- Tamler Sommers, 2018, Why Honor Matters, Basic Books, chapter 2
- Martha Nussbaum, 2018. The Monarchy of Fear, Oxford University Press
- Nussbaum , chapter 7
- David Velleman, 2009, How We Get Along, Cambridge University Press, page 95
This blog is concerned with most topics in applied philosophy. In particular it is concerned with autonomy, love and other emotions. comments are most welcome
Monday, 3 September 2018
Honour in a Cosmopolitan Society
Tuesday, 5 June 2018
Grief
A robot cannot grieve. Stoics want to limit our
dispositions to grieve. In this posting I want to examine grief. This
examination was prompted by John Danaher’s examination of coping
with grief , my examination not a direct response to that of Danaher.
The purpose of my examination is threefold. First is grief a useful emotion?
Secondly how grief is related to love and does this point to the emotions being
connected. Lastly I will consider how much grief is appropriate. I will
conclude that to be fully human someone must be prepared to accept
vulnerability and with vulnerability comes grief. Prior to my examination we
must define grief. Roughly speaking grief is distress caused by someone’s death.
Grief has a focus, the death of a loved one and as such is a genuine emotion as
opposed to depression and sadness which have no real focus and are perhaps better
described as moods.
In the past if someone ventured into the forest at night
her fear might have kept her safe provided of course it wasn’t over excessive. Other
emotions such as guilt, shame and perhaps even anger
can be useful emotions. Can grief also be a useful emotion? I would argue it
can’t. For someone venturing into the forest at night her fear focusses her
attention on danger and this focus benefits her by helping keep her safe. In a
similar way someone’s anger is focussed on some perceived injustice and this
focus might help her right this perceived injustice. The focus of someone’s
grief is the death of another and it is hard to see how this focus can be
useful her. It might be objected that grief is not just an emotion but a social
construct and that an appropriate display of grief is useful in demonstrating
that someone is part of that social order. Someone who celebrated the death of
her spouse would become a social outcast. However displaying grief is not the
same as experiencing grief and in this posting I am only concerned with the
latter. Consider Robinson Crusoe and Man Friday on their desert island. Let us
accept Crusoe loves Friday, not in an erotic way, but cares about him. Let us
assume Friday dies and Crusoe grieves for him, does his grief serve any useful
purpose? Clearly Crusoe’s grief serves no useful purpose by displaying that he
is part of the social order. I would also argue that Crusoe’s grief because of
Friday’s death doesn’t benefit Crusoe in any way. Indeed his grief might harm
him by lessening his focus on important needs such as obtaining food and
maintaining his shelter. It would appear that in answer to my first question is
that grief is not a useful emotion.
Guilt and shame are negative emotions but might help focus
our attention on doing something useful. Grief doesn’t focus our attention on
anything useful. In the light of the above it might be concluded that because
grief is a negative emotion serving no useful purpose that we should seek to
eliminate it. I am reluctant to accept such a conclusion. I have argued that
grief has a specific focus and that considered in isolation grief isn’t a
useful emotion. Let us accept if we grieve about someone that we must have cared
about or loved the person we grieve about. Wantons and psychopaths can’t grieve
because they don’t care. Grief is not the same as sorrow. I may be sorry I’ve
broken the cup by dropping it but I don’t grieve about it because even if it
was my favourite cup I didn’t care enough about it, I didn’t love it. Grief and
love are connected and grief cannot be considered in isolation. The
reason why we grieve is love. Some animals appear to grieve, see Jessica
Pierce . Grieving animals seem to support the above conclusion. For
why should animals grieve for it would seem grief serves no evolutionary
purpose? Any mother’s love serves an evolutionary purpose if grief and love are
connected and this connection might help explain why animals grieve. If grief
and love are connected then other emotions might be connected. Can someone said
to be brave if he recklessly defends something he doesn’t care about? Some
virtue ethicists believe the virtues are connected by practical wisdom (1). Perhaps
the emotions are connected by loving as defined by caring about. I will
not pursue this suggestion further here.
Let us consider my last question, how much grief
appropriate. Perhaps because grief serves no useful purpose we should seek to
eliminate or reduce our grief as much as possible. Let us accept that loving is
part of leading a flourishing life. I have argued above that grief are love are
connected. The question we must now try to answer is this, would seeking to
eliminate or limit our grief damage our capacity to love? Psychopaths don’t
feel grief and don’t care about others and it might suggested that this means
if we can’t grieve that we can’t love. However this is only a suggestion and it
might be pointed out psychopaths don’t seem to feel most emotions. In order to
answer the above question I want to consider one aspect of love. Can anyone
love something without making himself vulnerable to the fate of what he loves? A
stoic might argue someone can I would suggest he can’t. If someone is indifferent
when bad things happen to something he loves then he cannot be said to love
that thing. What does it mean to be vulnerable to something’s fate? It means if
the something is harmed the vulnerable person is also harmed. This harm isn’t
physical, it involves a negative mental affect. I would further suggest that if
someone suffers negative mental affect focussed on the loss of his beloved that
he is grieving. If we accept the above definition of grief then it is
perfectly possible to grieve for something which isn’t a person. It seems to me
to make sense to say that someone can grieve over the death of much loved dog. It
follows from the above that grief is inextricably linked to our capacity to
love and that any attempt to limit our grief will also mean limiting our
capacity to love. In response to the above it might be objected that when the
object of our love dies our love should cease and that love gives us no reason
not to try to limit our grief. In response to the above I would firstly suggest
that love cannot just be simply switched off and on. Perhaps in special
circumstance, such as a child on learning his father has murdered his mother, love
might be abruptly terminated but not in normal ones. Secondly I would suggest
that when we become vulnerable due to love that we don’t simply become
vulnerable to the beloved, whatever that might mean, but specifically to harm
befalling the beloved or the loss of beloved. When someone dies this loss is
ongoing. It would appear that the answer to my second question is that
accepting some grief is the price we pay for loving
Let us accept we should be prepared to accept some grief.
However how grief is appropriate? Let us also accept that even if we can’t
abruptly stop loving love can fade. If love fades over time then we have no
reason based on our former love to continue grieving as our vulnerability
decreases. As our love fades so should our grief. Accepting the above then
might explain why even if the reasons for our grief don’t expire over time our
grief diminishes nor because the reasons change but because we change. Human
have a continuing need to love and be loved and what we love helps define us. In
the light of the above it might be argued even if someone’s beloved has
deceased the lover can satisfy his need for love by loving her memory. Derek
Parfit seems to support this objection with his example of a Russian nobleman asking
his wife to be true to his former self if he changes. (1) In response to this
objection I would suggest that loving the memory of someone is an incomplete
form of love. Loving isn’t purely passive the lover seeks ways to benefit his
beloved over time, love is a bit like gardening. It follows if someone’s grief
is based on the memory of a deceased beloved that his love is incomplete in
some way because he cannot actively try to benefit his beloved. Let us accept
that a more complete form of love is preferable to an incomplete form. It
follows that if obsessive grief damages our ability to love our friends who
remain in a more complete way that we should seeks ways to diminish and over
time eliminate this grief.
- Julia Annas, Intelligent Virtue, Oxford University Press, 2011, page 94
- Derek Parfit, Reasons and Persons, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984, page 327
Wednesday, 16 May 2018
Germline Gene Editing and Savulescu's Procreative Beneficence Principle
Wednesday, 2 May 2018
Why I'm not a Stoic
I
admire fortitude, detachment and many other stoic virtues but believe full
blown stoicism is damaging. Let us accept that for someone living in an
extremely deprived environment with limited options that these virtues can help
him to survive. An account of how stoicism can help people survive in such
circumstance is given by James Stockdale who was shot down in the Vietnam War
and detained in Hanoi, see Stockdale
. Someone who suffers from a life limiting disease might also find himself in
an extremely deprived environment and once again with few options. In these
deprived circumstances adopting a stoical perspective seems to be a sensible
option.
Fortunately,
most of us don’t live in such circumstances. The question I wish to address is
this, in more normal circumstances should we lead a stoic life? Some stoics
believe that the only thing that always makes us happy in life is leading a
life of virtue.
“The
only thing that always contributes to happiness, as it is necessary and
sufficient for the condition, is virtue. Conversely the only thing that
necessitates misery and is “bad” or “evil” is the corruption of reason, namely
vice.” Internet
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Perhaps
virtue is the only thing that always makes
us happy but I will argue there are some things which even if they don’t always
make us happy are nonetheless essential for a happy life. Certain things such
as fame and material goods might make us happy temporarily. However, we can’t always attain these goods
and once attained these goods might not always make us happy. Let us accept
that the excessive pursuit of these goods can damage our happiness in three
ways. Firstly, we might be disappointed if we fail to obtain these goods, secondly
even if we do obtain them they might fail to meet our expectations once again
leading to disappointment, lastly the pursuit of these goods might divert us
from the one thing that always makes us happy namely virtue. Let us consider
the harm done by disappointment first. A stoic would argue that in order to
avoid such disappointment that whilst we might prefer such goods we should
remain indifferent to them. I would suggest that with regard to disappointment
stoicism is a philosophy of pessimism by rejecting hope. A stoic shouldn’t hope
because hope would make him vulnerable to disappointment. Let us assume that
the excessive pursuit of fame or material goods hinders us from pursuing the
only thing that always makes us happy, virtue. A stoic would argue we should
always pursue virtue and as a result we not pursue those things which damage
this pursuit. Let us agree with our stoic that we should first of all pursue
virtue. Let us also agree that the excessive pursuit of fame or material goods
damages this pursuit. However, it is by no means clear that using balanced
Aristotelian moderation in pursuit of these goods will damage our pursuit of
virtue. Accepting the above means that in normal circumstances that we have no
clear reasons to accept or reject Stoicism.
At
this point someone might object I am misunderstanding the stoic idea of
happiness. I am confusing stoic ideas with Epicurean ones. An Epicurean is
concerned with hedonistic happiness whilst to a Stoic happiness is concerned to
living our lives in accordance with essential nature as rational creatures. For
the sake of argument let us accept my objector’s point. Let us also accept that
stoics believe that if someone leads his life in accordance with his essential
nature that he will flourish.
I now
want to examine what is meant by flourishing. Flourishing is a slippery
concept. For instance, could it really be said that a creature, which leaves
behind plenty of descendants, flourishes? Using a Darwinian idea of flourishing
it certainly does. Moreover, it might be argued evolution means leaving behind
plenty of descendants is selected for and hence is part of the nature of all
living things. However, a Darwinian idea of flourishing, at best, plays only a
small part in most people’s idea of flourishing. A stoic idea of flourishing
seems to depend on the essential nature of a creature which defines it. For
instance it is part of the nature of bees to collect nectar to make honey and a
bee flourishes if it makes lots of honey. It is part of bee eater’s nature to
eat bees and it flourishes if it eats lots of bees. The stoics emphasise it is
an essential part of human nature to act rationally. According to the stoics a
human being who acts completely rationally should flourish. Let us now consider
a rational person who is virtuous, ratiomal, rich and healthy but lacks any
positive affection for any of these things. According to a stoic this person
flourishes. However intuitively we would not say such a person was flourishing.
Indeed, we might feel that there is something defective about him. He lacks
something that is necessary for flourishing. Perhaps one of the things he lacks
is happiness and we should leading a stoic life can lead to happiness. I won’t pursue
this point any further here. However, I would suggest one of the things a stoic
lacks is a caring attitude to things in general.
Let us
accept that stoics belief it is our nature to be rational. I have suggested
above that such a belief is too simplistic and that other things are an
essentIAL part of our nature. I will now present two arguments in an attempt to
show that caring about things is An essential part of our nature. First, let us
accept that someone’s ideals are defined by what he cares about. Now according
to Harry Frankfurt,
“a
person without ideals, there are no volitional laws he has bound himself to
respect and to which he unconditionally submits. He has no inviolable
boundaries. Thus he is amorphous with no fixed shape or identity.” (1)
Someone
without fixed shape or identity is still of course a human being but she isn’t
really a person. Almost all human beings develop into persons. Being a person
is part of our nature. It follows caring about something must also be part of
our nature. Secondly let us assume that caring about things is not part of our
nature. If this is so being rational becomes pointless. It is impossible to
apply rationality unless we care about something; it is impossible for
rationality to get any purchase if we don’t care about anything. All our
rational decisions are equally good and we have no basis to choose between
competing options. It follows if caring about something is not an essential
part of our nature then it isn’t possible to act rationally without caring
about some things. Rationality is one of these things but isn’t sufficient. In
the rest of this posting I will assume that caring about something is an
essential part of our nature.
Even
if we accept that caring about things is an essential part of our nature this
give us reason why we should reject stoic ideals. A stoic might point out that
he cares about virtue and rationality. The question is not whether a stoic
cares about things but whether he cares about enough things. I will argue that
he doesn’t. In order to make my argument I must make it clear what I mean by
‘care about’. David Hume famously argued reason is the slave of the passions.
However, I want to argue what we care about doesn’t simply means that we feel
passionate or emotional about something. Indeed, I would agree with the stoic
idea that reason can control our emotions, at least to some degree. Reason can
sort out our conflicting emotions and add stability to our sense of ever
changing emotions. However, let us accept that reason alone cannot cause us to
act. Our actions are based on what we will which is based on what we care
about. According to Frankfurt “the formation of a person’s will is most
fundamentally a matter of his coming to care about certain things, and of his
coming to care about some of them more than others” (2). Also according to
Frankfurt cares about’ something then he, “identifies himself with
what he cares about in the sense that he makes himself vulnerable to losses and
susceptible to benefits depending upon whether what he cares about is
diminished or enhanced”. (3) A similar but slightly different approach
concerning identity is taken by Bennett Helm who argues we are identified by
what we love (4). If we accept the above definition of ‘caring about’ it can be
regarded as a form of loving. In the rest of this posting I will use the word
love to mean ‘caring about’ as defined above. It is important to note the use
of the word love in this way is using a broader definition of love than simple
romantic or erotic love. Let us accept that loving is an essential part of
our nature, let us now also accept that to love something or someone means to
identify oneself with that thing or persin and that to identify with something
makes one vulnerable.
I want
to argue that if someone leads a stoic and limits his love to virtue and
rationality that he stunts himself and denies himself of the opportunity to
lead a good life. First however I must introduce the stoic idea of an
indifferent. Sometimes being indifferent to something may be the only sensible
attitude. I for instance am indifferent to my grandson’s Aspergers, see Aspergers,
Autism and Love . Sometimes being indifferent can be admirable
as when a patient bears his illness with great stoicism. However, I will argue
someone cannot remain indifferent to some things without causing serious damage
himself as a person. What then is an indifferent? If we accept the above then a
stoic only really cares about virtue and being rational and he tries to be
indifferent to everything else. Stoics of course don’t deny other things such
as health and even wealth might help us to flourish. However even though these other things usually
contributed to someone’s flourishing they might not do so in all circumstances.
Stoics split indifferents into two types. Things such as health and wealth,
which usually contributed to flourishing, are called preferred indifferents.
Dispreferred indifferents are things that usually damage our flourishing such
as disease or poverty.
The
idea of a preferred indifferent appears at first sight to be nonsensical. How
can someone prefer something but be indifferent to it at the same time? The
answer is of course he can’t. Nonetheless it is possible to prefer something in
some circumstances and be indifferent to it others. For instance, someone may
prefer cream cakes normally but not if he is on a diet. I will now argue that
whilst the idea of preferred indifferents may make sense when applied to cream
cakes that it makes no sense when applied to the things we care about or love.
Let us
consider a mother fleeing across the Sahara desert from persecution
together with her children. Let us assume on the way one of her children dies
from lack of water. A stoic would argue that this mother should be indifferent
to her child’s fate. He might point out that in these circumstances the mother
cannot change the fate of her child so reason dictates she should indifferent
towards its fate. Of course in different circumstances she would have preferred
her child to live. However I would argue such a mother cannot suddenly become
indifferent to her child’s fate because she loved him and still loves him
because love doesn’t suddenly die. Moreover because she loves him she
identifies herself with him and someone cannot change her identity suddenly.
Lastly because she loves him she makes herself vulnerable to what benefits and
harms him. She feels grief. According to a stoic grief is both harmful and
pointless. I have argued that love is impossible without the possibility of
grief and that if we seek to limit our ability to grieve we limit our ability
to love, see grief .
It follows if we love something we cannot suddenly become indifferent towards
it even if its circumstances change and we cannot alter these circumstances.
If we
accept the above then stoics have a problem with love because as I have argued
loving is essential to being a person. A stoic might respond that stoics can
love but that this love is restricted to virtue and reason.I accept that
someone who only loves virtue and reason could be a person. But I would suggest
she would be a deficient or incomplete sort of person. She would lack true
friends because to have friends you must love your friends see Helm (4).She
might of course have friends of utility, people she uses, or friends of
pleasure, people who please her, but I would not class these as true friends. A
stoic might respond that she can love other things but I would argue the same
problem remains. For instance if a stoic loved a childhood home in which she
was happy she cannot immediately become indifferent towards it if it is burnt
down..
It
seems to me in trying to make themselves less vulnerable to fate stoics damage
that which makes us persons; the ability to love. Persons are by their very
nature vulnerable and if we try to remove this vulnerability we damage our personhood. We
become soulless people somewhat akin to virtuous robots. Accepting the above
would explain why a stoic who loves only virtue is a deficient or incomplete
sort of person. The stoic belief that the only thing which is necessary and
sufficient for someone to flourish is for her to be virtuous is wrong, for
someone to flourish she must be able to love. It would appear that sometimes
stoic ideas damage persons. A stoic might respond to the above by
pointing out that our turbulent emotions are equally damaging to our personhood.
She might then suggest that because stoicism dampens down our turbulent
emotions without the need for drugs such as anti-depressants that far from
damaging our personhood stoicism actually enhances it. I have two responses to
my stoic First, I would suggest that most people should be cautious about
dampening down their emotions and should instead use their rationality to judge
how appropriate they are and if nessary to control them. Secondly I would
suggest experiencing emotions is part of being a person as we regard sociopaths
as being deficient persons in some way.
In
conclusion I have argued that in most circumstances the stoic’s quest to reduce
or eliminate his unhappiness damages his capacity to love which in turn damages
his ability to experience happiness and I wouldn’t recommend a stoic life.
However for a few people who live in extremely deprived circumstances a stoic
life might be the best option,
- Harry Frankfurt, 1999, Necessity, Volition and Love, Cambridge University Press, page 114
- Harry Frankfurt, 1988, The Importance of What We Care About. Cambridge University Press, page 91.
- Frankfurt, 1988, page 83.
- Bennett Helm, 2010, Love Friendship & the Self, Oxford University Press, page 122.
- Bennett Helm, chapter 8.
Tuesday, 3 April 2018
Physician Assisted Suicide and the Slippery Slope Argument
Thursday, 1 March 2018
Two Types of Pharmacological Cognitive Enhancement
It is suggested by Anders Sandberg that the use of cognitive enhancing drugs under medical supervision might achieve more overall learning and academic achievement and this is preferable to being driven into illicit use by bans, see practical ethics . In a previous posting I argued that the use of cognition enhancing drugs in examinations should be permissible subject to two conditions, see cognition enhancing drugs . In this posting I will firstly argue that there are two types of pharmacological enhancement. I will then consider such enhancement should be permissible, I will suggest that they should in some circumstances.
- Any cognition enhancing drugs must be safe to use without any major side effects. In certain circumstances some of these drug must be safe for long term use.
- In
certain circumstances the users of a cognition enhancing drugs must be
prepared to continue using these drugs.
- https://nickbostrom.com/ethics/statusquo.pdf
Monday, 5 February 2018
Autonomy and Toleration
In this posting I want to examine the relationship between
autonomy and toleration. This examination will highlight the tension between
respecting autonomous decisions and autonomous persons. I will argue that the
concept of autonomy we adopt affects how tolerant we should be. Toleration will
be defined as accepting choices we believe to be wrong and have the power to
change, provided that these choices don’t harm others. John Stuart Mill famously
argued that “the only purpose for which
power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community,
against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good,
either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant.” (1) Mill was discussing
liberty but the liberty to choose can be described as a primitive form of
autonomy. Mill believed if we accept the above then we must also accept that “if all mankind minus one, were of one
opinion, and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no
more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power,
would be justified in silencing mankind. (2) It follows that if we equate
autonomy with the liberty of Mill that toleration and autonomy are automatically
linked and that we should tolerate any behaviour, which we disapprove of and
have the power to change, provided that this behaviour doesn’t harm others.
It might be objected that it is overly
simplistic to equate autonomy with liberty and that a more nuanced account of
autonomy is needed. How then might we better define autonomy? Let us first consider
autonomous decision making. Of course the freedom to choose is a necessary
condition for autonomous decision making but it might not be a sufficient one. My
objector might suggest that the simple freedom to choose is an insufficient
condition for two reasons. Firstly
she might suggest that for someone’s decision to be an autonomous one that it
must accord with certain accepted norms in addition to the norm of not harming
others. For instance if someone made decisions about what she should to do
today based solely on her horoscope we might question if she was truly
self-governing. My objector might then argue that our concept of autonomy must
contain a substantive element and that that there is no meaningful content
neutral account of autonomy. Secondly she might suggest that for someone’s
decision to be autonomous he must accept Kant’s hypothetical imperative and
always choose means that are likely to deliver the ends he seeks. For instance
we might question whether someone was really self-governing if one of the ends he
desired was increased learning and he sought to acquire this increase by prayer.
In the light of my objector’s suggestions two arguments might now be advanced as
to why autonomy and toleration need not be linked. Firstly if we accept a
substantive account of autonomy which includes some accepted norms then we have
no reason, based on respecting autonomous decisions, to accept those decisions
which don’t concur with those norms and hence be tolerant. Secondly it might be argued we have no reason
based on respect for autonomy to respect, tolerate, those who choose means that
are unlikely to achieve the ends they seek.
I have outlined a possible more
nuanced definition of autonomous decision making. However we can respect
autonomous decisions or autonomous people. Let us now turn our examination to
respecting autonomous people. I will suggest that that respecting an autonomous
person means accepting all of her decisions including ones that
appear to have been made in a non-autonomous manner. My objector might
argue that it is possible to respect someone as an autonomous person without
respecting all of her decisions. In order to consider this objection I will
first consider what sort of person is an autonomous person and how is she connected
to autonomous decision making. It might be suggested that an autonomous person
is simply one who always make autonomous decisions. If we accept this definition
then we should have no problem in accepting all the decisions made by an
autonomous person. However if we accept this suggestion it might be argued that
it would be much simpler if we only respected autonomous decisions and ignored
the concept of an autonomous person altogether. Moreover most people don’t
always make decisions which conform to conditions outlined above for autonomous
decision making, indeed it might be suggested that they rarely do so. It
follows that if we accept the above that we are only going to respect an extremely
small set of human beings as autonomous persons. In the light of the above should
we simply respect human beings and forget about respecting autonomous people? I
would suggest we shouldn’t. A three year old and an adult in the prime of her
faculties differ in their capacities and intuitively the idea of self-control,
self-government or autonomy seems central to this difference. Perhaps a better
way to define an autonomous person would be to define her as a human being who
has the capacity to make autonomous decisions. Such a definition would satisfy
most adults because they want to be defined as the kind of creatures who can
make their own decisions rather than simply being defined as human beings. Such
a definition would also be useful because it defines a meaningful subset of
human beings in contrast our previous definition which only defined a narrow
subset. Lastly such a definition roughly concurs with Mill’s idea that liberty
is “meant to apply to human beings in the maturity of their faculties”. If we
accept this definition of an autonomous person then what does it mean to
respect such a person? I have suggested above that this means accepting all her
decisions which don’t harm others. Let us assume that we don’t respect all the
decisions of someone who has the capacity to make autonomous decisions. Which
of her decisions should we respect, only the one that are autonomous ones?
However doing so means respecting an autonomous person is
equivalent to respecting autonomous decisions and the concept of an autonomous person seems to do no work. Let us accept that if the concept of an autonomous
person is to be a meaningful one that respecting someone as an autonomous
person necessarily means accepting all of her decisions. This position seems to
concur with that of Mill. It follows that respecting someone as an autonomous person means
respecting, or at the very least accepting, her autonomous decisions. Acceptance
of the above and the previously outlined definition of toleration means that we
will be tolerant automatically. It means accepting choices we believe to be
wrong and have the power to change, provided these choices don’t harm others.
It might be objected that it
is difficult to ascertain whether someone has the capacity to make autonomous
decisions. She might point out that if we respect autonomous persons and this
means that we must respect non-autonomous decisions that this respect causes
difficulties for the doctrine of informed consent. My objector might proceed to
argue that because of this difficulty it would be much better to assess whether
some specific decision was an autonomous one rather than whether the person
making it had the capacity to make autonomous decisions. For this reason she
might suggest that when we respect autonomy we should only respect autonomous
decisions. She might point out that adopting her suggestion would mean that it
would be easier to act beneficently towards someone who seems to be making a
decision which runs counter to his best interests. If we accept that respecting
autonomy means respecting autonomous decisions and accept a substantive account
of autonomy then respect for autonomy and toleration aren’t automatically
linked. There are no reason based on respect for autonomy as to why we should
accept the decisions of others which conflict with our accepted norms. In a
western democracy if the wearing of the hijab goes against our accepted norms
then there is no reason to accept it based on respect for autonomy not to ban
it; similarly in an Islamic state if not wearing the hijab goes against the
accepted norms then again then there is no reason to accept not wearing it
based on respect for autonomy. It follows that there is no reason based on
respect for autonomy, as conceived above, as to why we should be tolerant,
unless of course one of our accepted norms is to be tolerant.
It would seem if we believe
respecting autonomy means respecting autonomous persons then we should be
tolerant, if we accept a substantive account of autonomy and believe respecting
autonomy means respecting autonomous decisions then we have no reason based on
autonomy to be tolerant. I will now present two arguments as to why we
shouldn’t accept that respecting autonomy means respecting substantive autonomous
decisions. Firstly I would argue if we do so then we might be accused of epistemic
arrogance. Let us accept that any autonomous decision must accord with the
hypothetical imperative. Let us assume someone makes a decision using this
imperative but that we don’t accept her decision as an autonomous one. It
follows that our rejection is based on rejecting the beliefs or norms her
decision is based upon. Let us also accept that our beliefs and desires help
define us as persons. It follows if we don’t respect someone’s decisions that
whilst we might be respecting her as a human being in a caring way but that we
aren’t respecting her as a person. Autonomy and the concept of a person are of
necessity connected. Most people don’t want to be only respected as a human being
but as a person. It follows that if we only respect autonomous decisions we
erode the concept of a person. Secondly I will argue that if we only accept a
substantive account autonomous decisions that the concept of an autonomous
decisions also loses its usefulness. If we only respect substantive autonomous
decisions we only respect what we regard as good decisions. It follows if we
only respect what we regard as good decisions the idea of autonomous making is
doing no useful work and becomes redundant. It follows that that if he concept
of autonomy is to remain a useful concept that we should reject a substantive
account of autonomous decision making.
I have argued that we
should reject a substantive account of autonomy. Most applied philosophers seem
wedded to a substantive account of autonomy perhaps, this is because of an
unconscious desire to justify their discipline for after all if something is a
primitive concept then there is less of a need for applied philosophy. If we
reject a substantive of autonomous decision making and still believe autonomy
remains important then we must accept that respecting autonomy means respecting
those people who have the capacity to make autonomous decisions. Respecting
those people who perhaps aren’t as we educated as some are and rely on their
emotions more than most people do. If we do so we must still be able to define
an autonomous decision. Clearly not all decisions are autonomous. For instance
random decisions, coerced decisions or decision made under some internal
compulsion, such as a patient refusing consent because of fear, aren’t
autonomous decisions. I have argued above that we should reject a substantive
account of autonomous decision making because it erodes the idea of a
particular person and reduces the need for autonomous decisions by equating
them with good decisions. It follows that we should adopt a content
neutral or primitive account of autonomous decision making. An
autonomous decision is one which is freely made by someone which is based on
her own beliefs and is instrumentally rational enough to serve those beliefs. Respecting
this primitive concept of autonomy entails that we will be naturally tolerant.
Respecting autonomy means accepting
choices we believe to be wrong and have the power to change provided that these
choices don’t harm others. Lastly if we accept that informed consent is based
on respect for patient autonomy then adopting a primitive account of autonomy
means a larger number of people should be competent to give consent compared to
the number if we adopt a substantive account.
- Mill J S. (1974) On Liberty and Other Essays. Oxford University Press (Oxfords Worlds Classics), introduction.
- Mill J S, chapter 2
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