Is Moral Reasoning a Waste of Time?

February 2013

When: Wednesday February 20th, 7:30pm
Where:

Harvard Book Store,

1256 Mass Ave, Harvard Sq, Cambridge

The empirical research of Jonathan Haidt and others challenges the belief that moral reasoning has any real effect upon the moral decisions we make. Most philosophers have historically affirmed the practical relevance of moral reasoning. Some philosophers (particularly Kant) demand that reason should dominate our moral thinking. In fact, in Kant’s view, to the extent that a judgment is based on gut emotions, it is NOT genuinely moral. Hume, on the other hand, argued that we had an innate tendency to feel positively about what maximizes human utility and negatively about what maximizes disutility. Although, in Hume’s view, the moral decision itself is emotional, reason helps construct the understanding of an act’s utility, to which we react emotionally.

John Rawls is foremost among philosophers who see moral judgments as consisting of a meld of reasoning and emotional reaction. For Rawls, we reach moral conclusions by bringing our emotions and our reasons into harmony with each other (a state he labels reflective equilibrium.) In all of these philosophical accounts of moral judgment, reason plays a key role. What if philosophers have been wrong about that? What if our actual moral decisions were largely independent of any moral reasoning? Would moral reasoning be reduced to a parlor game?
Some psychologists and some research suggest that, with respect to morality, we tend to make up our reasons after we have already made judgments. Those moral positions are generally, according to this point of view, taken on the basis of our gut emotional intuitions not reasons. Nor, according to this analysis, do we, on the whole, change our moral views on the basis of reasoned arguments.Should we accept this analysis? If we were to, what purpose would moral reasoning serve? Are we or should we be invested in reason driving our moral decisions?

 

Readings:

A series of postings on the New York Times Philosophy blog, The Stone, debating these issues:

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