defend the indefensible: utilitarianism

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That all sounds perfectly reasonable, yet I have my doubts. Firstly it's not clear that utilitarianism is coherent enough even to work as a rule of thumb - what kind of utility are we aiming for? Greatest good for greatest number (or net happiness increase or whatever) - the first is circular and the second leads to obvious and fundamental objections. Secondly I'm not sure anyone who claims to follow it as a general rule of thumb actually does any such thing. I think it's easy to assume, in discussions like this, that you follow it as a general principle, while ignoring all the other non-utilitarian considerations that actually (and legitimately) go into your normal ethical deliberations.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:13 (ten years ago) link

(I'm thinking here of morality as an personal matter; perhaps there are situations, e.g. provision of medical services in a national health care system, where a colder and more purely utilitarian approach is both possible and desirable.)

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:17 (ten years ago) link

it certainly exists - possibility or desirability i don't know about. consider cost benefit analyses for putting up pelican crossings etc. maybe utilitarianism is the most functional form of ethical reasoning for large organizations?

phasmid beetle types (Noodle Vague), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:20 (ten years ago) link

Possible because the utility is clearly defined (e.g. 'quality-adjusted life years' for NICE), desirable because yes it's certainly functional, also impartial.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:24 (ten years ago) link

i've pondered this a bit when people get all campaign-y about local hospital cuts/closures. okay, there is a political element which we can put to one side, but in the end people as individuals tend to think in deontological terms whereas the only plausible way of running an NHS is in broadly utilitarian terms?

phasmid beetle types (Noodle Vague), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:28 (ten years ago) link

This is interesting, all the reading I've done in moral philosophy tends to approach it from the personal side of things, I can't immediately recall anything dealing with institionalised ethics. I'm not sure how to deal with the disjunction between criticising utilitarianism at the personal level but accepting it at the institutional.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:44 (ten years ago) link

Firstly it's not clear that utilitarianism is coherent enough even to work as a rule of thumb - what kind of utility are we aiming for? Greatest good for greatest number (or net happiness increase or whatever) - the first is circular and the second leads to obvious and fundamental objections. Secondly I'm not sure anyone who claims to follow it as a general rule of thumb actually does any such thing. I think it's easy to assume, in discussions like this, that you follow it as a general principle, while ignoring all the other non-utilitarian considerations that actually (and legitimately) go into your normal ethical deliberations.

― click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, August 2, 2013 5:13 AM (14 minutes ago)

a few things. first utility is best defined individually and situationally, imo. it need not be rigorous to be valid. second, utilitarianism needn't preclude other considerations. you seem to criticize a pure utilitarianism that exists in isolation, which seems a bit absurd to me. most people don't operate on a single, pure principle. they consider many different factors and principles. tbh, this is the only context in which i think you can reasonably critique any ethical method, even if its proponents present it as The Answer.

i'm careful about my consumption (space, power, food, packaging, water, etc.) because i think it's unethical to ignore the implications of human and especially western overconsumption. by consuming less and more responsibly, i hope to do a tiny bit less damage in the long run. my motivation there is about as close to purely utilitarian as i think you can get. similarly, i think a lot about the likely effect of my actions, even when prodded by moral outrage. it's not enough to simply satisfy the moral urge. it's important to me that my actions actually accomplish what i think of as good ends, often considered in terms of most for most.

IIIrd Datekeeper (contenderizer), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:48 (ten years ago) link

I'm not sure how to deal with the disjunction between criticising utilitarianism at the personal level but accepting it at the institutional.

― click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, August 2, 2013 5:44 AM (3 minutes ago)

i think it's similar to the way we approach "fairness" where institutions are concerned. i don't insist that individuals be fair and equitable in all their actions (it'd be nice), but i am willing to demand that of institutions, especially public institutions.

IIIrd Datekeeper (contenderizer), Friday, 2 August 2013 12:51 (ten years ago) link

I'm careful about my consumption too, but I also think that the actual difference to the world that my choices make is entirely negligible. So if I'm being honest with myself my motivation is probably more deontological than consequential. That aside, I don't really disagree with your position - I mean I certainly don't disagree with your actions, but I'm not sure that what you're doing can usefully be described as utilitarian. You're essentially saying "I consider the impact of my actions on the world and on other people", which is well and good, but the point about utilitarianism is that it is a rigid systematisation of that principle.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 13:04 (ten years ago) link

I think the large organizations angke is key. More so than individuals, governments and other large scale entities are in positions where their decisions affect many people, and might harm some at the same time they are helping others. In these situations deontological notions about what is simply " right" no longer make a whole lot of sense, as you really need to be looking at what decision will be the best "overall."

Treeship, Friday, 2 August 2013 13:18 (ten years ago) link

lol, every drop is negligible, but then, the sea

as i see it, a specific critique of pure utilitarianism is unnecessary because the claim that any single approach can satisfactorily solve all ethical problems is intrinsically false, even foolish. therefore, i'm only concerned with whether or not "utilitarian" thinking has value in day-to-day ethical considerations.

i guess i'm pushing relativism more than honestly engaging with utilitarianism, so i'll bow out.

IIIrd Datekeeper (contenderizer), Friday, 2 August 2013 13:19 (ten years ago) link

xp

IIIrd Datekeeper (contenderizer), Friday, 2 August 2013 13:19 (ten years ago) link

Although, we definitely don't want our government to use utilitarianism to justify horrifying actions, which happens so often both in scifi and irl. Utilitarianism is one factor to consider, i guess, and an indispensible one in a large, complex world where actions have mixed consequences.

Treeship, Friday, 2 August 2013 13:21 (ten years ago) link

Sorry my last post was xpost to myself. I agree with contenderizer basically.

Treeship, Friday, 2 August 2013 13:23 (ten years ago) link

vulgar utilitarianism at work

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/02/us/theory-on-pain-is-driving-rules-for-abortions.html?hp&_r=0

Ms. Balch, the Right to Life official, who is also a lawyer, said she had been considering fetal pain as a way to draw attention to “the humanity of the unborn child” since she heard President Ronald Reagan speak about it stirringly in 1984. In a speech to religious broadcasters that year, he said, “Medical science doctors confirm that when the lives of the unborn are snuffed out, they often feel pain — pain that is long and agonizing.”

j., Friday, 2 August 2013 13:25 (ten years ago) link

Medical science doctors!

Here's the storify, of a lovely ladify (Phil D.), Friday, 2 August 2013 13:38 (ten years ago) link

utilitarian diet

http://blog.practicalethics.ox.ac.uk/2013/08/press-release-ethical-meat/

The development of artificial meat is a triumph for both science and ethics. Current meat production involves inflicting significant suffering on animals. It also causes environmental damage (see the FAO report, Livestock’s Long Shadow) and is hugely inefficient because limited food resources have used to keep a large animal alive. Intensive farming of chickens and pigs is also a breeding ground for the emergence of new strains of flu, causing pandemics that could kill tens of millions. Artificial meat production will almost entirely avoid these issues.

Ethical veganism will become a much more palatable option, as one could avoid eating real meat without sacrificing an integral part of many people’s diet. Indeed, this may be a watershed moment for animal welfare – if artificial meat manages to catch on and take over a large portion of the market, many fewer animals will be cruelly raised and slaughtered through factory farming, a key goal of movements like PETA (who have, incidentally, wholly endorsed and promoted the development of artificial meat).

...

Perhaps the future of the fast food industry is ethical meat, instead of the unethical meat. Consumers would be hard pressed to tell the difference between an artificial Big Mac and the current one.

j., Friday, 2 August 2013 13:55 (ten years ago) link

i wonder if it wouldnt be worth making a distinction between the actions of an individual and those of an aggregate of individuals (ie, the actions of communities or their government). i think utilitarianism can possibly be said to observe the ethical calculations that go into making up groups of diverse needs and desires, etc. just thinking out loud here.

ryan, Friday, 2 August 2013 14:00 (ten years ago) link

of course the flip side of it is that it can be used to implicitly justify oppression and the like--what's the bit in the Brothers Karamazov? if the whole world could live in peace and happiness based on the unending torture of one small child...

ryan, Friday, 2 August 2013 14:04 (ten years ago) link

sorry i am repeating things from upthread.

"greatest happiness for the greatest number" though strikes me as a more subtle formula that it is often given credit for--there's a way of interpreting it in which those two considerations are in mutual tension.

ryan, Friday, 2 August 2013 14:07 (ten years ago) link

i think it's similar to the way we approach "fairness" where institutions are concerned. i don't insist that individuals be fair and equitable in all their actions (it'd be nice), but i am willing to demand that of institutions, especially public institutions.

Yeah, on reflection there's obviously no problem with holding people and institutions to different standards. Just like we might expect and understand strong negative feelings to the perpetrator from the victim of a crime, but demand completely unemotional and impartial judgement from our justice system.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 15:06 (ten years ago) link

I also often find that utilitarianism is used to justify the most "fair" outcomes that don't affect me, e.g. benevolent Davos types who pronounce that it's ok to increase poverty in the US if you're reducing it by more net in India, and meanwhile they will keep their luxurious lifestyles either way.

HOOS next aka won't get steened again (Hurting 2), Friday, 2 August 2013 15:12 (ten years ago) link

maybe we can boost their altruism with a mind virus?

Philip Nunez, Friday, 2 August 2013 16:31 (ten years ago) link

Bernard Williams was weirdly hung up on this idea that utilitarians are committed to the view that certain kinds of emotional suffering are "irrational" and so, I guess, illegitimate. This has always seemed exactly wrong to me. Utilitarianism would condemn telling someone who is suffering deep post-traumatic regret over having made a horrible but ethically optimal decision to just "not give it a second thought", since that would probably just make them feel worse. Maybe that regret is irrational in some sense, but so what? Lots of emotions have little or nothing to do with rationality, but they exist, and they affect our lives, so from a utilitarian point of view, they count. They have to.

I think this gets at part of what attracts me to utilitarianism: it's a compassionate theory. It says that everyone's pleasure and everyone's pain counts, no matter who the person is or where their feelings come from. No other consideration, be it justice or fairness or rationality, matters more than the lived experiences of sentient beings. Granted, this cuts both way. It means that a serial killers' feelings have as much intrinsic significance as mine or yours. But it also means that any poor, marginalized person's suffering has as much intrinsic significance as that of the most powerful, influential person in the world. I think the implications of this are progressive.

I also think utilitarianism handles Williams's concerns about giving priority to close relationships pretty easily. I'll explain if someone is interested.

It's true that the rhetoric of the theory can be put to awful use, but that's true of every kind of moral justification. Consider again appeals to justice, fairness, and rationality.

It's also true that utilitarianism is tough to apply in practice. I think this is the most pressing type of objection to it. I have some thoughts about this, too.

First, it may be that the purpose of normative theory is more descriptive than pragmatically prescriptive. So utilitarianism would tell you what it is that makes actions right and wrong--and there is a prescriptive element to that--but not how to adjust your behavior to match. And faulting utilitarianism for this would be like faulting a physicists' explanation of a boxer's left hook for not teaching you how to throw one. That's a different task.

Second, this is a problem all normative theories face.

Third, by utilitarianism's own lights, any strategy that is most conducive to utility is the right one, even if it's is a mixed strategy that doesn't always involve consciously concerning yourself with utility. The best utilitarian agent may be one who, for example, prioritizes close relations without a second thought. In which case the best utilitarian approach to life would be to try to develop this quality, so that it becomes habitual. I don't think this is very far off from common-sense ideas about building character.

That all sounds perfectly reasonable, yet I have my doubts. Firstly it's not clear that utilitarianism is coherent enough even to work as a rule of thumb - what kind of utility are we aiming for? Greatest good for greatest number (or net happiness increase or whatever) - the first is circular and the second leads to obvious and fundamental objections.

Like what?

JRN, Friday, 2 August 2013 17:34 (ten years ago) link

speaking to the radical compassion angle, I think bentham's famous quote about animals demonstrates that quite nicely: "The question is not, "Can they reason?" nor, "Can they talk?" but "Can they suffer"

I think this is important because its reverses talk about rights based on the ability to reason with a more radical form of compassion based on shared vulnerability.

ryan, Friday, 2 August 2013 17:50 (ten years ago) link

and, further, it implies that a shared *vulnerability* grants access a community rather than some presumed positive characteristic (race or class or even species, say)

ryan, Friday, 2 August 2013 17:52 (ten years ago) link

Yes! I think Bentham was right on about that.

JRN, Friday, 2 August 2013 17:52 (ten years ago) link

Bernard Williams was weirdly hung up on this idea that utilitarians are committed to the view that certain kinds of emotional suffering are "irrational" and so, I guess, illegitimate. This has always seemed exactly wrong to me. Utilitarianism would condemn telling someone who is suffering deep post-traumatic regret over having made a horrible but ethically optimal decision to just "not give it a second thought", since that would probably just make them feel worse. Maybe that regret is irrational in some sense, but so what? Lots of emotions have little or nothing to do with rationality, but they exist, and they affect our lives, so from a utilitarian point of view, they count. They have to.

i think the idea is not that they're committed to a view that certain kinds of emotional suffering are irrational, but that the combination of (a) the principle of utility, (b) some degree of uncertainty/ignorance about what exactly it is human nature / in an individual's nature to feel given such-and-such circumstances, actions, histories, etc., and (c) a project of radically revising behaviors and institutions in order to mitigate suffering and promote the realization of the principle of utility in life, leaves room for certain questionable attitudes about the legitimacy (not immediately, but in the longer view) of a whole range of feelings as they currently happen to be experienced.

j., Friday, 2 August 2013 21:43 (ten years ago) link

obvious and fundamental objections to happiness as the measure of utility: happiness is not the measure of a good life, a world in which everyone is deliriously happy as a result of enforced drug intake is not a good world.

doubtless this is one of those obvious objections to which there is an obvious rejoinder...

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 21:50 (ten years ago) link

I also think utilitarianism handles Williams's concerns about giving priority to close relationships pretty easily. I'll explain if someone is interested.

i'm all ears.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 21:54 (ten years ago) link

I don't know about that. I just revisited the quote posted upthread:

<i>So what will typical advocates of the morality system have to say to me afterwards about my dreadful sense of regret? If they are—as perhaps they had better not be—totally consistent and totally honest with me, <b>what they will have to say is simply “Don't give it a second thought; you did what morality required, so your deep anguish about it is irrational.”</b> And that, surely, cannot be the right thing for anyone to say. My anguish is not irrational but entirely justified.</i>

To me, that doesn't read like Williams is saying that utilitarians are leaving room for questionable attitudes about the legitimacy of those feelings in the long run. He doesn't mention the long run. It reads like he's saying that utilitarians are committed to that view that those feelings are irrational and illegitimate today. Hence the discussion of what a committed, consistent utilitarian would "have to" say to a real suffering person now.

That being said, if that is his point, I concede that it isn't straightforwardly inaccurate. It's just insubstantial instead. Saying that utilitarianism might leave room for questionable attitudes in the long run isn't very damning. Until he says something about why utilitarianism doesn't just leave room for but actually produces or makes likely those attitudes, and why they are not just questionable but wrong, other than "surely this can't be right", it gets a big shrug from me.

Maybe those arguments are elsewhere in his work, I don't know. I've only read "A Critique of Utilitarianism". I don't remember them being in there.

JRN, Friday, 2 August 2013 22:10 (ten years ago) link

I forgot to click the convert HTML to BBcode button }:^|

a world in which everyone is deliriously happy as a result of enforced drug intake is not a good world.

Sure it is. It'll never happen, though, and we all know that. I think resistance to this idea comes from tacit knowledge about how, in the real world, rigidly enforced social engineering leads to horrible outcomes, and drugs only make people deliriously happy on a temporary basis, with a crash often lurking on the other side. But a world in which, by stipulation, the ordinary rules don't apply and the whole scheme works out perfectly? Sign me up. That's utopia.

I think one way utilitarianism can endorse prioritizing your nearest and dearest is by noting that (a) forming and maintaining close personal bonds seems to be integral to the well-being of most people (b) this is not likely to change and (c) these bonds can't be maintained unless people prioritize them a lot of the time, which seems to come naturally anyway.

Williams is hung up on motivation, though. He finds it disturbing that a man, in saving his wife's life, would be motivated by something other than the fact that she is his wife. I have two responses to this.

One is to repeat my comments about utilitarian character-building from upthread. If it's most conducive to utility to develop a habit of prioritizing your wife without considering utility at the time of decision, then you should do this, on utilitarian grounds.

The second is to say that I just don't share Williams's discomfort with the idea being motivated by the thought that "it was his wife and . . . in situations of this kind it is permissible to save one's wife." It doesn't seem like a psychologically plausible in-the-moment motivation, but otherwise, I have no problem with the admission that there are some possible situations in which saving a loved one would not be the best decision.

I also want to note that close social bonds have to be part of utility calculations. When considering the foreseeable outcomes of a decision, you have to work with the information and feelings you have. You, the decision-maker, also count. If it would break your heart to save a stranger rather than your own wife, that counts. If you know for certain that many people depend on your wife, but know nothing about the stranger you could save instead, that's relevant. In other words, considering utility and prioritizing your loved ones are not mutually exclusive.

I'd go so far as to say that utilitarianism, properly construed, demands that individual agents give extra consideration to people about whom they have more knowledge, and with whom their lives are more intertwined.

JRN, Friday, 2 August 2013 22:49 (ten years ago) link

Sign me up. That's utopia.

ok we have different value systems. why should yours trump mine?

as for it being ok to favour your family, it seems to me that to follow this route leads to the unravelling of utilitarianism. if we have to take account of regret, and favouring ones nearest and dearest, then surely we have to take account of all other thick ethical concepts in use in our normal everyday unsystematised morality. maybe sometimes people like to be selfish, or sometimes contrary and prefer someone else's lesser happiness to their greater, and to remove this right would lead to a decrease in happiness. if utilitarianism ends up having to track every single facet of our messy, often paradoxical everyday morality then it ain't really much of a system any more.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Friday, 2 August 2013 23:05 (ten years ago) link

i'm getting what i said from my sense of his diagnosis of utilitarianism's shortcomings in 'ethics and the limits of philosophy' (this is from ch. 10):

In this respect, utilitarianism is a marginal member of the
morality system. It has a strong tradition of thinking that blame
and other social reactions should be allocated in a way that will be
socially useful, and while this might lead to their being directed to
the voluntary, equally it might not. This follows consistently from
applying the utilitarian criterion to all actions, including the social
actions of expressing blame and so forth. The same principle can be
extended to unexpressed blame and critical thoughts; indeed, at
another level, a utilitarian might well ask whether the most useful
policy might not be to forget that the point of blame, on utilitarian
grounds, was usefulness. These maneuvers do seem to receive a
check when it comes to self-reproach and the sense of moral obliga-
tion. Utilitarians are often immensely conscientious people, who
work for humanity and give up meat for the sake of the animals.
They think this is what they morally ought to do and feel guilty if
they do not live up to their own standards. They do not, and
perhaps could not, ask: How useful is it that I think and feel like
this? It is because of such motivations, and not only because of
logical features, that utilitarianism in most versions is a kind of
morality, if a marginal one.

i take it that williams calls the anguish in his example (from your quote) 'entirely justified' on the basis of some kind of thicker ethical concept taken from the existing ethical life which it is utilitarianism's claim to theorize and correct/perfect by making utility the basic principle of judgments about actions and reactions.

and i take it that he says a committed utilitarian would deem that anguish irrational because a committed utilitarian's attitude toward eliminable suffering brought about by justified actions would be that it would be rational to eliminate it, and irrational not to. and though the utilitarian might concede that it might be for the better in general that people's characters be such that they happen to experience such feelings of anguish, even when they issue from morally justified actions, the utilitarian would also have to think that in principle it would be better if people's characters were such that they felt anguish only in accordance with what was morally justified, since otherwise it would cause them undue suffering.

j., Friday, 2 August 2013 23:08 (ten years ago) link

I think a system that failed to take account of the thick ethical concepts in use in our normal everyday unsystematized morality would be seriously deficient. Utilitarianism doesn't necessarily endorse those concepts, though. It just acknowledges that they affect people's lives in ways that matter. Utility is still the only thing of intrinsic value.

maybe sometimes people like to be selfish, or sometimes contrary and prefer someone else's lesser happiness to their greater, and to remove this right would lead to a decrease in happiness.

I don't see the problem. Maybe sometimes a little selfishness is OK. Isn't this common sense? One of the most common criticisms of utilitarianism is that it seems to demand constant altruistic self-sacrifice. You've hit on the fact that my interpretation of it doesn't seem to lead to this conclusion. I think that's a good thing!

and though the utilitarian might concede that it might be for the better in general that people's characters be such that they happen to experience such feelings of anguish, even when they issue from morally justified actions, the utilitarian would also have to think that in principle it would be better if people's characters were such that they felt anguish only in accordance with what was morally justified, since otherwise it would cause them undue suffering.

I swear I'm not trying to be flippant or obtuse, but again, I don't see the problem! Nor do I think the part I bolded is any kind of concession.

JRN, Friday, 2 August 2013 23:43 (ten years ago) link

I'm a bit lost - what should a utilitarian actually say to the captain who saved as many crew as he could by letting the others drown?

cardamon, Friday, 2 August 2013 23:44 (ten years ago) link

That could be complicated by specific details, but it's the right sort of thing to do.

JRN, Friday, 2 August 2013 23:50 (ten years ago) link

I think a system that failed to take account of the thick ethical concepts in use in our normal everyday unsystematized morality would be seriously deficient. Utilitarianism doesn't necessarily endorse those concepts, though. It just acknowledges that they affect people's lives in ways that matter. Utility is still the only thing of intrinsic value.

i think the issue is how it can have a stance toward those concepts which is both principled and pre-theoretically, ethically acceptable, given that it acknowledges only utility as being of intrinsic value and only the principle of utility as the basic principle of action and judgment.

j., Saturday, 3 August 2013 00:02 (ten years ago) link

If a utilitarian allows their common moral sense to outweigh their utility function, are they really a utilitarian?

i too went to college (silby), Saturday, 3 August 2013 00:03 (ten years ago) link

Or alternately, if we admit that to live by the principle of utility 100% of the time is impossible or even undesirable, then what is the point of adopting the principle in the first place?

I should note that Peter Singer seems to think that leading a perfectly utilitarian life is not only possible but is in fact the Right Thing To Do, so it's not like that is a crazy stance nobody reasonable would support. (Though I think Peter Singer is kind of crazy.)

i too went to college (silby), Saturday, 3 August 2013 00:07 (ten years ago) link

Also at least other moral theories have the good grace to more or less fess up to their dependency on God for authority. The utilitarian idea seems to be that since, definitionally, a world where utility is k+ε is better than a world where utility is k, therefore we must all necessarily act in such a way where we choose the former world over the latter.

But that therefore doesn't convince me. I might be misrepresenting the game here, but if I am, I'd like to know how it actually goes.

i too went to college (silby), Saturday, 3 August 2013 00:48 (ten years ago) link

I don't see the problem. Maybe sometimes a little selfishness is OK. Isn't this common sense? One of the most common criticisms of utilitarianism is that it seems to demand constant altruistic self-sacrifice. You've hit on the fact that my interpretation of it doesn't seem to lead to this conclusion. I think that's a good thing!

But your interpretation doesn't give us any idea of how to live! I see the logic of it - "one should act to increase overall happiness except where the systematic adoption of such a way of acting would decrease overall happiness" I guess - but I think such a system is at best unworkable (how would you know which of our messy moral behaviours to keep and which to discard?) and at worst completely empty.

Or as Silby puts it: If a utilitarian allows their common moral sense to outweigh their utility function, are they really a utilitarian? - surely a proper utilitarian should be working towards a world in which no-one wants to be selfish, rather than contradictorily trying to shoehorn selfishness into their theory?

This is why institution utilitarianism does make sense, because it can be completely systematically calculating and impartial.

click here to start exploding (ledge), Saturday, 3 August 2013 07:15 (ten years ago) link

And I still find your idea of a blissed out utopia unpalatable. There would e.g. be no room for Shakespeare - how could you make sense of tragedy in a world where everyone is 100% happy all the time? And if such happiness isn't my goal, why should I be a utilitarian?

click here to start exploding (ledge), Saturday, 3 August 2013 07:25 (ten years ago) link

What's better than happiness, though? Or to put it another way, if all suffering was removed, what would the loss be that outweighed the gain?

cardamon, Saturday, 3 August 2013 15:04 (ten years ago) link

(I would suggest 'the ability to go from worse to better' and even 'the ability to learn')

cardamon, Saturday, 3 August 2013 15:05 (ten years ago) link

As paths towards happiness

clique- your heels, together (darraghmac), Saturday, 3 August 2013 15:52 (ten years ago) link

Utilitarianism is first and foremost a theory about what makes things morally good/bad/right/wrong. Anyone who accepts a utilitarian position on that question is a utilitarian, regardless of how they actually conduct themselves as a moral agent. A person can fail to live up to their theoretical commitments, as we all know.

Most utilitarians do want to live up to their commitments though. There's a common caricature of how this is supposed to work, which is that it involves pausing to make impersonal utility calculations before every decision.

I don't think this caricature is accurate, though. I think a committed utilitarian can recognize that thinking carefully about the foreseeable consequences of actions is not always the right approach from a utilitarian perspective. There isn't always time for it, and even when there is, it can be hurtful to treat people in your life in this detached sort of way. I think a utilitarian can respond to this predicament by seeking to develop qualities of character that would be conducive to utility in these situations. Like a reflexive tendency toward compassion, for example.

This doesn't make someone any less of a utilitarian, since it's done for utilitarian reasons, in accordance with utilitarian theoretical commitments. I don't think this person is "living by the utility principle" any less for taking this approach. I also don't think they're allowing their moral sense to "outweigh their utility function". And I think taking this approach is highly desirable.

i think the issue is how it can have a stance toward those [thick ethical] concepts which is both principled and pre-theoretically, ethically acceptable

It can't. Every normative theory revises pre-theoretical judgments to some extent. That's a big part of what makes them interesting. And they probably need to, or else contradict themselves.

The utilitarian idea seems to be that since, definitionally, a world where utility is k+ε is better than a world where utility is k, therefore we must all necessarily act in such a way where we choose the former world over the latter.

But that therefore doesn't convince me. I might be misrepresenting the game here, but if I am, I'd like to know how it actually goes.

I think you are misinterpreting the game. All that follows from that premise is that utility is one thing of moral value.

But your interpretation doesn't give us any idea of how to live!

I don't think that's true. It doesn't give you a decision procedure for every situation, but it shouldn't. Life is too complicated for that. It does, however, give you a specific idea of what you should be aiming for. And this does, arguably, have some radical consequences. Singer is famous for some of these--about the use of animal products, about euthanasia, and about giving to charity, for example.

I also think focusing on utility offers a valuable, clarifying perspective on lots of issues. Take discussions about rape jokes, for example. Feminists tend to make utilitarian-type arguments on this subject, pointing out that rape jokes promote real emotional and physical harm. The arguments from the other side, however, tend to be about how unjust it is to expect comedians to be considerate, how this would infringe on their rights and on the very nature of the art form, and so on. I think utilitarianism helps you to see that, aside from often being confused or disingenuous, these arguments invoke considerations that are of no intrinsic standing. Which in turn helps you to see that the pro-rape-humor camp is just looking to rhetorically justify its enjoyment of hurting people.

surely a proper utilitarian should be working towards a world in which no-one wants to be selfish, rather than contradictorily trying to shoehorn selfishness into their theory?

I think a utilitarian can work towards a world in which no one wants to be selfish while acknowledging that selfish desires exist and need to be taken into account. Can you explain why you think this is contradictory?

JRN, Saturday, 3 August 2013 20:11 (ten years ago) link

Sorry if I missed someone's point, it's hard to keep all the objections straight.

JRN, Saturday, 3 August 2013 20:12 (ten years ago) link

What's better than happiness, though? Or to put it another way, if all suffering was removed, what would the loss be that outweighed the gain?

what if there were no suffering, no learning, no art, no beauty, no love, no friendship, no music, no science, no knowledge...

click here to start exploding (ledge), Monday, 5 August 2013 08:25 (ten years ago) link

Again, in service of what though?

:D@u!w/u (darraghmac), Monday, 5 August 2013 09:17 (ten years ago) link

moral philosophy has great value until it attempts to establish absolutes. at that point it becomes a runaway trolley and something of intrinsic value is about to get smashed.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 12 August 2018 18:10 (five years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Rationalism/Real England crossover - effective altruists buying a Blackpool hotel and opening a sort of research centre/commune/monastery.
http://effective-altruism.com/ea/1pc/ea_hotel_with_free_accommodation_and_board_for/

woof, Monday, 27 August 2018 13:33 (five years ago) link

terrifying thought that ILX might be shaping the world outside it like the faux conspiracists of Foucault's Pendulum

Noodle Vague, Monday, 27 August 2018 13:37 (five years ago) link

B&B altruists finding themselves inexplicably drawn to start a band with the swagger of Oasis.

woof, Monday, 27 August 2018 13:41 (five years ago) link

The cellars could serve as a nuclear bunker of moderate protection. It will be relatively low cost to keep a stockpile of long lasting food down there, which could be slowly used and replenished by the kitchen over a 2-5 year cycle.

woof, Monday, 27 August 2018 13:44 (five years ago) link

Also, growing the EA community in Northern England in general could be seen as a hedge against x-risk, i.e lessen the number of eggs (EAs) in the same, higher risk baskets (London and the South East). Blackpool might be hard to get to in the event of a catastrophe, but the flip side of this is that there would be a lower risk from hostile actors (mercenaries, milita), as well as lower direct damage from nukes and fallout.

Post-apocalyptic effective altruists! That is a cause I would donate to.

jmm, Monday, 27 August 2018 13:56 (five years ago) link

most EAs i know irl are really decent and kind people

marcos, Monday, 27 August 2018 14:09 (five years ago) link

the PDF j. posted back in March has some good stuff in it about how effective altruism is BS

As I discuss below, EA’s hidden curriculum includes at least four lessons: (1) Effective Altruists are heroic rescuers; (2) doing good is largely an individualistic project; (3) doing the most good does not require listening to those affected by the issues one is trying to address; and (4) anger is not an appropriate response to severe poverty. I am not suggesting that Effective Altruists consciously believe these lessons or teach them explicitly; nor can I offer here evidence about the extent to which they have been taken up. But I do think that EA conveys them. Moreover, these lessons are not mere window-dressing; they serve important functions in helping EA attract and retain members.

but it also contains stuff I vehemently disagree with like

Critics of charity will object that in a just world private individuals would not be able to accumulate enough money to make voluntary donating a significant driver of social change, and in the current (unjust) world the wealthy are unlikely to support reforms that would limit their ability to accumulate. I think this objection is overstated, both because an effective social practice of donating does not require the excessive accumulation that we associate with such megadonors as Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, and because individuals often donate to support political reforms that will reduce their own ability to accumulate.

El Tomboto, Monday, 27 August 2018 14:37 (five years ago) link

two years pass...

Anyone still a consequentialist? If so, why?

all cats are beautiful (silby), Wednesday, 4 November 2020 20:07 (three years ago) link

everyone?

flopson, Thursday, 5 November 2020 03:14 (three years ago) link

Clearly false.

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 03:34 (three years ago) link

every couple of years I google Peter Singer to see if he's still alive (currently: yes)

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Thursday, 5 November 2020 03:50 (three years ago) link

U think people voting for joe biden on deolontological principles?

flopson, Thursday, 5 November 2020 04:00 (three years ago) link

no I think people vote for joe biden for no reason

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 04:46 (three years ago) link

I do not think people by and large engage in moral reasoning when they decide to vote or in advance of most other choices they make

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 04:47 (three years ago) link

silby i love u welcome back but that doesnt make sense at all

cointelamateur (m bison), Thursday, 5 November 2020 05:23 (three years ago) link

nor does utilitarianism

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 05:32 (three years ago) link

i don’t know what your definition of moral reasoning is and i am aware your very cool posting style is just to angrily say stuff without deigning to ever give reasons, but it seems to me that the consequences of donald trump being president for another four years were weighing on many people’s minds

flopson, Thursday, 5 November 2020 05:53 (three years ago) link

I’ve lost track of my reasons if you want me tbrrwu

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 05:58 (three years ago) link

I don’t even know what a reason is anymore flopson

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 05:59 (three years ago) link

silbipsism

cointelamateur (m bison), Thursday, 5 November 2020 06:08 (three years ago) link

That’s where I believe everyone exists except me

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 07:00 (three years ago) link

Anyway first response hall of fame itt

all cats are beautiful (silby), Thursday, 5 November 2020 07:01 (three years ago) link

I am still a utilitarian

JRN, Thursday, 5 November 2020 18:20 (three years ago) link

Philpapers (though that was 2009) has

Normative ethics: deontology, consequentialism, or virtue ethics?
Other 301 / 931 (32.3%)
Accept or lean toward: deontology 241 / 931 (25.9%)
Accept or lean toward: consequentialism 220 / 931 (23.6%)
Accept or lean toward: virtue ethics 169 / 931 (18.2%)

https://philpapers.org/surveys/results.pl

Bidh boladh a' mhairbh de 'n láimh fhalaimh (dowd), Thursday, 5 November 2020 18:23 (three years ago) link

I'm a consequentialist but not a utilitarian.

neith moon (ledge), Thursday, 5 November 2020 18:28 (three years ago) link

well I'm a moral sceptic really but inasmuch as we still can should be excellent to each other, consequentialism is the only game in town.

neith moon (ledge), Thursday, 5 November 2020 18:32 (three years ago) link

I reject ethical rationalism after Hume

Politically homely (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 5 November 2020 19:02 (three years ago) link


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