, principles of morality are not
derived from self-love alone. - 4. What gains the admiration and respect of
others is by acting upon the pleasing moral
sentiments that fellow-humans share this is
virtuous and meritorious. - Human nature includes both selfish and unselfish
sentiments. - Human nature is selfish to some extent.
- Human nature also has the capacity to act beyond
ones selfishness. - We can feel the pain of others and their
misfortune. - Selfishness can over shadow good intentions but
does necessarily have to.
37IX. In Summary
- About Hume's ethics we have a moral sentiment
or feeling of approval or disapproval
(approbation or disapprobation) about actions
that we find pleasing or agreeable. We find
actions agreeable (and thus approve of them) not
because of the utility of such actions but
because we naturally have an inclination to
approve of what we are attracted to. In thinking
about the pleasures or pains of other people, we
(along with all other normal human beings) are
attracted to what arouses in us natural
sentiments of humanity and benevolence. Such
sentiments are not derived from self-love but
from a sense of identifying with other human
beings. That sense of fellow-feeling, not the
perception of the utility of actions, is the
basis on which we feel moral obligation. Of
course, promoting social utility is in our own
self-interest, but acting for the sake of
promoting our own self-interest is not a good
enough reason for acting in a moral way Dr.
Steve Daniel
38X. Advantages that have been offered on this view
- 1. Some will appreciate the fact that it removes
metaphysical mysteries from realm of ethics
because it grounds morality in moral sentiments
which all humans share. - 2. Pleasure and pain are important considerations
in ethical judgments. - 3. It attempts to balance both selfishness and
altruism. - 4. It seems to avoid pure egoism, utilitarianism,
and radical relativism.
39XI Objections Raised against Hume
- 1. Hume reduces ethics to a matter of taste
(e.g., A.J. Ayer C.L. Stevenson), relativism,
and subjectivism. - Hume replies since people have the same
psychological makeup, moral responses will be
comparable. To be sure, this doesnt mean
everyone will agree about but if provided the
same data, they will generally tend to respond
similarly -
- a. Common Nature
- b. Same Data
- Similar response.
-
- Ethical differences stem not from differences in
our feelings or passional nature but from
misunderstandings about the actual circumstances
surrounding a given act or from incomplete
analyses of the consequences accruing from the
act.
40XI. Objections
- 2. Those who embrace objectivist feelings will
reject Humes account of subjectivist feelings.
Some believe feelings can be a source of
objective truths of ethics. Consider Blaise
Pascals famous statement - The heart has its reasons that the reason know
not - For those who embrace objective feelings they
would argue that while feelings may not be an
infallible guide to ethics, feelings are not
distractions on the path to ethical truth.
Rather, feelings can be a source of ethical
insight. - Do you agree? Can ethical feelings be
objectively true or are they more like tastes?
41XI. Objections
- 3. Moral sentiments cannot provide an adequate
basis for moral obligations (e.g., justice). - Humes response It is obligatory, for example,
to be justbut the reason we adopt the concept of
justice and guide our actions in conformity to it
is because it comes from the moral sentiments we
all share. - Hume doesnt deny a specific instance of
injustice could be more beneficial to society
than its corresponding instance of justice in
some odd case, but by conforming ourselves to the
moral sentiments of justice, humanity can be
served. -
- Response Still justice is not absolute, fixed
upon absolutes it is sourced in moral sentiments
that can change (justice becomes somewhat
relative even if it is not radical relativism).
42XI. Objections
- 4. Borrowing the notion of social utility to find
a way to maintain social order is using reason.
Social utility is powerful enough to incite
action to actually do the good. - Hume would respond by saying that the source of
utility is not reason but moral sentiment that
we naturally share we identify with other beings
on that sense of fellow feelings. Thus, it is
not from social utility but moral sentiments
that ground our morality. Secondly, reasons of
social utility is not powerful enough to incite
action it is the moral sentiments of feelings
of approval or disapproval that motivates action,
not the perception of social utility. - 5. Humes skepticism is self-defeating because he
did not suspend moral judgments regarding God,
miracles, and metaphysics.
43XI. Objections
- 6. Metaphysical problem According to Hume,
meaningful propositions are empirical. But this
is self-defeating, for the statement that only
analytic or empirical propositions are
meaningful is not itself an analytic statement.
If one allows that such statements are
meaningful, then why cannot metaphysical
statements be meaningful? Stated differently, to
say there is no metaphysics is itself a
metaphysical statement, namely that you know that
metaphysics doesnt exist. - 7. Causality can be experienced internally. I am
the cause of this sentence I am typing, and I
experience that fact. Everyone experiences their
own thoughts and actions.
44XI. Objections
- 8. Fundamentally it fails to explain what is
wrong with a wrong action because it is solely
based on human experience. Reason only reveals
matters of fact. - a. Good in the moral sense of the term is reduced
to feelings or moral sentiments. - b. Evil in the moral sense of the term is reduced
to feelings or moral sentiments. - 1. Humes response is that there is no other way
to judge morality. Moreover, we are naturally
constituted in such a way that there is present
in us a sense of humanity which always
approves of that which promotes human welfare and
is useful in society because we all share it.
45XI. Objections
- 9. Hume is subject to the postmodern critique
that are our emotions are not a product of
moral sentiments. Rather, we are morally
scripted by our sub-culture. How does Hume know
that our moral sentiments are natural and not
socially inscribed values? - 10. Doesnt the idea that we all share a similar
constitution of moral sentiments beg the
question that we are designed by God (e.g.,
Thomas Reid)?