Difference between revisions of "SEPT 19"

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(Created page with "==7: SEP 19== ===Assigned=== :*Haidt, Chapter 3, "Elephants Rule" (52-72) :*Alfino, "Defining Morality and Values" (shared folder) :*Watch:[https://youtu.be/mQ2fvTvtzBM Be...")
 
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==7: SEP 19==
+
==8: SEP 19. Unit Two: Moral Psychology==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Haidt, Chapter 3, "Elephants Rule" (52-72)
+
:*View: System 1 and System 2. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBVV8pch1dM Veritasium, “The Science of Thinking”] 12 mins.
  
:*Alfino, "Defining Morality and Values" (shared folder)
+
:*Utilitarianism: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-a739VjqdSI PBS Philosophy Crash course on utilitarianism]
 +
::*The Trolley Problem [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WB3Q5EF4Sg The Trolley Problem].
 +
::*Recommended to browse: Self-driving cars with Trolley problems: [http://www.cnet.com/news/self-driving-car-advocates-tangle-with-messy-morality/], [https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/the-cold-logic-of-drunk-people/381908/ The Cold Logic of Drunk People]
  
:*Watch:[https://youtu.be/mQ2fvTvtzBM Beginner's Guide to Kant's Moral Philosophy]
+
:*Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157); 14)
  
:*SW1 Assigned on Thursday. But previewed today!
+
:*Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14) – neurology of rewards, empathy, Ultimatum game, cultural effects.
  
===In-class content===
+
===In-Class===
  
:*"Defining Morality and Values" Philosophers' critical quetions.
+
:*System 1 and System 2  - Lecture with research from moral psychology
 +
:*Group work on SW1.
 +
:*Giving Peer Criticism
  
===What is Ethics? What are Values? How are they enforced? ===
+
===Veritasium video, “The Science of Thinking”  -- System 1 and System 2===
  
::*Morality is about problems that can be addressed by values.
+
:*examples of letting Sys1 do the job and get it wrong: earth around sun, bat/ball price.
::*Values are expectations of others to think, speak, feel, and act in particular ways (and sometimes to refrain from thinking, speaking, etc. in particular ways).
 
::*We enforce values in social life by many means, from conversation about expectations, gossip about others’ behavior, and, of course, the justice system.
 
  
===Summing up Sapolsky: Morality as a product of Evolution===
+
:*Sys1 and Sys2 - Gunn and Drew. 
 +
::*Sys1 is quick, intuitive, selective, fills in gaps (“The Cat”), part of process for long term memory
 +
::*Sys2 is slow, deliberate, limited to working memory. 
  
:*Some key claims and inferences:
+
:*”chunking” - Sys1 finds patterns that help us store long term memory. “Muscle memory” - going from Sys2 to Sys1. Deliberate and effortful at first, then more automatic.  
::*Evolution shapes our bodies, our behaviors, and our ideas (evo-psych)
 
::*Cooperation and coalitions can give us a fitness advantage.
 
::*A problem with cooperation is to not become a sucker and to avoid free-riders.
 
::*This is a problem we can address with values (e.g. it’s a moral problem).
 
::*Morality isn’t only about cooperation.
 
  
===Haidt, Chapter 3, "Elephants Rule"===
+
:*”Add 1” task - pupil dilation, heart rate increase.  Three cheers for psychophysiology!!!
  
*Personal Anecdote from Haidt's married life: your inner lawyer  (automatic speech)
+
:*In overcoming automatic thinking, you need to bring in Sys2 (Note: This is important in overcoming bias, which relies on automatic thinking.)
 +
 
 +
:*Ads - The “un” campaign got around Sys1’s filter for boring insurance ads.
 +
 
 +
:*Pedagogy - Active pedagogy - making you do something with the information (small groups, worksheets, but also interactive discussion) is better than passive learning environment.  (Note caveat - Life learners do this also on their own and cultivate behaviors that keep Sys2 involved.  Or, some of the best students in the class make Sys2 work hard even just while listening!
 +
 
 +
===System 1 and System 2 in moral psychology===
 +
 
 +
:*gloss Elephant and Rider metaphor in Haidt. Plato's Charioteer.  (Diff metaphors for consciousness.)
 +
 
 +
:*(This is from Haidt, C3, "Elephants rule" - In that chapter he's introducing some research in moral psychology that shows how System 1 works, especially with value judgements. "Intuitions comes first" is another way of saying that system 1 is fast and on the scene judging before system 2 gets out of bed.)
 +
 
 +
:*Personal Anecdote from Haidt's married life: your inner lawyer  (automatic speech)
 
:*Priming studies: "take" "often"  -- working with neutral stories also
 
:*Priming studies: "take" "often"  -- working with neutral stories also
  
*'''Research supporting "intuitions come first"'''
+
:*'''Research supporting "intuitions come first"'''
  
:*1. Brains evaluate instantly and constantly
+
:*1. Brains evaluate instantly and constantly - Zajonc on "affective primacy"- small flashes of pos/neg feeling from ongoing stimuli - even applies to made up language "mere exposure effect" tendency to have more positive responses to something just be repeat exposure.
::*Zajonc on "affective primacy"- small flashes of pos/neg feeling from ongoing cs stimuli - even applies to made up language "mere exposure effect" tendency to have more positive responses to something just be repeat exposure.
 
  
 
:*2. Social and Political judgements are especially intuitive
 
:*2. Social and Political judgements are especially intuitive
 
::*'''Affective Priming''' - flashing word pairs with dissonance: "flower - happiness" vs. "hate - sunshine"  
 
::*'''Affective Priming''' - flashing word pairs with dissonance: "flower - happiness" vs. "hate - sunshine"  
 
::*Implicit Association Test  [https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/ Project Implicit]   
 
::*Implicit Association Test  [https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/ Project Implicit]   
::*Flashing word pairs with political terms causes '''dissonance'''. measurable delay in response when, say, conservatives read "Clinton" and "sunshine".  Dissonance is pain.
+
::*Flashing word pairs with political terms causes '''dissonance'''. measurable delay in response when, say, conservatives read "Clinton" and "sunshine".  ''Dissonance is pain''.
::*Todorov's work extending "attractiveness" advantage to snap judgements.  "Competency" judgments of political candidates correct 2/3 of time. note:
+
::*Todorov's work extending "attractiveness" advantage to snap judgements.  "Competency" judgments of political candidates correct 2/3 of time. Judgements of competence.  note speed of judgement .1 of a second.(59)
::*Judgements of competence.  note speed of judgement .1 of a second.(59)
+
 
 +
:*3. Bodies guide judgements --Fart Spray exaggerates moral judgements (!); Zhong: hand washing before and after moral judgements. Helzer and Pizarro: standing near a sanitizer strengthens conservatism.
 +
 
 +
:*4. Psychopaths: reason but don't feel - Transcript from Robert Hare research
 +
 
 +
:*5. Babies: feel but don't reason; Helper and hinder puppets.  The babies are not thinking with concepts...system 1.
 +
 
 +
===Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157; 14)===
 +
 
 +
:*Note: The text has a couple of pages at the end from a different part of the book.  This material summarizes some of the early childhood research that Tomasello uses to support his theory.
 +
 
 +
:*Diffs bt US and other primates:
 +
::*Great apes are "instrumentally rational"; mostly competitive, some friendships, not a lot of helping.
 +
::*Chimps and bonobos don't use structured cooperation, don't exclude freeriders, no concept of fairness.
 +
 
 +
:*Hypothesis: We (400K ago) were forced to develop a cooperative rationality that included concern for the well being of the partner, then group.  Values this explains: mutual respect, fairness, exclusion of free riders, allowance for "2nd person protest" ("Hey, you said you would...").  From there a collective intentionality that recognizes right and wrong as having an objective status. 
 +
 
 +
:*147: Paraphrased from "Rather.." Morality doesn't develop just by assessing the rational costs for individuals involved, but it might develop if we recognized our dependency on partners and the group.  Relationships involve "investment", not just "payoffs" (as in game theory models).
 +
 
 +
:*Cooperation in reciprocal altruism models is fragile. Someone is always ready to make a sucker out of you and then cooperation goes to zero. 
 +
 
 +
:*Interdependence cultivates genuine concern for the partner, shared intentionality, self-other equivalence (of roles), "deservingness".
 +
 
 +
:*Ontogeny - how something comes to be.
 +
 
 +
::*Digression from text: "Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" - meaning "This phrase suggests that an organism's development will take it through each of the adult stages of its evolutionary history, or its phylogeny.  Sort of true. [https://evolution.berkeley.edu/ontogeny-and-phylogeny/#:~:text=These%20scientists%20claimed%20that%20ontogeny,evolutionary%20history%2C%20or%20its%20phylogeny.].  The slogan is still used, but evolutionists would deny that it is a powerful or general principle. Distinguish from the philosophy field: Ontology.
 +
 
 +
:*Still, '''Contemporary children pass through two stages similar to the stages of the theory (2nd person morality and joint commitment).''' read at 155. The extra pages are from C3, which he mentions as providing evidence.  See summary box at end of pdf. 
 +
 
 +
:*prior to age 3, no recognition of social norms, but after, they will engage in '''3rd party punishment'''.
  
:*3. Bodies guide judgements
+
:*Go through text boxes from Chapter 3 at the end of the pdf.
::*Fart Spray exaggerates moral judgements (!)
 
::*Zhong: hand washing before and after moral judgements.
 
::*Helzer and Pizarro: standing near a sanitizer strengthens conservatism.
 
  
:*4. Psychopaths: reason but don't feel
+
===Utilitarianism - Additional notes===
::*Transcript from Robert Hare research
 
  
:*5. Babies: feel but don't reason
+
:*Let's meet Jeremy Bentham.  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Bentham]
::*Theory behind startle response studies in infants
 
::*helper and hinderer puppet shows: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anCaGBsBOxM Yale Theory of Mind & Baby prosociality]  [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a7JbLSIirXI Basic Puppet set up for prosociality studies on babies]
 
::*reaching for helper puppets  "parsing their social world"
 
  
:*6. Affective reactions in the brain  '''Belief Change'''
+
:*Brief historical intro to utilitarians: Early industrial society, "social statics" (early efforts to measure social conditions)Utilitarians were seen as reformers.   
::*Josh Greene's fMRI studies of Trolley type problems.  [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WB3Q5EF4Sg The Trolley Problem]
 
::*Research study: 20 stories like trolley: direct personal harm, for good reason. 20 stories of impersonal harm18 test subjects put in fMRI and asked about each storyPersonal harm stories consistently activate more emotional centers, like vmPFC.
 
::*Pause on Joshua Greene quote, p. 67
 
:*When does the elephant listen to reason?
 
:*Paxton and Greene experiments with incest story using versions with good and bad arguments.  Harvard students showed no difference, though some when allowed delayed response.
 
::*Friends... The Importance of Friends...Friends are really important...
 
  
===Philosophical Moral Theories: Duty Ethics===
+
:*'''Fundamental consequentialist intuition''':  Most of what's important about morality can be seen in outcomes of our actions that promote happiness and human well-being.
  
:*Basic intuition behind non-consequential duty ethics: Moral behavior sometimes feels like a "command" or absolute imperative to live up to an ideal.  Versions of this include:
+
:*Basic principles of utilitarian thought:
::*An external command, as coming from a creator God, such as God's command to Abraham to kill Isaac, or, better, to follow the example of Jesus.  But then, a revolutionary might also feel this way.
 
::*An internal command, an internalization of Divine laws, like the 10 commandments, or
 
::*A completely secular sense of duty '''to be true to an ideal or conception of ourselves'''. 
 
:::*As rational  - "I have to respect X's right to live their own lives" (also respect for '''autonomy''')
 
:::*As deserving of '''basic dignity''' - "I don't feel morally comfortable with people making degrading choices from limited options." (Famine brides, sex trafficking, organ donation under conditions of poverty, but also humiliation, etc. from discrimination)
 
:::*As deserving of '''care''' - Human dignity also requires that I care for other's basic needs. (People living in squalor, dying for lack of health care.
 
:::*As free people who enjoy '''liberty'''.  (This relates to our new unit on basic liberties.)
 
  
:*Typical formulation of "modern" duty ethics comes from Kant. He is focused on autonomy and honoring our rational being, not improving others' material circumstances. Morality has nothing to do with our natural inclinations or self-interest.
+
::*'''Equal Happiness Principle''': Everyone's happiness matters to them as much as mine does to me. Everyone's interests have equal weight. (Note this is a rational principle.  Emotionally, it's false. Utilitarian thinking often involves overcoming a System 1 automatic (evolved) preference.)
  
:*'''Kant's view''':
+
:::*Note on method: this is a way to universalize.  Recall earlier discussion about conditions for ethical discourse. Ethics is about figuring out when we need to take a moral concern about something and, if we do, then we take on constraint (conversational): universalizability, equality of interests.  (Note that also get to this result from Tomasello and Wrangham.)
  
::*What does it mean to be good, for Kant?  To have a good willThe will to do the right thing. Not for rewards.
+
::*'''Principle of Utility''': Act always so that you promote the greatest good for the greatest number.   
 +
:::*Hedonic version: Act to promote the greatest pleasure ...
 +
:::*Classical utilitarian: greatest balance of range of qualitatively diverse pleasures and aspects of well-being. More wholistic.
 +
:::*Preference utilitarian version: Act to maximally fulfill our interest in acting on our preferences. (Very compatibile with neo-liberal economic thinking.)
  
::*Bartender exampleSelf-interested motivations don’t count (fear of getting caught, losing customers, harming customers).
+
::*But what is utility?  What is a preference?
 +
::*'''Utility''': pleasure, what is useful, happiness, well-being. 
 +
:::*Is the utilitarian committed to maximizing happiness of individuals directly?  A utilitarian focused on promoting utility, might still acknowledge that promoting human happiness is mostly about protecting conditions for an individual's autonomous pursuit of happiness. Consider cases: When does promoting the greater good involve letting people make their own decisions vs. managing or regulating an issue centrally?
 +
:::*Conditions for the pursuit of happiness:  Order, stability, opportunity, education, health, rights, liberty.
 +
:::*Issue of protection of rights in utilitarian thought.   
 +
::*'''Preferences''':  
 +
:::*An indirect way to solve the problem of lack of agreement about goods.  Let's maximize opportunities for people to express their preferences.  Positive: pushing the question of the good life to the individual.  Negative: High levels of individualism may reduce social trust.  Lack of action on opportunities to reduce suffering. 
 +
:::*But sometimes we ought to override preferences: Thought experiment: Returning a gun to an angry person.  Is the angry person's preference one that has to count? People "prefer" to live in a way that is heating up the planet!
 +
:::*Cultural contradictions in our preferences: we prefer health, but we also "prefer" to eat the western diet, smoke things, and drink alcohol.  Which preferences should the utilitarian focus on?  Some preferences are based on bias or prejudice.
  
::*'''What is it that Kant wants you to love and swear absolute duty to?'''  A little background on Kant.  Enlightenment figure. (This is a good time to read a bit about the European intellectual movement called "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Enlightenment The Enlightenment]".  Some Enlightenment ideals: modern free will, importance of reason. 
+
====Group Discussion: Assessing Utilitarianism====
  
::*Kant's ideal: Morality originates in my free will.  The ability to make rules for ourselvesBeing rational.  Being bad is a failure of duty to revere this freedom in me and in others. 
+
:*Consider applying utilitarianism to different kinds of moral problems (from interpersonal ethics to public policy questions)Identify three situations in which you would want to use utilitarianism and three situations in which you would not.
::*This does involves a pretty radical abstraction from the promotion of happiness.  For Kant, what's morally important about us has nothing to do with our well-being, contra eudaimonistic ethics.
 
  
:*Categorical Imperative - Kant's phrase for the kind of motivation (maxim describing our will) that is moral, as opposed to prudential (prudence is about managing consequences).
+
===Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14)===
  
::*'''Formulation #1''': “I ought never to act except in such a way that I could also will that my maxim should become universal law.”  ...if it makes sense for you to will that everyone act from your maxim.  This is a kind of test.
+
:*This chapter is about how the reward structures in the brain work similarly for social and non-social tasks.  This gives us a glimpse of the neurobiology of everyday ethics.  Getting norms and values right (learning them, showing them in your behavior, calling others out, moral shunning) involves the same reward system as non-social tasks, like finding a job or any search problems (getting a good deal on something, etc.)
  
:::*Lying fails the testThere is a logical contradiction between the maxim of truth telling and maxim of lyingYou want people to believe you after all.
+
:*100: The knowledge domains for social and non-social tasks are distinct(Social knowledge tells me whether to make noisily slurping noises while eating noodlesOther knowledge helps me know that I should wait to split my wood till it is dry.
  
::*'''Formulation #2''': Act in such a way that you treat humanity... always as an end and never simply as a meansRequires respect of others as source of rational planning.   
+
:*Applies to emotionally negative situations, like giving negative appraisal. For this, we use empathy. (More on empathy soonYou can think of it both as a way of acquiring knowledge about others’ experience and maintaining social bonds during emotionally negative situations (physical and mental suffering, failures to meet expectations, etc.).   
  
:::*Are we using people only as an end when we get services from others?  Not necessarily. Recall video.
+
:*Churchland’s take on the Ultimatum Game research findings.  Typically, we say this research shows that we are not strictly rational as Responder.  But, Churchland suggests there might be a “social rationality” .  Also culturally variable.  P. 105.  Cites Henrich, market integration may be a variable (measured as: how much of your food do you get from the store).  
  
::*'''Formulation #3''': Act as though through your actions you could become a legislator of universal moralsWe are examples, contributing to a rational order or not. (Are you on "team Reason"? How do we integrate that with knowledge of morality as a system of evolved social behaviors?)
+
:*Really complicated Ultimatum Game researchroughly, norm changes are affected by both conscious and unconcscious (Sys 2 and 1) neural processes. Fashion as example of relatively unconscious cultural process. Norms that have changed this way: breastfeeding, recycling, sexually orientation. 
  
:::*Rationalism: Kant thinks we can all agree, in principle, to promote the idea of the world as a place for rational beings.
+
:*What is happening in the brain during moral experience?  We are getting rewarding or not based on lots of social knowledge and cues from others.

Latest revision as of 16:47, 19 September 2024

8: SEP 19. Unit Two: Moral Psychology

Assigned

  • Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157); 14)
  • Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14) – neurology of rewards, empathy, Ultimatum game, cultural effects.

In-Class

  • System 1 and System 2 - Lecture with research from moral psychology
  • Group work on SW1.
  • Giving Peer Criticism

Veritasium video, “The Science of Thinking” -- System 1 and System 2

  • examples of letting Sys1 do the job and get it wrong: earth around sun, bat/ball price.
  • Sys1 and Sys2 - Gunn and Drew.
  • Sys1 is quick, intuitive, selective, fills in gaps (“The Cat”), part of process for long term memory
  • Sys2 is slow, deliberate, limited to working memory.
  • ”chunking” - Sys1 finds patterns that help us store long term memory. “Muscle memory” - going from Sys2 to Sys1. Deliberate and effortful at first, then more automatic.
  • ”Add 1” task - pupil dilation, heart rate increase. Three cheers for psychophysiology!!!
  • In overcoming automatic thinking, you need to bring in Sys2 (Note: This is important in overcoming bias, which relies on automatic thinking.)
  • Ads - The “un” campaign got around Sys1’s filter for boring insurance ads.
  • Pedagogy - Active pedagogy - making you do something with the information (small groups, worksheets, but also interactive discussion) is better than passive learning environment. (Note caveat - Life learners do this also on their own and cultivate behaviors that keep Sys2 involved. Or, some of the best students in the class make Sys2 work hard even just while listening!

System 1 and System 2 in moral psychology

  • gloss Elephant and Rider metaphor in Haidt. Plato's Charioteer. (Diff metaphors for consciousness.)
  • (This is from Haidt, C3, "Elephants rule" - In that chapter he's introducing some research in moral psychology that shows how System 1 works, especially with value judgements. "Intuitions comes first" is another way of saying that system 1 is fast and on the scene judging before system 2 gets out of bed.)
  • Personal Anecdote from Haidt's married life: your inner lawyer (automatic speech)
  • Priming studies: "take" "often" -- working with neutral stories also
  • Research supporting "intuitions come first"
  • 1. Brains evaluate instantly and constantly - Zajonc on "affective primacy"- small flashes of pos/neg feeling from ongoing stimuli - even applies to made up language "mere exposure effect" tendency to have more positive responses to something just be repeat exposure.
  • 2. Social and Political judgements are especially intuitive
  • Affective Priming - flashing word pairs with dissonance: "flower - happiness" vs. "hate - sunshine"
  • Implicit Association Test Project Implicit
  • Flashing word pairs with political terms causes dissonance. measurable delay in response when, say, conservatives read "Clinton" and "sunshine". Dissonance is pain.
  • Todorov's work extending "attractiveness" advantage to snap judgements. "Competency" judgments of political candidates correct 2/3 of time. Judgements of competence. note speed of judgement .1 of a second.(59)
  • 3. Bodies guide judgements --Fart Spray exaggerates moral judgements (!); Zhong: hand washing before and after moral judgements. Helzer and Pizarro: standing near a sanitizer strengthens conservatism.
  • 4. Psychopaths: reason but don't feel - Transcript from Robert Hare research
  • 5. Babies: feel but don't reason; Helper and hinder puppets. The babies are not thinking with concepts...system 1.

Tomasello - "Human Morality as Cooperation Plus" (143-157; 14)

  • Note: The text has a couple of pages at the end from a different part of the book. This material summarizes some of the early childhood research that Tomasello uses to support his theory.
  • Diffs bt US and other primates:
  • Great apes are "instrumentally rational"; mostly competitive, some friendships, not a lot of helping.
  • Chimps and bonobos don't use structured cooperation, don't exclude freeriders, no concept of fairness.
  • Hypothesis: We (400K ago) were forced to develop a cooperative rationality that included concern for the well being of the partner, then group. Values this explains: mutual respect, fairness, exclusion of free riders, allowance for "2nd person protest" ("Hey, you said you would..."). From there a collective intentionality that recognizes right and wrong as having an objective status.
  • 147: Paraphrased from "Rather.." Morality doesn't develop just by assessing the rational costs for individuals involved, but it might develop if we recognized our dependency on partners and the group. Relationships involve "investment", not just "payoffs" (as in game theory models).
  • Cooperation in reciprocal altruism models is fragile. Someone is always ready to make a sucker out of you and then cooperation goes to zero.
  • Interdependence cultivates genuine concern for the partner, shared intentionality, self-other equivalence (of roles), "deservingness".
  • Ontogeny - how something comes to be.
  • Digression from text: "Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" - meaning "This phrase suggests that an organism's development will take it through each of the adult stages of its evolutionary history, or its phylogeny. Sort of true. [2]. The slogan is still used, but evolutionists would deny that it is a powerful or general principle. Distinguish from the philosophy field: Ontology.
  • Still, Contemporary children pass through two stages similar to the stages of the theory (2nd person morality and joint commitment). read at 155. The extra pages are from C3, which he mentions as providing evidence. See summary box at end of pdf.
  • prior to age 3, no recognition of social norms, but after, they will engage in 3rd party punishment.
  • Go through text boxes from Chapter 3 at the end of the pdf.

Utilitarianism - Additional notes

  • Let's meet Jeremy Bentham. [3]
  • Brief historical intro to utilitarians: Early industrial society, "social statics" (early efforts to measure social conditions). Utilitarians were seen as reformers.
  • Fundamental consequentialist intuition: Most of what's important about morality can be seen in outcomes of our actions that promote happiness and human well-being.
  • Basic principles of utilitarian thought:
  • Equal Happiness Principle: Everyone's happiness matters to them as much as mine does to me. Everyone's interests have equal weight. (Note this is a rational principle. Emotionally, it's false. Utilitarian thinking often involves overcoming a System 1 automatic (evolved) preference.)
  • Note on method: this is a way to universalize. Recall earlier discussion about conditions for ethical discourse. Ethics is about figuring out when we need to take a moral concern about something and, if we do, then we take on constraint (conversational): universalizability, equality of interests. (Note that also get to this result from Tomasello and Wrangham.)
  • Principle of Utility: Act always so that you promote the greatest good for the greatest number.
  • Hedonic version: Act to promote the greatest pleasure ...
  • Classical utilitarian: greatest balance of range of qualitatively diverse pleasures and aspects of well-being. More wholistic.
  • Preference utilitarian version: Act to maximally fulfill our interest in acting on our preferences. (Very compatibile with neo-liberal economic thinking.)
  • But what is utility? What is a preference?
  • Utility: pleasure, what is useful, happiness, well-being.
  • Is the utilitarian committed to maximizing happiness of individuals directly? A utilitarian focused on promoting utility, might still acknowledge that promoting human happiness is mostly about protecting conditions for an individual's autonomous pursuit of happiness. Consider cases: When does promoting the greater good involve letting people make their own decisions vs. managing or regulating an issue centrally?
  • Conditions for the pursuit of happiness: Order, stability, opportunity, education, health, rights, liberty.
  • Issue of protection of rights in utilitarian thought.
  • Preferences:
  • An indirect way to solve the problem of lack of agreement about goods. Let's maximize opportunities for people to express their preferences. Positive: pushing the question of the good life to the individual. Negative: High levels of individualism may reduce social trust. Lack of action on opportunities to reduce suffering.
  • But sometimes we ought to override preferences: Thought experiment: Returning a gun to an angry person. Is the angry person's preference one that has to count? People "prefer" to live in a way that is heating up the planet!
  • Cultural contradictions in our preferences: we prefer health, but we also "prefer" to eat the western diet, smoke things, and drink alcohol. Which preferences should the utilitarian focus on? Some preferences are based on bias or prejudice.

Group Discussion: Assessing Utilitarianism

  • Consider applying utilitarianism to different kinds of moral problems (from interpersonal ethics to public policy questions). Identify three situations in which you would want to use utilitarianism and three situations in which you would not.

Churchland C4 – “Norms and Values” – (96-110; 14)

  • This chapter is about how the reward structures in the brain work similarly for social and non-social tasks. This gives us a glimpse of the neurobiology of everyday ethics. Getting norms and values right (learning them, showing them in your behavior, calling others out, moral shunning) involves the same reward system as non-social tasks, like finding a job or any search problems (getting a good deal on something, etc.)
  • 100: The knowledge domains for social and non-social tasks are distinct. (Social knowledge tells me whether to make noisily slurping noises while eating noodles. Other knowledge helps me know that I should wait to split my wood till it is dry.
  • Applies to emotionally negative situations, like giving negative appraisal. For this, we use empathy. (More on empathy soon. You can think of it both as a way of acquiring knowledge about others’ experience and maintaining social bonds during emotionally negative situations (physical and mental suffering, failures to meet expectations, etc.).
  • Churchland’s take on the Ultimatum Game research findings. Typically, we say this research shows that we are not strictly rational as Responder. But, Churchland suggests there might be a “social rationality” . Also culturally variable. P. 105. Cites Henrich, market integration may be a variable (measured as: how much of your food do you get from the store).
  • Really complicated Ultimatum Game research. roughly, norm changes are affected by both conscious and unconcscious (Sys 2 and 1) neural processes. Fashion as example of relatively unconscious cultural process. Norms that have changed this way: breastfeeding, recycling, sexually orientation.
  • What is happening in the brain during moral experience? We are getting rewarding or not based on lots of social knowledge and cues from others.