defend the indefensible: utilitarianism

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flopson (et al) as I've alluded upthread I think consequentialist theories fail to correctly specify what actions are moral b/c I am basically a moral error theorist (based on my limited reading), i.e. moral propositions are all false. In my particular case my not-well-developed intuition is that moral propositions are all false because, for a moral proposition ("It is moral to do X") to be true, it would have to derive the authority to obligate me from somewhere, and I don't think that there are any such things from which authority can be derived.

Even leaving that aside, I think Singer and his adherents basically are sophists in their more popularized arguments about reducing suffering. Leading people by the nose by getting them to agree that they'd save a child drowning in a pond and then arguing that they therefore, to be consistent, must agree that effective altruism is a moral imperative is basically a political hoodwink, not a good argument.

My further and even less-well-developed intuition is that in point of fact people do not engage in moral reasoning all that often when making decisions; I suspect that they do whatever it is they do for some uncomputable collection of reasons and then pattern-match it after the fact to the collection of moral propositions they want to believe they adhere to. Which even if moral theories were ever true would make them of dubious use.

go hang a salami I'm a canal, adam (silby), Friday, 28 August 2015 01:58 (eight years ago) link

also Brian Leiter is a twit

go hang a salami I'm a canal, adam (silby), Friday, 28 August 2015 01:58 (eight years ago) link

yeah despite my explanation above that's what i don't get - where the fuck did the inbuilt philosophical hostility toward sophistry go?!? singerism is clearly an attempt to manipulate people into moral compliance, yet so many argumentatively hygienic people are total subscribers

(maybe in fact they maintain principled reservations for academic purposes but this is their little bit of cynicism, to profess what's good for the masses)

actually, once a very pro-singer philosopher i know contacted me while working on a piece for one of those 'just the arguments hard and fast' commercial books, and asked me how to formalize an argument correctly (something we had learned plenty about in school, this one no less than anyone else). i was aghast, the task was so rudimentary…

j., Friday, 28 August 2015 02:21 (eight years ago) link

thx silby

for a moral proposition ("It is moral to do X") to be true, it would have to derive the authority to obligate me from somewhere, and I don't think that there are any such things from which authority can be derived

philosophers seem to always thirst for another deeper thing behind the thing in question... but it never ends... i had to ban myself from thinking that way after getting spending a whole acid trip in a recursive loop. good luck though.

people do not engage in moral reasoning all that often when making decisions; I suspect that they do whatever it is they do for some uncomputable collection of reasons and then pattern-match it after the fact to the collection of moral propositions they want to believe they adhere to

this is probably literally true, but idk... it's kind of like austrian economists being like "the market is too complex to understand, submit to it and let the price vector take a whizz all over you." like we still need some shitty model of ethics to help us understand what to do when stuff gets fucked up

when i was in high school i saw peter singer in an astra taylor documentary where she interviews celeb philosophers, and i remember being pretty into his part and telling my friend about it the next day, "hey, there's this philosopher who says we should give all our money to oxfam, crazy shit" and he was like "pfft... you needed a philosopher to tell you that bro?"

i think my problem with the jacobin piece upthread is you can apply the argument in that piece to anything that is not uh, single-handedly overthrowing capitalism, or whatever. the only exception is the author says at one point that philantrophy subsidizes capitalism which is what put the person in the ditch in the first place, but that's an unbacked empirical claim whereas vicious cycle of poverty is extremely well documented as well as fact that a random income shock can often snap you out of it. as i said upthread, this EA stuff only exists J-PAL has done the best empirical social science work ever and we have some strong results about poverty now

also, like, i don't even think EA is necessarily at odds with orthodox marxism... if having a revolution is the best thing poors can do with their money send them an unconditional cash transfer maybe they'll use it to have a revolution who knows

flopson, Friday, 28 August 2015 02:31 (eight years ago) link

j. presumably you agree that the state should redistribute wealth from rich people to poor people... what other argument exists for that other than utility is concave in wealth?

flopson, Friday, 28 August 2015 02:34 (eight years ago) link

they don't deserve it and we do

j., Friday, 28 August 2015 03:51 (eight years ago) link

interesting.... so if an unequal distribution were deserved (hypothetical), no problem? even if you could make poors better off by taking away just desserts from rich?

flopson, Friday, 28 August 2015 04:02 (eight years ago) link

why would the poors want to take away desserts that the rich ppl deserved, esp. considering they would also have whatever they deserved

j., Friday, 28 August 2015 05:31 (eight years ago) link

right now someone is currently getting either more or less than their both desserts, yet seemingly everyone thinks they're getting less. plausible that even if everyone were getting their just desserts, they would still feel that way.

flopson, Friday, 28 August 2015 14:15 (eight years ago) link

maybe in a society where everybody is dependent on many other people there's no such thing as individual dessert

MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 August 2015 14:17 (eight years ago) link

is no one going to make a dessert joke here? OUTRAGEOUS

droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 28 August 2015 14:27 (eight years ago) link

tbh i wasn't sure people already weren't

MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 August 2015 14:28 (eight years ago) link

you're right in the middle of it!!!

j., Friday, 28 August 2015 14:28 (eight years ago) link

maybe in a society where everybody is dependent on many other people there's no such thing as individual dessert

― MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, August 28, 2015 10:17 AM (21 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

j was the one who said "deserve" in the first place. i don't personally think it's a good way to think about distribution... i mean, greg mankiw thinks we shouldn't redistribute money to poors because they don't deserve it, ilx poster j thinks the opposite. if it's hard to figure out just desserts, so everyone just goes home with their priors. whereas in a utilitarian perspective, i show you a poor person suffering and a rich person spending his marginal dollars on trifles, and we're done. maybe consequences don't really exist maan *takes bong rip* or whatever but that seems like an unavoidably useful framework for anyone with strong egalitarian priors

flopson, Friday, 28 August 2015 14:45 (eight years ago) link

i've said elsewhere, maybe upthread, that consequentialism might make more sense (or have more utility, lol) in the context of political action

but i'm not, instinctively, a consequentialist and i don't think political beliefs are analogous to ethical theory - i think there's a gap between programmatic or ideological types of thinking and ethics as it applies to individual action and interrelationships. if you could somehow demonstrate to me that e.g. capitalism was the form of economic organization that maximized "happiness" for the greatest number of people, i'd still believe it was a Bad Thing

MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 August 2015 14:54 (eight years ago) link

sorry i shd've expanded on that first sentence - something along the lines of "the nature of managing expenditure on infrastructure for supporting large numbers of people might mean it's most effectively considered thru some kind of consequentialist lens"

MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 August 2015 14:56 (eight years ago) link

flopson, I too think it is a useful framework, but what people don't like about utilitarianism is that utility is seen as more than a framework. E.G. to say "a dollar has more value to a poor person than a rich person and that argues it should be seen as a good when money flows from the rich to the poor" is a soft form of utilitarianism indeed, and not the form in which people find it indefensible.

I think a concave real-valued function is a great metaphor for this argument but that doesn't mean I think there literally IS a real-valued function lying around whose concavity is the issue. Let alone any talk about fixed point theorems.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 28 August 2015 15:27 (eight years ago) link

^ my point

j., Friday, 28 August 2015 15:47 (eight years ago) link

Just a thought, but if "the greatest good for the greatest number" is a correct formulation of the highest morality, then how would this highest morality not endorse selectively euthanizing the least healthy and most unproductive members of society, starting with the most disabled and extremely elderly, so as to redirect the resources they consume toward creating a better life for the much younger and healthier, but impoverished, members of society?

Aimless, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:17 (eight years ago) link

Because it's ludicrous?

Frederik B, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:26 (eight years ago) link

I'm pretty sure there are still a few million eugenicists out there who would consider it ludicrous not to euthanize the weakest members of society and who'd justify it on purely utilitarian grounds. Is there anything inherent in utilitarianism that precludes that justification?

Aimless, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:31 (eight years ago) link

Anyone considering where to get resources for the poor should start with the wealthy, rather than the disabled and elderly. And throughout history, that does seem to be what people do. And even at times, violent uprisings has taken property, and at times even lifes, from the rich in order to give to the poor. The empirical evidence don't really support that this actually ends up in happiness and goodness. That's a different discussion, though.

Also, that is a prime example of dismissing consequentialism because the consequences of it are perceived to be bad ;)

Frederik B, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:32 (eight years ago) link

You sidestepped my question very neatly, but your answer doesn't answer it. Is there anything inherent in utilitarianism that precludes its application to justify eugenics?

Aimless, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:37 (eight years ago) link

if you could somehow demonstrate to me that e.g. capitalism was the form of economic organization that maximized "happiness" for the greatest number of people

i think good (no doubt controversial) case can be made for this (with proviso that definitions of ‘capitalism’ & ‘happiness’ not unproblematic givens)

drash, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:39 (eight years ago) link

this is prob dumb-obv thing to say, but my problem with utilitarianism/ consequentialism is problem with any totalizing ethical system/ theory

irl (as opposed to academic philosophy), ethical considerations, criteria, calculations involve complex, heterogeneous, mixed set of language-games, engaging with abstraction/ generalization, analogies & disanalogies, yet also attuned to dense web (context) of particulars

in ‘pure’ form or as totalizing theory, consequentialism & deontology both are inhuman & absurd, alien to ways humans actually ‘reason’ morally— ways much more sophisticated than philosophy’s gedanken-parables capture or allow for (ways not easily schematized by philosophy)

imo everyone (sociopaths aside) is consequentialist and deontologist, i.e. these are primordial ethical perspectives/ arguments/ language-games, most useful & essential as correctives, checks & balances on each other

philosophers like singer seem to me like children, frustrated at illogicalities & apparent paradoxes of e.g. english language, adamantly insisting others shd adopt their own invented wd-be ‘rational’ language
i don’t begrudge anyone that choice of personal ethics (especially if it induces ethical action), but ultimately— in pure form— it’s no more ‘rational’ (its normative power no more secured by ‘logic’) than e.g. ethics based on religion
the complexity of ethical thought prob best elucidated through narrative, not abstract theory or some input-output algorithm for action

nb theories, algorithms, gedanken-experiments, schematizations of philosophy (e.g. of utilitarian philosophy) are useful— insofar as they contribute to diverse toolbox of ethical-political reasoning, argumentation, persuasion, evaluation (e.g. of policy)
but imo they don’t in themselves provide any answers

drash, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:42 (eight years ago) link

i agree it can be argued, it frequently is argued! by "demonstrate" i meant "proved to a reasonable degree of certainty".

not all consequentialism is utilitarianism, obv, but the problem they both have at the macro and micro level is fundamentally one of time - of consequences, even. an action that benefits me in the short term might do me greater harm as it's consequences unfold. a policy that benefits x number of people over a year might harm 100x people over 10.

this isn't to say consequentialism can't be a good way of taking decisions on how to behave, but it does mean that to call those decisions "moral" requires a lot of qualification of what "good", "right" and "consequence" mean

MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 August 2015 19:48 (eight years ago) link

i think the language of ethics as commonly used is far closer to a deontological position. consequentialism feels closer to the language of government.

MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 August 2015 19:50 (eight years ago) link

which is to say yeah i broadly agree with you drash, to insist on either position dogmatically is only sane in the realm of philosophy...the same might be true of a rigid belief in the field of ethics as a guide to how to live tho

MC Whistler (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 August 2015 19:53 (eight years ago) link

x-post: No I can't. In the same way I can't find anything inherent in modern science to preclude it's application to proving that the world is flat. Nobody in their right mind, and in good faith, could argue that it would be utilitarian to kill a bunch of grandfathers and -mothers. But somebody might lie and manipulate to say such a thing, sure. However, the risk of something like that happening - due to utilitarianism - are so little that it simply doesn't matter, consequentialistically speaking. When speaking consequentially, what matters are not 'inherent' things, what matters is not 'being', but 'doing'.

As I said upthread, I fully accept if people think that the moral philosophy with the best consequences are anti-consequentialist. I cannot argue against lying and saying that you're not a consequentialist, even though consequentialist argumenation brought you to that conclusion. But what I would need to hear to consider deontology, for instance, would be a convincing argument based on deontological reasoning, instead of utilitarian.

Also, crash mostly otm.

Also, Noodle Vague also tom that 'the language of ethics' is closer to deontology, which is obviously why it's a worthless waste of time ;)

Also also also, late Wittgenstein rules! Language games forever.

Frederik B, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:55 (eight years ago) link

Sorry, drash not crash. Stupid auto-correct.

Frederik B, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:56 (eight years ago) link

children, frustrated at illogicalities & apparent paradoxes of e.g. english language, adamantly insisting others shd adopt their own invented wd-be ‘rational’ language

Have to admit that I am irrationally sympathetic with those people

Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 28 August 2015 19:57 (eight years ago) link

xps yr points otm nv

drash, Friday, 28 August 2015 19:58 (eight years ago) link

Also also also, late Wittgenstein rules! Language games forever.

:) with you there (waving my lighter in the air)

drash, Friday, 28 August 2015 20:05 (eight years ago) link

Have to admit that I am irrationally sympathetic with those people

am sympathetic too. funny thing is, temperamentally wittgenstein was like epitome of this, keenly felt & suffered from this frustration/perplexity
that’s always one of the voices in his (dialogic) texts (a voice in himself)
all his late philosophy is like therapeutically trying to work through this, let go of that obsessiveness/ demand/ delusion, demystify ‘rule-following’

drash, Friday, 28 August 2015 20:21 (eight years ago) link

Singer distinguishes between involuntary and nonvoluntary euthanasia and argues the latter is defensible whereas the former is basically not http://utilitarianism.net/singer/by/1993----.htm

This is twenty years ago now though so maybe he's gotten weirder. Euthanasia is probably the topic of his that has sparked the most lay outrage iirc

go hang a salami I'm a canal, adam (silby), Friday, 28 August 2015 20:23 (eight years ago) link

imo everyone (sociopaths aside) is consequentialist and deontologist,

macintyre_shed_tear.gif

j., Friday, 28 August 2015 21:58 (eight years ago) link

utilitarians of many non-horrific stripes routinely repudiate dumm consequences drawn from their main doctrine by e.g. claiming that the basic moral standards (inclusive of duties, rights, liberties, autonomy, what have you) are to be observed in some fashion or other when applying the principle of utility. mill did so. whether or not their theoretical refinements or their official stance toward existing moral practices hold up is another matter (esp. e.g. in view of their generally wide-open attitude toward the revision of any existent practice that could be improved utility-wise), but their official view excludes 'let's kill all the babies' etc.

j., Friday, 28 August 2015 22:02 (eight years ago) link

xp aw & virtue ethicist too (i.e. everyone is)
(<3 aristotle)

drash, Friday, 28 August 2015 22:13 (eight years ago) link

(though not v aristotelian irl myself)
(think aristotle wd be first to criticize utilitarians & deontologists, strict dogmatic ones anyway, for reasons related to discussion above)

drash, Friday, 28 August 2015 22:32 (eight years ago) link

i think it's straightforward to maintain lots of inalienable human rights & other rules on utilitarian grounds esp when allowing for the lack of omniscience/consensus on individual decisions

ogmor, Friday, 28 August 2015 23:11 (eight years ago) link

Gawker ended up publishing the piece: http://gawker.com/heres-the-philosophy-essay-vox-found-too-upsetting-to-p-1727243459

Furthermore, it’s difficult to get a grasp of what Big Bad World would be like. But the way people live there may be similar to the way we live. There are ups and downs in our lives. Perhaps a typical human life often ends up with only a little happiness as its net sum. Perhaps many lives end up with a negative sum. But then, is the Big Bad World so bad as one may at first have thought? It’s quite possible that people in Big Bad World aren’t living in abject poverty and misery, but instead have lives similar those of many affluent people living in rich, developed countries today.

I thought an assumption of the repugnant conclusion is that the people in Big Bad World live lives barely worth living. If in imagining such a world we imagine a world in which peoples' lives are pretty good, that just means we haven't thought about a big enough world, and we can reiterate the problem with respect to an even bigger world where individual standards of living are much worse but the net happiness is greater.

jmm, Saturday, 29 August 2015 15:09 (eight years ago) link

I think a concave real-valued function is a great metaphor for this argument but that doesn't mean I think there literally IS a real-valued function lying around whose concavity is the issue. Let alone any talk about fixed point theorems.

― Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, August 28, 2015 11:27 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

all language is just metaphors, none of the things literally exist (although it's possible to observe these functions under very weak assumptions, just in rather banal settings). i think this is just bias against math, people take it more literally than they do other language for some reason. i just said concave real valued function as a shorthand to what we all understand and are familiar with as a real thing

flopson, Saturday, 29 August 2015 16:40 (eight years ago) link

Metaphors don't suffice for what's supposed to be (and claimed as by some of its proponents) a totalizing ethical theory. If philosophers in the anglophone tradition still want to make arguments about how we ought to live (which, for some reason, some of them do) resorting to analogy, sophistry, and appeals to common sense sorta seems like admitting the project is ridiculous.

go hang a salami I'm a canal, adam (silby), Saturday, 29 August 2015 18:22 (eight years ago) link

utilitarianism isn't a philosophy, it's a tactic.

rushomancy, Saturday, 29 August 2015 18:31 (eight years ago) link

i think this is just bias against math, people take it more literally than they do other language for some reason.

for some reason?!?!

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 29 August 2015 18:44 (eight years ago) link

I mean I'm not trying to be difficult, just saying, as someone in math I'm keenly aware of the way that mathematical language is actually much more useful to take literally than other language, as long as you make sure only to take it literally when it's meant literally.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 29 August 2015 18:45 (eight years ago) link

all language is just metaphors, none of the things literally exist

flopson comin out all nietzschean

j., Saturday, 29 August 2015 19:01 (eight years ago) link

Which is why I think it's cool to say "it's good when money flows from rich to poor because IT'S KIND OF LIKE there's a concave function" is cool but "I can't tell you what utility different actions have but there must be a consistent way to assign utilities to outcomes because fixed point theorem" is not OK; it takes what was a useful metaphor and promotes it to the kind of thing to which one can apply fixed-point theorems.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 29 August 2015 19:14 (eight years ago) link

i think i see what you mean

/all language is just metaphors, none of the things literally exist/

flopson comin out all nietzschean
--j.

haha i love these threads cause i'm just pulling stuff outta my ass but you guys have actually studied thought hard about and know like the history of these ideas. thank you for putting up with me each time i load the thread im like oh god what crap did i post here last night and cringe

flopson, Saturday, 29 August 2015 19:39 (eight years ago) link


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