Universal Morality: A Proposition
by
Stefan Molyneux
by Stefan Molyneux
DIGG THIS
Sometimes the
greatest plans can be derailed by a single word. One of my earliest
articles
was entitled "Proving Libertarian Morality," which was
my attempt to provide a rational and universal justification for
a theory of ethics, and which has proved thoroughly confusing for
some people, all because of one single word.
I wrote this
article in the first place because it always struck me as odd that
we libertarians are fascinated by right and wrong, and pour prodigious
effort into arguing that society or people should do this or that,
and yet our opinions rarely rest on a universal foundation of ethical
reasoning. If pressed, we appeal to "the greatest good for
the greatest number," or "do unto others as you would
have them do unto you," or state that economic inefficiencies
are bad, taxation is evil, violence is wrong, government power corrupts
and so on.
Without strict
ethical reasoning, however, these statements remain fundamentally
as baseless as "government is good," "social programs
help the poor," and "unicorns are pretty." To really
change the world, we must present more than just opinions, more
than mere assertions. The great challenge in ethical debating is
possessing the leverage to radically extend people’s opinions
about core moral issues. This is easier than it sounds, since a
good philosopher does not change people’s minds, but rather just
logically expands the principles they already accept. Newton didn’t
change people’s minds about their everyday experiences of the tangible
world – he just extended those everyday principles to the universal.
The force that drops the apple also moves the moon.
The same is
true when debating morality. Have you ever met anyone who argued
that murder is the highest moral good, or that rape is a man's best
course of action, or that the Golden Rule is: steal everything
you can get your hands on, all the time? Of course not. Most
people already consider violence and theft to be morally wrong.
However, as morality gets more abstract, it gets harder and harder
for people to maintain their consistency. I can’t even count the
number of times people have agreed with me that "theft is wrong,"
but who then instantly become baffled when I reply "therefore
taxation is wrong." It’s the same with the military. No one
has any trouble with the equation: Man + murder = evil. Throw
in one little inconsequential variable, however, and most people
get very confused. Man + murder + green costume = ?zzttz¿¡[short
circuit] um, national hero?
Newton’s challenge
was not to convince people that apples fall down, but that the same
force that moves apples also moves everything else. Extending the
principle of gravity from immediate experience to interplanetary
motion is quite a mental feat – and even more is demanded from libertarians!
Our real challenge is to extend the moral principles everyone already
accepts – thus if we lack a solid argument for the universality
of those moral principles, we are unlikely to gain much ground.
I believe that our lack of a compelling argument for universal principles
is one reason we have made so little progress over the last century
or so. If moral rules are accepted (i.e. murder = evil),
but universal consistency is optional, we have no real leverage
to change people’s thinking. Everyone thinks that apples and planets
move according to separate – and probably opposing – principles.
For quite some
time, I sweated my brain dry working on this problem. The argument
that I came up with was, in essence:
- Morality
can be defined as Universally Preferred Behavior (i.e. a moral
theory is that which proposes which behaviors should be preferred
– or proscribed – for all peoples in all places at all times.)
- For a proposition
to be defined as moral, it must advocate a logically consistent
set of Universally Preferred Behavior, such as "don’t steal."
- Anyone who
argues against Universally Preferred Behavior must do so
using clear language, arguments, logic and evidence – all based
on the principle that truth is better than falsehood.
- Clear language,
argument, logic and evidence – and a universal preference for
truth over falsehood – are all examples of Universally Preferred
Behavior. Therefore a man can only argue against Universally
Preferred Behavior by using Universally Preferred Behavior,
since anyone who argues is acting on the premise that clear language
is universally preferred to gibberish, logic to illogic, and truth
to falsehood.
- Since Universally
Preferred Behavior cannot be opposed without accepting the premise
of Universally Preferred Behavior, Universally Preferred Behavior
must stand as a valid concept.
The argument
follows the same general lines as arguments for logic itself. Logic
as a methodology for validating the consistency of arguments is
irrefutable, since logic can only be dismissed either on a whim,
which is invalid, or using logic, which relies on the validity of
logic in the first place.
Arguing against
Universally Preferred Behavior is like shouting into somebody’s
ear that sound does not exist, or phoning someone to tell him that
phones are a fantasy. The argument self-destructs on deployment.
A sample argument
runs thus:
- Person
A: People should not steal.
- Person
B: There is no such thing as morality, since objective standards
do not exist.
- So I should
not believe that theft is wrong, because no objective standards
exist?
- That’s
right.
- Is it merely
your opinion that no objective standards exist, or is it objectively
true that no standards exist?
- It is
objectively true that no standards exist.
- And is it
merely your opinion that I should not believe in morality because
no objective standards exist, or is objectively true?
- It is
objectively true you should not believe in morality, because no
objective standards exist.
- And what
criteria have you used to separate mere opinion from objective
truth?
- Reason.
- So reason,
then, is the objective standard by which you have determined that
no objective standards exist?
- [minor forehead
detonation]
A standard
argument against proofs of universal morality is that morality does
not exist in the real world. That is true, of course, but so what?
The scientific method doesn’t exist in the real world either; neither
do logic or numbers – does that mean that science and math are utterly
subjective, and that any old opinion goes? Of course not. It is
exactly the same with morality. Moral theories must pass the test
of logical consistency, just as theories in science or mathematics.
If you submit a mathematical paper, and on the first page you assume
that 2 + 2 = 5, rare would be the individual
who would read any further! Any sane reviewer would simply circle
that error, hand it back and tell you to start over.
The same is
true for moral propositions. No one has to engage in moral theorizing
– just as people are free to read chicken entrails rather than use
the scientific method – but the moment that somebody corrects you
on anything, he is acting on the premise that you are bound by some
standard of truth or behavior beyond mere whim – and so he accepts
Universally Preferred Behavior. If someone tells you that truth
is better than falsehood, then he is telling you that it is universally
better to believe things that are true than to believe things
that are false. The moment that someone invokes a universal preference,
he is instantly bound by the requirements of logical consistency.
Thus no man can argue against morality – Universally Preferred Behavior
– without using morality.
If I tell you
that it is better to believe things that are false, my argument
self-destructs, because either (a) I am lying, which means you should
believe me, but that my argument is the opposite of truth, or (b)
I am telling the truth, in which case I am immediately contradicting
my stated principle that it is better to believe false things.
The same contradiction
occurs if I argue against the basic libertarian principle of self-ownership.
If I open my mouth and use my larynx and tongue to express an argument
against self-ownership, my argument immediately self-destructs,
since I am exercising self-ownership to argue that self-ownership
is invalid, impossible, or immoral.
A Way
Forward?
In my view,
it is essential that libertarians work to develop and communicate
ironclad arguments for the universality and consistency of morality
itself. If we take a rational and scientific approach to the challenges
of moral theories, we shall start to get real traction in the world
of ideas, and elevate ourselves about the yammering hordes of debaters
who pound tables and bellow that their opinions are just somehow
more correct than everyone else’s.
The disservice
that I have done to this idea is using the word "preferred"
rather than "preferable." I would like to now officially
change my definition of morality from Universally Preferred
Behavior to Universally Preferable Behavior. My use of the
former phrase has confused a large number of people, who think that
I am defining morality as "behaviors that are universally preferred
by all people at all times," and thus using a descriptive
and not prescriptive definition. I was rather surprised by
this misunderstanding (though I can see how it could be derived
linguistically), since it is quite obvious that many people have
many different opinions about what is moral – not to mention that
if everyone in the whole world had the same opinion about what was
right, we would scarcely need a science of morality! So to all of
those who have written to me to tell me that people do not
have the same opinions about what is good, I can only agree, and
add that people’s existing moral preferences are irrelevant to the
science of morality, just as people’s existing beliefs that the
world was flat was irrelevant to the physical sciences.
Three Hurdles
To further
develop the science of ethics, I propose that any moral theory must
surmount three basic hurdles. The first hurdle is, of course, logical
consistency. I have spoken about this at length before, so I will
just touch on it here. By "logical consistency," I mean
that, at the very least, any theory proposing Universally Preferable
Behavior must not be self-contradictory. If a moral theory proposes
that "everyone must steal," it immediately self-destructs,
since stealing is only of value if a thief gets to keep the proceeds
of his theft. No man would steal a wallet if he knew that it would
be stolen from him immediately afterwards (and the spectacle of
a world full of people constantly stealing from each other would
be rather ludicrous to contemplate). Thus a thief only steals –
or violates property rights – because he wishes to exercise his
property rights over the stolen item. Implicit in the action of
stealing is thus a simultaneous rejection and affirmation of property
rights, which is how we know that theft as a moral rule is
both logically – and therefore morally – wrong.
Logical consistency
also requires categorical uniformity. A physicist who argues that
all objects which are heavier than air fall towards the ground neatly
deals with both rocks and helium balloons – but he cannot say that
one rock falls down, but another rock that is also heaver than air
falls up. In other words, opposite actions require opposing
properties – in this case, that all rocks are heavier than air,
and so fall down, while helium balloons are lighter than air, and
thus float up. The opposing property is: lighter than air
versus heavier than air.
In the same
manner, a moral theory which proposes that murder is wrong, but
that it is morally right for soldiers to murder, immediately
fails the test of logical consistency. Putting on a green costume
does not change a man’s moral nature, any more than painting a rock
makes it lighter than air. (The same, of course, goes for all manner
of statist occupations, such as policeman, politician, prison guard
etc.)
On the other
hand, where objective physical differences do exist, such
as mental retardation or childhood, moral theories are perfectly
right in assigning diminished moral responsibility to such individuals.
The second
generalized hurdle for any moral theory can be described as "the
coma test." It defies common sense to propose that a man in
a coma can be immoral. Thus any moral theory which puts forward
positively prescribed actions, such as "you must serve your
country" or "you must help the poor" immediately
fail the coma test. A moral theory which prescribes a positive good
must immediately condemn its opposite as immoral. If "helping
the poor" is a positive moral obligation, then refraining from
helping the poor must be morally wrong. Since a man in a coma cannot
by definition be out helping the poor, he must be immoral, which
is quite ridiculous. (Let’s not even get into the evils we would
all be committing every time we took a nap!) Of course, you could
"adjust" the moral rule to say "you must help the
poor to the best of your ability," which would
bypass the coma test, but then plows straight into rank subjectivism
– what on earth does "to the best of your ability" really
mean? (As it happens, I have a podcast
on this very topic!)
The third generalized
test is evidence. Any decent moral theory must explain some
of the well-known and consistently observed facts of history, such
as the grinding poverty of the Middle Ages, the murderous actions
of dictatorships, the violent nature of theocracies, the fact that
governments always grow, the slow economic suicide of socialism
(or the rather more rapid self-immolation of communism) and so on.
Any moral theory which predicts that communism would be a smashing
success, and that capitalism would result in poverty for all, obviously
fails the basic test of empiricism and historical evidence.
I
truly believe that we must resist the short-term tactics of arguing
only about politics and economics, and instead spend our energies
hacking through the challenges of defining arguments for an objective
and universal morality. If we can come to a rigorous, well-defined
and well-understood theory of morality, then we will gain immense
traction, and can finally begin to achieve the success that has
hitherto eluded us. Without a doubt, my suggestions are far more
strategic and tactical, but I think that it is very clear by now
that our prior tactics have not succeeded. If we train ourselves
in moral reasoning, and learn how to refute those who oppose universal
ethics, rather than, say, merely arguing against the minimum wage,
then we can really truly turn the tide of history and save not just
libertarianism, but the world.
January
26, 2007
Stefan
Molyneux [send him mail]
has been an actor, comedian, gold-panner, graduate student, and
software entrepreneur. His first novel, Revolutions
was published in 2004, and he maintains a
blog. Listen to his podcast, which you can get by clicking here
or, you like iTunes better, you can click here.
For more on DROs, please see
my archives. He is host of Freedomain
Radio.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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