ETHICS, the name generally given to the science of moral
philosophy. The word “ethics” is derived from the Gr.
ηθικος,
that which pertains to
ηθος, character.
For convenience in reference, the arrangement followed in this
article may be explained at the outset: —
| PAGE |
| I. |
Definition and Scope |
809 |
| II. |
Historical Sketch |
809 |
| A. | Greek and Graeco-Roman Ethics |
810 |
| | The Age of the Sophists |
811 |
| | Socrates and his Disciples |
811 |
| | Plato |
812 |
| | Plato and Aristotle |
814 |
| | Aristotle |
815 |
| | Stoicism |
816 |
| | Hedonism (Epicurus) |
818 |
| | Later Greek and Roman Ethics |
818 |
| | Neoplatonism |
819 |
| B. | Christianity and Medieval Ethics |
820 |
| | Christian and Jewish “Law of God” |
820 |
| | Christian and Pagan Inwardness
(Knowledge, Faith, Love, Purity) |
820 |
| |
|
| | Distinctive
Particulars of Christian Morality |
821 |
| | Development of Opinion in
Early Christianity, Augustine, Ambrose |
823 |
| | Medieval Morality
and Moral Philosophy |
824 |
| | Thomas Aquinas |
824 |
| | Casuistry and Jesuitry |
826 |
| | The Reformation;
and birth of Modern Thought |
826 |
| C. | Modern Ethics |
827 |
| | Grotius |
827 |
| | Hobbes |
827 |
| | The Cambridge Moralists
(Cudworth, More) |
828 |
| | Cumberland |
829 |
| | Locke |
829 |
| | Clarke |
829 |
| | Shaftesbury |
830 |
| | Mandeville |
830 |
| | Butler |
831 |
| | Wollaston |
831 |
| | Hutcheson |
831 |
| | Hume |
832 |
| | Adam Smith |
833 |
| | The Intuitional School
(Price, Reid, Stewart, Whewell)
|
833 |
| | The Utilitarian School
(Paley, Bentham, Mill) |
835 |
C. Modem Ethics continued
| | Association and Evolution |
837 |
| | Free-will |
837 |
| | French Influence on English Ethics
(Helvetius, Comte) |
838 |
| | German Influence on English Ethics
(Kant, Hegel) |
839 |
| D. | Ethics since 1879 |
840 |
| III. |
Bibliography |
845 |
Section I. contains a general survey of the subject; it shows in
what sense ethics is to be regarded as a special field of philosophical
investigation its relations to other departments of thought, especially
to psychology, religion and modern physical science. The
article makes no attempt to give a detailed, casuistical examination
of the matter of ethical theory. For this, reference must be made
to special articles on philosophic schools, writers and terms.
Section II. is a historical sketch in four parts tracing the main
of development in ethical speculation from its birth to the
present day. Here again it has been possible to notice only the
salient points or landmarks, leaving all detail to special articles as
above. All important writers whose names occur in this sketch
are treated in special biographical articles, and references are given
as often as possible to supplementary articles which illustrate and
explain points which cannot be fully treated here. This is especially
the case in connexion with technical terms (whose history and
meaning are inevitably taken for granted) and biographical information
about minor ethical writers.
I. Definition and Subject-Matter of Ethics
In its widest sense, the term “ethics” would imply an examination
into the general character or habits of mankind, and would
even involve a description or history of the habits of men in particular
societies living at different periods of time. Such a field
of study would obviously be too wide for any particular science
or philosophy to investigate, and moreover portions of the field
are already occupied by history, by anthropology and by the
particular sciences (e.g. physiology, anatomy, biology), in so
far as the habits and character of men depend upon the material
processes which these sciences examine. Even philosophies
such as logic and aesthetic would be necessary for such an
investigation, if thought and artistic production are normal
human habits and elements in character. Ethics then is usually
confined to the particular field of human character and conduct
so far as they depend upon or exhibit certain general principles
commonly known as moral principles. Men in general characterize
their own conduct and character and that of other men
by such general adjectives as good, bad, right and wrong, and
it is the meaning and scope of these adjectives, primarily in
relation to human conduct, and ultimately in their final and
absolute sense, that ethics investigates.
A not uncommon definition of ethics as the “science of conduct”
a inexact for various reasons, (1) The sciences are descriptive
or experimental. But a description of what acts or what ends
of action men in the present or the past call, or have called,
“good” or “bad” is clearly beyond human powers. And
experiments in morality (apart from the inconvenient practical
consequences likely to ensue) are useless for purposes of ethics,
because the moral consciousness would itself at one and the same
time be required to make the experiment and to provide the
subject upon which the experiment is performed. (2) Ethics
is a philosophy and not a science. Philosophy is a process of
reflection upon the presuppositions involved in unreflective
thought. In logic and metaphysics it investigates either the
process of apprehension itself, or conceptions such as cause,
substance, space, time, which the ordinary scientific consciousness
never criticizes. In moral philosophy the place of the body
of sciences, which philosophy as the theory of knowledge investigates,
is taken by the developed moral consciousness, which
already pronounces moral judgment without hesitation, and
claims authority to subject to continual criticism the institutions
and forms of social life which it has itself helped to create.
When ethical speculation first begins, conceptions such as
those of duty, responsibility, the will as the ultimate subject
of moral approbation and disapprobation, are already in existence
and already operative. Moral philosophy in a certain sense adds
nothing to these conceptions, though it sets them in a clearer
light. The problems of the moral consciousness at the time at
which it first becomes reflective are not strictly speaking philosophical
problems at all. It is occupied with just such questions
as each individual man who wishes to act rightly is constantly
called upon to answer, e.g. questions such as “What particular
action will meet the claims of justice under such and such
circumstances?” or “What degree of ignorance will excuse
this particular person in this particular case from his responsibility?”
It tries to attain a knowledge as complete as possible
of the circumstances under which the act contemplated must be
performed, the personalities of the persons whom it may affect,
and the consequences (so far as they can be foreseen) which
it will produce, and then by virtue of its own power of moral
discrimination pronounces judgment. And the ever-recurring
problem of the moral consciousness, “What ought to be done?”
is one which receives a clearer and more definite answer as men
become more able in the course of moral experience to apply
those principles of the moral consciousness which are yet employed
in that experience from the outset. Nevertheless there
is a sense in which moral philosophy may be said to originate
out of difficulties inherent in the nature of morality itself, although
it remains true that the questions which ethics attempts to
answer are never questions with which the moral consciousness
as such is confronted. The fact that men give different answers
to moral problems which seem similar in character, or even the
mere fact that men disregard, when they act immorally, the
dictates and implicit principles of the moral consciousness is
certain sooner or later to produce the desire either, on the one
hand, to justify immoral action by casting doubt upon the
authority of the moral consciousness and the validity of its
principles, or, on the other hand, to justify particular moral
judgments either by (the only valid method) an analysis of
the moral principle involved in the judgment and a demonstration
of its universal acceptation, or by some attempted proof
that the particular moral judgment is arrived at by a process
of inference from some universal conception of the Supreme
Good or the Final End from which all particular duties or
virtues may be deduced. It may be that criticism of morality
first originates with a criticism of existing moral institutions
or codes of ethics; such a criticism may be due to the spontaneous
activity of the moral consciousness itself. But when
such criticism passes into the attempt to find a universal criterion
of morality — such an attempt being in effect an effort to make
morality scientific — and especially when the attempt is seen,
as it must in the end be seen, to fail (the moral consciousness
being superior to all standards of morality and realizing itself
wholly in particular judgments), then ethics as a process of
reflection upon the nature of the moral consciousness may be
said to begin. If this be true it follows that one of the chief
function of ethics must be criticism of mistaken attempts to
find a criterion of morality superior to the pronouncements of
the moral consciousness itself. The ultimate superiority of the
moral consciousness over all other standards is recognized, even
by those who impugn its authority, whenever they claim that
all men ought to recognize the superior value of the standards
which they themselves wish to substitute. Similarly, their
opponents refute their arguments by showing that they are
based ultimately upon a recognition of certain distinctions
which are moral distinctions (i.e. imply a moral consciousness
capable of discriminating between right and wrong in particular
cases), and that these moral distinctions conflict with the conclusions
which they reach.
This may briefly be illustrated by reference to some of the
great fundamental controversies of ethics. None of these
originates out of conflicting statements of the moral consciousness,
i.e. there is no fundamental contradiction in morality
itself. No one (if unsophisticated) ever confused the conception
of pleasure with the conception of the Good, or thought that
the claims of selfish interest were identical with those of duty
But the controversy between hedonists and antihedonists
originates as soon as men reflect that a good which is not in some
sense “my” good is not good at all, or that no act can be said
to be moral which does not satisfy “me.” Or, again, the
reflection that the mark or sign of the perfect performance of
a particular virtuous act or function is the presence of a characteristic
pleasure which always accompanies it, is opposed to
the reflection that it is a mark of the highest morality never to
rest satisfied, and out of these seemingly contradictory statements
of the reflective consciousness might arise a multitude
of controversies either concerning pleasure and duty, or the even
more difficult and complex conceptions of merit, progress, and
the nature of the Supreme Good or Final End.
When and how fresh controversies in ethics will begin it would
be impossible for any one to foretell. Sometimes the dominance
of a particular science or branch of study is the occasion
of an attempt to apply to ethics ideas borrowed from
or analogous to the conceptions of that science. False
analogies drawn between ethics and mathematics or between
morality and the perception of beauty have wrought much
mischief in modern and to some degree even in ancient ethics.
The influence of ideas borrowed from biology is everywhere
manifest in the ethical speculations of modern times. Sometimes,
again, whole theories of ethics have been formulated which can
be seen in the end to be efforts to subordinate moral conceptions
to conceptions belonging properly to institutions or departments
of human thought and activity which the moral consciousness
has itself originated. Law, for instance, depends, or at least
ought to depend, upon men's need for and consciousness of
justice. And such institutions as the family and the state are
created by the social consciousness, which is the moral consciousness
from another aspect. Yet morality has been subordinated
to legal and social sanctions, and moral advance has been held
to be conditioned by political and social necessities which are
not moral needs. Similarly no one since civilization emerged
from barbarism has ever really been willing to yield allegiance
to a deity who is not moral in the fullest and highest sense of the
word. God is not superior to moral law. Yet there have been
whole systems of theological ethics which have
attempted to base human morality upon the arbitrary
will of God or upon the supreme authority of a divinely inspired
book or code of laws. One of the greatest of all ethical controversies,
that concerning the freedom of the will, arose directly
out of what was in reality a theological problem — the necessity,
namely, of reconciling God's foreknowledge with human freedom.
The unreflective moral consciousness never finds it difficult to
distinguish between a man's power of willing and all the forces
of circumstance, heredity and the like, which combine to form
the temptations to which he may yield or bid defiance; and
such facts as “remorse” and “penitence” are a continual
testimony to man's sense of freedom. But so soon as men
perceive upon reflection an apparent discrepancy between the
utterances of their moral consciousness and certain conclusions
to which theological speculation (or at a later period metaphysical
and scientific inquiries) seems inevitably to lead them, they
will not rest satisfied until the belief in the will's freedom (hitherto
unquestioned) is upon further reflection justified or condemned.
It is clear then that the complexity of the subject-matter of
ethics is such that no sharply defined boundary lines can be drawn
between it and other branches of inquiry. Just in so far as it
presupposes the apprehension of moral facts, it must presuppose
a knowledge of the system of social relationships upon which
some at least of those facts depend. No one, for instance, could
inquire into the nature of justice without being further compelled
to undertake an examination of the nature of the state.
It would be difficult to decide how much of the dispute between
the advocates of pleasure theories and their opponents turns
upon vexed questions of psychology, and how much is
strictly relevant to ethics. If, as has already been
said, one of the chief tasks of ethics is to prevent the
intrusion into its own sphere of inquiry of ideas borrowed from
other and alien sources, then obviously these sources must be
investigated. One example of this necessity may be given. It
is sometimes maintained that the proper method of ethics is
the psychological method; ethics, we are told, should examine
as its subject-matter moral sentiments wherever found, without
raising ultimate questions as to the nature of obligation or
moral authority in general. Now if in opposition to such arguments
the ultimate character of moral obligation be defended,
it will be necessary to point out that no one feels moral sentiments
except in connexion with particular objects of moral approbation
or disapprobation (e.g. gratitude is inexplicable apart from a
particular relationship existing between two or more persons),
and that these objects are objects of the moral consciousness
alone. But such a line of argument is certain to make necessary
an inquiry into the nature of the objects of psychological study
which may produce quite unforeseen results for psychology.
Nothing therefore is to be gained by confining ethics within
limits which must from the nature of the case be arbitrary.
The defender at all events of the supremacy of moral intuitions
must be prepared to follow whither the argument leads, into
whatever strange quarters it may direct him. But this much
may be said by way of delimitation of the scope of ethics: however
complicated and involved its arguments and processes of
inference may become, the facts from which they start and the
conclusions to which they point are such as the moral consciousness
alone can understand or warrant.
(Henry Herbert Williams)
II. Historical Sketch
A. Greek and Graeco-Roman Ethics. — The ethical speculation
of Greece, and therefore of Europe, had no abrupt and absolute
beginning. The naive and fragmentary precepts of conduct,
which are everywhere the earliest manifestation of nascent
moral reflection, are a noteworthy element in the gnomic poetry
of the 7th and 6th centuries B.C. Their importance is shown
by the traditional enumeration of the Seven Sages of the 6th
century, and their influence on ethical thought is attested by the
references of Plato and Aristotle. But from these unscientific
utterances to a philosophy of morals was a long process. In the
practical wisdom of Thales (q.v.), one of the seven, we cannot
discern any systematic theory of morality. In the case of
Pythagoras, conspicuous among pre-Socratic philosophers as the
founder not merely of a school, but of a sect or order bound by a
common rule of life, there is a closer connexion between moral
and metaphysical speculation. The doctrine of the Pythagoreans
that the essence of justice (conceived as equal retribution) was a
square number, indicates a serious attempt to extend to the
region of conduct their mathematical view of the universe;
and the same may be said of their classification of good with
unity, straightness and the like, and of evil with the opposite
qualities. Still, the enunciation of the moral precepts of
Pythagoras appears to have been dogmatic, or even prophetic, rather
than philosophic, and to have been accepted by his disciples
with an unphilosophic reverence as the
ipse dixit[1]
of the master.
Hence, whatever influence the Pythagorean blending of ethical
and mathematical notions may have had on Plato, and, through
him, on later thought, we cannot regard the school as having
really forestalled the Socratic inquiry after a completely reasoned
theory of conduct. The ethical element in the “dark”
philosophizing of Heraclitus (c. 530-470 B.C.),
though it anticipates
Stoicism in its conceptions of a law of the universe, to which
the wise man will carefully conform, and a divine harmony, in
the recognition of which he will find his truest satisfaction, is
more profound, but even less systematic. It is only when we
come to Democritus, a contemporary of Socrates, the last of
the original thinkers whom we distinguish as pre-Socratic, that
we find anything which we can call an ethical system. The
fragments that remain of the moral treatises of Democritus are
sufficient, perhaps, to convince us that the turn of Greek philosophy
in the direction of conduct, which was actually due to
Socrates, would have taken place without him, though in a less
decided manner; but when we compare the Democritean ethics
with the post-Socratic system to which it has most affinity,
Epicureanism, we find that it exhibits a very rudimentary
apprehension of the formal conditions which moral teaching
must fulfil before it can lay claim to be treated as scientific.
The truth is that no system of ethics could be constructed until
attention had been directed to the vagueness and inconsistency
of the common moral opinions of mankind. For this purpose
was needed the concentration of a philosophic intellect of the
first order on the problems of practice. In Socrates first we find
the required combination of a paramount interest in conduct
and an ardent desire for knowledge. The pre-Socratic thinkers
were all primarily devoted to ontological research; but by the
middle of the 5th century B.C. the conflict of their dogmatic
systems had led some of the keenest minds to doubt the possibility
of penetrating the secret of the physical universe. This doubt
found expression in the reasoned scepticism of Gorgias, and
produced the famous proposition of Protagoras, that human
apprehension is the only standard of existence. The same
feeling led Socrates to abandon the old physico-metaphysical
inquiries. In his case, moreover, it was strengthened by a naive
piety that forbade him to search into things of which the gods
seemed to have reserved the knowledge to themselves. The regulation
of human action, on the other hand (except on occasions of
special difficulty, for which omens and oracles might be vouchsafed),
they had left to human reason. On this accordingly
Socrates concentrated his efforts.
Though, however, Socrates was the first to arrive at a proper
conception of the problems of conduct, the general idea did not
originate with him. The natural reaction against the
metaphysical and ethical dogmatism of the early
thinkers had reached its climax in the Sophists (q.v.).
Gorgias and Protagoras are only representatives of what was
really a universal tendency to abandon dogmatic theory and take
refuge in practical matters, and especially, as was natural in the
Greek city-state, in the civic relations of the citizen. The education
given by the Sophists aimed at no general theory of life,
but professed to expound the art of getting on in the world and
of managing public affairs. In their eulogy of the virtues of the
citizen, they pointed out the prudential character of justice and
the like as a means of obtaining pleasure and avoiding pain.
The Greek conception of society was such that the life of the
free-born citizen consisted mainly of his public function, and,
therefore, the pseudo-ethical disquisitions of the Sophists satisfied
the requirements of the age. None thought of
αρετη (virtue
or excellence) as a unique quality possessed of an intrinsic value,
but as the virtue of the citizen, just as good flute-playing was the
virtue of the flute-player. We see here, as in other activities
of the age, a determination to acquire technical knowledge, and
to apply it directly to the practical issue; just as music was being
enriched by new technical knowledge, architecture by modern
theories of plans and T-squares (sc. Hippodamus), the handling
of soldiers by the new technique of “tactics” and “hoplitics,” so
citizenship must be analysed afresh, systematized and adapted
in relation to modern requirements. The Sophists had studied
these matters superficially indeed but with thoroughness as far
as they went, and it is not remarkable that they should have
taken the methods which were successful in rhetoric, and
applied them to the “science and art” of civic virtues. Plato's
Protagoras claims, not unjustly, that in teaching virtue they
simply did systematically what every one else was doing at
haphazard. But in the true sense of the word, they had no
ethical system at all, nor did they contribute save by contrast
to ethical speculation. They merely analysed conventional
formulae, much in the manner of certain modern so-called
“scientific” moralists. Into this arena of hazy popular common
sense Socrates brought a new critical spirit, showing
that these popular lecturers, in spite of their fertile
eloquence, could not defend their fundamental assumptions,
nor even give rational definitions of what they professed to explain.
Not only were they thus “ignorant,” but they were also
perpetually inconsistent with themselves in dealing with particular
instances. Thus, by the aid of his famous “dialectic,” Socrates
arrived first at the negative result that the professed teachers of
the people were as ignorant as he himself claimed to be, and in
a measure justified the eulogy of Aristotle that he rendered to
philosophy the service of “introducing induction and definitions.”
This description of his work is, however, both too technical and
too positive, if we may judge from those earlier dialogues of
Plato in which the real Socrates is found least modified. The
pre-eminent wisdom which the Delphic oracle attributed to him
was held by himself to consist in a unique consciousness of
ignorance. Yet it is equally clear from Plato that there was a
most important positive element in the teaching of Socrates in
virtue of which it is just to say with Alexander Bain, “the first
important name in ancient ethical philosophy is Socrates.”
The union of the negative and the positive elements in his work
has caused historians no little perplexity, and we cannot quite
save the philosopher's consistency unless we regard some of the
doctrines attributed to him by Xenophon as merely tentative
and provisional. Still the positions of Socrates that are most
important in the history of ethical thought not only are easy
to harmonize with his conviction of ignorance, but even render
it easier to understand his unwearied cross-examination of common
opinion. While he showed clearly the difficulty of acquiring
knowledge, he was convinced that knowledge alone could be the
source of a coherent system of virtue, as error of evil. Socrates,
therefore, first in the history of thought, propounds a positive
scientific law of conduct. Virtue is knowledge. This principle
involved the paradox that no man, knowing good, would do evil.
But it was a paradox derived from his unanswerable truisms,
“Every one wishes for his own good, and would get it if he could,”
and “No one would deny that justice and virtue generally are
goods, and of all goods the best.” All virtues are, therefore,
summed up in knowledge of the good. But this good is not, for
Socrates, duty as distinct from interest. The force of the paradox
depends upon a blending of duty and interest in the single notion
of good, a blending which was dominant in the common thought
of the age. This it is which forms the kernel of the positive
thought of Socrates according to Xenophon. He could give no
satisfactory account of Good in the abstract, and evaded all
questions on this point by saying that he knew “no good that
was not good for something in particular,” but that good is
consistent with itself. For himself he prized above all things
the wisdom that is virtue, and in the task of producing it he
endured the hardest penury, maintaining that such life was
richer in enjoyment than a life of luxury. This many-sidedness
of view is illustrated by the curious blending of noble and merely
utilitarian sentiment in his account of friendship: a friend who
can be of no service is valueless; yet the highest service that a
friend can render is moral improvement.
The historically important characteristics of his moral philosophy,
if we take (as we must) his teaching and character
together, may be summarized as follows: — (1) an ardent inquiry
for knowledge nowhere to be found, but which, if found, would
perfect human conduct; (2) a demand meanwhile that men
should act as far as possible on some consistent theory; (3) a
provisional adhesion to the commonly received view of good,
in all its incoherent complexity, and a perpetual readiness to
maintain the harmony of its different elements, and demonstrate
the superiority of virtue by an appeal to the standard of self-interest;
(4) personal firmness, as apparently easy as it was
actually invincible, in carrying out consistently such practical
convictions as he had attained. It is only when we keep all
these points in view that we can understand how from the
spring of Socratic conversation flowed the divergent streams
of Greek ethical thought.
Four distinct philosophical schools trace their immediate
origin to the circle that gathered round Socrates — the Megarian,
the Platonic, the Cynic and the Cyrenaic. The
impress of the master is manifest on all, in spite of the
wide differences that divide them; they all agree in
holding the most important possession of man to be
wisdom or knowledge, and the most important knowledge to be
knowledge of Good. Here, however, the agreement ends. The
more philosophic part of the circle, forming a group in which
Euclid of Megara (see Megarian School)
seems at first to have
taken the lead, regarded this Good as the object of a still unfulfilled
quest, and were led to identify it with the hidden secret
of the universe, and thus to pass from ethics to metaphysics.
Others again, whose demand for knowledge was more easily
satisfied, and who were more impressed with the positive and
practical side of the master's teaching, made the quest a much
simpler affair. They took the Good as already known, and held
philosophy to consist in the steady application of this knowledge
to conduct. Among these were Antisthenes the Cynic and
Aristippus of Cyrene. It is by their recognition of the duty of
living consistently by theory instead of mere impulse or custom,
their sense of the new value given to life through this rationalization,
and their effort to maintain the easy, calm, unwavering
firmness of the Socratic temper, that we recognize both Antisthenes
and Aristippus as “Socratic men,” in spite of the completeness
with which they divided their master's positive doctrine
into systems diametrically opposed. Of their contrasted principles
we may perhaps say that, while Aristippus took the most
obvious logical step for reducing the teaching of Socrates to clear
dogmatic unity, Antisthenes certainly drew the most natural
inference from the Socratic life.
Aristippus (see Cyrenaics) argued that, if all that is beautiful
or admirable in conduct has this quality as being useful, i.e.
productive of some further good; if virtuous action
is essentially action done with insight, or rational
apprehension of the act as a means to this good, this
good must be pleasure. Bodily pleasures and pains Aristippus
held to be the keenest, though he does not seem to have maintained
this on any materialistic theory, as he admitted the
existence of purely mental pleasures, such as joy in the prosperity
of one's native land. He fully recognized that his good was
capable of being realized only in successive parts, and gave even
exaggerated emphasis to the rule of seeking the pleasure of the
moment, and not troubling oneself about a dubious future.
It was in the calm, resolute, skilful culling of such pleasures as
circumstances afforded from moment to moment, undisturbed
by passion, prejudices or superstition, that he conceived the
quality of wisdom to be exhibited; and tradition represents
him as realizing this ideal to an impressive degree. Among the
prejudices from which the wise man was free he included all
regard to customary morality beyond what was due to the
actual penalties attached to its violation; though he held, with
Socrates, that these penalties actually render conformity reasonable.
Thus early in the history of ethical theory appeared the
most thoroughgoing exposition of hedonism.
Far otherwise was the Socratic spirit understood by Antisthenes
and the Cynics (q.v.). They equally held that no speculative
research was needed for the discovery of good and
virtue, and maintained that the Socratic wisdom was
exhibited, not in the skilful pursuit, but in the rational
disregard of pleasure, — in the clear apprehension of the intrinsic
worthlessness of this and most other objects of men's ordinary
desires and aims. Pleasure, indeed, Antisthenes declared roundly
to be an evil; “Better madness than a surrender to pleasure.”
He did not overlook the need of supplementing merely intellectual
insight by “Socratic force of soul”; but it seemed to him that,
by insight and self-mastery combined, an absolute spiritual
independence might be attained which left nothing wanting
for perfect well-being (see also Diogenes).
For as for poverty,
painful toil, disrepute, and such evils as men dread most, these,
he argued, were positively useful as means of progress in spiritual
freedom and virtue. There is, however, in the Cynic notion of
wisdom, no positive criterion beyond the mere negation of
irrational desires and prejudices. We saw that Socrates, while
not claiming to have found the abstract theory of good or wise
conduct, practically understood by it the faithful performance of
customary duties, maintaining always that his own happiness
was therewith bound up. The Cynics more boldly discarded
both pleasure and mere custom as alike irrational; but in so
doing they left the freed reason with no definite aim but its
own freedom. It is absurd, as Plato urged, to say that knowledge
is the good, and then when asked “knowledge of what?” to have
no positive reply but “of the good”; but the Cynics do not seem
to have made any serious effort to escape from this absurdity.
The ultimate views of these two Socratic schools we shall
have to notice presently when we come to the post-Aristotelian
schools. We must now proceed to trace the fuller development
of the Socratic theory in the hands of Plato and Aristotle.
The ethics of Plato cannot properly be treated as a finished
result, but rather as a continual movement from the position
of Socrates towards the more complete, articulate
system of Aristotle; except that there are ascetic and
mystical suggestions in some parts of Plato's teaching which
find no counterpart in Aristotle, and in fact disappear from
Greek philosophy soon after Plato's death until they are revived
and fantastically developed in Neopythagoreanism and Neoplatonism.
The first stage at which we can distinguish Plato's
ethical view from that of Socrates is presented in the Protagoras,
where he makes a serious, though clearly tentative effort to
define the object of that knowledge which he with his master
regards as the essence of all virtue. Such knowledge, he here
maintains, is really mensuration of pleasures and pains, whereby
the wise man avoids those mistaken under-estimates of future
feelings in comparison with present which we commonly call
“yielding to fear or desire.” This hedonism has perplexed
Plato's readers needlessly (as we have said in speaking of the
Cyrenaics) , inasmuch as hedonism is the most obvious corollary
of the Socratic doctrine that the different common notions of
good — the beautiful, the pleasant and the useful — were to be
somehow interpreted by each other. By Plato, however, this
conclusion could have been held only before he had accomplished
the movement of thought by which he carried the Socratic
method beyond the range of human conduct and developed it
into a metaphysical system.
This movement may be expressed thus. “If we know,” said
Socrates, “what justice is, we can give an account or definition
of it”; true knowledge must be knowledge of the general fact,
common to all the individual cases to which we apply our general
notion. But this must be no less true of other objects of thought
and discourse; the same relation of general notions to particular
examples extends through the whole physical universe; we can
think and talk of it only by means of such notions. True or
scientific knowledge then must be general knowledge, relating,
not to individuals primarily, but to the general facts or qualities
which individuals exemplify; in fact, our notion of an individual,
when examined, is found to be an aggregate of such general
qualities. But, again, the object of true knowledge must be what
really exists; hence the reality of the universe must lie in general
facts or relations, and not in the individuals that exemplify
them.
So far the steps are plain enough; but we do not yet see how
this logical Realism (as it was afterwards called) comes to have
the essentially ethical character that especially interests us in
Platonism. Plato's philosophy is now concerned with the whole
universe of being; yet the ultimate object of his philosophic
contemplation is still “the good,” now conceived as the ultimate
ground of all being and knowledge. That is, the essence of the
universe is identified with its end, — the “formal” with the
“final” cause of things, to use the later Aristotelian phraseology.
How comes this about?
Perhaps we may best explain this by recurring to the original
application of the Socratic method to human affairs. Since all
rational activity is for some end, the different arts or functions
of human industry are naturally defined by a statement of their
ends or uses; and similarly, in giving an account of the different
artists and functionaries, we necessarily state their end, “what
they are good for.” In a society well ordered on Socratic
principles, every human being would be put to some use; the
essence of his life would consist in doing what he was good for
(his proper
εργον).
But again, it is easy to extend this view
throughout the whole region of organized life; an eye that
does not attain its end by seeing is without the essence of an eye.
In short, we may say of all organs and instruments that they
are what we think them in proportion as they fulfil their function
and attain their end. If, then, we conceive the whole universe
organically, as a complex arrangement of means to ends, we shall
understand how Plato might hold that all things really were, or
(as we say) “realized their idea,” in proportion as they
accomplished the special end or good for which they were adapted.
Even Socrates, in spite of his aversion to physics, was led by
pious reflection to expound a ideological view of the physical
world, as ordered in all its parts by divine wisdom for the realization
of some divine end; and, in the metaphysical turn which
Plato gave to this view, he was probably anticipated by Euclid of
Megara, who held that the one real being is “that which we call
by many names. Good, Wisdom, Reason or God,” to which
Plato, raising to a loftier significance the Socratic identification
of the beautiful with the useful, added the further name of
Absolute Beauty, explaining how man's love of the beautiful
finally reveals itself as the yearning for the end and essence of
being.
Plato, therefore, took this vast stride of thought, and identified
the ultimate notions of ethics and ontology. We have now to see
what attitude he will adopt towards the practical inquiries from
which he started. What will now be his view of wisdom, virtue,
pleasure and their relation to human well-being?
The answer to this question is inevitably somewhat complicated.
In the first place we have to observe that philosophy
has now passed definitely from the market-place into the lecture-room.
The quest of Socrates was for the true art of conduct for
a man living a practical life among his fellows. But if the objects
of abstract thought constitute the real world, of which this world
of individual things is but a shadow, it is plain that the highest,
most real life must lie in the former region and not in the latter.
It is in contemplating the abstract reality which concrete things
obscurely exhibit, the type or ideal which they imperfectly
imitate, that the true life of the mind in man must consist; and
as man is most truly man in proportion as he is mind, the desire
of one's own good, which Plato, following Socrates, held to be
permanent and essential in every living thing, becomes in its
highest form the philosophic yearning for knowledge. This
yearning, he held, springs — like more sensual impulses — from a
sense of want of something formerly possessed, of which there
remains a latent memory in the soul, strong in proportion to its
philosophic capacity; hence it is that in learning any abstract
truth by scientific demonstration we merely make explicit what we
already implicitly know; we bring into dear consciousness hidden
memories of a state in which the soul looked upon Reality and
Good face to face, before the lapse that imprisoned her in an alien
body and mingled her true nature with fleshly feelings and impulses.
We thus reach the paradox that the true art of living
is really an “art of dying” as far as possible to mere sense, in
order more fully to exist in intimate union with absolute goodness
and beauty. On the other hand, since the philosopher must still
live and act in the concrete sensible world, the Socratic identification
of wisdom and virtue is fully maintained by Plato. Only
be who apprehends good in the abstract can imitate it in such
transient and imperfect good as may be realized in human life,
and it is impossible that, having this knowledge, he should not
act on it, whether in private or public affairs. Thus, in the true
philosopher, we shall necessarily find the practically good man,
who being “likest of men to the gods is best loved by them”;
and also the perfect statesman, if only the conditions of his
society allow him a sphere for exercising his statesmanship.
The characteristics of this practical goodness in Plato's
matured thought correspond to the fundamental conceptions in
his view of the universe. The soul of man, in its good or
normal condition, must be ordered and harmonized
under the guidance of reason. The question then arises,
“Wherein does this order or harmony precisely consist?”
In explaining how Plato was led to answer this question, it will
be well to notice that, while faithfully maintaining the Socratic
doctrine that the highest virtue was inseparable from knowledge
of the good, he had come to recognize an inferior kind of virtue,
possessed by men who were not philosophers. It is plain that
if the good that is to be known is the ultimate ground of the whole
of things, it is attainable only by a select and carefully trained
few. Yet we can hardly restrict all virtue to these alone. What
account, then, was to be given of ordinary “civic” bravery,
temperance and justice? It seemed clear that men who did
their duty, resisting the seductions of fear and desire, must have
right opinions, if not knowledge, as to the good and evil in human
life; but whence comes this right “opinion”? Partly, Plato
said, it comes by nature and “divine allotment,” but for its
adequate development “custom and practice” are required.
Hence the paramount importance of education and discipline
for civic virtue; and even for future philosophers such moral
culture, in which physical and aesthetic training must co-operate,
is indispensable; no merely intellectual preparation will suffice.
His point is that perfect knowledge cannot be implanted in a
soul that has not gone through a course of preparation including
much more than physical training. What, then, is this preparation?
A distinct step in psychological analysis was taken when
Plato recognized that its effect was to produce the “harmony”
above mentioned among different parts of the soul, by subordinating
the impulsive elements to reason. These non-rational
elements he further distinguished as appetitive
(το
επιθυµητικον)
and spirited
(το
θυµοειδες
or θυµος)
— the practical separateness
of which from each other and from reason he held to be
established by our inner experience.
On this triple division of the soul he founded a systematic
view of the four kinds of goodness recognized by the common
moral consciousness of Greece, and in later times known as the
Cardinal Virtues (q.v.). Of these the two most fundamental
were (as has been already indicated) wisdom — in its highest form
philosophy — and that harmonious and regulated activity of all
the elements of the soul which Plato regards as the essence of
uprightness in social relations
(δικαιοσινη). The import of
this term is essentially social; and we can explain Plato's use
of it only by reference to the analogy which he drew between
the individual man and the community. In a rightly ordered
polity social and individual well-being alike would depend on that
harmonious action of diverse elements, each performing its proper
function, which in its social application is more naturally termed
δικαιοσινη.
We see, moreover, how in Plato's view the fundamental
virtues, Wisdom and Justice in their highest forms, are
mutually involved. Wisdom will necessarily maintain orderly
activity, and this latter consists in regulation by wisdom, while
the two more special virtues of Courage
(ανδρεια)
and Temperance
(σωφροσινη)
are only different sides or aspects of this wisely
regulated action of the complex soul.
Such, then, are the forms in which essential good seemed to
manifest itself in human life. It remains to ask whether the
statement of these gives a complete account of human well-being,
or whether pleasure also is to be included. On this point Plato's
view seems to have gone through several oscillations. After
apparently maintaining (Protagoras) that pleasure is the good,
he passes first to the opposite extreme, and denies it (Phaedo,
Gorgias) to be a good at all. For (1), as concrete and transient,
it is obviously not the real essential good that the philosopher
seeks; (2) the feelings most prominently recognized as pleasures
are bound up with pain, as good can never be with evil; in so far,
then, as common sense rightly recognizes some pleasures as good,
it can only be from their tendency to produce some further good.
This view, however, was too violent a divergence from Socratism
for Plato to remain in it. That pleasure is not the real absolute
good, was no ground for not including it in the good of concrete
human life; and after all only coarse and vulgar pleasures were
indissolubly linked to the pains of want. Accordingly, in the
Republic he has no objection to trying the question of the intrinsic
superiority of philosophic or virtuous[2]
life by the standard of
pleasure, and argues that the philosophic (or good) man alone
enjoys real pleasure, while the sensualist spends his life in oscillating
between painful want and the merely neutral state of painlessness,
which he mistakes for positive pleasure. Still more
emphatically is it declared in the Laws that when we are “discoursing
to men, not to gods,” we must show that the life which
we praise as best and noblest is also that in which there is
the greatest excess of pleasure over pain. But though Plato
holds this inseparable connexion of best and pleasantest to be
true and important, it is only for the sake of the vulgar that he
lays this stress on pleasure. For in the most philosophical comparison
in the Philebus between the claims of pleasure and wisdom
the former is altogether worsted; and though a place is allowed
to the pure pleasures of colour, form and sound, and of intellectual
exercise, and even to the “necessary” satisfaction of appetite,
it is only a subordinate one. At the same time, in his later view,
Plato avoids the exaggeration of denying all positive quality of
pleasure even to the coarser sensual gratifications; they are undoubtedly
cases of that “replenishment” or “restoration” to
its “natural state” of a bodily organ, in which he defines pleasure
to consist (see Timaeus, pp. 64, 65); he merely maintains that the
common estimate of them is to a large extent illusory, or a false
appearance of pleasure is produced by contrast with the antecedent
or concomitant painful condition of the organ. It is not
surprising that this somewhat complicated and delicately balanced
view of the relations of “good” and “pleasure” was not long
maintained within the Platonic school, and that under Speusippus,
Plato's successor, the main body of Platonists took up a simply
anti-hedonistic position, as we learn from the polemic of Aristotle.
In the Philebus, however, though a more careful psychological
analysis leads him to soften down the exaggerations of this attack
on sensual pleasure, the antithesis of knowledge and pleasure is
again sharpened, and a desire to depreciate even good pleasures
is more strongly shown; still even here pleasure is recognized
as a constituent of that philosophic life which is the highest
human good, while in the Laws, where the subject is more
popularly treated, it is admitted that we cannot convince man
that the just life is the best unless we can also prove it to be
the pleasantest.
When a student passes from Plato to Aristotle, he is so
forcibly impressed by the contrast between the habits of
mind of the two authors, and the literary manners
of the two philosophers, that it is easy to understand
how their systems have come to be popularly
conceived as diametrically opposed to each other; and the
uncompromising polemic which Aristotle, both in his ethical
and in his metaphysical treatises, directs against Plato and
the platonists, has tended strongly to confirm this view. Yet
a closer inspection shows us that when a later president of the
Academy (Antiochus of Ascalon) repudiated the scepticism which
for two hundred years had been accepted as the traditional
Platonic doctrine, he had good grounds for claiming Plato and
Aristotle as consentient authorities for the ethical position which
he took up. For though Aristotle's divergence from Plato is
very conspicuous when we consider either his general conception
of the subject of ethics, or the details of his system of virtues,
still his agreement with his master is almost complete as regards
the main outline of his theory of human good; the difference
between the two practically vanishes when we view them in
relation to the later controversy between Stoics and Epicureans.
Even on the cardinal point on which Aristotle entered into direct
controversy with Plato, the definite disagreement between the
two is less than at first appears; the objections of the disciple
hit that part of the master's system that was rather imagined
than thought; the main positive result of Platonic speculation
only gains in distinctness by the application of Aristotelian
analysis.
Plato, we saw, held that there is one supreme science
or wisdom, of which the ultimate object is absolute good;
in the knowledge of this, the knowledge of all particular
goods — that is, of all that we rationally desire to know — is
implicitly contained; and also all practical virtue, as no one
who truly knows what is good can fail to realize it. But in spite
of the intense conviction with which he thus identified metaphysical
speculation and practical wisdom, we find in his writings
no serious attempt to deduce the particulars of human well-being
from his knowledge of absolute good, still less to unfold from it
the particular cognitions of the special arts and sciences. Indeed,
we may say that the distinction which Aristotle explicitly draws
between speculative science or wisdom and practical wisdom
(on its political side statesmanship) is really indicated in Plato's
actual treatment of the subjects, although the express recognition
of it is contrary to his principles. The discussion of good (e.g.)
in his Philebus relates entirely to human good, and the respective
claims of Thought and Pleasure to constitute this; he only refers
in passing to the Divine Thought that is the good of the ordered
world, as something clearly beyond the limits of the present
discussion. So again, in his last great ethico-political treatise
(the Laws) there is hardly a trace of his peculiar metaphysics.
On the other hand, the relation between human and divine
good, as presented by Aristotle, is so close that we can hardly
conceive Plato as having definitely thought it closer. The substantial
good of the universe, in Aristotle's view, is the pure
activity of universal abstract thought, at once subject and object,
which, itself changeless and eternal, is the final cause and first
source of the whole process of change in the concrete world. And
both he and Plato hold that a similar activity of pure speculative
intellect is that in which the philosopher will seek to exist,
though he must, being a man, concern himself with the affairs
of ordinary human life, a region in which his highest good will
be attained by realizing perfect moral excellence. No doubt
Aristotle's demonstration of the inappropriateness of attributing
moral excellence to the Deity seems to contradict Plato's doctrine
that the just man as such is “likest the gods,” but here again
the discrepancy is reduced when we remember that the essence
of Plato's justice
(δικαωσυνη)
is harmonious activity. No doubt,
too, Aristotle's attribution of pleasure to the Divine Existence
shows a profound metaphysical divergence from Plato; but it
is a divergence which has no practical importance. Nor, again,
is Aristotle's divergence from the Socratic principle that all
“virtue is knowledge” substantially greater than Plato's, though
it is more plainly expressed. Both accept the paradox in the
qualified sense that no one can deliberately act contrary to what
appears to him good, and that perfect virtue is inseparably bound
up with perfect wisdom or moral insight. Both, however, recognize
that this actuality of moral insight is not a function of the
intellect only, but depends rather on careful training in good
habits applied to minds of good natural dispositions, though the
doctrine has no doubt a more definite and prominent place in
Aristotle's system. The disciple certainly takes a step in advance
by stating definitely, as an essential characteristic of virtuous
action, that it is chosen for its own sake, for the beauty of virtue
alone; but herein he merely formulates the conviction that his
master inspires. Nor, finally, does Aristotle's account of the relation
of pleasure to human well-being (although he has to combat
the extreme anti-hedonism to which the Platonic school under
Speusippus had been led) differ materially from the outcome of
Plato's thought on this point, as the later dialogues present it to
us. Pleasure, in Aristotle's view, is not the primary constituent
of well-being, but rather an inseparable accident of it; human
well-being is essentially well-doing, excellent activity of some
kind, whether its aim and end be abstract truth or noble conduct;
knowledge and virtue are objects of rational choice apart from
the pleasure attending them; still all activities are attended and
in a manner perfected by pleasure, which is better and more
desirable in proportion to the excellence of the activity. He no
doubt criticizes Plato's account of the nature of pleasure, arguing
that we cannot properly conceive pleasure either as a “process”
or as “replenishment” — the last term, he truly says, denotes a
material rather than a psychical fact. But this does not interfere
with the general ethical agreement between the two thinkers;
and the doctrine that vicious pleasures are not true or real
pleasures is so characteristically Platonic that we are almost
surprised to find it in Aristotle.
In so far as there is any important difference between the
Platonic and the Aristotelian views of human good, we may
observe that the latter has substantially a closer correspondence
to the positive element in the ethical teaching of Socrates,
though it is presented in a far more technical and scholastic
form, and involves a more distinct rejection of the fundamental
Socratic paradox. The same result appears when
we compare the methods of the three philosophers.
Although the Socratic induction forms a striking
feature of Plato's dialogues, his ideal method of ethics is
purely deductive; he admits common sense only as supplying
provisional steps and starting-points from which the mind is to
ascend to knowledge of absolute good, through which knowledge
alone, as he conceives, the lower notions of particular goods are
to be truly conceived. Aristotle, discarding the transcendentalism
of Plato, naturally retained from Plato's teaching the original
Socratic method of induction from and verification by common
opinion. Indeed, the windings of his exposition are best understood
if we consider his literary manner as a kind of Socratic
dialogue formalized and reduced to a monologue. He first leads
us by an induction to the fundamental notion of ultimate end or
good for man. All men, in acting, aim at some result, either
for its own sake or as a means to some further end; but obviously
not everything can be sought merely as a means; there must
be some ultimate end. In fact men commonly recognize such an
end, and agree to call it well-being[3]
(ευδαιµονια).
But they
take very different views of its nature; how shall we find the
true view? We observe that men are classified according to
their functions; all kinds of man, and indeed all organs of
man, have their special functions, and are judged as functionaries
and organs according as they perform their functions well or
ill. May we not then infer that man, as man, has his proper
function, and that the well-being or “doing well” that all seek
really lies in fulfilling well the proper function of man, that is,
in living well that life of the rational soul which we recognize
as man's distinctive attribute?
Again, this Socratic deference to common opinion is not
shown merely in the way by which Aristotle reaches his fundamental
conception; it equally appears in his treatment of the
conception itself. In the first place, though in Aristotle's view
the most perfect well-being consists in the exercise of man's
“divinest part,” pure speculative reason, he keeps far from
the paradox of putting forward this and nothing else as human
good; so far, indeed, that the greater part of his treatise is
occupied with an exposition of the inferior good which is realized
in practical life when the appetitive or impulsive (semi-rational)
element of the soul operates under the due regulation of reason.
Even when the notion of “good performance of function” was
thus widened, and when it had further taken in the pleasure that
is inseparably connected with such functioning, it did not yet
correspond to the whole of what a Greek commonly understood
as “human well-being.” We may grant, indeed, that a moderate
provision of material wealth is indirectly included, as an indispensable
pre-requisite of a due performance of many functions
as Aristotle conceives it — his system admits of no beatitudes
for the poor; still there remain other goods, such as beauty,
good birth, welfare of progeny, the presence or absence of which
influenced the common view of a man's well-being, though they
could hardly be shown to be even indirectly important to his
“well-acting.” These Aristotle attempts neither to exclude
from the philosophic conception of well-being nor to include
in his formal definition of it. The deliberate looseness which is
thus given to his fundamental doctrine characterizes more or
less his whole discussion of ethics. He plainly says that the
subject does not admit of completely scientific treatment; his
aim is to give not a definite theory of human good, but a practically
adequate account of its most important constituents.
The most important element, then, of well-being or good
life for ordinary men Aristotle holds to consist in well-doing as
determined by the notions of the different moral excellences.
In expounding these, he gives throughout the pure result of
analytical observation of the common moral consciousness of
his age. Ethical truth, in his view, is to be attained by careful
comparison of particular moral opinions, just as physical truth is
to be obtained by induction from particular physical observations.
On account of the conflict of opinion in ethics we cannot hope to
obtain certainty upon all questions; still reflection will lead
us to discard some of the conflicting views and find a reconciliation
for others, and will furnish, on the whole, a practically
sufficient residuum of moral truth. This adhesion to common
sense, though it involves a sacrifice of both depth and completeness
in Aristotle's system, gives at the same time an historical
interest which renders it deserving of special attention as an
analysis of the current Greek ideal of “fair and good life”
(καλοκ&alphaγαθια).
His virtues are not arranged on any clear
philosophic plan; the list shows no serious attempt to consider
human life exhaustively, and exhibit the standard of excellence
appropriate to its different departments or aspects. He seems
to have taken as a starting-point Plato's four cardinal virtues.
The two comprehensive notions of Wisdom and Justice
(δικαιοσυνη)
he treats separately. As regards both his analysis leads
him to diverge considerably from Plato. As we saw, his distinction
between practical and speculative Wisdom belongs to the
deepest of his disagreements with his master; and in the case
of
δικαιοσυνη
again he distinguishes the wider use of the term
to express Law-observance, which (he says) coincides with the
social side of virtue generally, and its narrower use for the virtue
that “aims at a kind of equality,” whether (1) in the distribution
of wealth, honour, &c., or (2) in commercial exchange, or (3) in
the reparation of wrong done. Then, in arranging the other
special virtues, he begins with courage and temperance, which
(after Plato) he considers as the excellences of the “irrational
element” of the soul. Next follow two pairs of excellences,
concerned respectively with wealth and honour: (1) liberality
and magnificence, of which the latter is exhibited in greater
matters of expenditure, and (2) laudable ambition and
highmindedness similarly related to honour. Then comes gentleness
— the virtue regulative of anger; and the list is concluded by the
excellences of social intercourse, friendliness (as a mean between
obsequiousness and surliness), truthfulness and decorous wit.
The abundant store of just and close analytical observation
contained in Aristotle's account of these notions give it a permanent
interest, even beyond its historical value as a delineation
of the Greek ideal of “fair and good”
life.[4]
But its looseness
of arrangement and almost grotesque co-ordination of qualities
widely differing in importance are obvious. Thus his famous
general formula for virtue, that it is a mean or middle state,
always to be found somewhere between the vices which stand
to it in the relation of excess and defect, scarcely avails to render
his treatment more systematic. It was important, no doubt,
to express the need of observing due measure and proportion,
in order to attain good results in human life no less than in
artistic products; but the observation of this need was no new
thing in Greek literature; indeed, it had already led the Pythagoreans
and Plato to find the ultimate essence of the ordered
universe in number. But Aristotle's purely quantitative statement
of the relation of virtue and vice is misleading, even where
it is not obviously inappropriate; and sometimes leads him to
such eccentricities as that of making simple veracity a mean
between boostfulness and mock-modesty.[5]
It ought to be said that Aristotle does not present the formula
just discussed as supplying a criterion of good conduct in any
particular case; he expressly leaves this to be determined by
“correct reasoning, and the judgment of the practically-wise
man
(‘ο
φρονιµος).”
We cannot, however, find that he has
furnished any substantial principles for its determination;
indeed, he hardly seems to have formed a distinct general idea
of the practical syllogism by which he conceives it to be
effected.[6]
The kind of reasoning which his view of virtuous conduct requires
is one in which the ultimate major premise states a distinctive
characteristic of some virtue, and one or more minor premises
show that such characteristic belongs to a certain mode of conduct
under given circumstances; since it is essential to good
conduct that it should contain its end in itself, and be chosen
for its own sake. But he has not failed to observe that practical
reasonings are not commonly of this kind, but are rather concerned
with actions as means to ulterior ends; indeed, he lays
stress on this as a characteristic of the “political” life, when he
wishes to prove its inferiority to the life of pure speculation.
Though common sense will admit that virtues are the best of
goods, it still undoubtedly conceives practical wisdom as chiefly
exercised in providing those inferior goods which Aristotle,
after recognizing the need or use of them for the realization of
human well-being, has dropped out of sight; and the result is
that, in trying to make clear his conception of practical wisdom,
we find ourselves fluctuating continually between the common
notion, which he does not distinctly reject, and the notion
required as the keystone of his ethical system.
On the whole, there is probably no treatise so masterly as
Aristotle's Ethics, and containing so much close and valid
thought, that yet leaves on the reader's mind so strong
an impression of dispersive and incomplete work.
It is only by dwelling on these defects that we can
understand the small amount of influence that his
system exercised during the five centuries after his death, as
compared with the effect which it has had, directly or indirectly,
in shaping the thought of modern Europe. Partly, no doubt,
the limited influence of his disciples, the Peripatetics (q.v.),
is to be attributed to that exaltation of the purely speculative
life which distinguished the Aristotelian ethics from other later
systems, and which was too alien from the common moral
consciousness to find much acceptance in an age in which the
ethical aims of philosophy had again become paramount. Partly,
again, the analytical distinctness of Aristotle's manner brings
into special prominence the difficulties that attend the Socratic
effort to reconcile the ideal aspirations of men with the principles
on which their practical reasonings are commonly conducted.
The conflict between these two elements of Common Sense
was too profound to be compromised; and the moral consciousness
of mankind demanded a more trenchant partisanship than
Aristotle's. Its demands were met by the Stoic school which
separated the moral from the worldly view of life, with an
absoluteness and definiteness that caught the imagination;
which regarded practical goodness as the highest manifestation
of its ideal of wisdom; and which bound the common notions of
duty into an apparently coherent system, by a formula that
comprehended the whole of human life, and exhibited its relation
to the ordered process of the universe. The intellectual descent
of its ethical doctrines is principally to be traced to Socrates
through the Cynics, though an important element in them
seems attributable to the school that inherited the “Academy”
of Plato. Both Stoic and Cynic maintained, in its sharpest
form, the fundamental tenet that the practical knowledge which
is virtue, with the condition of soul that is inseparable from it,
is alone to be accounted good. He who exercises this wisdom
or knowledge has complete well-being; all else is indifferent to
him. It is true that the Cynics were more concerned to emphasize
the negative side of the sage's well-being, while the Stoics brought
into more prominence its positive side. This difference, however,
did not amount to disagreement. The Stoics, in fact, seem
generally to have regarded the eccentricities of Cynicism as an
emphatic manner of expressing the essential antithesis between
philosophy and the world; a manner which, though not necessary
or even normal, might yet be advantageously adopted by the
sage under certain circumstances.[7]
Wherein, then, consists this knowledge or wisdom that makes
free and perfect? Both Cynics and Stoics (q.v.) agreed that the
most important part of it was the knowledge that the
sole good of man lay in this knowledge or wisdom
itself. It must be understood that by wisdom they meant
wisdom realized in act; indeed, they did not conceive the
existence of wisdom as separable from such realization. We
may observe, too, that the Stoics rejected the divergence which
we have seen gradually taking place in Platonic-Aristotelian
thought from the position of Socrates, “that no one aims at
what he knows to be bad.” The stress that their psychology
laid on the essential unity of the rational self that is the source
of voluntary action prevented them from accepting Plato's
analysis of the soul into a regulative element and elements
needing regulation. They held that what we call passion is a
morbid condition of the rational soul, involving erroneous
judgment as to what is to be sought or shunned. From such
passionate errors the truly wise man will of course be free. He
will be conscious indeed of physical appetite; but he will not
be misled into supposing that its object is really a good; he
cannot, therefore, hope for the attainment of this object or fear
to miss it, as these states involve the conception of it as a good.
Similarly, though like other men he will be subject to bodily
pain, this will not cause him mental grief or disquiet, as his worst
agonies will not disturb his clear conviction that it is really
indifferent to his true reasonable self.
That this impassive sage was a being not to be found among
living men the later Stoics at least were fully aware. They faintly
suggested that one or two moral heroes of old time might have
realized the ideal, but they admitted that all other philosophers
(even) were merely in a state of progress towards it. This admission
did not in the least diminish the rigour of their demand
for absolute loyalty to the exclusive claims of wisdom. The
assurance of its own unique value that such wisdom involved
they held to be an abiding possession for those who had attained
it;[8]
and without this assurance no act could be truly wise or
virtuous. Whatever was not of knowledge was of sin; and the
distinction between right and wrong being absolute and not
admitting of degrees all sins were equally sinful; whoever broke
the least commandment was guilty of the whole law. Similarly,
all wisdom was somehow involved in any one of the manifestations
of wisdom, commonly distinguished as particular virtues;
though whether these virtues were specifically distinct, or only
the same knowledge in different relations, was a subtle question
on which the Stoics do not seem to have been agreed.
Aristotle had already been led to attempt a refutation of the
Socratic identification of virtue with knowledge; but his attempt
had only shown the profound difficulty of attacking the paradox,
so long as it was admitted that no one could of deliberate purpose
act contrary to what seemed to him best. Now, Aristotle's
divergence from Socrates had not led him so far as to deny this;
while for the Stoics who had receded to the original Socratic
position, the difficulty was still more patent. This theory of
virtue led them into two dilemmas. Firstly, if virtue is knowledge,
does it follow that vice is involuntary? If not, it must be
that ignorance is voluntary. This alternative is the less dangerous
to morality, and as such the Stoics chose it. But they were
not yet at the end of their perplexities; for while they were
thus driven to an extreme extension of the range of human
volition, their view of the physical universe involved an equally
thorough-going determinism. How could the vicious man
be responsible if his vice were strictly pre-determined? The
Stoics answered that the error which was the essence of vice was
so far voluntary that it could be avoided if men chose to exercise
their reason. No doubt it depended on the innate force and
firmness[9]
of a man's soul whether his reason was effectually
exercised; but moral responsibility was saved if the vicious act
proceeded from the man himself and not from any external
cause.
With all this we have not ascertained the positive practical
content of this wisdom. How are we to emerge from the barren
circle of affirming (1) that wisdom is the sole good and unwisdom
the sole evil, and (2) that wisdom is the knowledge of good and
evil; and attain some method for determining the particulars
of good conduct? The Cynics made no attempt to solve this
difficulty; they were content to mean by virtue what any plain
man meant by it, except in so far as their sense of independence
led them to reject certain received precepts and prejudices. The
Stoics, on the other hand, not only worked out a detailed system
of duties — or, as they termed them, “things meet and fit”
(καθηκοντα)
for all occasions of life; they were further especially
concerned to comprehend them under a general formula. They
found this by bringing out the positive significance of the notion
of Nature, which the Cynic had used chiefly in a negative way,
as an antithesis to the “consentions”
(νοµος),
from which his
knowledge had made him free. Even in this negative use of the
notion it is necessarily implied that whatever active tendencies
in man are found to be “natural” — that is, independent of and
uncorrupted by social customs and conventions — will properly
take effect in outward acts, but the adoption of “conformity to
nature” as a general positive rule for outward conduct seems to
have been due to the influence on Zeno of Academic teaching.
Whence, however, can this authority belong to the natural, unless
nature be itself an expression or embodiment of divine law and
wisdom? The conception of the world, as organized and filled by
divine thought, was common, in some form, to all the philosophies
that looked back to Socrates as their founder, — some even maintaining
that this thought was the sole reality. This pantheistic
doctrine harmonized thoroughly with the Stoic view of human
good; but being unable to conceive substance idealistically,
they (with considerable aid from the system of Heraclitus)
supplied a materialistic side to their pantheism, — conceiving
divine thought as an attribute of the purest and most primary
of material substances, a subtle fiery aether. This theological
view of the physical universe had a double effect on the ethics of
the Stoic. In the first place it gave to his cardinal conviction
of the all-sufficiency of wisdom for human well-being a root of
cosmical fact, and an atmosphere of religious and social emotion.
The exercise of wisdom was now viewed as the pure life of that
particle of divine substance which was in very truth the “god
within him”; the reason whose supremacy he maintained was
the reason of Zeus, and of all gods and reasonable men, no less
than his own; its realization in any one individual was thus
the common good of all rational beings as such; “the sage could
not stretch out a finger rightly without thereby benefiting all
other sages,” — nay, it might even be said that he was “as useful
to Zeus as Zeus to him.”[10]
But again, the same conception served
to harmonize the higher and the lower elements of human life.
For even in the physical or non-rational man, as originally constituted,
we may see dear indications of the divine design, which
it belongs to his rational will to carry into conscious execution;
indeed, in the first stage of human life, before reason is fully
developed, uncorrupted natural impulse effects what is afterwards
the work of reason. Thus the formula of “living according to
nature,” in its application to man as the “rational animal,”
may be understood both as directing that reason is to govern,
and as indicating how that government is to be practically exercised.
In man, as in every other animal, from the moment of
birth natural impulse prompts to the maintenance of his physical
frame; then, when reason has been developed and has recognized
itself as its own sole good, these “primary ends of nature” and
whatever promotes these still constitute the outward objects
at which reason is to aim; there is a certain value
(αξια) in them,
in proportion to which they are “preferred”
(προηγµενα)
and
their opposites “rejected”
(αποπροηγµενα);
indeed it is only in
the due and consistent exercise of such choice that wisdom
can find its practical manifestation. In this way all or most of
the things commonly judged to be “goods” — health, strength,
wealth, fame,[11]
&c., — are brought within the sphere of the sage's
choice, though his real good is solely in the wisdom of the choice,
and not in the thing chosen.
The doctrine of conformity to Nature as the rule of conduct
was not peculiar to Stoicism. It is found in the theories of
Speusippus, Xenocrates, and also to some extent in those of the
Peripatetics. The peculiarity of the Stoics lay in their refusing
to use the terms “good and evil” in connexion with “things
indifferent,” and in pointing out that philosophers, though
independent of these things, must yet deal with them in practical
life.
So far we have considered the “nature” of the individual
man as apart from his social relations; but the sphere of virtue,
as commonly conceived, lies chiefly in these, and this was fully
recognized in the Stoic account of duties
(καθηκοντα); indeed,
in their exposition of the “natural” basis of justice, the evidence
that man was born not for himself but for mankind is the most
important part of their work in the region of practical morality.
Here, however, we especially notice the double significance of
“natural,” as applied to (1) what actually exists everywhere
or for the most part, and (2) what would exist if the original
plan of man's life were fully carried out; and we find that the
Stoics have not clearly harmonized the two elements of the notion.
That man was “naturally” a social animal Aristotle had already
taught; that all rational beings, in the unity of the reason that
is common to all, form naturally one community with a common
law was (as we saw) an immediate inference from the Stoic
conception of the universe as a whole. That the members of
this “city of Zeus” should observe their contracts, abstain
from mutual harm, combine to protect each other from injury,
were obvious points of natural law; while again, it was clearly
necessary to the preservation of human society that its members
should form sexual unions, produce children, and bestow care
on their rearing and training. But beyond this nature did not
seem to go in determining the relations of the sexes; accordingly,
we find that community of wives was a feature of Zeno's ideal
commonwealth, just as it was of Plato's; while, again, the strict
theory of the school recognized no government or laws as true
or binding except those of the sage; he alone is the true ruler,
the true king. So far, the Stoic “nature” seems in danger of
being as revolutionary as Rousseau's. Practically, however,
this revolutionary aspect of the notion was kept for the most
part in the background; the rational law of an ideal community
was not distinguished from the positive ordinances and customs
of actual society; and the “natural” ties that actually bound
each man to family, kinsmen, fatherland, and to unwise humanity
generally, supplied the outline on which the external manifestation
of justice was delineated. It was a fundamental maxim
that the sage was to take part in public life; and it does not
appear that his political action was to be regulated by any other
principles than those commonly accepted in his community.
Similarly, in the view taken by the Stoics of the duties of social
decorum, and in their attitude to the popular religion, we find
a fluctuating compromise between the disposition to repudiate
what is conventional, and the disposition to revere what is
established, each tendency expressing in its own way the principle
of “conforming to nature.”
Among the primary ends of nature, in which wisdom recognized
a certain preferability, the Stoics included freedom from
bodily pain; but they refused, even in this outer
court of wisdom, to find a place for pleasure. They
held that the latter was not an object of uncorrupted
natural impulse, but an “aftergrowth”
(’επιγεννηµα).
They thus endeavoured to resist Epicureanism even on the
ground where the latter seems prima facie strongest; in its
appeal, namely, to the natural pleasure-seeking of all living
things. Nor did they merely mean by pleasure
(‘ηδονη) the
gratification of bodily appetite; we find (e.g.)Chrysippus urging,
as a decisive argument against Aristotle, that pure speculation
was “a kind of amusement; that is, pleasure.” Even the “joy
and gladness”
(χαρα,
ευφροσυνη)
that accompany the exercise of
virtue seem to have been regarded by them as merely an inseparable
accident, not the essential constituent of well-being.
It is only by a later modification of Stoicism that cheerfulness
or peace of mind is taken as the real ultimate end, to which
the exercise of virtue is merely a means. At the same time
it is probable that the serene joys of virtue and the grieflessness
which the sage was conceived to maintain amid the worst tortures,
formed the main attractions of Stoicism for ordinary minds.
In this sense it may be fairly said that Stoics and Epicureans
made rival offers to mankind of the same kind of happiness; and
the philosophical peculiarities of either system may be traced
to the desire of being undisturbed by the changes and chances
of life. The Stoic claims on this head were the loftiest; as the
well-being of their sage was independent, not only of external
things and bodily conditions, but of time itself; it was fully
realized in a single exercise of wisdom and could not be increased
by duration. This paradox is violent, but it is quite in harmony
with the spirit of Stoicism; and we are more startled to find
that the Epicurean sage, no less than the Stoic, is to be happy
even on the rack; that his happiness, too, is unimpaired by being
restricted in duration, when his mind has apprehended the
natural limits of life; that, in short, Epicurus makes no less
strenuous efforts than Zeno to eliminate imperfection from the
conditions of human existence. This characteristic, however,
is the key to the chief differences between Epicureanism and the
more naïve hedonism of Aristippus. The latter system gave the
simplest and most obvious answer to the inquiry after ultimate
good for man; but besides being liable, when developed consistently,
to offend the common moral consciousness, it conspicuously
failed to provide the “completeness” and “security”
which, as Aristotle says, “one divines to belong to man's true
Good.” Philosophy, in the Greek view, should be the art as
well as the science of good life; and hedonistic philosophy would
seem a bungling and uncertain art of pleasure, as pleasure is
ordinarily conceived. Nay, it would even be found that the
habit of philosophical reflection often operated adversely to
the attainment of this end, by developing the thinker's self-consciousness,
so as to disturb that normal relation to external
objects on which the zest of ordinary enjoyment depends.
Hence we find that later thinkers of the Cyrenaic school felt
themselves compelled to change their fundamental notion;
thus Theodorus defined the good as “gladness”
(χαρα) depending
on wisdom, as distinct from mere pleasure, while Hegesias
proclaimed that happiness was unattainable, and that the chief
function of wisdom was to render life painless by producing
indifference to all things that give pleasure. But by such changes
their system lost the support that it had had in the pleasure-seeking
tendencies of ordinary men. It was clear that if philosophic
hedonism was to be established on a broad and firm basis,
it must in its notion of good combine what the plain man naturally
sought with what philosophy could plausibly offer. Such a
combination was effected, with some little violence, by Epicurus;
whose system with all its defects showed a remarkable power
of standing the test of time, as it attracted the unqualified
adhesion of generation after generation of disciples for a period
of some six centuries.
In the fundamental principle of his philosophy Epicurus
is not original. Aristippus (cf. also Plato in the Protagoras
and Eudoxus) had already maintained that pleasure
is the sole ultimate good, and pain the sole evil; that
no pleasure is to be rejected except for its painful consequences,
and no pain to be chosen except as a means to greater pleasure;
that the stringency of all laws and customs depends solely on
the legal and social penalties attached to their violation; that,
in short, all virtuous conduct and all speculative activity are
empty and useless, except as contributing to the pleasantness
of the agent's life. And Epicurus assures us that he means by
pleasure what plain men mean by it; and that if the gratifications
of appetite and sense are discarded, the notion is emptied
of its significance. So far the system would seem to suit the
inclinations of the most thorough-going voluptuary. The
originality of Epicurus lay in his theory that the highest point
of pleasure, whether in body or mind, is to be attained by the
mere removal of pain or disturbance, after which pleasure admits
of variation only and not of augmentation; that therefore the
utmost gratification of which the body is capable may be provided
by the simplest means, and that “natural wealth” is no
more than any man can earn. When further he teaches that the
attainment of happiness depends almost entirely upon insight
and right calculation, fortune having very little to do with it;
that the pleasures and pains of the mind are far more important
than those of the body, owing to the accumulation of feeling
caused by memory and anticipation; and that an indispensable
condition of mental happiness lies in relieving the mind of all
superstitions, which can be effected only by a thorough knowledge
of the physical universe — he introduces an ample area for the
exercise of the philosophic intellect. So again, in the stress
that he lays on the misery which the most secret wrong-doing
must necessarily cause from the perpetual fear of discovery,
and in his exuberant exaltation of the value of disinterested
friendship, he shows a sincere, though not completely successful,
effort to avoid the offence that consistent egoistic hedonism is
apt to give to ordinary human feeling. As regards friendship,
Epicurus was a man of peculiarly unexclusive
sympathies.[12]
The genial fellowship of the philosophic community that he
collected in his garden remained a striking feature in the traditions
of his school; and certainly the ideal which Stoics and
Epicureans equally cherished of a brotherhood of sages was most
easily realized on the Epicurean plan of withdrawing from
political and dialectical conflict to simple living and serene
leisure, in imitation of the gods apart from the fortuitous concourse
of atoms that we call a world. No doubt it was rather
the practical than the theoretical side of Epicureanism which
gave it so strong a hold on succeeding generations.
The two systems that have just been described were those
that most prominently attracted the attention of the ancient
Later Greek philosophy.
Stoicism in Rome.
|
world, so far as it was directed to ethics, from their
almost simultaneous origin to the end of the 2nd
century A.D., when Stoicism almost vanishes from our
view. But side by side with them the schools of Plato
and Aristotle still maintained a continuity of tradition,
and a more or less vigorous life; and philosophy, as a
recognized element of Graeco-Roman culture, was understood
to be divided among these four branches. The internal history,
however, of the four schools was very different. We find no
development worthy of notice in Aristotelian ethics (see
Peripatetics).
The Epicureans, again, from their unquestioning
acceptance of the “dogmas”[13]
of their founder, almost deserve
to be called a sect rather than a school. On the other hand,
the changes in Stoicism are very noteworthy; and it is the more
easy to trace them, as the only original writings of this school
which we possess are those of the later Roman Stoics. These
changes may be attributed partly to the natural inner development
of the system, partly to the reaction of the Roman mind
on the essentially Greek doctrine which it received, — a reaction
all the more inevitable from the very affinity between the Stoic
sage and the ancient Roman ideal of manliness. It was natural
that the earlier Stoics should be chiefly occupied with delineating
the inner and outer characteristics of ideal wisdom and virtue,
and that the gap between the ideal sage and the actual philosopher,
though never ignored, should yet be somewhat overlooked.
But when the question “What is man's good?” had been
answered by an exposition of perfect wisdom, the practical
question “How may a man emerge from the folly of the world,
and get on the way towards wisdom?” naturally attracted
attention; and the preponderance of moral over scientific
interest, which was characteristic of the Roman mind, gave
this question especial prominence. The sense of the gap between
theory and fact gives to the religious element of Stoicism a new
force; the soul, conscious of its weakness, leans on the thought
of God, and in the philosopher's attitude towards external
events, pious resignation preponderates over self-poised indifference;
the old self-reliance of the reason, looking down on man's
natural life as a mere field for its exercise, makes room for a
positive aversion to the flesh as an alien element imprisoning
the spirit; the body has come to be a “corpse which the soul
sustains,”[14]
and life a “sojourn in a strange
land”;[15] in short,
the ethical idealism of Zeno has begun to borrow from the
metaphysical idealism of Plato.
In no one of these schools was the outward coherence of
tradition so much strained by inner changes as it was in Plato's.
History of
Plato's school.
|
The alterations, however, in the metaphysical position
of the Academics had little effect on their ethical teaching,
as, even during the period of Scepticism, they
appear to have presented as probable the same general
view of human good which Antiochus afterwards dogmatically
announced as a revival of the common doctrine of Plato and
Aristotle. And during the period of a century and a half between
Antiochus and Plutarch, we may suppose the school to have
maintained the old controversy with Stoicism on much the same
ground, accepting the formula of “life according to nature,”
but demanding that the “good” of man should refer to his
nature as a whole, the good of his rational part being the chief
element, and always preferable in case of conflict, but yet not
absolutely his sole good. In Plutarch, however, we see the
same tendencies of change that we have noticed in later Stoicism.
The conception of a normal harmony between the higher and
lower elements of human life has begun to be disturbed, and the
side of Plato's teaching that deals with the inevitable imperfections
of the world of concrete experience becomes again prominent.
For example, we find Plutarch amplifying the suggestion
in Plato's latest treatise (the Laws) that this imperfection
is due to a bad world-soul that strives against the good, — a
suggestion which is alien to the general tenor of Plato's doctrine,
and had consequently been unnoticed during the intervening
centuries. We observe, again, the value that Plutarch attaches,
not merely to the sustainment and consolation of rational
religion, but to the supernatural communications vouchsafed
by the divinity to certain human beings in dreams, through
oracles, or by special warnings, like those of the genius of Socrates.
For these flashes of intuition, he holds, the soul should be prepared
by tranquil repose and the subjugation of sensuality
through abstinence. The same ascetic effort to attain by aloofness
from the body a pure receptivity for supernatural influences,
is exhibited in Neo-Pythagoreanism. But the general tendency
that we are noting did not find its full expression in a reasoned
system until we come to the Egyptian Plotinus.
The system of Plotinus (205-270 A.D.) is a striking development
of that element of Platonism which has had most fascination
for the medieval and even for the modern mind,
but which had almost vanished out of sight in the
controversies of the post-Aristotelian schools. At the
same time the differences are the more noteworthy from the
reverent adhesion which the Neoplatonists always maintain to
Plato. Plato identified good with the real essence of things;
with that in them which is definitely conceivable and knowable.
It belongs to this view to regard the imperfection of things as
devoid of real being, and so incapable of being definitely thought
or known; accordingly, we find that Plato has no technical term
for that in the concrete sensible world which hinders it from
perfectly expressing the abstract ideal world, and which in
Aristotle's system is distinguished as absolutely formless matter
(υλη).
And so, when we pass from the ontology to the ethics of
Platonism, we find that, though the highest life is only to be
realized by turning away from concrete human affairs and their
material environment, still the sensible world is not yet an
object of positive moral aversion; it is rather something which
the philosopher is seriously concerned to make as harmonious,
good and beautiful as possible. But in Neoplatonism the
inferiority of the condition in which the embodied human soul
finds itself is more intensely and painfully felt; hence an express
recognition of formless matter
(υλη)
as the “first evil,” from
which is derived the “second evil,” body
(σωµα),
to whose
influence all the evil in the soul's existence is due. Accordingly
the ethics of Plotinus represent, we may say, the moral idealism
of the Stoics cut loose from nature. The only good of man is the
pure existence of the soul, which in itself, apart from the contagion
of the body, is perfectly free from error or defect; if only
it can be restored to the untrammelled activity of its original
being, nothing external, nothing bodily, can positively impair
its perfect welfare. It is only the lowest form of virtue — the
“civic” virtue of Plato's Republic —
that is employed in
regulating those animal impulses whose presence in the soul is due
to its mixture with the body; higher or philosophic wisdom,
temperance, courage and justice are essentially purifications
from this contagion; until finally the highest mode of goodness
is reached, in which the soul has no community with the body,
and is entirely turned towards reason. It should be observed
that Plotinus himself is still too Platonic to hold that the absolute
mortification of natural bodily appetites is required for purifying
the soul; but this ascetic inference was drawn to the fullest
extent by his disciple Porphyry.
There is, however, a yet higher point to be reached in the
upward ascent of the Neoplatonist from matter; and here the
divergence of Plotinus from Platonic idealism is none the less
striking, because it is a bona fide result of reverent reflection on
Plato's teaching. The cardinal assumption of Plato's metaphysic
is, that the real is definitely thinkable and knowable in proportion
as it is real; so that the further the mind advances in abstraction
from sensible particulars and apprehension of real being, the
more definite and clear its thought becomes. Plotinus, however,
urges that, as all thought involves difference or duality of some
kind, it cannot be the primary fact in the universe, what we call
God. He must be an essential unity prior to this duality, a
Being wholly without difference or determination; and, accordingly,
the highest mode of human existence, in which the soul
apprehends this absolute, must be one in which all definite
thought is transcended, and all consciousness of self lost in the
absorbing ecstasy. Porphyry tells us that his master Plotinus
attained the highest state four times during the six years which
he spent with him.
Neoplatonism, originally Alexandrine, is often regarded as
Hellenistic rather than Hellenic, a product of the mingling of
Greek with Oriental civilization. But however Oriental may
have been the cast of mind that welcomed this theosophic
asceticism, the forms of thought by which these views were
philosophically reached are essentially Greek; and it is by a
thoroughly intelligible process of natural development, in which
the intensification of the moral consciousness represented by
Stoicism plays an important part, that the Hellenic pursuit
of knowledge culminates in a preparation for ecstasy, and the
Hellenic idealization of man's natural life ends in a settled
antipathy to the body and its works. At the same time we
ought not to overlook the affinities between the doctrine of
Plotinus and that remarkable combination of Greek and Hebrew
thought which Philo Judaeus had expounded two centuries
before; nor the fact that Neoplatonism was developed in
conscious antagonism to the new religion which had spread from
Judea, and was already threatening the conquest of the Graeco-Roman
world, and also to the Gnostic systems (see Gnosticism);
nor, finally, that it furnished the chief theoretical support in the
last desperate struggle that was made under Julian to retain
the old polytheistic worship.
B. Christianity and Medieval Ethics. — In the present article
we are not concerned with the origin of the Christian religion,
nor with its outward history. Nor have we to consider the
special doctrines that have formed the bond of union of the
Christian communities except in their ethical aspect, their bearing
on the systematization of human aims and activities. This
aspect, however, must necessarily be prominent in discussing
Christianity, which cannot be adequately treated merely as a
system of theological beliefs divinely revealed, and special
observances divinely sanctioned; for it claims to regulate the
whole man, in all departments of his existence. It was not till
the 4th century A.D. that the first attempt was made to offer a
systematic exposition of Christian morality; and nine centuries
more had passed away before a genuinely philosophic intellect,
trained by a full study of Aristotle, undertook to give complete
scientific form to the ethical doctrine of the Catholic church.
Before, however, we take a brief survey of the progress of
systematic ethics from Ambrose to Thomas Aquinas, it may be
well to examine the chief features of the new moral consciousness
that had spread through Graeco-Roman civilization, and was
awaiting philosophic synthesis. It will be convenient to consider
first the new form or universal characteristics of Christian
morality, and afterwards to note the chief points in the matter
or particulars of duty and virtue which received development
or emphasis from the new religion.
The first point to be noticed is the new conception of morality
as the positive law of a theocratic community possessing a
Christian and
Jewish “law of God.”
|
written code imposed by divine revelation, and
sanctioned by divine promises and threatenings. It
is true that we find in ancient thought, from Socrates
downwards, the notion of a law of God, eternal and
immutable, partly expressed and partly obscured by the shifting
codes and customs of actual human societies. But the sanctions
of this law were vaguely and, for the most part, feebly imagined;
its principles were essentially unwritten, and thus referred not
to the external will of an Almighty Being who claimed unquestioning
submission, but rather to the reason that gods
and men shared, by the exercise of which alone they could be
adequately known and defined. Hence, even if the notion of
law had been more prominent than it was in ancient ethical
thought, it could never have led to a juridical, as distinct from
a philosophical, treatment of morality. In Christianity, on the
other hand, we early find that the method of moralists determining
right conduct is to a great extent analogous to that of
interpreting a code. It is assumed that divine commands
have been implicitly given for all occasions of life, and that they
are to be ascertained in particular cases by interpretation of
the general rules obtained from texts of scripture, and by
inference from scriptural examples. This juridical method
descended naturally from the Jewish theocracy, of which
Christendom was a universalization. Moral insight, in the
view of the most thoughtful Jews of the age immediately preceding
Christianity, was conceived as knowledge of a divine code,
emanating from an authority external to human reason which
had only the function of interpreting and applying its rules.
This law was derived partly from Moses, partly from the utterances
of the later prophets, partly from oral tradition and from the
commentaries and supplementary maxims of generations of
students. Christianity inherited the notion of a written divine
code acknowledged as such by the “true Israel” — now potentially
including the whole of mankind, or at least the chosen of all
nations, — on the sincere acceptance of which the Christian's
share of the divine promises to Israel depended. And though
the ceremonial part of the old Hebrew code was altogether
rejected, and with it all the supplementary jurisprudence
resting on tradition and erudite commentary, still God's law
was believed to be contained in the sacred books of the Jews,
supplemented by the teaching of Christ and his apostles. By
the recognition of this law the church was constituted as an
ordered community, essentially distinct from the State; the
distinction between the two was emphasized by the withdrawal
of the early Christians from civic life, to avoid the performance
of idolatrous ceremonies imposed as official, expressions of
loyalty, and by the persecutions which they had to endure,
when the spread of an association apparently so hostile to the
framework of ancient society had at length alarmed the imperial
government. Nor was the distinction obliterated by the recognition
of Christianity as the state religion under Constantine.
Thus the jural form in which morality was conceived only
emphasized the fundamental difference between it and the laws
of the state. The ultimate sanctions of the moral code were
the infinite rewards and punishments awaiting the immortal
soul hereafter; but the church early felt the necessity of withdrawing
the privileges of membership from apostates and
allowing them to be gradually regained only by a solemn
ceremonial expressive of repentance, protracted through several
years. This formal and regulated “penitence” was extended
from apostasy to other grave — or, as they were subsequently
called, “deadly” — sins; while for minor offences all Christians
were called upon to express contrition by fasting and abstinence
from ordinarily permitted pleasures, as well as verbally in public
and private devotions. “Excommunication” and “penance”
thus came to be temporal ecclesiastical sanctions of the moral
law. As the graduation of these sanctions naturally became
more minute, a correspondingly detailed classification of offences
was rendered necessary, and thus a system of ecclesiastical
jurisprudence was gradually produced, somewhat analogous
to that of Judaism. At the same time this tendency to make
prominent a scheme of external duties has always been counteracted
in Christianity by the remembrance of its original antithesis
to Jewish legalism. We find that this antithesis, as exaggerated
by some of the Gnostic sects of the 2nd and 3rd centuries A.D.,
led, not merely to theoretical antinomianism, but even (if the
charges of their orthodox opponents are not entirely to be discredited)
to gross immorality of conduct. A similar tendency
has shown itself at other periods of church history. And though
such antinomianism has always been sternly repudiated by the
moral consciousness of Christendom, it has never been forgotten
that “inwardness,” rightness of heart or spirit, is the
preeminent characteristic of Christian goodness. It must not, of
course, be supposed that the need of something more than mere
fulfilment of external duty was ignored even by the later Judaism.
Rabbinic erudition could not forget the repression of vicious
desires in the tenth commandment, the stress laid in Deuteronomy
on the necessity of service to God, or the inculcation by later
prophets of humility and faith. “The real and only Pharisee,”
says the Talmud, “is he who does the will of his Father because
he loves Him.” But it remains true that the contrast with the
“righteousness of the scribes and pharisees” has always served
to mark the requirement of “inwardness” as a distinctive feature
of the Christian code — an inwardness not merely negative,
tending to the repression of vicious desires as well as vicious acts,
but also involving a positive rectitude of the inner state of the
soul.
In this aspect Christianity invites comparison with Stoicism,
and indeed with pagan ethical philosophy generally, if we
Christian and
Pagan inwardness.
|
except the hedonistic schools. Rightness of purpose,
preference of virtue for its own sake, suppression of
vicious desires, were made essential points by the
Aristotelians, who attached the most importance to
outward circumstances in their view of virtue, no less than by
the Stoics, to whom all outward things were indifferent. The
fundamental differences between pagan and Christian ethics
depend not on any difference in the value set on rightness of
heart, but on different views of the essential form or conditions
of this inward rightness. In neither case is it presented purely
and simply as moral rectitude. By the pagan philosophers it
was always conceived under the form of Knowledge or Wisdom,
it being inconceivable to all the schools sprung from Socrates
that a man could truly know his own good and yet deliberately
choose anything else. This knowledge, as Aristotle held, might
be permanently precluded by vicious habits, or temporarily
obliterated by passion, but if present in the mind it must produce
lightness of purpose. Or even if it were held with some of the
Stoics that true wisdom was out of the reach of the best men
actually living, it none the less remained the ideal condition
of perfect human life. By Christian teachers, on the other hand,
the inner springs of good conduct were generally conceived as
Faith and Love. Of these notions the former has a
somewhat complex ethical import; it seems to blend
several elements differently prominent in different minds. Its
simplest and commonest meaning is that emphasized in the
contrast of “faith” with “sight”; where it signifies belief
in the invisible divine order represented by the church, in the
actuality of the law, the threats, the promises of God, in spite
of all the influences in man's natural life that tend to obscure
this belief. Out of this contrast there ultimately grew an
essentially different opposition between faith and knowledge
or reason, according to which the theological basis of ethics was
contrasted with the philosophical; the theologians maintaining
sometimes that the divine law is essentially arbitrary, the
expression of will, not reason; more frequently that its reasonableness
is inscrutable, and that actual human reason should
confine itself to examining the credentials of God's messengers,
and not the message itself. But in early Christianity this latter
antithesis was as yet undeveloped; faith means simply force
in clinging to moral and religious conviction, whatever their
rational grounds may be; this force, in the Christian consciousness,
being inseparably bound up with personal loyalty and
trust towards Christ, the leader in the battle with evil, the ruler
of the kingdom to be realized. So far, however, there is no
ethical difference between Christian faith and that of Judaism,
or its later imitation, Mahommedanism; except that the
personal affection of loyal trust is peculiarly stirred by the
blending of human and divine natures in Christ, and the rule
of duty impressively taught by the manifestation of his perfect
life. A more distinctively Christian, and a more deeply moral,
significance is given to the notion in the antithesis of “faith”
and “works.” Here faith means more than loyal acceptance
of the divine law and reverent trust in the lawgiver; it implies
a consciousness, at once continually present and continually
transcended, of the radical imperfection of all human obedience
to the law, and at the same time of the irremissible condemnation
which this imperfection entails. The Stoic doctrine of the
worthlessness of ordinary human virtue, and the stern paradox
that all offenders are equally, in so far as all are absolutely,
guilty, find their counterparts in Christianity; but the latter
(maintaining this ideal severity in the moral standard, with an
emotional consciousness of what is involved in it quite unlike
that of the Stoic) overcomes its practical exclusiveness through
faith. This faith, again, may be conceived in two modes,
essentially distinct though usually combined. In one view it
gives the believer strength to attain, by God's supernatural aid
or “grace,” a goodness of which he is naturally incapable;
in the other view it gives him an assurance that, though he
knows himself a sinner deserving of utter condemnation, a
perfectly just God still regards him with favour on account of
the perfect services and suffering of Christ. Of these views
the former is the more catholic, more universally present in
the Christian consciousness; the latter more deeply penetrates
the mystery of the Atonement, as expounded in the Pauline
epistles.
But faith, however understood, is rather an indispensable
pre-requisite than the essential motive principle of Christian
good conduct. This motive is supplied by the other
central notion, love. On love depends the “fulfilling
of the law,” and the sole moral value of Christian duty — that
is, on love to God, in the first place, which in its fullest development
must spring from Christian faith; and, secondly, love to
all mankind, as the objects of divine love and sharers in the
humanity ennobled by the incarnation. This derivative philanthropy
characterizes the spirit in which all Christian performance
of social duty is to be done; loving devotion to God being
the fundamental attitude of mind that is to be maintained
throughout the whole of the Christian's life. But further, as
regards abstinence from unlawful acts and desires
prompting to them, we have to notice another form
in which the inwardness of Christian morality manifests itself,
which, though less distinctive, should yet receive attention in
any comparison of Christian ethics with the view of Graeco-Roman
philosophy. The profound horror with which the
Christian's conception of a suffering as well as an avenging
divinity tended to make him regard all condemnable acts was
tinged with a sentiment which we may perhaps describe as a
ceremonial aversion moralized — the aversion, that is, to foulness
or impurity. In Judaism, as in other, especially Oriental,
religions, the natural dislike of material defilement has been
elevated into a religious sentiment, and made to support a complicated
system of quasi-sanitary abstinences and ceremonial
purifications; then, as the ethical element predominated in
the Jewish religion, a moral symbolism was felt to reside in the
ceremonial code, and thus aversion to impurity came to be a
common form of the ethico-religious sentiment. Then, when
Christianity threw off the Mosaic ritual, this religious sense of
purity was left with no other sphere besides morality; while,
from its highly idealized character, it was peculiarly well adapted
for that repression of vicious desires which Christianity claimed
as its special function.
The distinctive features of Christian ethics are obedience,
unworldliness, benevolence, purity and humility.
Distinctive particulars
of Christian morality.
|
They are naturally connected with the more general
characteristics just stated; though many of them
may also be referred directly to the example and
precepts of Christ, and in several cases they are clearly
due to both causes, inseparably combined.
1. We may notice, in the first place, that the conception of
morality as a code which, if not in itself arbitrary, is yet to be
accepted by men with unquestioning submission, tends naturally
to bring into prominence the virtue of obedience to authority;
just as the philosophic view of goodness as the realization of
reason gives a special value to self-determination and independence
(as we see more clearly in the post-Aristotelian schools where
ethics is distinctly separated from politics).
2. Again, the opposition between the natural world and the
spiritual order into which the Christian has been born anew led
not merely to a contempt equal to that of the Stoic for wealth,
fame, power, and other objects of worldly pursuit, but also,
for some time at least, to a comparative depreciation of the
domestic and civic relations of the natural man. This tendency
was exhibited most simply and generally in the earliest period
of the church's history. In the view of primitive Christians,
ordinary human society was a world temporarily surrendered to
Satanic rule, over which a swift and sudden destruction was
impending; in such a world the little band who were gathered
in the ark of the church could have no part or lot, — the only
attitude they could maintain was that of passive alienation.
On the other hand, it was difficult practically to realize this
alienation, and a keen sense of this difficulty induced the same
hostility to the body as a clog and hindrance, that we find to
some extent in Plato, but more fully developed in Neoplatonism,
Neopythagoreanism, and other products of the mingling of
Greek with Oriental thought. This feeling is exhibited in the
value set on fasting in the Christian church from the earliest
times, and in an extreme form in the self-torments of later
monasticism; while both tendencies, anti-worldliness and anti-sensualism,
seem to have combined in causing the preference of
celibacy over marriage which is common to most early Christian
writers.[16]
Patriotism, again, and the sense of civic duty, the
most elevated of all social sentiments in the Graeco-Roman
civilization, tended, under the influence of Christianity, either
to expand itself into universal philanthropy, or to concentrate
itself on the ecclesiastical community. “We recognize one
commonwealth, the world,” says Tertullian; “we know,”
says Origen, “that we have a fatherland founded by the word
of God.” We might further derive from the general spirit of
Christian unworldliness that repudiation of the secular modes
of conflict, even in a righteous cause, which substituted a passive
patience and endurance for the old pagan virtue of courage,
in which the active element was prominent. Here, however,
we clearly trace the influence of Christ's express prohibition of
violent resistance to violence, and his inculcation, by example
and precept, of a love that was to conquer even natural resentment.
An extreme result of this influence is shown in Tertullian's
view, that no Christian could properly hold the office of a secular
magistrate in which he would have to doom to death, chains,
imprisonment; but even more sober writers, such as Ambrose,
extend Christian passivity so far as to preclude self-defence
even against a murderous assault. The common sense of
Christendom gradually shook off these extravagances; but the
reluctance to shed blood lingered long, and was hardly extinguished
even by the growing horror of heresy. We have a curious
relic of this in the later times of ecclesiastical persecution, when
the heretic was doomed to the stake that he might be punished
in some manner “short of
bloodshed.”[17]
3. It is, however, in the impulse given to practical beneficence
in all its forms, by the exaltation of love as the root of all virtues,
that the most important influence of Christianity on
the particulars of civilized morality is to be found;
although the exact amount of this influence is here
somewhat difficult to ascertain, since it merely carries further
a development traceable in the history of pagan morality. This
development appears when we compare the different post-Socratic
systems of ethics. In Plato's exposition of the different
virtues there is no mention whatever of benevolence, although
his writings show a keen sense of the importance of friendship
as an element of philosophic life, especially of the intense personal
affection naturally arising between master and disciple. Aristotle
goes somewhat further in recognizing the moral value of friendship
(φιλια);
and though he considers that in its highest form
it can be realized only by the fellowship of the wise and good,
he yet extends the notion so as to include the domestic affections,
and takes notice of the importance of mutual kindness in binding
together all human societies. Still in his formal statement
of the different virtues, positive beneficence is discernible only
under the notion of “liberality,” in which form its excellence
is hardly distinguished from that of graceful profusion in self-regarding
expenditure (Nic. Eth. iv. 1). Cicero, on the other
hand, in his paraphrase of a Stoic treatise on external duties
(De officiis), ranks the rendering of positive services to other
men as a chief department of social duty; and the Stoics generally
recognized the universal fellowship and natural mutual
claims of human beings as such. Indeed, this recognition in
later Stoicism is sometimes expressed with so much warmth
of feeling as to be hardly distinguishable from Christian philanthropy.
Nor was this regard for humanity merely a doctrine
of the school. Partly through the influence of Stoic and other
Greek philosophy, partly from the natural expansion of human
sympathies, the legislation of the Empire, during the first three
centuries, shows a steady development in the direction of natural
justice and humanity; and some similar progress may be traced
in the general tone of moral opinion. Still the utmost point that
this development reached fell considerably short of the standard
of Christian charity. Without dwelling on the immense impetus
given to the practice of social duty generally by the religion that
made beneficence a form of divine service, and identified “piety”
with “pity,” we have to put down as definite changes introduced
by Christianity — (1) the severe condemnation and final suppression
of the practice of exposing infants; (2) effective abhorrence
of the barbarism of gladiatorial combats; (3) immediate moral
mitigation of slavery, and a strong encouragement of emancipation;
(4) great extension of the eleemosynary provision made
for the sick and the poor. As regards almsgiving, however —
the importance of which has caused it to usurp, in modern
languages, the general name of “charity” — it ought to be
observed that Christianity merely universalized a duty which
has always been inculcated by Judaism, within the limits of
the chosen people.
4. The same may be said of the stricter regulation which
Christianity enforced on the relations of the sexes; except so
far as the prohibition of divorce is concerned, and the stress
laid on “purity of heart” as contrasted with merely outward
chastity.
5. Even the peculiarly Christian virtue of humility, which
presents so striking a contrast to the Greek “highmindedness,”
was to some extent anticipated in the Rabbinic teaching. Its
far greater prominence under the new dispensation may be
partly referred to the express teaching and example of Christ;
partly, in so far as the virtue is manifested in the renunciation
of external rank and dignity, or the glory of merely secular
gifts and acquirements, it is one aspect of the unworldliness
which we have already noticed; while the deeper humility
that represses the claim of personal merit even in the saint
belongs to the strict self-examination, the continual sense of
imperfection, the utter reliance on strength not his own, which
characterize the inner moral life of the Christian. Humility
in this latter sense, “before God,” is an essential condition of
all truly Christian goodness.
We have, however, yet to notice the enlargement of the sphere
of ethics due to its close connexion with theology; for while
this added religious force and sanction to ordinary moral obligations,
it equally tended to impart a moral aspect to religious
belief and worship. “Duty to God” — as distinct from duty
to man — had not been altogether unrecognized by pagan
moralists; but the rather dubious relations of even the more
orthodox philosophy to the established polytheism had generally
prevented them from laying much stress upon it. Again, — just
as the Stoics held wisdom to be indispensable to real rectitude
of conduct, while at the same time they included under the
notion of wisdom a grasp of physical as well as ethical truth, —
so the similar emphasis laid on inwardness in Christian ethics
caused orthodoxy or correctness of religious belief to be regarded
as essential to goodness, and heresy as the most fatal of vices,
corrupting as it did the very springs of Christian life. To the
philosophers (with the single exception of Plato), however, convinced
as they were that the multitude must necessarily miss
true well-being through their folly and ignorance, it could never
occur to guard against these evils by any other method than that
of providing philosophic instruction for the few; whereas the
Christian clergy, whose function it was to offer truth and eternal
life to all mankind, naturally regarded theological misbelief
as insidious preventible contagion. Indeed, their sense of its
deadliness was so keen that, when they were at length able to
control the secular administration, they rapidly overcame their
aversion to bloodshed, and initiated that long series of religious
persecutions to which we find no parallel in the pre-Christian
civilization of Europe. It was not that Christian writers did
not feel the difficulty of attributing criminality to sincere ignorance
or error. But the difficulty is not really peculiar to theology;
and the theologians usually got over it (as some philosophers
had surmounted a similar perplexity in the region of ethics
proper) by supposing some latent or antecedent voluntary sin,
of which the apparently involuntary heresy was the fearful
fruit.
Lastly, we must observe that, in proportion as the legal conception
of morality as a code of which the violation deserves
supernatural punishment predominated over the philosophic
view of ethics as the method for attaining natural felicity, the
question of man's freedom of will to obey the law necessarily
became prominent. At the same time it cannot be broadly
said that Christianity took a decisive side in the metaphysical
controversy on free-will and necessity; since, just as in Greek
philosophy the need of maintaining freedom as the ground of
responsibility clashes with the conviction that no one deliberately
chooses his own harm, so in Christian ethics it clashes with the
attribution of all true human virtue to supernatural grace, as
well as with the belief in divine foreknowledge. All we can say
is that in the development of Christian thought the conflict of
conceptions was far more profoundly felt, and far more serious
efforts were made to evade or transcend it.
In the preceding account of Christian morality, it has been
already indicated that the characteristics delineated did not all
Development of
opinion in early
Christianity.
|
exhibit themselves simultaneously to the same extent,
or with perfect uniformity throughout the church.
Changes in the external condition of Christianity,
the different degrees of civilization in the societies
of which it was the dominant religion, and the natural
process of internal development, continually brought
different features into prominence; while again, the important
antagonisms of opinion within Christendom frequently involved
ethical issues — even in the Eastern Church — until in the 4th
century it began to be absorbed in the labour of a dogmatic
construction. Thus, for example, the anti-secular tendencies
of the new creed, to which Tertullian (160-420) gave violent
and rigid expression, were exaggerated in the Montanist heresy
which he ultimately joined; on the other hand, Clement of
Alexandria, in opposition to the general tone of his age, maintained
the value of pagan philosophy for the development of
Christian faith into true knowledge (Gnosis), and the value of
the natural development of man through marriage for the normal
perfecting of the Christian life. So again, there is a marked
difference between the writers before Augustine and those that
succeeded him in all that concerns the internal conditions of
Christian morality. By Justin and other apologists the need of
redemption, faith, grace is indeed recognized, but the theological
system depending on these notions is not sufficiently
developed[18]
to come into even apparent antagonism with the freedom of the
will. Christianity is for the most part conceived as essentially
a proclamation through the Divine Word, to immortal beings
gifted with free choice, of the true code of conduct sanctioned
by eternal rewards and punishments. This legalism contrasts
strikingly with the efforts of pagan philosophy to exhibit virtue
as its own reward; and the contrast is triumphantly pointed
out by more than one early Christian writer. Lactantius
(circa 300 A.D.), for example, roundly declares that Plato and
Aristotle, referring everything to this earthly life, “made
virtue mere folly”; though himself maintaining, with pardonable
inconsistency, that man's highest good did not consist in
mere pleasure, but in the consciousness of the filial relation of
the soul to God. It is plain, however, that on this external
legalistic view of duty it was impossible to maintain a difference
in kind between Christian and pagan morality; the philosopher's
conformity to the rules of chastity and beneficence, so far as
it went, was indistinguishable from the saint's. But when this
inference was developed in the teaching of Pelagius, it was
repudiated as heretical by the church, under the powerful
leadership of Augustine (354-430); and the doctrine of man's
incapacity to obey God's law by his unaided moral
energy was pressed to a point at which it was difficult
to reconcile it with the freedom of the will. Augustine
is fully aware of the theoretical indispensability of maintaining
Free Will, from its logical connexion with human responsibility
and divine justice; but he considers that these latter points are
sufficiently secured if actual freedom of choice between good and
evil is allowed in the single case of our progenitor
Adam.[19] For
since the natura seminalis from which all men were to arise
already existed in Adam, in his voluntary preference of self
to God, humanity chose evil once for all; for which ante-natal
guilt all men are justly condemned to perpetual absolute
sinfulness
and consequent punishment, unless they are elected by God's
unmerited grace to share the benefits of Christ's redemption.
Without this grace it is impossible for man to obey the “first
greatest commandment” of love to God; and, this unfulfilled,
he is guilty of the whole law, and is only free to choose between
degrees of sin; his apparent external virtues have no moral
value, since inner tightness of intention is wanting. “All that
is not of faith is of sin”; and faith and love are mutually
involved and inseparable; faith springs from the divinely
imparted germ of love, which in its turn is developed by faith
to its full strength, while from both united springs hope, joyful
yearning towards ultimate perfect fruition of the object of love.
These three Augustine (after St Paul) regards as the three
essential elements of Christian virtue; along with these he
recognizes the fourfold division of virtue into prudence, temperance,
courage and justice according to their traditional interpretation;
but he explains these virtues to be in their true natures
only the same love to God in different aspects or exercises.
The uncompromising mysticism of this view may be at once
compared and contrasted with the philosophical severity of
Stoicism. Love of God in the former holds the same absolute
and unique position as the sole clement of moral worth in human
action, which, as we have seen, was occupied by knowledge of
Good in the latter; and we may carry the parallel further by
observing that in neither case is this severity in the abstract
estimate of goodness necessarily connected with extreme rigidity
in practical precepts. Indeed, an important part of Augustine's
work as a moralist lies in the reconciliation which he laboured
to effect between the anti-worldly spirit of Christianity and the
necessities of secular civilization. For example, we find him
arguing for the legitimacy of judicial punishments and military
service against an over-literal interpretation of the Sermon on
the Mount; and he took an important part in giving currency
to the distinction between evangelical “counsels” and
“commands,” and so defending the life of marriage and temperate
enjoyment of natural good against the attacks of the more
extravagant advocate of celibacy and self-abnegation; although
he fully admitted the superiority of the latter method of avoiding
the contamination of sin.
The attempt to Christianize the old Platonic list of virtues,
which we have noticed in Augustine's system, was probably
due to the influence of his master Ambrose, in whose
treatise De officiis ministrorum we find for the first
time an exposition of Christian duty systematized on a plan
borrowed from a pre-Christian moralist. It is interesting to
compare Ambrose's account of what subsequently came to be
known as the “four cardinal virtues” with the corresponding
delineations in Cicero's[20]
De officiis which served the bishop as
a model. Christian Wisdom, so far as it is speculative, is of
course primarily theological; it has God, as the highest truth,
for its chief object, and is therefore necessarily grounded on
faith. Christian Fortitude is essentially firmness in withstanding
the seductions of good and evil fortune, resoluteness in the conflict
perpetually waged against wickedness without carnal weapons —
though Ambrose, with the Old Testament in his hand, will not
quite relinquish the ordinary martial application of the term.
“Temperantia” retains the meaning of “observance of due
measure” in all conduct, which it had in Cicero's treatise;
though its notion is partly modified by being blended with the
newer virtue of humility. Finally in the exposition of Christian
Justice the Stoic doctrine of the natural union of all human
interests is elevated to the full height and intensity of evangelical
philanthropy; the brethren are reminded that the earth was
made by God a common possession of all, and are bidden to
administer their means for the common benefit; Ambrose,
we should observe, is thoroughly aware of the fundamental
union of these different virtues in Christianity, though he does
not, like Augustine, resolve them all into the one central affection
of love of God.
Under the influence of Ambrose and Augustine, the four cardinal
virtues furnished a basis on which the systematic ethical
Ecclesiastical
morality in the
“Dark Ages.”
|
theories of subsequent theologians were built. With
them the triad of Christian graces, Faith, Hope and
Love, and the seven gifts of the Spirit (Isaiah xi. 2)
were often combined. In antithesis to this list, an
enumeration of the “deadly sins” obtained currency.
These were at first commonly reckoned as eight; but
a preference for mystical numbers characteristic of medieval
theologians finally reduced them to seven. The statement
of them is variously given, Pride, Avarice, Anger, Gluttony,
Unchastity, are found in all the lists; the remaining two (or
three) are variously selected from among Envy, Vainglory, and
the rather singular sins Gloominess (tristitia) and Languid
Indifference (acidia or acedia, from Gr.
’ακηδια).
These latter
notions show plainly, what indeed might be inferred from a
study of the list as a whole, that it represents the moral experience
of the monastic life, which for some centuries was more and more
unquestioningly regarded as in a peculiar sense “religious.”
It should be observed that the (also Augustinian) distinction
between “deadly” and “venial” sins had a technical reference
to the quasi-jural administration of ecclesiastical discipline,
which grew gradually more organized as the spiritual power of
the church established itself amid the ruins of the Western
empire, and slowly developed into the theocracy that almost
dominated Europe during the latter part of the middle ages.
“Deadly” sins were those for which formal ecclesiastical penance
was held to be necessary, in order to save the sinner from eternal
damnation; for “venial” sins he might obtain forgiveness,
through prayer, almsgiving, and the observance of the regular
fasts. We find that “penitential books” for the use of the
confessional, founded partly on traditional practice and partly
on the express decrees of synods, come into general use in the
7th century. At first they are little more than mere inventories
of sins, with their appropriate ecclesiastical punishments;
gradually cases of conscience come to be discussed and decided,
and the basis is laid for that system of casuistry which reached
its full development in the 14th and 15th centuries. This
ecclesiastical jurisprudence, and indeed the general relation of
the church to the ruder races with which it had to deal during
this period, necessarily tended to encourage a somewhat external
view of morality. But a powerful counterpoise to this tendency
was continually maintained by the fervid inwardness of Augustine,
transmitted through Gregory the Great, Isidore of Seville,
Alcuin, Hrabanus Maurus, and other writers of the philosophically
barren period between the destruction of the Western empire
and the rise of Scholasticism.
Scholastic ethics, like scholastic philosophy, attained its
completest result in the teaching of Thomas Aquinas. But
Medieval moral
philosophy.
|
before giving a brief account of the ethical part of his
system, it will be well to notice the salient points in
the long and active discussion that led up to it. In
the pantheistic system of Erigena (q.v.) (circa 810-877)
the chief philosophic element is supplied by the influence of
Plato and Plotinus, transmitted through an unknown author
of the 5th century, who assumed the name of Dionysius the
Areopagite. Accordingly the ethical side of this doctrine has
the same negative and ascetic character that we have observed
in Neoplatonism. God is the only real Being; evil is essentially
unreal and incognizable; the true aim of man's life is to return
to perfect union with God out of the degraded material existence
into which he has fallen. This doctrine found little acceptance
among Erigena's contemporaries, and was certainly unorthodox
enough to justify the condemnation which it subsequently
received from Honorius III.; but its influence, together with that
of the Pseudo-Dionysius, had a considerable share in developing
the more emotional orthodox mysticism of the 12th and 13th
centuries; and Neoplatonism (or Platonism received through
a Neoplatonic tradition) remained a distinct element in medieval
thought, though obscured in the period of mature scholasticism
by the predominant influence of Aristotle. Passing on to Anselm
(1033-1109), we observe that the Augustinian doctrine of original
sin and man's absolute need of unmerited grace is retained in
his theory of salvation; he also follows Augustine in defining
freedom as the “power not to sin”; though in saying that Adam
fell “spontaneously” and “by his free choice,” though not
“through its freedom,” he has implicitly made the distinction
that Peter the Lombard afterwards expressly draws between
the freedom that is opposed to necessity and freedom from the
slavery to sin. Anselm further softens the statement of
Augustinian predestinationism by explaining that the freedom
to will is not strictly lost even by fallen man; it is inherent in a
rational nature, though since Adam's sin it only exists potentially
in humanity, except where it is made actual by grace.
In a more real sense Abelard (1079-1142) tries to establish
the connexion between man's ill desert and his free consent.
He asserts that the inherited propensity to evil is not strictly
a sin, which is only committed when the conscious self yields
to vicious inclination. With a similar stress on the self-conscious
side of moral action, he argues that rightness of conduct depends
solely on the intention, at one time pushing this doctrine to the
paradoxical assertion that all outward acts as such are
indifferent.[21]
In the same spirit, under the reviving influence of ancient
philosophy (with which, however, he was imperfectly acquainted
and the relation of which to Christianity he extravagantly
misunderstood), he argues that the old Greek moralists, as
inculcating a disinterested love of good — and so implicitly love
of God as the highest good — were really nearer to Christianity
than Judaic legalism was. Nay, further, he required that
the Christian “love to God” should be regarded as pure only if
purged from the self-regarding desire of the happiness which
God gives. The general tendency of Abelard's thought was
suspiciously regarded by contemporary
orthodoxy;[22] and the
over-subtlety of the last-mentioned distinction provoked
vehement replies from orthodox mystics of the age. Thus,
Hugo of St Victor (1077-1141) argues that all love is necessarily
so far “interested” that it involves a desire for union with the
beloved; and since eternal happiness consists in this union,
it cannot truly be desired apart from God; while Bernard of
Clairvaux (1091-1153) more elaborately distinguishes four
stages by which the soul is gradually led from (1) merely self-regarding
desire for God's aid in distress, to (2) love him for his
loving-kindness to it, then also (3) for his absolute goodness,
until (4) in rare moments this love for himself alone becomes
the sole all-absorbing affection. This controversy Peter the
Lombard endeavoured to compose by the scholastic art of
taking distinctions, of which he was a master. In his treatise,
Libri sententiarum, mainly based on Augustinian doctrine, we
find a distinct softening of the antithesis between nature and
grace and an anticipation of the union of Aristotelian and
Christian thought, which was initiated by Albert the Great and
completed by Thomas Aquinas.
The moral philosophy of Aquinas is Aristotelianism with a
Neoplatonic tinge, interpreted and supplemented by a view of
Christian dogma derived chiefly from Augustine. All
action or movement of all things irrational as well as
rational is directed towards some end or good, — that
is, really and ultimately towards God himself, the ground and
first cause of all being, and unmoved principle of all movement.
This universal though unconscious striving after God, since he
is essentially intelligible, exhibits itself in its highest form in
rational beings as a desire for knowledge of him; such knowledge,
however, is beyond all ordinary exercise of reason, and
may be only partially revealed to man here below. Thus the
summum bonum for man is objectively God, subjectively the
happiness to be derived from loving vision of his perfections;
although there is a lower kind of happiness to be realized here
below in a normal human existence of virtue and friendship,
with mind and body sound and whole and properly trained for
the needs of life. The higher happiness is given to man by free
grace of God; but it is given to those only whose heart is right,
and as a reward of virtuous actions. Passing to consider what
actions are virtuous, we first observe generally that the morality
of an act is in part, but only in part, determined by its particular
motive; it partly depends on its external object and circumstances,
which render it either objectively in harmony with the
“order of reason,” or the reverse. In the classification of
particular virtues and vices we can distinguish very clearly
the elements supplied by the different teachings which Aquinas
has imbibed. He follows Aristotle closely in dividing the
“natural” virtues into intellectual and moral, giving his
preference to the former class, and the intellectual again into
speculative and practical; in distinguishing within the speculative
class the “intellect” that is conversant with principles,
the “science” that deduces conclusions, and the “wisdom”
to which belongs the whole process of knowing the sublimest
objects of knowledge; and in treating practical wisdom as
inseparably connected with moral virtues, and therefore in a
sense moral. His distinction among moral virtues of the
justice that renders others their due from the virtues that control
the appetites and passions of the agent himself, represents his
interpretation of the Nicomachean Ethics; while his account
of these latter virtues is a simple transcript of Aristotle's, just
as his division of the non-rational element of the soul into
“concupiscible” and “irascible” is the old Platonic one. In
arranging his list, however, he defers to the established doctrine
of the four cardinal virtues (derived from Plato and the Stoics
through Cicero); accordingly, the Aristotelian ten have to
stand under the higher genera of (1) the prudence which gives
reasoned rules of conduct, (2) the temperance which restrains
misleading desire, and (3) the fortitude that resists misleading
fear of dangers or toils. But before these virtues are ranked
the three “theologic” virtues, faith, love and hope,
supernaturally “instilled” by God, and directly relating to him as
their object. By faith we obtain that part of our knowledge of
God which is beyond the range of mere natural wisdom or
philosophy; naturally (e.g.), we can know God's existence, but
not his trinity in unity, though philosophy is useful to defend
this and other revealed verities; and it is essential for the soul's
welfare that all articles of the Christian creed, however little
they can be known by natural reason, should be apprehended
through faith; the Christian who rejects a single article loses
hold altogether of faith and of God. Faith is the substantial
basis of all Christian morality, but without love — the essential
form of all the Christian virtues —
it is “formless” (informis).
Christian love is conceived (after Augustine) as primarily love
to God (beyond the natural yearning of the creature after its
ultimate good), which expands into love towards all God's
creatures as created by him, and so ultimately includes even
self-love. But creatures are only to be loved in their purity
as created by God; all that is bad in them must be an object
of hatred till it is destroyed. In the classification of sins the
Christian element predominates; still we find the Aristotelian
vices of excess and defect, along with the modern divisions into
“sins against God, neighbour and self,” “mortal and venial
sins,” and so forth.
From the notion of sin — treated in its jural aspect — Aquinas
passes naturally to the discussion of Law. The exposition of
this conception presents to a great extent the same matter
that was dealt with by the exposition of moral virtues, but in a
different form; the prominence of which may perhaps be
attributed to the growing influence of Roman jurisprudence,
which attained in the 12th century so rapid and brilliant a
revival in Italy. This side of Thomas's system is specially
important, since it is just this blending of theological conceptions
with the abstract theory of the later Roman law that gave the
starting-point for independent ethical thought in the modern
world. Under the general idea of law, defined as an “ordinance
of reason for the common good, promulgated by him who has
charge of the community,” Thomas distinguishes (1) the eternal
law or regulative reason of God which embraces all his creatures,
rational and irrational; (2) “natural law,” being that part of
the eternal law that relates to rational creatures as such; (3)
human law, which properly consists of more particular deductions
from natural law particularized and adapted to the varying
circumstances of actual communities; (4) divine law specially
revealed to man. As regards natural law, he teaches that God
has implanted in the human mind a knowledge of its immutable
general principles; and not only knowledge, but a disposition,
to which he applies the peculiar scholastic name
synderesis,[23]
that unerringly prompts to the realization of these principles in
conduct, and protests against their violation. All acts of natural
virtue are implicitly included within the scope of this law of
nature; but in the application of its principles to particular
cases — to which the term “conscience” should be restricted
— man's judgment is liable to err, the light of nature being
obscured and perverted by bad education and custom. Human
law is required, not merely to determine the details for which
natural law gives no intuitive guidance, but also to supply the
force necessary for practically securing, among imperfect men,
the observance of the most necessary rules of mutual behaviour.
The rules of this law must be either deductions from principles
of natural law, or determinations of particulars which it leaves
indeterminate; a rule contrary to nature could not be valid
as law at all. Human law, however, can deal with outward
conduct alone, and natural law, as we have seen, is liable to be
vague and obscure in particular applications. Neither natural
nor human law, moreover, takes into account that supernatural
happiness which is man's highest end. Hence they need to be
supplemented by a special revelation of divine law. This
revelation is distinguished into the law of the old covenant and
the law of the gospel; the latter of these is productive as well
as imperative since it carries with it the divine grace that makes
its fulfilment possible. We have, however, to distinguish in the
case of the gospel between (1) absolute commands and (2)
“counsels,” which latter recommend, without positively ordering
the monastic life of poverty, celibacy and obedience as the best
method of effectively turning the will from earthly to heavenly
things.
But how far is man able to attain either natural or Christian
perfection? This is the part of Thomas's system in which the
cohesion of the different elements seems weakest. He is scarcely
aware that his Aristotelianized Christianity inevitably combines
two different difficulties in dealing with this question: first, the
old pagan difficulty of reconciling the proposition that will is a
rational desire always directed towards apparent good, with the
freedom of choice between good and evil that the jural view of
morality seems to require; and, secondly, the Christian difficulty
of harmonizing this latter notion with the absolute dependence
on divine grace which the religious consciousness affirms. The
latter difficulty Thomas, like many of his predecessors, avoids
by supposing a “co-operation” of free-will and grace, but the
former he does not fully meet. It is against this part of his
doctrines that the most important criticism, in ethics, of his
rival Duns Scotus (c. 1266-1308) was directed. He
urged that will could not be really free if it were bound
to reason, as Thomas (after Aristotle) conceives it;
a really free choice must be perfectly indeterminate between
reason and unreason. Scotus consistently maintained that the
divine will is similarly independent of reason, and that the
divine ordering of the world is to be conceived as absolutely
arbitrary. On this point he was followed by the acute intellect
of William of Occam (d. c. 1347). This doctrine is
obviously hostile to all reasoned morality; and in
fact, notwithstanding the dialectical ability of Scotus
and Occam, the work of Thomas remained indubitably the
crowning result pf the great constructive effort of medieval
philosophy. The effort was, indeed, foredoomed to failure,
since it attempted the impossible task of framing a coherent
system out of the heterogeneous data furnished by Scripture,
the fathers, the church and Aristotle — equally unquestioned,
if not equally venerated, authorities. Whatever philosophic
quality is to be found in the work of Thomas belongs to it in
spite of, not in consequence of, its method. Still, its influence has
been great and long-enduring, — in the Catholic Church primarily,
but indirectly among Protestants, especially in England, since
the famous first book of Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity is to a
great extent taken from the Summa theologiae.
Partly in conscious antagonism to the schoolmen, yet with
close affinity to the central ethico-theological doctrine which
they read out of or into Aristotle, the mystical manner
of thought continued to maintain itself in the church.
Philosophically it rested upon Neoplatonism, but
its development in strict connexion with Christian orthodoxy
begins in the 12th century with Bernard of Clairvaux and Hugo
of St Victor. It blended the Christian element of love with the
ecstatic vision of Plotinus, sometimes giving the former a decided
predominance. In its more moderate form, keeping wholly
within the limits of ecclesiastical orthodoxy, this mysticism is
represented by Bonaventura and Gerson; while it appears more
independent and daringly constructive in the German Eckhart,
advancing in some of his followers to open breach with the
church, and even to practical immorality.
In the brief account above given of the general ethical view
of Thomas Aquinas no mention has been made of the detailed
discussion of particular duties included in the Summa
theologiae; in which, for the most part, an excellent
combination of moral elevation with sobriety of judgment is
shown, though on certain points the scholastic pedantry of
definition and distinction is unfavourable to due delicacy of
treatment. As the properly philosophic interest of scholasticism
faded in the 14th and 15th centuries, the quasi-legal treatment
of morality came again into prominence, borrowing a good deal
of matter from Thomas and other schoolmen. One result of
this was a marked development and systematization of casuistry.
The best known Summae casuum conscientiae, compiled for
the conduct of auricular confession, belong to the 14th and 15th
centuries. The oldest, the Astesana, from Asti in Piedmont, is
arranged as a kind of text-book of morality on a scholastic basis;
later manuals are merely lists of questions and answers. It was
inevitable that, in proportion as this casuistry assumed the
character of a systematic penal jurisprudence, its precise determination
of the limits between the prohibited and the allowable,
with all doubtful points closely scrutinized and illustrated by
fictitious cases, would have a tendency to weaken the moral
sensibilities of ordinary minds; the greater the industry spent
in deducing conclusions from the diverse authorities, the greater
necessarily became the number of points on which doctors
disagreed; and the central authority that might have repressed
serious divergences was wanting in the period of moral
weakness[24]
that the church went through after the death of Boniface VIII.
A plain man perplexed by such disagreements might naturally
hold that any opinion maintained by a pious and orthodox
writer must be a safe one to follow; and thus weak consciences
were subtly tempted to seek the support of authority for some
desired relaxation of a moral rule. It does not, however, appear
that this danger assumed formidable proportions until after the
Reformation; when, in the struggle made by the Catholic
church to recover its hold on the world, the principle of authority
was, as it were, forced into keen, balanced and prolonged conflict
with that of reliance on private judgment. To the Jesuits, the
foremost champions in this struggle, it seemed indispensable
that the confessional should be made attractive;
for this purpose ecclesiastico-moral law must be
somehow “accommodated” to worldly needs; and the theory
of “Probabilism” supplied a plausible method for effecting
this accommodation. The theory proceeded thus: A layman
could not be expected to examine minutely into a point on which
the learned differed; therefore he could not fairly be blamed
for following any opinion that rested on the authority of even
a single doctor; therefore his confessor must be authorized to
hold him guiltless if any such “probable” opinion could be
produced in his favour; nay, it was his duty to suggest such
an opinion, even though opposed to his own, if it would relieve
the conscience under his charge from a depressing burden.
The results to which this Probabilism, applied with an earnest
desire to avoid dangerous rigour, led in the 17th century were
revealed to the world in the immortal Lettres provinciales of
Pascal.
In tracing the development of casuistry we have been carried
beyond the great crisis through which Western Christianity
The Reformation.
Transition to
modern ethical
philosophy.
|
passed in the 16th century. The Reformation which
Luther initiated may be viewed on several sides,
even if we consider only its ethical principles and
effects. It maintained the simplicity of Apostolic
Christianity against the elaborate system of a corrupt
hierarchy, the teaching of Scripture alone against the
commentaries of the fathers and the traditions of the
church, the right of private judgment against the dictation of
ecclesiastical authority, the individual responsibility of every
human soul before God in opposition to the papal control over
purgatorial punishments, which had led to the revolting degradation
of venal indulgences. Reviving the original antithesis
between Christianity and Jewish legalism, it maintained the inwardness
of faith to be the sole way to eternal life, in contrast to
the outwardness of works; returning to Augustine, and expressing
his spirit in a new formula, to resist the Neo-Pelagianism that had
gradually developed itself within the apparent Augustinianism of
the church, it maintained the total corruption of human nature,
as contrasted with that “congruity” by which, according to the
schoolmen, divine grace was to be earned; renewing the fervent
humility of St Paul, it enforced the universal and absolute
imperativeness of all Christian duties, and the inevitable
unworthiness of all Christian obedience, in opposition to the theory
that “condign” merit might be gained by “supererogatory”
conformity to evangelical “counsels.” It will be seen that these
changes, however profoundly important, were, ethically considered,
either negative or quite general, relating to the tone
and attitude of mind in which all duty should be done. As
regards all positive matter of duty and virtue, and most of the
prohibitive code for ordinary men, the tradition of Christian
teaching was carried on substantially unchanged by the Reformed
churches. Even the old method of casuistry was
maintained[25]
during the 16th and 17th centuries; though Scriptural texts,
interpreted and supplemented by the light of natural reason,
now furnished the sole principles on which cases of conscience
were decided.
In the 17th century, however, the interest of this quasi-legal
treatment of morality gradually faded; and the ethical studies
of educated minds were occupied with the attempt,
renewed after so many centuries, to find an independent
philosophical basis for the moral code. The renewal of
this attempt was only indirectly due to the Reformation; it is
rather to be connected with the more extreme reaction from the
medieval religion which was partly caused by, partly expressed in,
that enthusiastic study of the remains of old pagan culture that
spread from Italy over Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries.
To this “humanism” the Reformation seemed at first more
hostile than the Roman hierarchy; indeed, the extent to which
this latter had allowed itself to become paganized by the Renaissance
was one of the points that especially roused the Reformers'
indignation. Not the less important is the indirect stimulus
given by the Reformation towards the development of a moral
philosophy independent alike of Catholic and Protestant assumptions.
Scholasticism, while reviving philosophy as a handmaid
to theology, had metamorphosed its method into one resembling
that of its mistress; thus shackling the renascent intellectual
activity which it stimulated by the double bondage to Aristotle
and to the church. When the Reformation shook the traditional
authority in one department, the blow was necessarily felt in
the other. Not twenty years after Luther's defiance of the pope,
the startling thesis “that all that Aristotle taught was false”
was prosperously maintained by the youthful Ramus before the
university of Paris; and almost contemporaneously the group
of remarkable thinkers in Italy who heralded the dawn of modern
physical science — Cardanus, Telesio, Patrizzi, Campanella, Bruno
— began to propound their Aristotelian theories of the constitution
of the physical universe. It was to be foreseen that a
similar assertion of independence would make itself heard in
ethics also; and, indeed, amid the clash of dogmatic convictions,
and the variations of private judgment, it was natural to seek for
an ethical method that might claim universal acceptance from
all sects.
C. Modern Ethics. — The need of such independent principles
was most strongly felt in the region of man's civil and political
relations, especially the mutual relations of communities.
Accordingly we find that modern ethical
controversy began in a discussion of the law of nature. Albericus
Gentilis (1557-1611) and Hugo Grotius (1583-1645) were the
first to give a systematic account. Natural law, according to
Grotius and other writers of the age, is that part of divine law
which follows from the essential nature of man, who is distinguished
from animals by his “appetite” for tranquil association
with his fellows, and his tendency to act on general principles. It
is therefore as unalterable, even by God himself, as the truths
of mathematics, although its effect may be overruled in any
particular case by an express command of God; hence it is
cognizable a priori, from the abstract consideration of human
nature, though its existence may be known a posteriori also from
its universal acceptance in human societies. The conception,
as we have seen, was taken from the later Roman jurists; by
them, however, the law of nature was conceived as something
that underlay existing law, and was to be looked for through it,
though it might ultimately supersede it, and in the meanwhile
represented an ideal standard, by which improvements in
legislation were to be guided. Still the language of the jurists
in some passages (cf. Inst. of Justinian, ii. 1, 2) clearly implied
a period of human history in which men were governed by
natural law alone, prior to the institution of civil society.
Posidonius had identified this period with the mythical “golden
age”; and such ideas easily coalesced with the narrative in
Genesis. Thus there had become current the conception of a
“state of nature” in which individuals or single families lived
side by side — under none other than those “natural” laws
which
prohibited mutual injury and interference in the free use of the
goods of the earth common to all, and upheld parental authority,
fidelity of wives, and the observance of compacts freely made.
This conception Grotius took, and gave it additional force and
solidity by using the principles of this natural law for the
determination of international rights and duties, it being obvious
that independent nations, in their corporate capacities, were
still in that “state of nature” in their mutual relations. It was
not, of course, assumed that these laws were universally obeyed;
indeed, one point with which Grotius is especially concerned
is the natural right of private war, arising out of the violation
of more primary rights. Still a general observance was involved
in the idea of a natural law as a “dictate of right reason indicating
the agreement or disagreement of an act with man's rational and
social nature”; and we may observe that it was especially
necessary to assume such a general observance in the case of
contracts, since it was by an “express or tacit pact” that
the right of property (as distinct from the mere right to non-interference
during use) was held by him to have been instituted.
A similar “fundamental pact” had long been generally regarded
as the normal origin of legitimate sovereignty.
The ideas above expressed were not peculiar to Grotius;
in particular the doctrine of the “fundamental pact” as the
jural basis of government had long been maintained, especially
in England, where the constitution historically established
readily suggested such a compact. At the same time the rapid
and remarkable success of Grotius's treatise (De jure belli et
pacis) brought his view of Natural Right into prominence, and
suggested such questions as — “What is man's ultimate reason
for obeying these laws? Wherein exactly does this their agreement
with his rational and social nature consist? How far, and
in what sense, is his nature really social?”
It was the answer which Hobbes (1588-1679) gave to these
fundamental questions that supplied the starting-point for
independent ethical philosophy in England. The
nature of this answer was determined by the psychological
views to which Hobbes had been led, possibly to some
extent under the influence of Bacon,
partly perhaps through[26]
association with his younger contemporary Gassendi, who, in
two treatises, published between the appearance of Hobbes's
De cive (1642) and that of the Leviathan (1651), endeavoured to
revive interest in Epicurus. Hobbes's psychology is in the first
place materialistic; he holds, that is, that in any of the psycho-physical
phenomena of human nature the reality is a material
process of which the mental feeling is a mere “appearance.”
Accordingly he regards pleasure as essentially motion “helping
vital action,” and pain as motion “hindering” it. There is no
logical connexion between this theory and the doctrine that
appetite of desire has always pleasure (or the absence of pain) for
its object; but a materialist, framing a system of psychology,
will naturally direct his attention to the impulses arising out of
bodily wants, whose obvious end is the preservation of the agent's
organism; and this, together with a philosophic wish to simplify,
may lead him to the conclusion that all human impulses are
similarly self-regarding. This, at any rate, is Hobbes's cardinal
doctrine in moral psychology, that each man's appetites or
desires are naturally directed either to the preservation of his
life, or to that heightening of it which he feels as
pleasure.[27]
Hobbes does not distinguish instinctive from deliberate pleasure-seeking;
and he confidently resolves the most apparently
unselfish emotions into phases of self-regard. Pity he finds to
be grief for the calamity of others, arising from imagination
of the like calamity befalling oneself; what we admire with
seeming disinterestedness as beautiful (pulchrum) is really
“pleasure in promise”; when men are not immediately seeking
present pleasure, they desire power as a means to future pleasure,
and thus have a derivative delight in the exercise of power that
prompts to what we call benevolent action. Since, then, all the
voluntary actions of men tend to their own preservation or
pleasure, it cannot be reasonable to aim at anything else; in
fact, nature rather than reason fixes this as the end of human
action; it is reason's function to show the means. Hence if we
ask why it is reasonable for any individual to observe the rules
of social behaviour that are commonly called moral, the answer
is obvious that this is only indirectly reasonable, as a means to
his own preservation or pleasure. It is not, however, in this,
which is only the old Cyrenaic or Epicurean answer, that the
distinctive point of Hobbism lies. It is rather in the doctrine
that even this indirect reasonableness of the most fundamental
moral rules is entirely conditional on their general observance,
which cannot be secured apart from government. For example,
it is not reasonable for me to perform my share of a contract,
unless I have reason for believing that the other party will perform
his; and this I cannot have, except in a society in which
he will be punished for non-performance. Thus the ordinary
rules of social behaviour are only hypothetically obligatory;
they are actualized by the establishment of a “common power”
that may “use the strength and means of all” to enforce on all
the observance of rules tending to the common benefit. On the
other hand Hobbes yields to no one in maintaining the paramount
importance of moral regulations. The precepts of good
faith, equity, requital of benefits, forgiveness of wrong so far as
security allows, the prohibition of contumely, pride, arrogance,
— which may all be summed up in the formula, “Do not that to
another which thou wouldest not have done to thyself” (i.e. the
negative of the “golden rule”) —
he still calls “immutable and
eternal laws of nature” — meaning that, though a man is not
unconditionally bound to realize them, he is, as a reasonable
being, bound to desire that they should be realized. The
pre-social state of man, in his view, is also pre-moral; but it is
therefore utterly miserable. It is a state in which every one has
a right to everything that may conduce to his
preservation;[28]
but it is therefore also a state of war — a state so wretched that
it is the first dictate of rational self-love to emerge from it
into social peace and order. Hence Hobbes's ideal constitution
naturally comes to be an unquestioned and unlimited — though
not necessarily monarchical — despotism. Whatever the government
declares to be just or unjust must be accepted as such,
since to dispute its dictates would be the first step towards
anarchy, the one paramount peril outweighing all particular
defects in legislation and administration. It is perhaps easy to
understand how, in the crisis of 1640, when the ethico-political
system of Hobbes first took written shape, a peace-loving
philosopher should regard the claims of individual conscience
as essentially anarchical, and dangerous to social well-being;
but however strong might be men's yearning for order, a view
of social duty, in which the only fixed positions were selfishness
everywhere and unlimited power somewhere, could not but
appear offensively paradoxical.
There was, however, in his theory an originality, a force, an
apparent coherence which rendered it undeniably impressive;
in fact, we find that for two generations the efforts to construct
morality on a philosophical basis take more or less the form of
answers to Hobbes. From an ethical point of view Hobbism
divides itself naturally into two parts, which by Hobbes's
peculiar political doctrines are combined into a coherent whole,
but are not otherwise necessarily connected. Its theoretical
basis is the principle of egoism; while, for practically determining
the particulars of duty it makes morality entirely dependent
on positive law and institution. It thus affirmed the relativity
of good and evil in a double sense; good and evil, for any
individual citizen, may from one point of view be defined as
the objects respectively of his desire and his aversion; from
another, they may be said to be determined for him by his
sovereign. It is this latter aspect of the system which is primarily
attacked by the first generation of writers that replied to Hobbes.
This attack, or rather the counter-exposition of orthodox
doctrine, is conducted on different methods by the Cambridge
moralists and by Cumberland respectively. Cumberland is
content with the legal view of morality, but endeavours to
establish the validity of the laws of nature by taxing them on the
single supreme principle of rational regard for the “common
good of all,” and showing them, as so based, to be adequately
supported by the divine sanction. The Cambridge school,
regarding morality primarily as a body of truth rather than
a code of rules, insist on its absolute character and intuitive
certainty.
Cudworth was the most distinguished of the little group of
thinkers at Cambridge in the 17th century, commonly known
as the Cambridge Platonists (q.v.). In his treatise on Eternal
and Immutable Morality his main aim is to maintain the
“essential and eternal distinctions of good and evil” as
independent of mere will, whether human or divine. These
The Cambridge
moralists, Cudworth.
|
distinctions, he insists, have an objective reality,
cognizable by reason no less than the relations of
space or number; and he endeavours to refute
Hobbism — which he treats as a “novantique philosophy,”
a mere revival of the relativism of Protagoras — chiefly
by the following argumentum ad hominem. He argues that
Hobbes's atomic materialism involves the conception of an
objective physical world, the object not of passive sense that
varies from man to man, but of the active intellect that is the
same in all; there is therefore, he urges, an inconsistency in
refusing to admit a similar exercise of intellect in morals, and
an objective world of right and wrong, which the mind by its
normal activity clearly apprehends as such.
Cudworth, in the work above mentioned, gives no systematic
exposition of the ethical principles which he holds to be thus
intuitively apprehended. But we may supply this Mon
deficiency from the Enchiridion Ethicum of Henry
More, another thinker of the same school. More gives a list
of 23 Noemata Moralia, the truth of which will, he says, be
immediately manifest. Some of these admit of a purely egoistic
application, and appear to be so understood by the author —
as (e.g.) that goods differ in quality as well as in duration, and
that the superior good or the lesser evil is always to be preferred;
that absence of a given amount of good is preferable to the
presence of equivalent evil; that future good or evil is to be
regarded as much as present, if equally certain, and nearly as
much if very probable. Objections, both general and special,
might be urged by a Hobbist against these modes of formulating
man's natural pursuit of self-interest; but the serious controversy
between Hobbism and modern Platonism related not to such
principles as these, but to others which demand from the individual
a (real or apparent) sacrifice for his fellows. Such are
the evangelical principle of “doing as you would be done by”;
the principle of justice, or “giving every man his own, and
letting him enjoy it without interference”; and especially
what More states as the abstract formula of benevolence, that
“if it be good that one man should be supplied with the means
of living well and happily, it is mathematically certain that it is
doubly good that two should be so supplied, and so on.” The
question, however, still remains, what motive any individual
has to conform to these social principles when they conflict with
his natural desires. To this Cudworth gives no explicit reply,
and the answer of More is hardly clear. On the one hand he
maintains that these principles express an absolute good, which
is to be called intellectual because its essence and truth are
apprehended by the intellect. We might infer from this that
the intellect, so judging, is itself the proper and complete
determinant of the will, and that man, as a rational being,
ought to aim at the realization of absolute good for its own sake.
In spite, however, of possible inferences from his definition of
virtue, this does not seem to be really More's view. He explains
that though absolute good is discerned by the intellect, the
“sweetness and flavour” of it is apprehended, not by the intellect
proper, but by what he calls a “boniform faculty”; and it is
in this sweetness and flavour that the motive to virtuous conduct
lies; ethics is the “art of living well and happily,” and true
happiness lies in “the pleasure which the soul derives from the
sense of virtue.” In short, More's Platonism appears to be
really as hedonistic as Hobbism; only the feeling to which it
appeals as ultimate motive is of a kind that only a mind of
exceptional moral refinement can habitually feel with the
decisive intensity required.
It is to be observed that though More lays down the abstract
principle of regarding one's neighbour's good as much as one's
own with the full breadth with which Christianity inculcates
it, yet when he afterwards comes to classify virtues he is too
much under the influence of Platonic-Aristotelian thought to
give a distinct place to benevolence, except under the old form
of liberality. In this respect his system presents a striking
contrast to Cumberland's, whose treatise De Legibus Naturae
(1672), though written like More's in Latin, is yet in its ethical
matter thoroughly modern. Cumberland is a thinker both original
and comprehensive, and, in spite of defects in style and
clearness, he is noteworthy as having been the first to
lay down that “regard for the common good of all”
is the supreme rule of morality or law of nature. So far he may
be fairly called the precursor of later utilitarianism. His fundamental
principle and supreme “Law of Nature” is thus stated:
“The greatest possible benevolence of every rational agent
towards all the rest constitutes the happiest state of each and
all, so far as depends on their own power, and is necessarily
required for their happiness; accordingly Common Good will
be the Supreme Good.” It is, however, important to notice that
in his “good” is included not merely happiness but
“perfection”; and he does not even define perfection so as to
exclude
from it the notion of absolute moral perfection and save his
theory from an obvious logical circle. A notion so vague could
not possibly be used with any precision for determining the
subordinate rules of morality; but in fact Cumberland does not
attempt this; his supreme principle is designed not to rectify,
but merely to support and systematize, common morality. This
principle, as was said, is conceived as strictly a law, and therefore
referred to a lawgiver, God, and provided with a sanction in
its effects on the agent's happiness. That the divine will is
expressed by it, Cumberland, “not being so fortunate as to
possess innate ideas,” tries to prove by a long inductive examination
of the evidences of man's essential sociality exhibited in his
physical and mental constitution. His account of the sanction,
again, is sufficiently comprehensive, including both the internal
and the external rewards of virtue and punishments of vice;
and he, like later utilitarians, explains moral" obligation to lie
in the force exercised on the will by these sanctions; but as to
the precise manner in which individual is implicated with
universal good, and the operation of either or both in determining
volition, his view is indistinct if not actually inconsistent.
The clearness which we seek in vain from Cumberland is
found to the fullest extent in Locke, whose Essay on the Human
Understanding (1600) was already planned when
Cumberland's treatise appeared. Yet Locke's ethical
opinions have been widely misunderstood; since from a confusion
between “innate ideas” and “intuitions,” which has been
common in recent ethical discussion, it has been supposed that
the founder of English empiricism must necessarily have been
hostile to “intuitional” ethics. The truth is that, while Locke
agrees entirely with Hobbes as to the egoistic basis of rational
conduct, and the interpretation of “good” and “evil” as
“pleasure” and “pain,” or that which is productive of pleasure
and pain, he yet agrees entirely with Hobbes's opponents in
holding ethical rules to be actually obligatory independently of
political society, and capable of being scientifically constructed
on principles intuitively known, — though he does not regard
these principles as implanted in the mind at birth. The aggregate
of such rules he conceives as the law of God, carefully distinguishing
it, not only from civil law, but from the law of opinion or
reputation, the varying moral standard by which men actually
distribute praise and blame; as being divine it is necessarily
sanctioned by adequate rewards and punishments. He does not,
indeed, speak of the scientific construction of this code as having
been actually effected, but he affirms its possibility in language
remarkably strong and decisive. “The idea,” he says, “of a
Supreme Being, infinite in power, goodness, and wisdom, whose
workmanship we are, and upon whom we depend, and the
idea of ourselves, as understanding rational beings, being such
as are clear in us, would, I suppose, if duly considered and
pursued, afford such foundations of our duty and rules of action,
as might place morality among the sciences capable of demonstration;
wherein, I doubt not, but from self-evident propositions,
by necessary consequences as incontestable as those in mathematics,
the measure of right and wrong might be made out.”
As Locke cannot consistently mean by God's “goodness”
anything but the disposition to give pleasure, it might be inferred
that the ultimate standard of right rules of action ought to be
the common happiness of the beings affected by the action;
but Locke does not explicitly adopt this standard. The only
instances which he gives of intuitive moral truths are the purely
formal propositions, “No government allows absolute liberty,”
and “Where there is no property there is no injustice,”
— neither
of which has any evident connexion with the general happiness.
As regards his conception of the Law of Nature, he takes it
in the main immediately from Grotius and Pufendorf, more
remotely from the Stoics and the Roman jurists.
We might give, as a fair illustration of Locke's general conception
of ethics, a system which is frequently represented
as diametrically opposed to Lockism; namely, that
expounded in Clarke's Boyle lectures on the Being
and Attributes of God (1704). It is true that Locke is not particularly
concerned with the ethico-theological proposition which
Clarke is most anxious to maintain, — that the fundamental
rules of morality are independent of arbitrary will, whether
divine or human. But in his general view of ethical principles as
being, like mathematical principles,[29]
essentially truths of relation,
Clarke is quite in accordance with Locke; while of the four
fundamental rules that he expounds, Piety towards God, Equity,
Benevolence and Sobriety (which includes self-preservation),
the first is obtained, just as Locke suggests, by “comparing
the idea” of man with the idea of an infinitely good and wise
being on whom he depends; and the second and third are
axioms self-evident on the consideration of the equality or
similarity of human individuals as such. The principle of equity
— that “whatever I judge reasonable or unreasonable for
another to do for me, that by the same I declare reasonable
or unreasonable that I in the like case should do for him,” is
merely a formal statement of the golden rule of the gospel. We
may observe that, in stating the principle of benevolence, “since
the greater good is always most fit and reasonable to be done,
every rational creature ought to do all the good it can to its
fellow-creatures,” Clarke avowedly follows Cumberland, from
whom he quotes the further sentence that “universal love and
benevolence is as plainly the most direct, certain and effectual
means to this good as the flowing of a point is to produce a line.”
The quotation may remind us that the analogy between ethics
and mathematics ought to be traced further back than Locke;
in fact, it results from the influence exercised by Cartesianism
over English thought generally, in the latter half of the 17th
century. It must be allowed that Clarke is misled by the analogy
to use general ethical terms (“fitness,” “agreement” of things,
&c.), which overlook the essential distinction between what is
and what ought to be; and even in one or two expressions to
overleap this distinction extravagantly, as (e.g.) in saying that
the man who “wilfully acts contrary to justice wills things to be
what they are not and cannot be.” What he really means is
less paradoxically stated in the general proposition that “originally
and in reality it is natural and (morally speaking) necessary
that the will should be determined in every action by the reason
of the thing and the right of the case, as it is natural and
(absolutely speaking) necessary that the understanding should
submit to a demonstrated truth.” But though it is an essential
point in Clarke's view that what is right is to be done as such,
apart from any consideration of pleasure or pain, it is to be
inferred that he is not prepared to apply this doctrine in its
unqualified form to such a creature as man, who is partly under
the influence of irrational impulses. At least when he comes to
argue the need of future rewards and punishments we find that
his claim on behalf of morality is startlingly reduced. He
now only contends that “virtue deserves to be chosen for its
own sake, and vice to be avoided, though a man was sure for
his own particular neither to gain nor lose anything by the practice
of either.” He fully admits that the question is altered when
vice is attended by pleasure and profit to the vicious man, virtue
by loss and calamity; and even that it is “not truly reasonable
that men by adhering to virtue should part with their lives,
if thereby they deprived themselves of all possibility of receiving
any advantage from their adherence.”
Thus, on the whole, the impressive earnestness with which
Clarke enforces the doctrine of rational morality only rendered
more manifest the difficulty of establishing ethics on an independent
philosophical basis; so long at least as the psychological
egoism of Hobbes is not definitely assailed and overthrown.
Until this is done, the utmost demonstration of the abstract
reasonableness of social duty only leaves us with an irreconcilable
antagonism between the view of abstract reason and the self-love
which is allowed to be the root of man's appetitive nature. Let
us grant that there is as much intellectual absurdity in acting
unjustly as in denying that two and two make four; still, if a
man has to choose between absurdity and unhappiness, he will
naturally prefer the former; and Clarke, as we have already
seen, is not really prepared to maintain that such preference is
irrational.[30]
It remains to try another psychological basis for ethical
construction; instead of presenting the principle of social duty
as abstract reason, liable to conflict to any extent
with natural self-love, we may try to exhibit the
naturalness of man's social affections, and demonstrate
a normal harmony between these and his self-regarding impulses.
This is the line of thought which Shaftesbury (1671-1713) may
be said to have initiated. This theory had already been advanced
by Cumberland and others, but Shaftesbury was the first to
make it the cardinal point in his system; no one had yet definitely
transferred the centre of ethical interest from the Reason, conceived
as apprehending either abstract moral distinctions or
laws of divine legislation, for the emotional impulses that prompt
to social duty; no one had undertaken to distinguish clearly,
by analysis of experience, the disinterested and self-regarding
elements of our appetitive nature, or to prove inductively their
perfect harmony. In his Inquiry concerning Virtue and Merit he
begins by attacking the egoism of Hobbes, which, as we have
seen, was not necessarily excluded by the doctrine of rational
intuitions of duty. This interpretation, he says, would be true
only if we considered man as a wholly unrelated individual.
Such a being we might doubtless call “good,” if his impulses
were adapted to the attainment of his own felicity. But man
we must and do consider in relation to a larger system of which
he forms a part, and so we call him “good” only when his
impulses and dispositions are so balanced as to tend towards the
good of this whole. And again we do not attribute goodness
to him merely because his outward acts have beneficial results.
When we speak of a man as good, we mean that his dispositions
or affections are such as tend of themselves to promote the good
or happiness of human society. Hobbes's moral man, who, if let
loose from governmental constraint, would straightway spread
ruin among his fellows, is not what we commonly agree to call
good. Moral goodness, then, in a “sensible creature” implies
primarily disinterested affections, whose direct object is the good
of others; but Shaftesbury does not mean (as he has been
misunderstood to mean) that only such benevolent social impulses
are good, and that these are always good. On the contrary,
he is careful to point out, first, that immoderate social affections
defeat themselves, miss their proper end, and are therefore bad;
secondly, that as an individual's good is part of the good of the
whole “self-affections” existing in a duly limited degree are
morally good. Goodness, in short, consists in due combination,
in just proportion, of both sorts of “affections,” tendency to
promote general good being taken as the criterion of the right
degrees and proportions. This being established, the main aim
of Shaftesbury's argument is to prove that the same balance
of private and social affections, which tends naturally to public
good, is also conducive to the happiness of the individual in
whom it exists. Taking the different impulses in detail, he first
shows how the individual's happiness is promoted by developing
his social affections, mental pleasures being superior to bodily,
and the pleasures of benevolence the richest of all. In discussing
this he distinguishes, with well-applied subtlety, between the
pleasurableness of the benevolent emotions themselves, the
sympathetic enjoyment of the happiness of others, and the
pleasure arising from a consciousness of their love and esteem.
He then exhibits the unhappiness that results from any excess
of the self-regarding impulses, bodily appetite, desire of wealth,
emulation, resentment, even love of life itself; and ends by
dwelling on the intrinsic painfulness of all
malevolence.[31]
One more special impulse remains to be noticed. We have
seen that goodness of character consists in a certain harmony of
self-regarding and social affections. But virtue, in Shaftesbury's
view, is something more; it implies a recognition of moral
goodness and immediate preference of it for its own sake. This
immediate pleasure that we take in goodness (and displeasure
in its opposite) is due to a susceptibility which he calls the
“reflex” or “moral” sense, and compares with our
susceptibility
to beauty and deformity in external things; it furnishes both
an additional direct impulse to good conduct, and an additional
gratification to be taken into account in the reckoning which
proves the coincidence of virtue and happiness. This doctrine
of the moral sense is sometimes represented as Shaftesbury's
cardinal tenet; but though characteristic and important, it is
not really necessary to his main argument; it is the crown
rather than the keystone of his ethical structure.
The appearance of Shaftesbury's Characteristics (1713) marks
a turning-point in the history of English ethical thought. With
the generation of moralists that followed, the consideration of
abstract rational principles falls into the background, and its
place is taken by introspective study of the human mind, observation
of the actual play of its various impulses and sentiments.
This empirical psychology had not indeed been neglected by
previous writers. More, among others, had imitated Descartes
in a discussion of the passions, and Locke's essay had given a
still stronger impulse in the same direction; still, Shaftesbury
is the first moralist who distinctly takes psychological experience
as the basis of ethics. His suggestions were developed by
Hutcheson into one of the most elaborate systems of moral
philosophy which we possess; through Hutcheson, if not
directly, they influenced Hume's speculations, and are thus
connected with later utilitarianism. Moreover, the substance
of Shaftesbury's main argument was adopted by Butler, though
it could not pass the scrutiny of that powerful and cautious
intellect without receiving important modifications and additions.
On the other hand, the ethical optimism of Shaftesbury, rather
broadly impressive than exactly reasoned, and connected as it
was with a natural theology that implied the Christian scheme
to be superfluous, challenged attack equally from orthodox
divines and from cynical freethinkers. Of these latter
Mandeville, the author of The Fable of the Bees, or
Private Vices Public Benefits (1723), was a conspicuous
if not a typical specimen. He can hardly be called a “moralist”;
and though it is impossible to deny him a considerable share of
philosophic penetration, his anti-moral paradoxes have not
even apparent coherence. He is convinced that virtue (where it
is more than a mere pretence) is purely artificial; but not quite
certain whether it is a useless trammel of appetites and passions
that are advantageous to society, or a device creditable to the
politicians who introduced it by playing upon the “pride and
vanity” of the “silly creature man.” The view, however, to
which he gave audacious expression, that moral regulation is
something alien to the natural man, and imposed on him from
without, seems to have been very current in the polite society
of his time, as we learn both from Berkeley's Alciphron and
from Butler's more famous sermons.
The view of “human nature” against which Butler preached
was not exactly Mandeville's, nor was it properly to be called
Hobbist, although Butler fairly treats it as having a philosophical
basis in Hobbes's psychology. It was, so to say,
Hobbism turned inside out, — rendered licentious and
anarchical instead of constructive. Hobbes had said
“the natural state of man is non-moral, unregulated; moral rules
are means to the end of peace, which is a means to the end of
self-preservation.” On this view morality, though dependent
for its actuality on the social compact which establishes government,
is actually binding on man as a reasonable being. But the
quasi-theistic assumption that what is natural must be reasonable
remained in the minds of Hobbes's most docile readers, and in
combination with his thesis that egoism is natural, tended to
produce results which were dangerous to social well-being. To
meet this view Butler does not content himself, as is sometimes
carelessly supposed, with insisting on the natural claim to
authority of the conscience which his opponent repudiated as
artificial; he adds a subtle and effective argument ad hominem.
He first follows Shaftesbury in exhibiting the social affections
as no less natural than the appetites and desires which tend
directly to self-preservation; then reviving the Stoic view
of the prima naturae, the first objects of natural appetites,
he argues that pleasure is not the primary aim even of the
impulses which Shaftesbury allowed to be “self-affections”;
but rather a result which follows upon their attaining their
natural ends. We have, in fact, to distinguish self-love, the
“general desire that every man hath of his own happiness” or
pleasure, from the particular affections, passions, and appetites
directed towards objects other than pleasure, in the satisfaction
of which pleasure consists. The latter are “necessarily
presupposed” as distinct impulses in “the very idea of an interested
pursuit”; since, if there were no such pre-existing desires,
there would be no pleasure for self-love to aim at. Thus the
object of hunger is not the pleasure of eating but food; hunger
is therefore, strictly speaking, no more “interested” than
benevolence; granting that the pleasures of the table are an
important element in the happiness at which self-love aims,
the same at least may be said for the pleasures of love and
sympathy. Further, so far from bodily appetites (or other
particular desires) being forms of self-love, there is no one of
them which under certain circumstances may not come into
conflict with it. Indeed, it is common for men to sacrifice to
passion what they know to be their true interests; at the same
time we do not consider such conduct “natural” in man as a
rational being; we rather regard it as natural for him to govern
his transient impulses. Thus the notion of natural unregulated
egoism turns out to be a psychological chimera. Indeed, we may
say that an egoist must be doubly self-regulative, since rational
self-love ought to restrain not only other impulses, but itself also;
for as happiness is made up of feelings that result from the
satisfaction of impulses other than self-love, any over-development
of the latter, enfeebling these other impulses, must proportionally
diminish the happiness at which self-love aims. If,
then, it be admitted that human impulses are naturally under
government, the natural claim of conscience or the moral faculty
to be the supreme governor will hardly be denied.
But has not self-love also, by Butler's own account, a similar
authority, which may come into conflict with that of conscience?
Butler fully admits this, and, in fact, grounds on it an important
criticism of Shaftesbury. We have seen that in the latter's
system the “moral sense” is not absolutely required, or at least
is necessary only as a substitute for enlightened self-regard;
since if the harmony between prudence and virtue, self-regarding
and social impulses, is complete, mere self-interest will prompt
a duly enlightened mind to maintain precisely that “balance” of
affections in which goodness consists. But to Butler's more
cautious mind the completeness of this harmony did not seem
sufficiently demonstrable to be taken as a basis of moral teaching;
he has at least to contemplate the possibility of a man being convinced
of the opposite; and he argues that unless we regard conscience
as essentially authoritative — which is not implied in the
term “moral sense” — such a man is really bound to be
vicious;
‘since interest, one's own happiness, is a manifest obligation.”
Still on this view, even if the authority of conscience be asserted,
we seem reduced to an ultimate dualism of our rational nature.
Butler's ordered polity of impulses turns out to be a polity with
two independent governments. Butler does not deny this, so
far as mere claim to authority is concerned;[32]
but he maintains
that, the dictates of conscience being clear and certain, while the
calculations of self-interest lead to merely probable conclusions,
it can never be practically reasonable to disobey the former, even
apart from any proof which religion may furnish of the absolute
coincidence of the two in a future life.
This dualism of governing principles, conscience and self-love,
in Butler's system, and perhaps, too, his revival of the Platonic
conception of human nature as an ordered and governed WoUattott
community of impulses, is perhaps most nearly anticipated
in Wollaston's Religion of Nature Delineated (1722). Here,
for the first time, we find “moral good” and “natural good”
or “happiness” treated separately as two essentially distinct
objects of rational pursuit and investigation; the harmony
between them being regarded as matter of religious faith, not
moral knowledge. Wollaston's theory of moral evil as consisting
in the practical contradiction of a true proposition, closely
resembles the most paradoxical part of Clarke's doctrine, and was
not likely to approve itself to the strong common sense of Butler;
but his statement of happiness or pleasure as a “justly desirable”
end at which every rational being “ought” to aim corresponds
exactly to Butler's conception of self-love as a naturally governing
impulse; while the “moral arithmetic” with which he
compares pleasures and pains, and endeavours to make the
notion of happiness quantitatively precise, is an anticipation of
Benthamism.
There is another side of Shaftesbury's harmony which Butler
was ultimately led to oppose in a more decided manner, — the
opposition, namely, between conscience or the moral sense and
the social affections. In the Sermons, indeed (1729), Butler seems
to treat conscience and calm benevolence as permanently allied
though distinct principles, but in the Dissertation on Virtue,
appended to the Analogy (1739), he maintains that the conduct
dictated by conscience will often differ widely from that to which
mere regard for the production of happiness would prompt. We
may take this latter treatise as representing the first in the
development of English ethics, at which what were afterwards
called “utilitarian” and “intuitional” morality were first
formally opposed; in earlier systems the antithesis is quite
latent, as we have incidentally noticed in the case of Cumberland
and Clarke. The argument in Butler's dissertation was probably
directed chiefly against Hutcheson, who in his Inquiry
into the Original of our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue had
definitely identified virtue with benevolence. The identification
is slightly qualified in Hutcheson's posthumously published
System of Moral Philosophy (1755), in which the general view of
Shaftesbury is more fully developed, with several new psychological
distinctions, including Butler's separation of “calm”
benevolence — as well as, after Butler, “calm self-love”
— from the
“turbulent” passions, selfish or social. Hutcheson follows
Butler again in laying stress on the regulating and controlling
function of the moral sense; but he still regards “kind
affections” as the principal objects of moral approbation the “calm”
and “extensive” affections being preferred to the turbulent and
narrow — together with the desire and love of moral excellence
which is ranked with universal benevolence, the two being
equally worthy and necessarily harmonious. Only in a secondary
sense is approval due to certain “abilities and dispositions
immediately connected with virtuous affections,” as candour,
veracity, fortitude, sense of honour; while in a lower grade still
are placed sciences and arts, along with even bodily skills and
gifts; indeed, the approbation we give to these is not strictly
moral, but is referred to the “sense of decency or dignity,”
which (as well as the sense of honour) is to be distinguished from
the moral sense. Calm self-love Hutcheson regards as morally
indifferent; though he enters into a careful analysis of the
elements of happiness,[33]
in order to show that a true regard for
private interest always coincides with the moral sense and with
benevolence. While thus maintaining Shaftesbury's “harmony”
between public and private good, Hutcheson is still more careful
to establish the strict disinterestedness of benevolent affections.
Shaftesbury had conclusively shown that these were not in the
vulgar sense selfish; but the very stress which he lays on the
pleasure inseparable from their exercise suggests a subtle egoistic
theory which he does not expressly exclude, since it may be said
that this “intrinsic reward” constitutes the real motive of the
benevolent man. To this Hutcheson replies that no doubt the
exquisite delight of the emotion of love is a motive to sustain
and develop it; but this pleasure cannot be directly obtained,
any more than other pleasures, by merely desiring it; it can be
sought only by the indirect method of cultivating and indulging
the disinterested desire for others' good, which is thus obviously
distinct from the desire for the pleasure of benevolence. He
points to the fact that the imminence of death often intensifies
instead of diminishing a man's desire for the welfare of those he
loves, as a crucial experiment proving the disinterestedness of
love; adding, as confirmatory evidence, that the sympathy and
admiration commonly felt for self-sacrifice depends on the belief
that it is something different from refined self-seeking.
It remains to consider how, from the doctrine that affection is
the proper object of approbation, we are to deduce moral rules or
“natural laws” prescribing or prohibiting outward acts. It is
obvious that all actions conducive to the general good will deserve
our highest approbation if done from disinterested benevolence;
but how if they are not so done? In answering this question,
Hutcheson avails himself of the scholastic distinction between
“material” and “formal” goodness. “An action,” he says,
“is materially good when in fact it tends to the interest of the
system, so far as we can judge of its tendency, or to the good of
some part consistent with that of the system, whatever were the
affections of the agent. An action is formally good when it flowed
from good affection in a just proportion.” On the pivot of this
distinction Hutcheson turns round from the point of view of
Shaftesbury to that of later utilitarianism. As regards “material”
goodness of actions, he adopts explicitly and unreservedly the
formula afterwards taken as fundamental by Bentham; holding
that “that action is best which procures the greatest
happiness for the greatest numbers, and the worst which
in a like manner occasions misery.” Accordingly his treatment
of external rights and duties, though decidedly inferior
in methodical clearness and precision, does not differ in principle
from that of Paley or Bentham, except that he lays greater stress
on the immediate conduciveness of actions to the happiness of
individuals, and more often refers in a merely supplementary
or restrictive way to their tendencies in respect of general happiness.
It may be noticed, too, that he still accepts the “social
compact” as the natural mode of constituting government, and
regards the obligations of subjects to civil obedience as normally
dependent on a tacit contract; though he is careful to state that
consent is not absolutely necessary to the just establishment of
beneficent government, nor the source of irrevocable obligation
to a pernicious one.
An important step further in political utilitarianism was
taken by Hume in his Treatise on Human Nature (1739). Hume
concedes that a compact is the natural means of peacefully
instituting a new government, and may therefore
be properly regarded as the ground of allegiance to it at the
outset; but he urges that, when once it is firmly established
the duty of obeying it rests on precisely the same combination of
private and general interests as the duty of keeping promises;
it is therefore absurd to base the former on the latter. Justice,
veracity, fidelity to compacts and to governments, are all
co-ordinate;
they are all “artificial” virtues, due to civilization,
and not belonging to man in his “ruder and more natural”
condition; our approbation of all alike is founded on our perception
of their useful consequences. It is this last position that
constitutes the fundamental difference between Hutcheson's
ethical doctrine and Hume's.[34]
The former, while accepting
utility as the criterion of “material goodness,” had adhered to
Shaftesbury's view that dispositions, not results of action, were
the proper object of moral approval; at the same time, while
giving to benevolence the first place in his account of personal
merit, he had shrunk from the paradox of treating it as the sole
virtue, and had added a rather undefined and unexplained train
of qualities, — veracity, fortitude, activity, industry, sagacity, —
immediately approved in various degrees by the “moral sense”
or the “sense of dignity.” This naturally suggested to a mind
like Hume's, anxious to apply the experimental method to
psychology, the problem of reducing these different elements
of personal merit — or rather our approval of them — to some
common principle. The old theory that referred this approval
entirely to self-love, is, he holds, easy to disprove by “crucial
experiments” on the play of our moral sentiments; rejecting this,
he finds the required explanation in the sympathetic pleasure
that attends our perception of the conduciveness of virtue to the
interests of human beings other than ourselves. He endeavours
to establish this inductively by a survey of the qualities, commonly
praised as virtues, which he finds to be always either
useful or immediately agreeable, either (1) to the virtuous agent
himself or (2) to others. In class (2) he includes, besides the
Benevolence of Shaftesbury and Hutcheson, the useful virtues,
Justice, Veracity and Fidelity to compacts; as well as such
immediately agreeable qualities as politeness, wit, modesty and
even cleanliness. The most original part of his discussion,
however, is concerned with qualities immediately useful to their
possessor. The most cynical man of the world, he says, with
whatever “sullen incredulity” he may repudiate virtue as a
hollow pretence, cannot really refuse his approbation to “discretion,
caution, enterprise, industry, frugality, economy, good
sense, prudence, discernment”; nor again, to “temperance,
sobriety, patience, perseverance, considerateness, secrecy,
order, insinuation, address, presence of mind, quickness of conception,
facility of expression.” It is evident that the merit
of these qualities in our eyes is chiefly due to our perception of
their tendency to serve the person possessed of them; so that
the cynic in praising them is really exhibiting the unselfish
sympathy of which he doubts the existence. Hume admits
the difficulty that arises, especially in the case of the “artificial”
virtues, such as justice, &c., from the undeniable fact that we
praise them and blame their opposites without consciously
reflecting on useful or pernicious consequences; but considers
that this may be explained as an effect of “education and acquired
habits.”[35]
So far the moral faculty has been considered as contemplative
rather than active; and this, indeed, is the point of view from
which Hume mainly regards it. If we ask what actual motive
we have for virtuous conduct, Hume's answer is not quite clear.
On the one hand, he speaks of moral approbation as derived
from “humanity and benevolence,” while expressly recognizing,
after Butler, that there is a strictly disinterested element in our
benevolent impulses (as also in hunger, thirst, love of fame and
other passions). On the other hand, he does not seem to think
that moral sentiment or “taste” can “become a motive to
action,” except as it “gives pleasure or pain, and thereby
constitutes happiness or misery.” It is difficult to make these
views quite consistent; but at any rate Hume emphatically
maintains that “reason is no motive to action,” except so far
as it “directs the impulse received from appetite or inclination”;
and recognizes — in his later treatise at least — no
“obligation”
to virtue, except that of the agent's interest or happiness. He
attempts, however, to show, in a summary way, that all the
duties which his moral theory recommends are also “the true
interest of the individual,” — taking into account the importance
to his happiness of “peaceful reflection on one's own conduct.”
But even if we consider the moral consciousness merely as a
particular kind of pleasurable emotion, there is an obvious
question suggested by Hume's theory, to which he gives no
adequate answer. If the essence of “moral taste” is sympathy
with the pleasure of others, why is not this specific feeling
excited by other things beside virtue that tend to cause such
pleasure? On this point Hume contents himself with the vague
remark that “there are a numerous set of passions and sentiments,
of which thinking rational beings are by the original constitution
of nature the only proper objects.” The truth is, that Hume's
notion of moral approbation was very loose, as is sufficiently
shown by the list of “useful and agreeable” qualities which he
considers worthy of approbation.[36]
It is therefore hardly surprising
that his theory should leave the specific quality of the moral
sentiments a fact still needing to be explained. An original and
ingenious solution of this problem was offered by his contemporary
Adam Smith, in his Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759).
Without denying the actuality or importance of that
sympathetic pleasure in the perceived or inferred effects
of virtues and vices he yet holds that the essential
part of common moral sentiment is constituted rather by a more
direct sympathy with the impulses that prompt to action or
expression. The spontaneous play of this sympathy he treats
as an original and inexplicable fact of human nature, but he
considers that its action is powerfully sustained by the pleasure
that each man finds in the accord of his feelings with another's.
By means of this primary element, compounded in various
ways, Adam Smith explains all the phenomena of the moral
consciousness. He takes first the semi-moral notion of “propriety”
or “decorum,” and endeavours to show inductively that
our application of this notion to the social behaviour of another
is determined by our degree of sympathy with the feeling expressed
in such behaviour. Thus the prescriptions of good taste
in the expression of feeling may be summed up in the principle,
“reduce or raise the expression to that with which spectators
will sympathize.” When the effort to restrain feeling is exhibited
in a degree which surprises as well as pleases, it excites admiration
as a virtue or excellence; such excellences Adam Smith quaintly
calls the “awful and respectable,” contrasting them with the
“amiable virtues” which consist in the opposite effort to
sympathize, when exhibited in a remarkable degree. From the
sentiments of propriety and admiration we proceed to the sense
of merit and demerit. Here a more complex phenomenon
presents itself for analysis; we have to distinguish in the sense
of merit — (1) a direct sympathy with the sentiments of the agent,
and (2) an indirect sympathy with the gratitude of those who
receive the benefit of his actions. In the case of demerit there is
a direct antipathy to the feelings of the misdoer, but the chief
sentiment excited is sympathy with those injured by the misdeed.
The object of this sympathetic resentment, impelling us to
punish, is what we call injustice; and thus the remarkable
stringency of the obligation to act justly is explained, since the
recognition of any action as unjust involves the admission that
it may be forcibly obstructed or punished. Moral judgments,
then, are expressions of the complex normal sympathy of an
impartial spectator with the active impulses that prompt to and
result from actions. In the case of our own conduct what we
call conscience is really sympathy with the feelings of an imaginary
impartial spectator.
Adam Smith gives authority to his moral system by saying
that “moral principles are justly to be regarded as the laws
of the Deity”; but this he never proves. So Hume insists
emphatically on the “reality of moral obligation”; but is
found to mean no more by this than the real existence of the
likes and dislikes that human beings feel for each other's qualities.
The fact is that amid the analysis of feelings aroused by the
sentimentalism of Shaftesbury's school, the fundamental
questions “What is right?” and “Why?” had been allowed
to drop into the background, and the consequent danger to
morality was manifest. The binding force of moral rules becomes
evanescent if we admit, with Hutcheson, that the “sense” of
them may properly vary from man to man as the palate does;
and it seems only another way of putting Hume's doctrine, that
reason is not concerned with the ends of action, to say that the
mere existence of a moral sentiment is in itself no reason for
obeying it. A reaction, in one form or another, against the
tendency to dissolve ethics into psychology was inevitable;
since mankind generally could not be so far absorbed by the
interest of psychological hypothesis as to forget their need of
establishing practical principles. It was obvious, too, that this
reaction might take place in either of the two lines of thought,
which, having been peacefully allied in Clarke and Cumberland,
had become distinctly opposed to each other in Butler and
Hutcheson. It might either fall back on the moral principles
commonly accepted, and, affirming their objective validity,
endeavour to exhibit them as a coherent and complete set of
ultimate ethical truths; or it might take the utility or conduciveness
to pleasure, to which Hume had referred for the
origin of most sentiments, as an ultimate end and standard by
which these sentiments might be judged and corrected. The
former is the line adopted with substantial agreement by Price,
Reid, Stewart and other members of the still existing Intuitional
school; the latter method, with considerably more divergence of
view and treatment, was employed independently and almost
simultaneously by Paley and Bentham in both ethics and politics,
and is at the present time widely maintained under the name
of Utilitarianism.
Price's Review of the Chief Questions and Difficulties of Morals
was published in 1757, two years before Adam Smith's treatise.
In regarding moral ideas as derived from the “intuition
of truth or immediate discernment of the nature of
things by the understanding,” Price revives the general view of
Cudworth and Clarke; but with several specific differences.
Firstly, his conception of “right” and “wrong” as
“single
ideas” incapable of definition or analysis — the notions
“right,”
“fit,” “ought,” “duty,” “obligation,” being coincident or
identical — at least avoids the confusions into which Clarke
and Wollaston had been led by pressing the analogy between
ethical and physical truth. Secondly, the emotional element
of the moral consciousness, on which attention had been concentrated
by Shaftesbury and his followers, though distinctly
recognized as accompanying the intellectual intuition, is carefully
subordinated to it. While right and wrong, in Price's view, are
“real objective qualities” of actions, moral “beauty and
deformity” are subjective ideas; representing feelings which
are partly the necessary effects of the perceptions of right and
wrong in rational beings as such, partly due to an “implanted
sense” or varying emotional susceptibility. Thus, both reason
and sense of instinct co-operate in the impulse to virtuous conduct,
though the rational element is primary and paramount. Price
further follows Butler in distinguishing the perception of merit,
and demerit in agents as another accompaniment of the perception
of right and wrong in actions; the former being, however,
only a peculiar species of the latter, since, to perceive merit in
any one is to perceive that it is right to reward him. It is to be
observed that both Price and Reid are careful to state that the
merit of the agent depends entirely on the intention or “formal
rightness” of his act; a man is not blameworthy for unintended
evil, though he may of course be blamed for any wilful neglect
(cf. Arist., Eth. Nic., iii. 1), which has caused him to be ignorant
of his real duty. When we turn to the subject matter of virtue,
we find that Price, in comparison with More or Clarke, is decidedly
laxer in accepting and stating his ethical first principles; chiefly
owing to the new antithesis to the view of Shaftesbury and
Hutcheson by which his controversial position is complicated.
What Price is specially concerned to show is the existence of
ultimate principles beside the principle of universal benevolence.
Not that he repudiates the obligation either of rational benevolence
or self-love; on the contrary, he takes more pains than
Butler to demonstrate the reasonableness of either principle.
“There is not anything,” he says, “of which we have more
undeniably an intuitive perception, than that it is ‘right to
pursue and promote happiness,’ whether for ourselves or for
others.” Finally, Price, writing after the demonstration by
Shaftesbury and Butler of the actuality of disinterested
impulses in human nature, is bolder and clearer than Cudworth
or Clarke in insisting that right actions are to be chosen because
they are right by virtuous agents as such, even going so far
as to lay down that an act loses its moral worth in proportion
as it is done from natural inclination.
On this latter point Reid, in his Essays on the Active Powers of
the Human Mind (1788), states a conclusion more in harmony
with common sense, only maintaining that “no act
can be morally good in which regard for what is right
has not some influence.” This is partly due to the fact that
Reid builds more distinctly than Price on the foundation laid
by Butler; especially in his acceptance of that duality of governing
principles which we have noticed as a cardinal point in the
latter's doctrine. Reid considers “regard for one's good on the
whole” (Butler's self-love) and “sense of duty” (Butler's
conscience) as two essentially distinct and co-ordinate rational
principles, though naturally often comprehended under the one
term, Reason. The rationality of the former principle he takes
pains to explain and establish; in opposition to Hume's doctrine
that it is no part of the function of reason to determine the ends
which we ought to pursue, or the preference due to one end over
another. He urges that the notion of
“good[37] on the whole” is
one which only a reasoning being can form, involving as it does
abstraction from the objects of all particular desires, and comparison
of past and future with present feelings; and maintains
that it is a contradiction to suppose a rational being to have the
notion of its Good on the Whole without a desire for it, and that
such a desire must naturally regulate all particular appetites
and passions. It cannot reasonably be subordinated even to
the moral faculty; in fact, a man who doubts the coincidence of
the two — which on religious grounds we must believe to be
complete in a morally governed world — is reduced to the “miserable
dilemma whether it is better to be a fool or a knave.”
As regards the moral faculty itself, Reid's statement coincides
in the main with Price's; it is both intellectual and active,
not merely perceiving the “rightness” or
“moral obligation”
of actions (which Reid conceives as a simple unanalysable
relation between act and agent), but also impelling the will to
the performance of what is seen to be right. Both thinkers hold
that this perception of right and wrong in actions is accompanied
by a perception of merit and demerit in agents, and also by a
specific emotion; but whereas Price conceives this emotion
chiefly as pleasure or pain, analogous to that produced in the mind
by physical beauty or deformity, Reid regards it chiefly as
benevolent affection, esteem and sympathy (or their opposites),
for the virtuous (or vicious) agent. This “pleasurable good-will,”
when the moral judgment relates to a man's own actions, becomes
“the testimony of a good conscience — the purest and most
valuable of all human enjoyments.” Reid is careful to observe
that this moral faculty is not “innate” except in germ; it
stands in need of “education, training, exercise (for which
society is indispensable), and habit,” in order to the attainment
of moral truth. He does not with Price object to its
being called the “moral sense,” provided we understand by
this a source not merely of feelings or notions, but of “ultimate
truths.” Here he omits to notice the important question whether
the premises of moral reasoning are universal or individual
judgments; as to which the use of the term “sense” seems
rather to suggest the second alternative. Indeed, he seems
himself quite undecided on this question; since, though he
generally represents ethical method as deductive, he also speaks
of the “original judgment that this action is right and that
wrong.”
The truth is that the construction of a scientific method of
ethics is a matter of little practical moment to Reid. Thus,
though he offers a list of first principles, by deduction from which
these common opinions may be confirmed, he does not present
it with any claim to completeness. Besides maxims relating to
virtue in general, — such as (1) that there is a right and wrong in
conduct, but (2) only in voluntary conduct, and that we ought
(3) to take pains to learn our duty, and (4) fortify ourselves
against temptations to deviate from it — Reid states five fundamental
axioms. The first of these is merely the principle of
rational self-love, “that we ought to prefer a greater to a lesser
good, though more distinct, and a less evil to a greater,” — the
mention of which seems rather inconsistent with Reid's distinct
separation of the “moral faculty” from “self-love.”
The third
is merely the general rule of benevolence stated in the somewhat
vague Stoical formula, that “no one is born for himself only.”
The fourth, again, is the merely formal principle that “right and
wrong must be the same to all in all circumstances,” which
belongs equally to all systems of objective morality; while the
fifth prescribes the religious duty of “veneration or submission
to God.” Thus, the only principle which ever appears to offer
definite guidance as to social duty is the second, “that so far
as the intention of nature appears in the constitution of man,
we ought to act according to that intention,” the
vagueness[38]
of which is obvious. (For Reid's views on moral freedom see
A. Bain, Mental Science, pp. 422, seq.)
A similar incompleteness in the statement of moral principles
is found if we turn to Reid's disciple, Dugald Stewart, whose
Philosophy of the Active and Moral Powers of Man
(1828) contains the general view of Butler and Reid,
and to some extent that of Price, — expounded with
more fulness and precision, but without important original
additions or modifications. Stewart lays stress on the obligation
of justice as distinct from benevolence; but his definition of
justice represents it as essentially impartiality, — a virtue which
(as was just now said of Reid's fourth principle) must equally
find a place in the utilitarian or any other system that lays
down universally applicable rules of morality. Afterwards,
however, Stewart distinguishes “integrity or honesty” as a
branch of justice concerned with the rights of other men, which
form the subject of “natural jurisprudence.” In this department
he lays down the moral axiom “that the labourer is entitled
to the fruit of his own labour” as the principle on which complete
rights of property are founded; maintaining that occupancy
alone would only confer a transient right of possession during
use. The only other principles which he discusses are veracity
and fidelity to promises, gratitude being treated as a natural
instinct prompting to a particular kind of just actions.
It will be seen that neither Reid nor Stewart offers more than
a very meagre and tentative contribution to that ethical science
by which, as they maintain, the received rules of
morality may be rationally deduced from self-evident
first principles. A more ambitious attempt in the same direction
was made by Whewell in his Elements of Morality (1846).
Whewell's general moral view differs from that of his Scottish
predecessors chiefly in a point where we may trace the influence
of Kant — viz. in his rejection of self-love as an independent
rational and governing principle, and his consequent refusal
to admit happiness, apart from duty, as a reasonable end for
the individual. The moral reason, thus left in sole supremacy,
is represented as enunciating five ultimate principles, — those of
benevolence, justice, truth, purity and order. With a little
straining these are made to correspond to five chief divisions of
Jus, — personal security (benevolence being opposed to the
ill-will that commonly causes personal injuries), property,
contract, marriage and government; while the first, second
and fourth, again, regulate respectively the three chief classes
of human motives, affections, mental desires and appetites.
Thus the list, with the addition of two general principles,
“earnestness”
and “moral purpose,” has a certain air of systematic
completeness. When, however, we look closer, we find that the
principle of order, or obedience to government, is not seriously
intended to imply the political absolutism which it seems to
express, and which English common sense emphatically repudiates;
while the formula of justice is given in the tautological
or perfectly indefinite proposition “that every man ought to
have his own.” Whewell, indeed, explains that this latter
formula must be practically interpreted by positive law, though
he inconsistently speaks as if it supplied a standard for judging
laws to be right or wrong. The principle of purity, again, “that
the lower parts of our nature ought to be subject to the higher,”
merely particularizes that supremacy of reason over non-rational
impulses which is involved in the very notion of reasoned
morality. Thus, in short, if we ask for a clear and definite
fundamental intuition, distinct from regard for happiness, we
find really nothing in Whewell's doctrine except the single rule
of veracity (including fidelity to promises); and even of this
the axiomatic character becomes evanescent on closer inspection,
since it is not maintained that the rule is practically unqualified,
but only that it is practically undesirable to formulate its
qualifications.
On the whole, it must be admitted that the doctrine of the intuitional
school of the 18th and 19th centuries has been developed
Intuitional and
utilitarian schools.
|
with less care and consistency than might have been
expected, in its statement of the fundamental axioms
or intuitively known premises of moral reasoning.
And if the controversy which this school has conducted
with utilitarianism had turned principally on the determination
of the matter of duty, there can be little doubt that it would
have been forced into more serious and systematic effort to define
precisely and completely the principles and method on which
we are to reason deductively to particular rules of
conduct.[39]
But in fact the difference between intuitionists and utilitarians
as to the method of determining the particulars of the moral
code was complicated with a more fundamental disagreement
as to the very meaning of “moral obligation.” This Paley and
Bentham (after Locke) interpreted as merely the effect on the
will of the pleasures or pains attached to the observance or violation
of moral rules, combining with this the doctrine of Hutcheson
that “general good” or “happiness” is the final end and
standard of these rules; while they eliminated all vagueness
from the notion of general happiness by defining it to consist
in “excess of pleasure over pain” — pleasures and pains being
regarded as “differing in nothing but continuance or intensity.”
The utilitarian system gained an attractive air of simplicity by
thus using a single perfectly clear notion — pleasure and its
negative quantity pain — to answer both the fundamental
questions of mortals, “What is right?” and “Why should I
do it?” But since there is no logical connexion between
the answers that have thus come to be considered as one
doctrine, this apparent unity and simplicity has really hidden
fundamental disagreements, and caused no little confusion in
ethical debate.
In Paley 's Principles of Moral and Political
Philosophy[40]
(1785), the link between general pleasure (the standard) and
private pleasure or pain (the motive) is supplied by
the conception of divine legislation. To be “obliged”
is to be “urged by a violent motive resulting from the command
of another”; in the case of moral obligation, the command
proceeds from God, and the motive lies in the expectation of
being rewarded and punished after this life. The commands of
God are to be ascertained “from scripture and the light of
nature combined.” Paley, however, holds that scripture is
given less to teach morality than to illustrate it by example
and enforce it by new sanctions and greater certainty, and that
the light of nature makes it clear that God wills the happiness
of his creatures. Hence, his method in deciding moral questions
is chiefly that of estimating the tendency of actions to promote
or diminish the general happiness. To meet the obvious objections
to this method, based on the immediate happiness caused by
admitted crimes (such as “knocking a rich villain on the head”),
he lays stress on the necessity of general rules in any kind of
legislation;[41]
while, by urging the importance of forming and
maintaining good habits, he partly evades the difficulty of
calculating the consequences of particular actions. In this way
the utilitarian method is freed from the subversive tendencies
which Butler and others had discerned in it; as used by Paley,
it merely explains the current moral and jural distinctions,
exhibits the obvious basis of expediency which supports most
of the received rules of law and morality and furnishes a simple
solution, in harmony with common sense, of some perplexing
casuistical questions. Thus (e.g.) “natural rights” become
rights of which the general observance would be useful apart
from the institution of civil government; as distinguished from
the no less binding “adventitious rights,” the utility of which
depends upon this institution. Private property is in this
sense “natural” from its obvious advantages in encouraging
labour, skill, preservative care; though actual rights of property
depend on the general utility of conforming to the law of the land
by which they are determined. We observe, however, that
Paley's method is often mixed with reasonings that belong to an
alien and older manner of thought; as when he supports the
claim of the poor to charity by referring to the intention of
mankind “when they agreed to a separation of the common
fund,” or when he infers that monogamy is a part of the divine
design from the equal numbers of males and females born. In
other cases his statement of utilitarian considerations is fragmentary
and unmethodical, and tends to degenerate into loose
exhortation on rather trite topics.
In unity, consistency and thoroughness of method, Bentham's
utilitarianism has a decided superiority over Paley's. He
considers actions solely in respect of their pleasurable
and painful consequences, expected or actual; and he
recognizes the need of making a systematic register
of these consequences, free from the influences of
common moral opinion, as expressed in the “eulogistic” and
“dyslogistic” terms in ordinary use. Further, the effects
that he estimates are all of a definite, palpable, empirically
ascertainable quality; they are such pleasures and pains as
most men feel and all can observe, so that all his political or
moral inferences lie open at every point to the test of practical
experience. Every one, it would seem, can tell what value he
sets on the pleasures of alimentation, sex, the senses generally,
wealth, power, curiosity, sympathy, antipathy (malevolence),
the goodwill of individuals or of society at large, and on the
corresponding pains, as well as the pains of labour and organic
disorders;[42]
and can guess the rate at which they are valued
by others; therefore if it be once granted that all actions are
determined by pleasures and pains, and are to be tried by the
same standard, the art of legislation and private conduct is
apparently placed on an empirical basis. Bentham, no doubt,
seems to go beyond the limits of experience proper in recognizing
“religious” pains and pleasures in his fourfold division of
sanctions, side by side with the “physical,”
“political,” and
“moral” or “social”; but the truth is that he does
not seriously
take account of them, except in so far as religious hopes and
fears are motives actually operating, which therefore admit
of being observed and measured as much as any other motives.
He does not himself use the will of an omnipotent and benevolent
being as a means of logically connecting individual and general
happiness. He thus undoubtedly simplifies his system, and
avoids the doubtful inferences from nature and Scripture in
which Paley's position is involved; but this gain is dearly
purchased. For in answer to the question that immediately
arises, How then are the sanctions of the moral rules which it
will most conduce to the general happiness for men to observe,
shown to be always adequate in the case of all the individuals
whose observance is required? he is obliged to admit that
“the only interests which a man is at all times sure to find
adequate motives for consulting are his own.” Indeed, in many
parts of his work, in the department of legislative and constitutional
theory, it is rather assumed that the interests of some men
will continually conflict with those of their fellows, unless we
alter the balance of prudential calculation by a readjustment of
penalties. But on this assumption a system of private conduct
on utilitarian principles cannot be constructed until legislative
and constitutional reform has been perfected. And, in fact,
“private ethics,” as conceived by Bentham, does not exactly
expound such a system; but rather exhibits the coincidence,
so far as it extends, between private and general happiness, in
that part of each man's conduct that lies beyond the range of
useful legislation. It was not his place, as a practical philanthropist,
to dwell on the defects in this
coincidence;[43] and since
what men generally expect from a moralist is a completely
reasoned account of what they ought to do, it is not surprising
that some of Bentham's disciples should have either ignored
or endeavoured to supply the gap in his system. One section
of the school even maintained it to be a cardinal doctrine of
utilitarianism that a man always gains his own greatest happiness
by promoting that of others; another section, represented
by John Austin, apparently returned to Paley's position, and
treated utilitarian morality[44]
as a code of divine legislation;
others, with Grote, are content to abate the severity of the claims
made by “general happiness” on the individual, and to consider
utilitarian duty as practically limited by reciprocity; while
on the opposite side an unqualified subordination of private
to general happiness was advocated by J. S. Mill, who did more
than any other member of the school to spread and popularize
utilitarianism in ethics and politics.
The fact is that there are several different ways in which a
utilitarian system of morality may be used, without deciding
Varieties of
utilitarian
doctrine.
|
whether the sanctions attached to it are always
adequate, (1) It may be presented as practical
guidance to all who choose “general good” as their
ultimate end, whether they do so on religious grounds,
or through the predominance in their minds of impartial sympathy,
or because their conscience acts in harmony with utilitarian
principles, or for any combination of these or any other reasons;
or (2) it may be offered as a code to be obeyed not absolutely,
but only so far as the coincidence of private and general interest
may in any case be judged to extend; or again (3) it may be
proposed as a standard by which men may reasonably agree
to praise and blame the conduct of others, even though they
may not always think fit to act on it. We may regard morality
as a kind of supplementary legislation, supported by public
opinion, which we may expect the public, when duly enlightened,
to frame in accordance with the public interest. Still, even from
this point of view, which is that of the legislator or social reformer
rather than the moral philosopher, our code of duty must be
greatly influenced by our estimate of the degrees in which men
are normally influenced by self-regard (in its ordinary sense of
regard for interests not sympathetic) and by sympathy or benevolence,
and of the range within which sympathy may be expected
to be generally effective. Thus, for example, the moral standard
for which a utilitarian will reasonably endeavour to gain the
support of public opinion must be essentially different in quality,
according as he holds with Bentham that nothing but self-regard
will “serve for diet,” though “for a dessert benevolence
is a very
valuable addition”; or with J. S. Mill that disinterested
public spirit should be the prominent motive in the
performance of all socially useful work, and that even hygienic
precepts should be inculcated, not chiefly on grounds of prudence,
but because “by squandering our health we disable ourselves
from rendering services to our fellow-creatures.”
Not less important is the interval that separates Bentham's
polemical attitude towards the moral sense from Mill's conciliatory
position, that “the mind is not in a state conformable
to utility unless it loves virtue as a thing desirable in itself.”
Such love of virtue Mill holds to be in a sense natural, though
not an ultimate and inexplicable fact of human nature; it is
to be explained by the “Law of Association” of feelings and
ideas, through which objects originally desired as a means to
some further end come to be directly pleasant or desirable. Thus,
the miser first sought money as a means to comfort, but ends
by sacrificing comfort to money; and similarly though the
first promptings to justice (or any other virtue) spring from the
non-moral pleasures gained or pains avoided by it, through the
link formed by repeated virtuous acts the performance of them
ultimately comes to have that immediate satisfaction attached
to it which we distinguished as moral. Indeed, the acquired
tendency to virtuous conduct may become so strong that the
habit of willing it may continue, “even when the reward which
the virtuous man receives from the consciousness of well-doing
is anything but an equivalent for the sufferings he undergoes
or the wishes he may have to renounce.” It is thus that the
before-mentioned self-sacrifice of the moral hero is conceived
by Mill to be possible and actual. The moral sentiments, on
this view, are not phases of self-love as Hobbes held; nor can
they be directly identified with sympathy, either in Hume's
way or in Adam Smith's; in fact, though apparently simple
they are really derived in a complex manner from self-love
and sympathy combined with more primitive impulses. Justice
(e.g.) is regarded by Mill as essentially resentment moralized
by enlarged sympathy and intelligent self-interest; what we
mean by injustice is harm done to an assignable individual
by a breach of some rule for which we desire the violator to be
punished, for the sake both of the person injured and of society
at large, including ourselves. As regards moral sentiments
generally, the view suggested by Mill is more definitely given
by the chief living representative of the associationist school,
Alexander Bain; by whom the distinctive characteristics of
conscience are traced to “education under government or
authority,” though prudence, disinterested sympathy and other
emotions combine to swell the mass of feeling vaguely denoted
by the term moral. The combination of antecedents is somewhat
differently given by different writers; but all agree in
representing the conscience of any individual as naturally
correlated to the interests of the community of which he is a
member, and thus a natural ally in enforcing utilitarian rules,
or even a valuable guide when utilitarian calculations are difficult
and uncertain.
This substitution of hypothetical history for direct analysis
of the moral sense is really older than the utilitarianism of Paley
Association
and evolution.
|
and Bentham, which it has so profoundly modified.
The effects of association in modifying mental phenomena
were noticed by Locke, and made a cardinal
point in the metaphysic of Hume; who also referred
to the principle slightly in his account of justice and other
“artificial” virtues. Some years earlier,
Gay,[45] admitting
Hutcheson's proof of the actual disinterestedness of moral and
benevolent impulses, had maintained that these (like the desires
of knowledge or fame, the delight of reading, hunting and
planting, &c.) were derived from self-love by “the power of
association.” But a thorough and systematic application of
the principle to ethical psychology is first found in Hartley's
Observations on Man (1748). Hartley, too, was the first to
conceive association as producing, instead of mere cohesion of
mental phenomena, a quasi-chemical combination of these into
a compound apparently different from its elements. He shows
elaborately how the pleasures and pains of “imagination,
ambition, self-interest, sympathy, theopathy, and the moral
sense” are developed out of the elementary pleasures and pains
of sensation; by the coalescence into really complex but
apparently single ideas of the “miniatures” or faint feelings
which the repetition of sensations contemporaneously or in
immediate succession tends to produce in cohering groups.
His theory assumes the correspondence of mind and body, and
is applied pari passu to the formation of ideas from sensations,
and of “compound vibratiuncules in the medullary substance”
from the original vibrations that arise in the organ of
sense.[46]
The same general view was afterwards developed with much
vigour and clearness on the psychical side alone by James Mill
in his Analysis of the Human Mind. The whole theory has been
persistently controverted by writers of the intuitional school,
who (unlike Hartley) have usually thought that this derivation
of moral sentiments from more primitive feelings would be
detrimental to the authority of the former. The chief argument
against this theory has been based on the early period at which
these sentiments are manifested by children, which hardly
allows time for association to produce the effects ascribed to it.
This argument has been met in recent times by the application
to mind of the physiological theory of heredity, according to
which changes produced in the mind (brain) of a parent, by
association of ideas or otherwise, tend to be inherited by his
offspring; so that the development of the moral sense or any
other faculty or susceptibility of existing man may be hypothetically
carried back into the prehistoric life of the human
race, without any change in the manner of derivation supposed.
At present, however, the theory of heredity is usually held in
conjunction with Darwin's theory of natural selection; according
to which different kinds of living things in the course of a
series of generations come gradually to be endowed with organs,
faculties and habits tending to the preservation of the individual
or species under the conditions of life in which it is placed.
Thus we have a new zoological factor in the history of the moral
sentiments; which, though in no way opposed to the older
psychological theory of their formation through coalescence of
more primitive feelings, must yet be conceived as controlling
and modifying the effects of the law of association by preventing
the formation of sentiments other than those tending to the
preservation of human life. The influence of the Darwinian
theory, moreover, has extended from historical psychology to
ethics, tending to substitute “preservation of the race under
its conditions of existence” for “happiness” as the ultimate
end and standard of virtue.
Before concluding this sketch of the development of English
ethical thought from Hobbes to the thinkers of the 19th century,
it will be well to notice briefly the views held by different
moralists on the question of free-will, — so far, that is, as
they have been put forward as ethically important. We must
first distinguish three meanings in which “freedom” is attributed
to the will or “inner self” of a human being, viz. (1) the general
power of choosing among different alternatives of action without
a motive, or against the resultant force of conflicting motives;
(2) the power of choice between the promptings of reason and
those of appetites (or other non-rational impulses) when the latter
conflict with reason; (3) merely the quality of acting rationally
in spite of conflicting impulses, however strong, the non posse
peccare of the medieval theologians.[47]
It is obvious that “freedom”
in this third sense is in no way incompatible with complete
determination; and, indeed, is rather an ideal state after which
the moral agent ought to aspire than a property which the human
will can be said to possess. In the first sense, again, as distinct
from the second, the assertion of “freedom” has no ethical
significance, except in so far as it introduces a general uncertainty
into all our inferences respecting human conduct. Even in the
second sense it hardly seems that the freedom of a man's will
can be an element to be considered in examining what it is right
or best for him to do (though of course the clearest convictions
of duty will be fruitless if a man has not sufficient self-control
to enable him to act on them); it is rather when we ask whether
it is just to punish him for wrong-doing that it seems important to
know whether he could have done otherwise. But in spite of
the strong interest taken in the theological aspect of this question
by the Protestant divines of the 17th century, it does not appear
that English moralists from Hobbes to Hume laid any stress on
the relation of free-will either to duty generally or to justice in
particular. Neither the doctrine of Hobbes, that deliberation
is a mere alternation of competing desires, voluntary action
immediately following the “last appetite,” nor the hardly less
decided Determinism of Locke, who held that the will is always
moved by the greatest present uneasiness, appeared to either
author to require any reconciliation with the belief in human
responsibility. Even in Clarke's system, where Indeterminism
is no doubt a cardinal notion, its importance is metaphysical
rather than ethical; Clarke's view being that the apparently
arbitrary particularity in the constitution of the cosmos is really
only explicable by reference to creative free-will. In the ethical
discussion of Shaftesbury and sentimental moralists generally
this question drops naturally out of sight; and the cautious
Butler tries to exclude its perplexities as far as possible from the
philosophy of practice. But since the reaction, led by Price and
Reid, against the manner of philosophizing that had culminated
in Hume, free-will has been generally maintained by the
intuitional school to be an essential point of ethics; and, in fact,
it is naturally connected with the judgment of good and ill
desert which these writers give as an essential element in their
analysis of the moral consciousness. An irresistible motive, it is
forcibly said, palliates or takes away guilt; no one can blame
himself for yielding to necessity, and no one can properly be
punished for what he could not have prevented. In answer to
this argument some necessarians have admitted that punishment
can be legitimate only if it be beneficial to the person punished;
others, again, have held that the lawful use of force is to restrain
lawless force; but most of those who reject free-will defend
punishment on the ground of its utility in deterring others from
crime, as well as in correcting or restraining the criminal on
whom it falls.
In the preceding sketch we have traced the course of English
ethical speculation without bringing it into relation with
French influence
on English ethics.
|
contemporary European thought on the same subject.
And in fact almost all the systems described, from
Hobbes downward, have been of essentially native
growth, showing hardly any traces of foreign influence.
We may observe that ethics is the only department in which this
result appears. The physics and psychology of Descartes were
much studied in England, and his metaphysical system was
certainly the most important antecedent of Locke's; but
Descartes hardly touched ethics proper. So again the controversy
that Clarke conducted with Spinoza, and afterwards
with Leibnitz, was entirely confined to the metaphysical region.
Catholic France was a school for Englishmen in many subjects,
but not in morality; the great struggle between Jansenists and
Jesuits had a very remote interest for them. It was not till near
the close of the 18th century that the impress of the French
revolutionary philosophy began to manifest itself in England;
and even then its influence was mostly political rather than
ethical. It is striking to observe how even in the case of writers
such as Godwin, who were most powerfully affected by the
French political movement, the moral basis, on which the new
social order of rational and equal freedom is constructed, is
almost entirely of native origin; even when the tone and spirit
are French, the forms of thought and manner of reasoning are
still purely English. In the derivation of Benthamism alone —
which, it may be observed, first becomes widely known in the
French paraphrase of Dumont — an important element is supplied
by the works of a French writer, Helvetius; as
Bentham himself was fully conscious. It was from
Helvetius that he learnt that, men being universally and solely
governed by self-love, the so-called moral judgments are really
the common judgments of any society as to its common interests;
that it is therefore futile on the one hand to propose any standard
of virtue, except that of conduciveness to general happiness,
and on the other hand useless merely to lecture men on duty and
scold them for vice; that the moralist's proper function is rather
to exhibit the coincidence of virtue with private happiness;
that, accordingly, though nature has bound men's interests
together in many ways, and education by developing sympathy
and the habit of mutual help may much extend the connexion,
still the most effective moralist is the legislator, who by acting
on self-love through legal sanctions may mould human conduct
as he chooses. These few simple doctrines give the ground plan
of Bentham's indefatigable and lifelong labours.
So again, in the modified Benthamism which the persuasive
exposition of J. S. Mill afterwards made popular in England, the
influence of Auguste Comte (Philosophie positive, 1820-1842,
and Système de politique positive, 1851-1854) appears as the chief
modifying element. This influence, so far as it has affected
moral as distinct from political speculation, has been exercised
primarily through the general conception of human
progress; which, in Comte's view, consists in the ever-growing
preponderance of the distinctively human attributes over
the purely animal, social feelings being ranked highest among
human attributes, and highest of all the most universalized
phase of human affection, the devotion to humanity as a whole.
Accordingly, it is the development of benevolence in man,
and of the habit of “living for others,” which Comte takes as the
ultimate aim and standard of practice, rather than the mere
increase of happiness. He holds, indeed, that the two are
inseparable, and that the more altruistic any man's sentiments and
habits of action can be made, the greater will be the happiness
enjoyed by himself as well as by others. But he does not seriously
trouble himself to argue with egoism, or to weigh carefully the
amount of happiness that might be generally attained by the
satisfaction of egoistic propensities duly regulated; a supreme
unquestioning self-devotion, in which all personal calculations
are suppressed, is an essential feature of his moral ideal. Such a
view is almost diametrically opposed to Bentham's conception of
normal human existence; the newer utilitarianism of Mill
represents an endeavour to find the right middle path between
the two extremes.
It is to be observed that, in Comte's view, devotion to humanity
is the principle not merely of morality, but of religion; i.e. it
should not merely be practically predominant, but should be
manifested and sustained by regular and partly symbolical
forms of expression, private and public. This side of Comte's
system, however, and the details of his ideal reconstruction
of society, in which this religion plays an important part, have
had but little influence either in England or elsewhere. It is
more important to notice the general effect of his philosophy on
the method of determining the particulars of morality as well as
of law (as it ought to be). In the utilitarianism of Paley and
Bentham the proper rules of conduct, moral and legal, are
determined by comparing the imaginary consequences of
different modes of regulation on men and women, conceived as
specimens of a substantially uniform and unchanging type. It is
true that Bentham expressly recognizes the varying influences
of climate, race, religion, government, as considerations which
it is important for the legislator to take into account; but his
own work of social construction was almost entirely independent
of such considerations, and his school generally appear to have
been convinced of their competence to solve all important ethical
and political questions for human beings of all ages and countries,
without regard to their specific differences. But in the Comtian
conception of social science, of which ethics and politics are the
practical application, the knowledge of the laws of the evolution
of society is of fundamental and continually increasing importance;
humanity is regarded as having passed through a series of
stages, in each of which a somewhat different set of laws and
institutions, customs and habits, is normal and appropriate.
Thus present man is a being that can only be understood through
a knowledge of his past history; and any effort to construct
for him a moral and political ideal, by a purely abstract and unhistorical
method, must necessarily be futile; whatever modifications
may at any time be desirable in positive law and morality
can only be determined by the aid of “social dynamics.” This
view extends far beyond the limits of Comte's special school or
sect, and has been widely accepted.
When we turn from French philosophy to German, we find
the influence of the latter on English ethical thought almost
German influence
on English ethics.
|
insignificant until a very recent period. In the 17th
century, indeed, the treatise of Pufendorf on the Law of
Nature, in which the general view of Grotius was restated
with modifications, partly designed to effect a
compromise with the doctrine of Hobbes, seems to have been
a good deal read at Oxford and elsewhere. Locke includes it
among the books necessary to the complete education of a gentleman.
But the subsequent development of the theory of conduct
in Germany dropped almost entirely out of the cognizance of
Englishmen; even the long dominant system of Wolff (d. 1754)
was hardly known. Nor had Kant any serious influence in
England until the second quarter of the 19th century. We find,
however, distinct traces of Kantian influence in Whewell and
other writers of the intuitional school, and at a later date it
became so strong that its importance on subsequent ethical
thought can scarcely be over-estimated.
The English moralist with whom Kant has most affinity is
Price; in fact, Kantism, in the ethical thought of modern
Europe, holds a place somewhat analogous to that
formerly occupied by the teaching of Price and Reid
among English moralists. Kant, like Price and Reid, holds that
man as a rational being is unconditionally bound to conform to a
certain rule of right, or “categorical imperative” of reason.
Like Price he holds that an action is not good unless done from
a good motive, and that this motive must be essentially different
from natural inclination of any kind; duty, to be duty, must be
done for duty's sake; and he argues, with more subtlety than
Price or Reid, that though a virtuous act is no doubt pleasant
to the virtuous agent, and any violation of duty painful, this
moral pleasure (or pain) cannot strictly be the motive to the act,
because it follows instead of preceding the recognition of our
obligation to do it.[48]
With Price, again, he holds that lightness
of intention and motive is not only an indispensable condition
or element of the rightness of an action, but actually the sole
determinant of its moral worth; but with more philosophical
consistency he draws the inference — of which the English
moralist does not seem to have dreamt — that there can be no
separate rational principles for determining the “material”
rightness of conduct, as distinct from its “formal” rightness;
and therefore that all rules of duty, so far as universally binding,
must admit of being exhibited as applications of the one general
principle that duty ought to be done for duty's sake. This
deduction is the most original part of Kant's doctrine.
The dictates of reason, he points out, must necessarily
be addressed to all rational beings as such; hence, my
intention cannot be right unless I am prepared to will
the principle on which I act to be a universal law. He considers
that this fundamental rule or imperative “act on a maxim which
thou canst will to be law universal” supplies a sufficient
criterion for determining particular duties in all cases. The rule
excludes wrong conduct with two degrees of stringency. Some
offences, such as making promises with the intention of breaking
them, we cannot even conceive universalized; as soon as every
one broke promises no one would care to have promises made to
him. Other maxims, such as that of leaving persons in distress
to shift for themselves, we can easily conceive to be universal
laws, but we cannot without contradiction will them to be such;
for when we are ourselves in distress we cannot help desiring that
others should help us.
Another important peculiarity of Kant's doctrine is his
development of the connexion between duty and free-will.
He holds that it is through our moral consciousness that we
know that we are free; in the cognition that I ought to do
what is right because it is right and not because I like it, it is
implied that this purely rational volition is possible; that my
action can be determined, not “mechanically,” through the
necessary operation of the natural stimuli of pleasurable and
painful feelings, but in accordance with the laws of my true,
reasonable self. The realization of reason, or of human wills
so far as rational, thus presents itself as the absolute end of duty;
and we get, as a new form of the fundamental practical rule,
“act so as to treat humanity, in thyself or any other, as an end
always, and never as a means only.” We may observe, too,
that the notion of freedom connects ethics with jurisprudence
in a simple and striking manner. The fundamental aim of
jurisprudence is to realize external freedom by removing the
hindrances imposed on each one's free action through the
interferences of other wills. Ethics shows how to realize internal
freedom by resolutely pursuing rational ends in opposition to
those of natural inclination. If we ask what precisely are the
ends of reason, Kant's proposition that “all rational beings as
such are ends in themselves for every rational being” hardly
gives a clear answer. It might be interpreted to mean that
the result to be practically sought is simply the development of
the rationality of all rational beings — such as men — whom we
find to be as yet imperfectly rational. But this is not Kant's
view. He holds, indeed, that each man should aim at making
himself the most perfect possible instrument of reason; but he
expressly denies that the perfection of others can be similarly
prescribed as an end to each. It is, he says, “a contradiction to
regard myself as in duty bound to promote the perfection of
another, . . . a contradiction to make it a duty for me to do
something for another which no other but himself can do.”
In what practical sense, then, am I to make other rational beings
my ends? Kant's answer is that what each is to aim at in the
case of others is not Perfection, but Happiness, i.e. to help them
to attain those purely subjective ends that are determined for
each not by reason, but by natural inclination. He explains also
that to seek one's own happiness cannot be prescribed as a duty,
because it is an end to which every man is inevitably impelled
by natural inclination: but that just because each inevitably
desires his own happiness, and therefore desires that others
should assist him in time of need, he is bound to make the
happiness of others his ethical end, since he cannot morally
demand aid from others, without accepting the obligation of
aiding them in like case. The exclusion of private happiness
from the ends at which it is a duty to aim contrasts strikingly
with the view of Butler and Reid, that man, as a rational being,
is under a “manifest obligation” to seek his own interest. The
difference, however, is not really so great as it seems; since in
another part of his system Kant fully recognizes the reasonableness
of the individual's regard for his own happiness. Though
duty, in his view, excludes regard for private happiness, the
summum bonum is not duty alone, but happiness combined with
moral worth; the demand for happiness as the reward of duty
is so essentially reasonable that we must postulate a universal
connexion between the two as the order of the universe; indeed,
the practical necessity of this postulate is the only adequate
rational ground that we have for believing in the existence
of God.
Before the ethics of Kant had begun to be seriously studied
in England, the rapid and remarkable development of metaphysical
view and method of which the three chief
stages are represented by Fichte, Schelling and Hegel
respectively had already taken place; and the system of the
latter was occupying the most prominent position in the philosophical
thought of Germany.[49]
Hegel's ethical doctrine (expounded
chiefly in his Philosophie des Rechts, 1821) shows a
close affinity, and also a striking contrast, to Kant's. He holds,
with Kant, that duty or good conduct consists in the conscious
realization of the free reasonable will, which is essentially the
same in all rational beings. But in Kant's view the universal
content of this will is only given in the formal condition of “only
acting as one can desire all to act,” to be subjectively applied
by each rational agent to his own volition; whereas Hegel
conceives the universal will as objectively presented to each man
in the laws, institutions and customary morality of the community
of which he is a member. Thus, in his view, not merely
natural inclinations towards pleasures, or the desires for selfish
happiness, require to be morally resisted; but even the prompting
of the individual's conscience, the impulse to do what seems
to him right, if it comes into conflict with the common sense of
his community. It is true that Hegel regards the conscious
effort to realize one's own conception of good as a higher stage
of moral development than the mere conformity to the jural
rules establishing property, maintaining contract and allotting
punishment to crime, in which the universal will is first expressed;
since in such conformity this will is only accomplished accidentally
by the outward concurrence of individual wills, and is
not essentially realized in any of them. He holds, however,
that this conscientious effort is self-deceived and futile, is even
the very root of moral evil, except it attains its realization in
harmony with the objective social relations in which the individual
finds himself placed. Of these relations' the first grade is
constituted by the family, the second by civil society, and the third
by the state, the organization of which is the highest manifestation
of universal reason in the sphere of practice.
Hegelianism appears as a distinct element in modern English
ethical thought; but the direct influence of Hegel's system is
perhaps less important than that indirectly exercised through
the powerful stimulus which it has given to the study of the
historical development of human thought and human society.
According to Hegel, the essence of the universe is a process of
thought from the abstract to the concrete; and a right understanding
of this process gives the key for interpreting the
evolution in time of European philosophy. So again, in his view,
the history of mankind is a history of the necessary development
of the free spirit through the different forms of political organization:
the first being that of the Oriental monarchy, in which
freedom belongs to the monarch only; the second, that of the
Graeco-Roman republics, in which a select body of free citizens
is sustained on a basis of slavery; while finally in the modern
societies, sprung from the Teutonic invasion of the decaying
Roman empire, freedom is recognized as the natural right of
all members of the community. The effect of the lectures
(posthumously edited) in which Hegel's “Philosophy of History”
and “History of Philosophy” were expounded, has extended far
beyond the limits of his special school; indeed, the predominance
of the historical method in all departments of the theory
of practice is not a little due to their influence.
(Henry Sidgwick; X.)
D. Ethics since 1879. — Ethical controversies, like most other
speculative disputes, have, during the latter part of the 19th
and the beginning of the 20th century, centred round Darwinian
theories. The chief characteristic of English moral philosophy
in its previous history has been its comparative isolation from
great movements, sometimes contemporary movements, of
philosophical or scientific thought. Ethics in England no less
than on the continent of Europe suffered until the time of Bacon
from the excessive domination of theological dogma and the
traditional scholastic and Aristotelian philosophy. But the
moral philosophy of the 18th century, freed from scholastic
trammels, was a genuine native product, arising out of the
real problem of conduct and reaching its conclusions, at least
ostensibly, by an analysis of, and an appeal to, the facts of
conduct and the nature of morality. Even at the beginning of
the 19th century, when the main interest of writers who belonged
to the Utilitarian school was mainly political, the influence of
political theories upon contemporary moral philosophy was
upon the whole an influence of which the moral philosophers
themselves were unconscious; and from the nature of things
moral and political philosophy have a tendency to become one
and the same inquiry. Mill, it is true, and Comte both encouraged
the idea that society and conduct alike were susceptible of
strictly scientific investigation. But the attempt not only to treat
ethics scientifically, but actually to subordinate the principles
of conduct to the principles of existing biological science or
group of sciences biological in character, was reserved for post-Darwinian
moral philosophers. That attempt has not, in the
opinion of the majority of critics, been successful, and perhaps
what is most permanent in the contribution of modern times to
ethical theory will ultimately be attributed to philosophers
antagonistic to evolutionary ethics. Nevertheless the application
of the historical method to inquiries concerning the facts of
morality and the moral life — itself part of the great movement
of thought to which Darwin gave the chief impetus — has caused
moral problems to be presented in a novel aspect; while the
influence of Darwinism upon studies which have considerable
bearing upon ethics, e.g. anthropology or the study of comparative
religion, has been incalculable.
The other great movement in modern moral philosophy due
to the influence of German, and especially Hegelian, idealism
followed naturally for the most part from the revival of interest
in metaphysics noticeable in the latter half of the 19th century.
But metaphysical systems of ethics are no novelty even in
England, and, while the increased interest in ultimate issues
of philosophy has enormously deepened and widened men's
appreciation of moral problems and the issues involved in conduct,
the actual advance in ethical theory produced by such
speculations has been comparatively slight. What is of lasting
importance is the re-affirmation upon metaphysical grounds of
the right of the moral consciousness to state and solve its own
difficulties, and the successful repulsion of the claims of particular
sciences such as biology to include the sphere of conduct within
their scope and methods. And both evolutionary and idealistic
ethics agree in repudiating the standpoint of narrow individualism,
alike insist upon the necessity of regarding the self as social in
character, and regard the end of moral progress as only realizable
in a perfect society.
It is perhaps too much to hope that the long-continued controversy
between hedonists and anti-hedonists has been finally
settled. But certainly few modern moral philosophers would be
found in the present day ready to defend the crudities of hedonistic
psychology as they appear in Bentham and Mill. A certain
common agreement has been reached concerning the impossibility
of regarding pleasure as the sole motive criterion and end of
moral action, though different opinions still prevail as to the
place occupied by pleasure in the summum bonum, and the
possibility of a hedonistic calculus.
The failure of “laissez-faire” individualism in politics to
produce that common prosperity and happiness which its
advocates hoped for caused men to question the egoistic basis
upon which its ethical counterpart was constructed. Similarly
the comparative failure of science to satisfy men's aspirations
alike in knowledge and, so far as the happiness of the masses
is concerned, in practice has been largely instrumental in producing
that revolt against material prosperity as the end of
conduct which is characteristic of idealist moral philosophy.
To this revolt, and to the general tendency to find the principle
of morality in an ideal good present to the consciousness of all
persons capable of acting morally, the widespread recognition
of reason as the ultimate court of appeal alike in religion or
politics, and latterly in economics also, has no doubt contributed
largely. In the main the appeal to reason has followed the
traditional course of such movements in ethics, and has reaffirmed
in the light of fuller reflection the moral principles
implicit in the ordinary moral consciousness. It is only in the
present day that there are noticeable signs of dissatisfaction
with current morality itself, and a tendency to substitute or
advocate a new morality based ostensibly upon conclusions
derived from the facts of scientific observation.
Darwin himself seems never to have questioned, in the sceptical
direction in which his followers have applied his principles,
the absolute character of moral obligation. What interested
him chiefly, in so far as he made a study of morality, was
the development of moral conduct in its preliminary stages.
He was principally concerned to show that in morality,
as in other departments of human life, it was not
necessary to postulate a complete and abrupt gap between
human and merely animal existence, but that the instincts and
habits which contribute to survival in the struggle for existence
among animals develop into moral qualities which have a
similar value for the preservation of human and social life.
Regarding the social tendency as originally itself an instinct
developed out of parental or filial affection, he seems to suggest
that natural selection, which was the chief cause of its development
in the earlier stages, may very probably influence the
transition from purely tribal and social morality into morality
in its later and more complex forms. But he admits that natural
selection is not necessarily the only cause, and he refrains from
identifying the fully developed morality of civilized nations
with the “social instinct.” Moreover, he recognizes that
qualities, e.g. loyalty and sympathy, which may have been of
great service to the tribe in its primitive struggle for existence,
may become a positive hindrance to physical efficiency (leading
as they do to the preservation of the unfit) at a later stage.
Nevertheless to check our sympathy would lead to the “deterioration
of the noblest part of our nature,” and the question, which
is obviously of vital importance, whether we should obey the
dictates of reason, which would urge us only to such conduct
as is conducive to natural selection, or remain faithful to the
noblest part of our nature at the expense of reason, he leaves
unsolved.
It was in Herbert Spencer, the triumphant “buccinator novi
temporis,” that the advocates of evolutionary ethics found
their protagonist. Spencer looked to ideas derived
from the biological sciences to provide a solution of all
the enigmas of morality, as of most other departments of life;
and he conceived it “to be the business of moral science to
deduce from the laws of life and the conditions of existence what
kinds of action necessarily tend to produce happiness and
what kinds to produce unhappiness.” It is dear, therefore,
that any moral science which is to be of value must wait until
the “laws of life” and “conditions of existence” have been
satisfactorily determined, presumably by biology and the allied
sciences; and there are few more melancholy instances of
failure in philosophy than the paucity of the actual results
attained by Spencer in his lifetime in his application of the so-called
laws of evolution to human conduct — a failure recognized
by Spencer himself. His own contribution to ethics was vitiated
at the outset by the fact that he never shook himself free from
the trammels of the philosophy which his own system was
intended to supersede. He began by disclaiming any affinity
to Utilitarianism on the part of his own philosophy. He pointed
out that the principle of the greatest happiness of the greatest
number is a principle without any definite meaning, since men
are nowhere unanimous in their standard of happiness, but
regard the conception of happiness rather as a problem to be
solved than a test to be applied. Universal happiness would
require omniscience to legislate for it and the “normal” or, as
some would say, “perfect” man to desire it; neither of these
conditions of its realization is at present in existence. Further,
the principle that “everybody is to count for one, nobody for
more than one,” is equally unsatisfactory. It may be taken
to imply that the useless and the criminal should be entitled
to as much happiness as the useful and the virtuous. While it
gives no rule for private as distinct from public conduct, it
provides no real guidance for the legislator. For neither happiness,
nor the concrete means to happiness, nor finally the conditions
of its realization can be distributed; and in the end
“not general happiness becomes the ethical standard by which
legislative action is to be guided, but universal justice.” Yet
the implications of this latter conclusion Spencer never fully
thought out. He accepted bodily without farther questioning
the hedonistic psychology by which the Utilitarians sought to
justify their theory while he rejected the theory itself. Good,
e.g. defined by him “as conduct conducive to life,” is also
further
defined as that which is “conducive to a surplus of pleasures
over pains.” Happiness, again, is always regarded as consisting
in feeling, ultimately in pleasant feeling, and there is no attempt
to apply the same principles of criticism which he had successfully
applied to the Utilitarians' “happiness” to the conception of
“pleasure.” And, though he maintains as against the Utilitarians
the existence of certain fundamental moral intuitions
which have come to be quite independent of any present conscious
experience of their utility, he yet holds that they are the results
of accumulated racial experiences gradually organized and
inherited. Finally, side by side with a theory of the nature of
moral obligation thus fundamentally empirical and a posteriori
in its outlook, he maintains in his account of justice the existence
of the idea of justice as distinct from a mere sentiment, carrying
with it an a priori belief in its existence and identical in its
a priori and intuitive character with the ultimate criterion of
Utilitarianism itself. The fact is that any close philosophical
analysis of Spencer's system of ethics can only result in the
discovery of a multitude of mutually conflicting and for the most
part logically untenable theories. It is frequently impossible to
discover whether he wishes by an appeal to evolutionary principles
to reinforce the sanctions and emphasize the absolute
character of the traditional morality which in the main he
accepts without question from the current opinions about conduct
of his age, or whether he wishes to discredit and disprove
the validity of that morality in order to substitute by the aid
of the biological sciences a new ethical code. The argument,
for instance, that intuitive and a priori beliefs gain their absolute
character from the fact that they are the result of continued
transmission and accumulation of past nervous modifications
in the history of the race would, if taken seriously, lead us to the
belief that ultimate ethical sanctions are to be sought, not by an
appeal to the moral consciousness, but by the investigation of
brain tissue and the relation of man's bodily organism to its
environment. Yet such a view would be totally at variance
with much that Spencer says (especially in his treatment of
justice) concerning the trustworthiness and inevitable character
of men's constant appeal to the intuitions of their moral consciousness.
Moreover, the very fact itself of the possibility of inheriting
acquired moral characteristics is still hotly debated by those
biologists with whom should rest the ultimate verdict. Again,
the argument that “conduct is good or bad according as its
total effects are pleasurable or painful,” and that ultimately
“pleasure-giving acts are life-sustaining acts,” seems to involve
Spencer in a multitude of unverified assumptions and contradictory
theories. In the first place it is never clear whether
Spencer regards the fact that a particular course of conduct is
accompanied by a feeling of pleasure as a test of its life-preserving
and life-sustaining character, or whether he wishes us to use as
our criterion of what is pleasant in conduct the fact that the
conduct in question seems conducive to the continued existence
of man's organic life. He apparently passes from one criterion to
the other as best suits the purpose of the moment. He does
not prove the coincidence of life-sustaining and pleasant activities.
He assumes throughout that the pleasant is the opposite of what
is painful, and seems unaware of the difficulty of determining
by means of terms so highly abstract the specific character of
moral action. We find in his theory no satisfactory attempt
to discriminate between the pleasure aimed at by the altruist
and the immediate pleasure of egoistic action. Similarly he
disregards the distinction between pleasant feeling as an immediate
motive of conduct and the idea of the attainment of
future pleasure whether by the race or by the individual. Spencer
is involved in effect in most of the confusions and contradictions
of hedonistic psychology.
Nor is his attempt to construct a scientific criterion out of data
derived from the biological sciences productive of satisfactory
results. He is hampered by a distinction between “absolute”
and “relative” ethics definitely formulated in the last two
chapters of The Data of Ethics. Absolute ethics would deal with
such laws as would regulate the conduct of ideal man in an ideal
society, i.e. a society where conduct has reached the stage of
complete adjustment to the needs of social life. Relative ethics,
on the other hand, is concerned only with such conduct as is
advantageous for that society which has not yet reached the
end of complete adaptation to its environment, i.e. which is at
present imperfect. It is hardly necessary to say that Spencer
does not tell us how to bring the two ethical systems into correlation.
And the actual criteria of conduct derived from biological
considerations are almost ludicrously inadequate. Conduct, e.g.,
is said to be more moral in proportion as it exhibits a tendency
on the part of the individual or society to become more
“definite,” “coherent” and
“heterogeneous.” Or, again, we
should recognize as a test of the “authoritative” character of
moral ideas or feelings the fact that they are complex and representative,
referring to a remote rather than to a proximate
good, remembering the while that “the sense of duty is transitory,
and will diminish as fast as moralization increases.” In
fact, no acceptable scientific criterion emerges, and the outcome
of Spencer's attempt to ascertain the laws of life and the conditions
of existence is either a restatement of the dictates of
the moral consciousness in vague and cumbrous quasi-scientific
phraseology, or the substitution of the meaningless test of
“survivability” as a standard of perfection for the usual and
intelligible standards of “good” and “right.”
A similar criticism might fairly be passed upon the majority
of philosophers who approach ethics from the standpoint of
evolution. Sir Leslie Stephen, for instance, wishes to
substitute the conception of “social health” for that
of universal happiness, and considers that the conditions
of social health are to be discovered by an examination
of the “social organism” or of “social tissue,”
the laws of which
can be studied apart from those laws by which the individuals
composing society regulate their conduct. “The social evolution
means the evolution of a strong social tissue; the best type is the
type implied by the strongest tissue.” But on the important
question as to what constitutes the strongest social tissue, or to
what extent the analogy between society as at present constituted
and organic life is really applicable, we are left without
certain guidance. The fact is that with few exceptions evolutionary
moral philosophers evade the choice between alternatives
which is always presented to them. They begin, for the most
part, with a belief that in ethics as in other departments of human
knowledge “the more developed must be interpreted by the less
developed” — though frequently in the sequel complexity or
posteriority of development is erected as a standard by means
of which to judge the process of development itself. They are not
content to write a history of moral development, applying to it
the principles by which Darwinians seek to explain the development
of animal life. But the search of origins frequently leads
them into theories of the nature of that moral conduct whose
origin they are anxious to find quite at variance with current and
accepted beliefs concerning its nature. The discovery of the
so-called evolution of morality out of non-moral conditions is
very frequently an unconscious subterfuge by which the evolutionist
hides the fact that he is making a priori judgments upon
the value of the moral concepts held to be evolved. To accept
such theories of the origin of morality would carry with it the
conviction that what we took for “moral” conduct was in reality
something very different, and has been so throughout its history.
The legitimate inference which should follow would be the denial
of the validity of those moral laws which have hitherto been
regarded as absolute in character, and the substitution for all
customary moral terms of an entirely new set based upon
biological considerations. But it is precisely this, the only logical
inference, which most evolutionary philosophers are unwilling
to draw. They cannot give up their belief in customary morality.
Professor Huxley maintained, for example, in a famous lecture
that “the ethical progress of society depends not on imitating
the cosmic process, still less in running away from it, but in
combating it” (Romanes Lecture, ad fin.). And very frequently
arguments are adduced by evolutionists to prove that men's
belief in the absolute character of moral precepts is one of the
necessary means adopted by nature to carry out her designs for
the social welfare of mankind. Yet the other alternative, to
which such reasoning points, they are reluctant to accept.
For the belief that moral obligation is absolute in character,
that it is alike impossible to explain its origin and transcend
its laws, would make the search for a scientific criterion of
conduct to be deduced from the laws of life and conditions of
existence meaningless, if not absurd.
Perhaps the one European thinker who has carried evolutionary
principles in ethics to their logical conclusion is Friedrich
Nietzsche. Almost any system of morality or immorality
might find some justification in Nietzsche's
writings, which are extraordinarily chaotic and full of the
wildest exaggerations. Yet it has been a true instinct which has
led popular opinion as testified to by current literature to find in
Nietzsche the most orthodox exponent of Darwinian ideas in
their application to ethics. For he saw clearly that to be successful
evolutionary ethics must involve the “transvaluation of
all values,” the “demoralization” of all ordinary current
morality. He accepted frankly the glorification of brute strength,
superior cunning and all the qualities necessary for success in the
struggle for existence, to which the ethics of evolution necessarily
tend. He proclaimed himself, before everything else, a physiologist,
and looked to physiology to provide the ultimate standard
for everything that has value; and though his own ethical code
necessarily involves the disappearance of sympathy, love,
toleration and all existing altruistic emotions, he yet in a sense
finds room for them in such altruistic self-sacrifice as prepares
the way for the higher man of the future. Thus, after a fashion,
he is able to reconcile the conflicting claims of egoism and
altruism and succeed where most apostles of evolution fail.
The Christian virtues, sympathy for the weak, the suffering, &c.,
represent a necessary stage to be passed through in the evolution
of the Übermensch, i.e. the stage when the weak and suffering
combine in revolt against the strong. They are to be superseded,
not so much because all social virtues are to be scorned and rejected,
as because in their effects, i.e. in their tendency to perpetuate
and prolong the existence of the weak and those who are
least well equipped and endowed by nature, they are anti-social
in character and inimical to the survival of the strongest and
most vigorous type of humanity. Consequently Nietzsche in
effect maintains the following paradoxical position: he explains
the existence of altruism upon egoistical principles; he advocates
the total abolition of all altruism by carrying these same egoistical
principles to their logical conclusion; he nevertheless appeals to
that moral instinct which makes men ready to sacrifice their own
narrow personal interests to the higher good of society — an
instinct profoundly altruistic in character — as the ultimate
justification of the ethics he enunciates. Such a position is a
reductio ad absurdum of the attempt to transcend the ultimate
character of those intuitions and feelings which prompt men to
benevolence. Thus, though incidentally there is much to be
learned from Nietzsche, especially from his criticism of the ethics
of pessimism, or from the strictures he passes upon the negative
morality of extreme asceticism or quietism, his system inevitably
provides its own refutation. For no philosophy which travesties
the real course of history and distorts the moral facts is likely
to commend itself to the sober judgment of mankind however
brilliant be its exposition or ingenious its arguments. Finally,
the conceptions of strength, power and masterfulness by which
Nietzsche attempts to determine his own moral ideal, become,
when examined, as relative and unsatisfactory as other criteria
of moral action said to be deduced from evolutionary principles.
Men desire strength or power not as ends but as means to ends
beyond them; Nietzsche is most convincing when the Übermensch
is left undefined. Imagined as ideal man, i.e. as morality
depicts him, he becomes intelligible; imagined as Nietzsche
describes him he reels back into the beast, and that distinction
which chiefly separates man from the animal world out of which
he has emerged, viz. his unique power of self-consciousness and
self-criticism, is obliterated.
It was upon this crucial difficulty, i.e. the transition in the
evolution of morality from the stage of purely animal and
unconscious action to specifically human action, — i.e. action
directed by self-conscious and purposive intelligence
to an end conceived as good, — that the polemic of
T. H. Green and his idealistic followers fastened. And it is
perhaps unfortunate that metaphysical doctrines enunciated
chiefly for the purposes of criticism not in themselves vitally
necessary to the theory of morality propounded should have been
regarded as the main contribution to ethical theory of idealist
writers, and as such treated severely by hostile critics. Green's
principal objection to evolutionary moral philosophy is contained
in the argument that no merely “natural” explanation of the
facts of morality is conceivable. The knowing consciousness, —
i.e. so far as conduct is concerned the moral consciousness, —
can never become an object of knowledge in the sense in which
natural phenomena are objects of scientific knowledge. For such
knowledge implies the existence of a knowing consciousness as
a relating and uniting intelligence capable of distinguishing itself
from the objects to which it relates. And more particularly the
existence of the moral consciousness implies “the transition from
mere want to consciousness of wanted object, from impulse to
satisfy the want to effort for the realization of the wanted
objects, implies the presence of the want to a subject which
distinguishes itself from it.” Consequently the facts of moral
development imply with the emergence of human consciousness
the appearance of something qualitatively different from the
facts with which physiology for instance deals, imply a stratum
as it were in development which no examination of animal
tissues, no calculation of consequences with regard to the preservation
of the species can ever satisfactorily explain. However
far back we go in the history of humanity, if the presence of
consciousness be admitted at all, it will be necessary to admit
also the presence to consciousness of an ideal which can be
accepted or rejected, of a power of looking before and after, and
aiming at a future which is not yet fully realized. But unfortunately
the temporary exigencies of criticism made it
necessary for Green to emphasize the metaphysic of the self,
i.e. to insist upon the necessity of a critical examination of the
pre-requisites of any form of self-consciousness and especially
of the knowing consciousness, to such an extent that critics
have lost sight of the real dependence of his metaphysic upon the
direct evidence of the moral consciousness. The philosophic
value, the sincerity, the breadth and depth of his treatment
of moral facts and institutions have been fully recognized. What
has not been adequately realized is that the metaphysical basis
of his system of ethics — the argument, for example, contained
in the introduction to the Prolegomena — is unfairly treated if
divorced from his treatment of morals as a whole, and that it
can be justly estimated only if interpreted as much as the conclusion
as the starting-point of moral theory. The doctrine
of the eternity of the self, for instance, against which much
criticism (e.g. Taylor, The Problem of Conduct, chap, ii.) has
been directed, though it is chiefly expressed in the language of
epistemology, has its roots nevertheless in the direct testimony
of moral experience. For morality implies a power in the
individual of rising above the interests of his own narrower self
and identifying himself in the pursuit of a universal good with
the true interests of all other selves. Similarly the conception
of the self as a moral unity arises naturally out of the impossibility
of finding the summum bonum in a succession of transient states
of consciousness such as hedonism for example postulates. Good
as a true universal can only be realized by a true self, and both
imply a principle of unity not wholly expressible in terms of the
particulars which it unifies. But whether the idealistic interpretation
of the nature of universal good be the true one, i.e.
whether we are justified in identifying that self-consciousness
which is capable of grasping the principle of unity with the
principle of unity which it grasps is a metaphysical and theistic
problem comparatively irrelevant to Green's moral theory.
It would be quite possible to accept his criticisms of naturalism
and hedonism while rejecting many of the metaphysical inferences
which he draws. A somewhat similar answer might be returned
to those critics who find Green's use of the term “self-realization”
or “self-development” as characteristic of the moral ideal
unsatisfactory. It is quite easy to exhibit the futility of such a
conception if understood formally for the practical purposes
of moral philosophy. If the phrase be understood to mean the
realization of some capacities of the self it does not appear to
discriminate sufficiently between the good and bad capacities;
while the realization under present conditions of all the capacities
of a self is impossible. And to aim so far as is possible at all-round
development would again ignore the distinction between
vice and virtue. But used in the sense in which Green habitually
uses it self-realization implies, as he puts it, the fulfilment by the
good man of his rational capacity or the idea of a best that is in
time, i.e. the distinction between the good and the bad self is
never ignored, but is the fundamental assumption of his theory.
And if it be urged that the expression is in any case tautological,
i.e. that the good is defined in terms of self-realization and
self-realization in terms of the good, it may be doubted whether any
rational system of ethics can avoid a similar imputation. Green
would admit that in a certain sense the conception of “good”
is indefinable, i.e. that it can only be recognized in the particulars
of conduct of which it is the universal form. Only, therefore,
to those philosophers who believe in the existence of a criterion
of morality, i.e. a universal test such as that of pleasure, happiness
and the like, by which we can judge of the worth of actions, will
Green's position seem absurd; since, on the contrary, such conceptions
as those of “self-development” or “self-realization” seem
to have a definite and positive value if they call attention to the
metaphysical implications of morality and accurately characterize
the moral facts. What ambiguity they possess arises from the
ambiguity of morality itself. For moral progress consists in the
actualization of what is already potentially in existence. The
striking merit of Green's moral philosophy is that the idealism
which he advocates is rooted and grounded in moral habits and
institutions: and the metaphysic in which it culminates is
based upon principles already implicitly recognized by the moral
consciousness of the ordinary man. Nothing could be farther
from Green's teaching than the belief that constructive metaphysics
could, unaided by the intuitions of the moral consciousness,
discover laws for the regulation of conduct.
But although Green's loyalty to the primary facts of the moral
consciousness prevented him from constructing a rationalistic
system of morals based solely upon the conclusions of metaphysics,
it was perhaps inevitable that the revival of interest in metaphysics
so prominent in his own speculations should lead to a
more daring criticism of ethical first principles in other writers.
Bradley's Ethical Studies had presented with great brilliancy
an idealist theory of morality not very far removed from that
of Green's Prolegomena. But the publication of Appearance
and Reality by the same author marked a great advance in
philosophical criticism of ethical postulates, and a growing
dissatisfaction with current reconciliations between moral first
principles and the conclusions of metaphysics. Appearance
and Reality was not primarily concerned with morals, yet it
inevitably led to certain conclusions affecting conduct, and it
was no very long time before these conclusions were elaborated
in detail. Professor A. E. Taylor's Problem of Conduct
(1901) is one of the most noteworthy and independent
contributions to Moral Philosophy published in recent years.
But it nevertheless follows in the main Bradley's line of
criticism and may therefore be regarded as representative of
his school. There are two principal positions in Professor
Taylor's work: — (1) a refusal to base ethics upon metaphysics,
and (2) the discovery of an irreconcilable dualism in the nature of
morality which takes many shapes, but may be summarized
roughly as consisting in an ultimate opposition between egoism
and altruism. With regard to the first of these Taylor says
(op. cit. p. 4) that his object is to show that “ethics is as
independent of metaphysical speculation for its principles and methods
as any of the so-called ‘natural sciences’; that its real basis
must be sought not in philosophical theories about the nature
of the Absolute or the ultimate constitution of the Universe,
but in the empirical facts of human life as they are revealed to
us in our concrete everyday experience of the world and mankind,
and sifted and systematized by the sciences of psychology and
sociology. . . . Ethics should be regarded as a purely ‘positive’
or ‘experimental’ and not as a ‘speculative’
science.” With
regard to the second position one quotation will suffice (op. cit.
p. 183). “Altruism and egoism are divergent developments
from the common psychological root of primitive ethical sentiment.
Both developments are alike unavoidable, and each is
ultimately irreconcilable with the other. Neither egoism nor
altruism can be made the sole basis of moral theory without
mutilation of the facts, nor can any higher category be discovered
by the aid of which their rival claims may be finally adjusted.”
Professor Taylor expounds these two theories with great
brilliance of argument and much ingenuity, yet neither of them
will perhaps carry complete conviction to the minds of the
majority of his critics. It is curious, in the first place, to find
the independence of moral philosophy upon metaphysics supported
by metaphysical arguments. For whatever may be the
real character of the interrelation of moral and metaphysical
first principles it is obvious that Taylor's own dissatisfaction
with current moral principles arises from an inability to believe
in their ultimate rationality, i.e. a belief that they are untenable
from the standpoint of ultimate metaphysics; and perhaps
the most interesting portion of his book is the chapter entitled
“Beyond Good and Bad,” in which the highest and final form
of the ethical consciousness of mankind is subjected to searching
criticism. But further, it is becoming increasingly apparent
that psychology (upon which Taylor would base morality) itself
involves metaphysical assumptions; its position in fact cannot
be stated except as a metaphysical position, whether that of
subjective idealism or any other. And the need which most
philosophers have felt for some philosophical foundation for
morality arises, not from any desire to subordinate moral insight
to speculative theory, but because the moral facts themselves
are inexplicable except in the light of first principles which
metaphysics alone can criticize.
Taylor himself attempts to find the roots of ethics in the moral
sentiments of mankind, the moral sentiments being primarily
feelings or emotions, though they imply and result in judgments
of approval and disapproval upon conduct. But it may be
doubted whether he succeeds in clearly distinguishing ethical
feelings from ethical judgments, and if they are to be treated as
synonymous it seems difficult to avoid the conclusion that the
implications of moral “judgment” must involve a reference
to metaphysics.
Moreover, it is obvious that a great part of Taylor's quarrel
with current moral ideals arises from the fact that they do not
commend themselves to the moral judgment, i.e. from the
standpoint of real goodness they are unsatisfactory, being
tainted with evil. Hence it appears difficult to reconcile what
is in effect a belief in the validity of the judgments of the moral
consciousness with a belief that the real source and justification
of that consciousness are to be found in the very sentiments
and vague mass of floating feelings upon which it pronounces.
Scepticism seems to be the only possible result of such a position.
Taylor's polemic against metaphysical systems of ethics is based
throughout upon an alleged discrepancy and separation between
the facts of moral “experience,” the judgments of the moral
consciousness, and theories as to the nature of these which
the philosophers whom he attacks would by no means accept.
There is no doubt a distinction between morality as a form
of consciousness and reflection upon that morality. But such
a distinction neither corresponds to, nor testifies to, the existence
of a distinction between morality as “experience” and morality
as “theory” or “idea.”
Taylor is more persuasive when he is developing his second
main thesis — that of the alleged existence of an ultimate dualism
in the nature of morality. His accounts of the genesis of the
conceptions of obligation and responsibility as of most of the
ultimate conceptions with which moral philosophy deals will be
accepted or rejected to the extent to which the main contention
concerning the psychological basis of ethics commends itself to
the reader. But in his exposition of the fundamental contradiction
involved in morality elaborated with much care and illustrative
argument he appeals for the most part to facts familiar to
the unphilosophical moral consciousness. He begins by finding
an ultimate opposition between the instincts of self-assertion
and instincts which secure the production and protection of the
coming generation even in the infra-ethical world with which
biology deals. He traces this opposition into the forms in which
it appears in the social life of mankind (as, e.g., in the difficulty of
reconciling the conflicting claims of individual self-development
and self-culture and social service), and finds “a hidden root
of insincerity and hypocrisy beneath all morality” (p. 243),
inasmuch as it is not possible to pursue any one type of ideal
without some departure from singleness of purpose. And he
finds all the conceptions by which men have hoped to reconcile
admitted antagonisms and divergencies between moral ideals
claiming to be ultimate and authoritative alike unsatisfactory
(p. 285). Progress is illusory; there is no satisfactory goal to
which moral development inevitably tends; religion in which
some take refuge when distressed by the inexplicable contradictions
of moral conduct itself “contains and rests upon an element
of make, believe” (p. 489).
With Taylor's presentation of the difficulties with which
morality is expected to grapple probably few would be found
seriously to disagree, though they might consider it unduly
pessimistic. But when he turns what is in effect a statement
of certain forms of moral difficulty into an attack upon the
logical and coherent character of morality itself, he is not so
likely to command assent. For the difficulty all men meet with
in realizing goodness, or in being moral, is not in itself evidence
of an inherent contradiction in the nature of goodness as such.
And what perhaps would first strike an unprejudiced critic in
Taylor's examples of conflicting ideals or antagonistic yet
ultimate moral judgments would be the perception that they
are not necessarily moral ideas or judgments at all, and hence
necessarily not ultimate.
The claims of self-culture and of social service may when
considered in the abstract or in some hypothetical case appear
antagonistic and irreconcilable. But when they present themselves
to the individual moral consciousness it may be safely
asserted (1) that there can be only one moral choice possible,
i.e. that their opposition (where they are opposed) involves no
conflict of duties; and (2) that whichever ideal is in the end
preferred, opportunities will nevertheless be provided within its
realization for the concurrent realization of activities and
capacities ordinarily associated with the ideal alleged to be
contradictory. For just as there is no self-realization which
does not involve self-sacrifice, so there is no room for that
species of egoism within the confines of morality which is incompatible
with social service.
It will be clear from the foregoing account of Taylor's work
that the tendency of his thought, as of that of Bradley, is by no
means directed to the confirmation or re-establishment of those
principles of conduct recognized by the ordinary moral consciousness.
Psychology or metaphysics tend in their systems to
usurp the place of authority formerly assigned to ethics proper.
It would be true on the whole to assert that evolutionary
systems of ethics such as those of Herbert Spencer, Sir Leslie
Stephen or Professor S. Alexander (Moral Order and
Progress, 1899), together with the metaphysical
theories of morals of which T. H. Green and Bradley and Taylor
are the chief representatives, have dominated the field of ethical
speculation since 1870. Nevertheless it is only necessary to
mention such a work as Martineau's Types of Ethical Theory
to dispel the notion that the type of moral philosophy most
characteristically English, i.e. consisting in the patient analysis
of the form and nature of the moral consciousness itself, has given
way or is likely to give way to more ambitious and constructive
efforts. Martineau's chief endeavour was, as he himself says,
to interpret, to vindicate, and to systematize the moral sentiments,
and if the actual exhibition of what is involved, e.g., in
moral choice is the vindication of morality Martineau may be
said to have been successful. It is with his interpretation and
systematization of the moral sentiments that most of Martineau's
critics have found fault. It is impossible, e.g., to accept his
ordered hierarchy of “springs of action” without perceiving
that the real principle upon which they can be arranged in
order at all must depend upon considerations of circumstances
and consequences, of stations and duties, with which a strict
intuitionalism such as that of Martineau would have no
dealing.[50]
Similarly the notion of Conscience as a special faculty giving its
pronouncements immediately and without reflection cannot be
maintained in the face of modern psychological analysis and
is untrue to the nature of moral judgment itself. And Martineau
is curiously unsympathetic to the universal and social aspect
of morality with which evolutionary and idealist moral philosophers
are so largely occupied. Nevertheless there have been
few moral philosophers who have, apart from the idiosyncrasies
of their special prepossessions, set forth with clearer insight or
with greater nobility of language the essential nature of the moral
consciousness.
Equal in importance to Martineau's work is Professor Sidgwick's
Methods of Ethics, which appeared in 1874. The two works
are alike in loftiness of outlook and in the fact that
they are devoted to the re-examination of the nature
of the moral consciousness to the exclusion of alien branches of
inquiry. In most other respects they differ. Martineau is
much more in sympathy with idealism than Sidgwick, whose
work consists in a restatement from a novel and independent
standpoint of the Utilitarian position. And Sidgwick has been
far more successful than any other moral philosopher with the
exception of T. H. Green and Bradley in founding a school of
thought. Many of his most acute critics would be the first to
admit how much they owe to his teaching. Chief among the
more recent of these is G. E. Moore, whose book Principia Ethica
is an important original contribution to ethical thought. And
although Dr Hastings Rashdall (The Theory of Good and Evil,
Oxford, 1907) is not in agreement with Sidgwick's own particular
type of hedonistic theory in his own philosophical position, he
occupies a point of view somewhat similar to that of Sidgwick's
main attitude of Rational Utilitarianism. Rashdull's two
volumes exhibit also a welcome return on the part of English
thought to the proper business of the moral philosopher — the
examination of the nature of moral conduct. Other works, such
as Professor L. T. Hobhouse's Morals in Evolution or Professor
E. A. Westermarck's Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas,
testify to a continued interest in the history of morality and in
the anthropological inquiries with which moral philosophy is
closely connected.
Much that is of importance for moral philosophy has recently
been written upon problems that more properly belong to the
philosophy of religion and the theory of knowledge. J. F.
McTaggart's
Studies in Hegelian Cosmology, and his later work,
Some Dogmas of Religion, contain interesting contributions to
the theory of pleasure and of the problem of free will and
determinism. A notable instance of this tendency is seen in the
developments of the theory of pragmatism (q.v.), for which
F. C. S. Schiller has proposed the general term “humanism.”
Such aspects as concern ethics include, for example, the limited
indeterminism involved in the theory, the attitude of the religious
consciousness expressed by William James (Will to Believe and
Pragmatism), and the pragmatic conception of the good.
And the widespread interest in social problems has produced
a revival of speculation concerning questions partly political
and party ethical in character, e.g. the nature of justice. Finally
it has become apparent that many problems hitherto left for
political economy to solve belong more properly to the moralist,
if not to the moral philosopher, and it may be confidently expected
that with the increased complexity of social life and the
disappearance of many sanctions of morality hitherto regarded
as inviolable, the future will bring a renewed and practical
interest in the theory of conduct likely to lead to fresh developments
in ethical speculation.
Bibliography. —
The literature of the subject is so large in all
languages that only a small selection can be given here. For further
works reference may be made to subsidiary articles. See also
Baldwin's Dict. of Philos. and Psychol. vol. iii. (1905), pp. 812 foll.
(bibliography).
I. Historical. — Sir L. Stephen, History of English Thought in
the 18th Century (1876, 3rd ed. 1892); W. E. H. Lecky, History
of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne (1869, many
editions); works of Ed. Zeller (q.v.); G. H. Lewes, History of
Philosophy (1880); W. Gass, Geschichte der christlichen Ethik (1881);
A. W. Benn, The Greek Philosophers (1882); F. Jödl, Geschichte der
Ethik in der neueren Philos. (2 vols., 1882-1889); L. Schmidt, Ethik der
alten Griechen (1882); E. Howley, The Old Morality traced Historically
(1885); J. Martineau, Types of Ethical Theory (Oxford, 1885,
3rd ed. 1891); Th. Ziegler, Gesch. d. christl. Ethik (1886); Ch.
Letourneaux, L'Évolution de la morale (1887); K. Köstlin, Gesch.
der Ethik (1887); C. E. Luthardt, Die antike Ethik in ihrer geschichtlichen
Entwicklung (1887), and Hist. of Christian Ethics (1888);
C. M. Williams, A Review of the Systems of Ethics founded on the
Theory of Evolution (1893); J. Watson, Hedonistic Theories from
Aristippus to Spencer (1895); L. A. Selby-Bigge, British Moralists
(1897); R. Mackintosh, From Comte to Benjamin Kidd (1899);
S. Patten, The Development of English Thought (1899); A. B. Bruce,
The Moral Order of the World in Ancient and Modern Thought (1899);
Sir L. Stephen, The English Utilitarians (1901); Henry Sidgwick,
Outlines of the History of Ethics (5th ed., 1902); Paul Janet, History
of the Problems of Philosophy (1902-1903), Eng. trans. Ada Monahan,
vol. ii. “Ethics”; W. R. Sorley, Recent Tendencies in Ethics (1904).
II. Constructive and Critical. — Besides the works mentioned above
the following may be mentioned: — J. M. Guyau, La Morale anglaise
(1879), Éducation et hérédité (1889; Eng. trans. Greenstreet, with
introd. by G. F. Stout, 1891), Esquisse d'une morale sans obligation
ni sanction (Eng. trans., 1898); G. H. Lewes, Problems of Life and
Mind (1879); Sir L. Stephen, Science of Ethics (1882); P. Janet,
The Theory of Morals (Eng. trans., 1884); W. R. Sorley, On the
Ethics of Naturalism (1885); W. L. Courtney, Constructive Ethics
(1886); Wilson and Fowler, Principles of Morals (1886); H. Höffding,
Ethik (1888), Psychologie (1882, 1892; trans. Lowndes, 1892);
W. Wundt, Ethik (1886; trans. Titchener and others, 1897);
F. Paulsen, Ethik (1889, 1893; trans. Thilly, 1899); H. Sidgwick,
Method of Ethics (1890); J. T. Bixby, The Crisis in Morals: An
Examination of Rational Ethics (1891); J. Seth, Freedom an Ethical
Postulate (1891); J. H. Muirhead, Elements of Ethics (1892); G.
Simnel, Einleitung in die Moralwissenschaft (1892, 1893); T. Ziegler,
Social Ethics (1892); T. H. Huxley, Evolution and Ethics (1893);
W. Knight, The Christian Ethic (1893); J. S. Mackenzie, Manual of
Ethics (1893); F. Ryland, Ethics (1893); J. Seth. A Study of Ethical
Principles (1894, 6th ed. 1902); C. F. D'Arcy, Short Study of Ethics
(1895); J. H. Hyslop. The Elements of Ethics (1895); J. Kidd,
Morality and Religion (1895); Sir L. Stephen, Social Rights and
Duties (1896); J. M. Baldwin, Social and Ethical Interpretations in
Mental Development (1897); Th. Ribot, Psychology of Emotions
(1897); A. Seth Pringle-Pattison, Man's Place in the Cosmos (1897);
H. R. Marshall, Instinct and Reason (1898); W. Wallace, Natural
Theology and Ethics (1898); F. Paulsen, Partei-politik und Moral
(1900); A. E. Taylor, Problem of Conduct (1901); G. T. Ladd,
Philosophy of Conduct (1902); H. Sidgwick, Ethics of Green, Spencer,
Martineau (1902); D. Irons, Study in Psychology of Ethics (1903);
G. E. Moore, Principia Ethica (1903); R. Eucken, Geistige Strömungen
der Gegenwart (1904), and other works (see Eucken, Rudolf);
works of A. Fouillée (q.v.); G. Santayana, Life of Reason (1905);
E. A. Westermarck, Origin and Development of Moral Ideas (1906);
George Gore, Scientific Basis of Morality (1899), and New Scientific
Basis of Morality (1906), containing an interesting if unconvincing
attempt to explain ethics on purely physical principles.
(Henry Herbert Williams)
[1]
This well-known phrase was originally attributed to the
Pythagoreans.
[2]
It is highly characteristic of Platonism that the issue in this
dialogue, as originally stated, is between virtue and vice, whereas,
without any avowed change of ground, the issue ultimately discussed
is between the philosophic life and the life of vulgar ambition or
sensual enjoyment.
[3]
This cardinal term is commonly translated “happiness”; and
it must be allowed that it is the most natural term for what we (in
English) agree to call “our being's end and aim.” But happiness
so definitely signifies a state of feeling that it will not admit the
interpretation that Aristotle (as well as Plato and the Stoics) expressly
gives to
ευδαιµονια;
the confusion is best avoided by rendering
the word by the less familiar “well-being.”
[4]
Aristotle follows Plato and Socrates in identifying the notions of
καλος
(“fair,” “beautiful”) and
αγαθος
(“good”) in their application
to conduct. We may observe, however, that while the latter term is
used to denote the virtuous man, and (in the neuter) equivalent to
End generally, the former is rather chosen to express the quality of
virtuous acts which in any particular case is the end of the virtuous
agent. Aristotle no doubt faithfully represents the common sense
of Greece in considering that, in so far as virtue is in itself good to
the virtuous agent, it belongs to that species of good which we distinguish
as beautiful. In later Greek philosophy the term
καλον
(“honestum”) became still more technical in the signification of
“morally good.”
[5]
The above account is considerably expanded in H. Sidgwick's
Hist. of Ethics (5th ed., 1902), pp. 59-70.
[6]
There is a certain difficulty in discussing Aristotle's views on the
subject of practical wisdom, and the relation of the intellect to moral
action, since it is most probable that the only accounts that we have
of these views are not part of the genuine writings of Aristotle. Still
books vi. and vii. of the Nicomachean Ethics contain no doubt as pure
Aristotelian doctrine as a disciple could give, and appear to supply a
sufficient foundation for the general criticism expressed in the text.
[7]
It has been suggestively said that Cynicism was to Stoicism what
monasticism was to early Christianity. The analogy, however, must
not be pressed too far, since orthodox Stoics do not ever seem to have
regarded Cynicism as the more perfect way.
[8]
The Stoics were not quite agreed as to the immutability of virtue,
but they were agreed that, when once possessed, it could only be lost
through the loss of reason itself.
[9]
Hence some members of the school, without rejecting the definition
of virtue = knowledge, also defined it as
“strength and force.”
[10]
It is apparently in view of this union in reason of rational beings
that friends are allowed to be “external goods” to the sage, and that
the possession of good children is also counted a good.
[11]
The Stoics seem to have varied in their view of “good repute,”
ευ&deltaξια;
at first, when the school was more under the influence of
Cynicism, they professed an outward as well as an inward indifference
to it; ultimately they conceded the point to common sense, and
included it among
προηγµενα.
[12]
It is noted of him that he did not disdain the co-operation either
of women or of slaves in his philosophical labours.
[13]
The last charge of Epicurus to his disciples is said to have been,
των
δογµατων
µεµνησθαι
[14]
Epictetus.
[15]
Marcus Aurelius.
[16]
E.g. Justin Martyr, Origen, Tertullian, Cyprian.
[17]
Citra sanguinis effusionem.
[18]
To show the crudity of the notion of redemption in early Christianity,
it is sufficient to mention that many fathers represent Christ's
ransom as having been paid to the devil; sometimes adding that by
the concealment of Christ's divinity under the veil of humanity a
certain deceit was (fairly) practised on the great deceiver.
[19]
It is to be observed that Augustine prefers to use “freedom”
not for the power of willing either good or evil, but the power of
willing good. The highest freedom, in his view, excludes the possibility
of willing evil.
[20]
Cicero's works are unimportant in the history of ancient ethics,
as their philosophical matter was entirely borrowed from Greek
treatises now lost; but the influence exercised by them (especially
by the De officiis) over medieval and even modern readers was very
considerable.
[21]
Abelard afterwards retracted this view, at least in its extreme
form; and in fact does not seem to have been fully conscious of the
difference between (1) unfulfilled intention to do an act objectively
right, and (2) intention to do what is merely believed by the agent
to be right.
[22]
He was condemned by two synods, in 1121 and 1140.
[23]
Synderesis (Gr.
συντηρησις,
from
συντηρειν,
to watch closely, observe)
is used in this sense in Jerome (Com. in Ezek. i. 4-10).
[24]
The refusal of the council of Constance to condemn Jean Petit's
advocacy of assassination is a striking example of this weakness. Cf.
Milman, Lat. Christ. book xiii. c. 9.
[25]
As the chief English casuists we may mention Perkins, Hall,
Sanderson, as well as the more eminent Jeremy Taylor, whose
Ductor dubitantium appeared in 1660.
[26]
This influence was not exercised in the region of ethics. Bacon's
brief outline of moral philosophy (in the Advancement of Learning,
ii. 20-22) is highly pregnant and suggestive. But Bacon's great task
of reforming scientific method was one which, as he conceived it, left
morals on one side; he never made any serious effort to reduce his
ethical views to a coherent system, methodically reasoned on an
independent basin. The outline given in the Advancement was never
filled in, and does not seem to have had any effect on the subsequent
course of ethical speculation.
[27]
He even identifies the desire with the pleasure, apparently
regarding the stir of appetite and that of fruition as two parts of the
same “motion.”
[28]
In spite of Hobbes's uncompromising egoism, there is a noticeable
discrepancy between his theory of the ends that men naturally seek
and his standard for determining their natural rights. This latter is
never Pleasure simply, but always Preservation — though on occasion
he enlarges the notion of “preservation” into “preservation of life
so as not to be weary of it.” His view seems to be that in a state of
nature most men will fight, rob, &c.,
“for delectation merely” or
“for glory,” and that hence all men must be allowed an indefinite
right to fight, rob, &c., “for preservation.”
[29]
It should be noticed, however, that it is only in his treatment of
Equity and Benevolence that he really follows out the mathematical
analogy (cf. Sidgwick's History of Ethics, 5th ed., pp. 180-181).
[30]
It should be observed that, while Clarke is sincerely anxious to
prove that most principles are binding independently of Divine appointment,
he is no less concerned to snow that morality requires the
practical support of revealed religion.
[31]
Three classes of impulses are thus distinguished by Shaftesbury:
— (1) “Natural Affections,”
(2) “Self-affections,” and (3) “Unnatural
Affections.” Their characteristics are further considered in
the History of Ethics, p. 186 seq.
[32]
In a remarkable passage near the close of his eleventh sermon
Butler seems even to allow that conscience would have to give way
to self-love, if it were possible (which it is not) that the two should
come into ultimate and irreconcilable conflict.
[33]
It is worth noticing that Hutcheson's express definition of the
object of self-love includes “perfection” as well as
“happiness”;
but in the working out of his system he considers private good
exclusively as happiness or pleasure.
[34]
Hume's ethical view was finally stated in his Inquiry into the
Principles of Morals (1751), which is at once more popular and more
purely utilitarian than his earlier work.
[35]
Hume remarks that in some cases, by “association of ideas,” the
rule by which we praise and blame is extended beyond the principle
of utility from which it arises; but he allows much less scope to this
explanation in his second treatise than in his first.
[36]
In earlier editions of the Inquiry Hume expressly included all
approved qualities under the general notion of “virtue.” In later
editions be avoided this strain on usage by substituting or adding
“merit” in several passages — allowing that some of the
laudable
qualities which he mentions would be more commonly called
“talents,” but still maintaining that “there is little
distinction
made in our internal estimation” of “virtues” and
“talents.”
[37]
It is to be observed that whereas Price and Stewart (after
Butler) identify the object of self-love with happiness or pleasure,
Reid conceives this “good” more vaguely as including perfection
and happiness; though he sometimes uses “good” and
happiness
as convertible terms, and seems practically to have the latter in view
in all that he says of self-love.
[38]
E.g. Reid proposes to apply this principle in favour of monogamy,
arguing from the proportion of males and females born; without
explaining why, if the intention of nature hence inferred excludes
occasional polygamy, it does not also exclude occasional celibacy.
[39]
We may observe that some recent writers, who would generally
be included in this school, avoid in various ways the difficulty of
constructing a code of external conduct. Sometimes they consider moral
intuition as determining the comparative excellence of conflicting
motives (James Martineau). or the comparative quality of pleasures
chosen (Laurie), which Menu to be the same view in a hedonistic
garb; others hold that what is intuitively perceived is the rightness
or wrongness of individual acts — a view which obviously renders
ethical reasoning practically superfluous.
[40]
The originality — such as it is — of Paley's system (as of
Bentham's) lies in its method of working out details rather than in
its principles of construction. Paley expressly acknowledges his
obligations to the original and suggestive, though diffuse and
whimsical, work of Abraham Tucker (Light of Nature Pursued, 1768-1774).
In this treatise, as in Paley's, we find “every man's own
satisfaction, the spring that actuates all his motives,” connected
with “general good, the root whereout all our rules of conduct and
sentiments of honour are to branch,” by means of natural theology
demonstrating the “unniggardly goodness of the author of nature.”
Tucker is also careful to explain that satisfaction or pleasure is
“one and the same in kind, however much it may vary in degree,
. . . whether a man is pleased with hearing music, seeing prospects,
tasting dainties, performing laudable actions, or making
agreeable reflections,” and again that by “general good”
he means
“quantity of happiness,” to which “every pleasure that we do
to our
neighbour is an addition.” There is, however, in Tucker's theological
link between private and general happiness a peculiar ingenuity
which Paley's common sense has avoided. He argues that
men having no free will have really no desert; therefore the divine
equity must ultimately distribute happiness in equal shares to all;
therefore I must ultimately increase my own happiness most by
conduct that adds most to the general fund which Providence
administers.
But in fact the outline of Paley's utilitarianism is to be found a
generation earlier — in Gay's dissertation prefixed to Law's edition of
King's Origin of Evil as the following extracts will show: —
“The
idea of virtue is the conformity to a rule of life, directing the actions
of all rational creatures with respect to each other's happiness; to
which every one is always obliged. . . . Obligation is the necessity
of doing or omitting something in order to be happy. . . . Full and
complete obligation which will extend to all cases can only be that
arising from the authority of God. . . . The will of God [so far as it
directs behaviour to others] is the immediate rule or criterion of
virtue . . . but it is evident from the nature of God that he could
have no other design in creating mankind than their happiness;
and therefore he wills their happiness; therefore that my behaviour
so far as it may be a means to the happiness of mankind should be
such; so this happiness of mankind may be said to be the criterion
of virtue once removed.”
The same dissertation also contains the germ of Hartley's system,
as we shall presently notice.
[41]
It must be allowed that Paley's application of this argument is
somewhat loosely reasoned, and does not sufficiently distinguish the
consequence of a single act of beneficent manslaughter from the
consequences of a general permission to commit such acts.
[42]
This list gives twelve out of the fourteen classes in which Bentham
arranges the springs of action, omitting the religious sanction
(mentioned afterwards), and the pleasures and pains of self-interest,
which include all the other classes except sympathy and antipathy.
[43]
In the Deontology published by Bowring from MSS. left after
Bentham's death, the coincidence is asserted to be complete.
[44]
It should be observed that Austin, after Bentham, more frequently
uses the term “moral” to connote what he more distinctly
calls “positive morality,” the code of rules supported by common
opinion in any society.
[45]
In the before-mentioned dissertation. Cf. note 2 to p. 835.
Hartley refers to this treatise as having supplied the starting-point
for his own system.
[46]
It should be noticed that Hartley's sensationalism is far from
leading him to exalt the corporeal pleasures. On the contrary, he
tries to prove elaborately that they (as well as the pleasures of
imagination, ambition, self-interest) cannot be made an object of
primary pursuit without a loss of happiness on the whole — one of
his arguments being that these pleasures occur earlier in time, and
“that which is prior in the order of nature is always less perfect than
that which is posterior.”
[47]
It may be observed that in the view of Kant and others (2) and
(3) are somewhat confusingly blended.
[48]
Singularly enough, the English writer who approaches most
nearly to Kant on this point is the utilitarian Godwin, in his Political
Justice. In Godwin's view, reason is the proper motive to acts conducive
to general happiness: reason shows me that the happiness of
a number of other men is of more value than my own; and the perception
of this truth affords me at least some inducement to prefer
the former to the latter. And supposing it to be replied that the
motive is really the moral uneasiness involved in choosing the selfish
alternative, Godwin answers that this uneasiness, though a “constant
step” in the process of volition, is a merely “accidental”
step — “I feel pain in the neglect of an act of benevolence,
because
benevolence is judged by me to be conduct which it becomes me to
adopt.”
[49]
In Kantism, as we have partly seen, the most important ontological
beliefs — in God, freedom and immortality of the soul — are
based on necessities of ethical thought. In Fichte's system the connexion
of ethics and metaphysics is still more intimate; indeed, we
may compare it in this respect to Platonism; as Plato blends the
most fundamental notions of each of these studies in the one idea of
good, so Fichte blends them in the one idea free-will. “Freedom,”
in his view, is at once the foundation of all being and the end of all
moral action. In the systems of Schelling and Hegel ethics falls
again into a subordinate place; indeed, the ethical view of the former
is rather suggested than completely developed. Neither Fichte nor
Schelling has exercised more than the faintest and most indirect
influence on ethical philosophy in England; it therefore seems best
to leave the ethical doctrines of each to be explained in connexion
with the rest of his system.
[50]
Cf. A. Seth Pringle-Pattison, The Philosophical Radicals. Martineau's
Philosophy, p. 92.
Britannica Index