Difference between revisions of "SEPT 5"

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==3: SEPT 5==
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==4: SEP 5. ==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Hibbing, John R., Kevin Smith, and John R. Alford, ''Predisposed: Liberals, conservatives, and the biology of political difference'', Chapter 1, "Living with the Enemy". (32)
+
:*Hare and Woods – “Humans Evolved to be Friendly” – (1-19; 18) -- Key concepts: self-domestication, cooperative communication
:*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrvtOWEXDIQ PBS Aristotle and Virtue Theory: Crash Course Philosophy #38]
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:*Practice Writing Due last night.
  
===In-class content===
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===In-Class===
  
:*Lecture Segment: Philosophical Theories: Virtue Ethics
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:*Everyday Ethics: What kind of conversation is an ethical conversation
:*Lecture Segment: Some Preliminaries about Ethical theory and objectivity
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:*Practice Writing update.
:*In-class review of 1st practice writing.
 
  
===Some Preliminaries about Objectivity in Ethics and Features of Ethical Discourse===
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===Hare and Woods – “Humans Evolved to be Friendly”===
  
:*'''Where should we look for "moral goodness"?'''
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:*Homo is the genus — there were others, not just Neanderthals.  (Ok, let’s watch a Geico Caveman commercial [https://youtu.be/-Y7HDXBVbfc?si=LrENBU1_yP5foUGi]).
::*Intentions (Kantian),  
 
::*Person (a virtuous person) (Aristotle),
 
::*Consequences (Mill, Singer - Utilitarian)
 
  
:*(The following is pretty standard, but was drawn from Peter Singer's classic, ''Practical Ethics'')
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:*Not obvious that we were going to succeed.  Neanderthals were smart, had culture, fine motor skills (maybe speech).  Bigger, stronger.
  
:*'''What does it mean to say "values vary by culture"?  Is it always "bad relativism"?'''
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:*Major claim: Sapiens advantages may have include self-domestication and the changes that comes with that.
  
:*Singer's arguments against cultural relativism:
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:*cooperative communication, shared intentionality, theory of mind.   
::*Cultural Relativism (the old discussion): Ethics varies by culture.  Singer: This is true and false, same act under different conditions may have different value, but this is '''superficial relativism'''.  For example, existence of birth control led to a general change in sexual ethics. The moral principle in question here is: don't have kids that you're not ready to care for. That principle might remain the same and be objective, but the prohibition on casual sex might change.  (What dropped out was the idea that sex before marriage was sinful.)  
 
  
::*Note: There is strong polling data on advisability of living together prior to marriage.  Now, yes; 60 years ago, noSo cultural change itself doesn't tell you whether moral principles are changingThe consistent principle here?
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:*morphology of skeletons and skulls is influenced by neurohormonesEvidence trail.   
  
:*'''What kind of conversation is an ethical conversation'''
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:*bonobos are “wild domesticates”. - dogs are the best example.  Also engage in cooperative communication.  And they typically love us! 
  
::*Subjectivist Relativism - This position may not be held by any thoughtful person, but it sounds like what some people say when they start studying values and becomes confused or cynical.   
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:*dogs and wolves have common ancestor, the Ice Age wolfDomestication involve genomic change, not just about “taming a wild animal”.   Physical traits of domestication syndrome (3).
:::*The Position: "Wrong" means "I disapprove" or "my society disapproves")
 
:::*The Problems:
 
::::*If this sort of relativism is true, polls could determine ethics.  But they don't.
 
::::*Deep subjectivism can't making sense of disagreement. Ethics is a kind of conversation.
 
::::*There is just too much research suggesting that "I approve" isn't philosophical "rock bottom".
 
  
:*Singer: Ok to say the values aren't objective like physics (aren't facts about the world), but not sensible to deny the meaningfulness of moral disagreement and ethical reasoning.
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:*Belyaev wolf breeding experiments in Siberia — 1959 — 50 generations foxes to domesticate.  General story: relatively friendly member of wild species hang out near human garbage dump, reproductive advantage, interbred.  Then maybe we warmed up to them too.  So maybe wolves were somewhat self-domesticated at first.  (In Food studies, also pigs.).  
  
:*An evolutionist's twist: A society's ethical culture can produce positive, neutral, or negative outcomes for human flourishingIn this sense, values have objective consequences in meeting selection pressures (both natural and cultural). (Vax values, for example.)
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:*14K to 40K y.agoHumans almost eradicate wild wolves. 300K wolves, 1 billion dogs.
  
::*The sorts of reasons that count as ethical: '''universalizable''' ones. Can't just appeal to one person or group's interest. Note: most standard ethical theories satisfy this requirement, yet yield different analysis and adviceWe will look at the specific form of universalization in each theory we discuss, but you could say this is a kind of defining feature of ethical discourse.
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:*And us?  Changes around 80K y.ago. Middle Pleistocene(5) read Human domesticate are “feminized” versions of earlier Homo Sapien.
  
===Hibbing, et. al. ''Predisposed'' Chapter 1===
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:*Experimental corroboration - SSRI treated baby mice get globular head shape.  Neanderthals football shaped heads.  Lower testosterone, higher serotonin, more oxytocin. Research links oxytocin to cooperative behaviors.
  
:*'''Some opening examples of the persistence of partisanship'''
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:*Chimps, bonobos, humans on strangers: we have a category “intragroup stranger” (a stranger who we regard as a group member)Chimps generally hostile to strangers, bonobos friendlier to bonobo strangersWhat did this do for us?  (6).   
:*opening example: William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal -- meant as example of highly educated partisans who would be able to debate in a civilized way60's era political divisions often violent.   
 
:*also historical examples of highly partisan politics -- Hamilton & Adams, Hamilton & Burr (duelled).  Jefferson's dirty tricks.   
 
  
:*Goal of the Book: to explain why people experience and interpret the political world so very differently. Thesis at p. 5: “Our pitch…” (6): list of differences that track political differenceREAD
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:*Also about 80K y.ago we got more consistent in implementing the kind of culture that comes from cooperation. Expanded social networks mean more information flows. 50K y.ago jewelry, cool 3d animal paintings.   
  
:*'''A methodological concern'''
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:*7: But we are also an incredibly cruel species.   
:*Does it makes sense to believe that reduce the diversity of differences among us to "liberal" vs. "conservative". They are in fact measuring lots of differences, but claim there is a tradition of recognizing this difference.  11: some terminological issues.  Ultimately, labels for clusters of real personality and behavioral differences.   
 
  
:*Think Probabilistically: not biological determinists, rather real persistent differences shape and mold our ideologyExample: relation between conscientiousness and ideology 14A number of studies replicate a positive correlation bt conscientiousness and conservatism.  Lesson on 15: difference between representing data in categories vs. scatterplot.  Wilson-Patterson index of conservatism.  Brief lesson on correlation, 17Correlation for conscientiousness and conservatism small r = .2
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:*Oxytocin has another side“Mama bear hormone”. Hamster momsSocial bonding and aggression to out groups go together.   
  
:*'''What are predispositions?'''
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:*What Wrangham calls “the Goodness Paradox” “Humans become more violent when those we evolved to live more intensely were threatened.
:*Predispositions - "biologically and psychologically instantied defaults that, absent new information or overriding, govern response to given stimuli" (24). 
 
::*Leibniz speculated about "appetitions"
 
::*Neuroscientist Eagleman: brain running alot of its own programs.  Ad hoc defenses (also in Haidt) called "baloney generator" by Pinker.  We may have an illusion of rationality and control.  examples of self-deception like this, p. 21, also top of 22 read. 
 
::*Responses to Political stimuli emotionally salient and not always conscious:  Lodge: "hot cognition" or "automaticity" 
 
::*Predispositions vary qualitatively and by intensity. (Examples among people you know.)
 
::*Note examples from environmental psych on top of p. 21 and top of 22.
 
  
:*23: clarifying argument: not nature / nurture. predispositions are difficult to change.  research on long term stability of pol. orientation180 degree turn is very unusual.   
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:*Positive implicationsWe can expand the circleWhites/Black schooled together have more cooperative behaviors in later life (ok with interracial marriage, have friends from other group…)
  
:*'''Technical definition of predispositions''': "Predispositions, then, can be thought of as biologically and psychologically instantiated defaults that, absent new information or conscious overriding, govern response to given stimuli."
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:*Very interesting comment — Changing behavior changes attitudes.
  
:*Our actual predispositions vary, but also the degree to which we have predispositions is variable across a group. (This is one reason researchers in the field sometimes focus on highly partisan test subjects.)
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===Everyday Ethics: What kind of conversation is an ethical conversation===
  
:*25: some background on theorizing about political dispositions.  what is new today is better research, but also research connecting political variation with bio/cog variation.
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:*Ethical conversations and analyses are about evaluating "values and expectations" - claims that we ought to adopt or reject some value(s) and the associated behavior motivated by those values.  
  
:*27: resistance to this kind of theory in political science. Philip Conversealso, idea that politics is best understood in terms of history and culture
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:*So what are some of the unwritten, but widely acknowledged rules for having an ethical conversation?  What are the legitimate "moves" you can make in an ethical conversation? What moves would earn you a yellow or red card.   
  
===Philosophical Moral Theories: Virtue Ethics===
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:*'''Illegitimate moves''':
 +
::*Appealing to only one person's or group's interests.
 +
:::*"What's right is what serves my interests!" vs. "In this circumstance, it is morally permissible for everyone to pursue their interests"
 +
::*Denying the standing (need for consideration) of a person or group arbitrarily. "
 +
:::*"Everyone deserves human rights except group X"
 +
::*Most illicit appeals in informal logic (fallacies): ''ad hominems'' and appeals to pity, ignorance, etc.
  
:*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrvtOWEXDIQ PBS Aristotle and Virtue Theory: Crash Course Philosophy #38]
+
:*'''Legitimate moves:'''  
 
+
::*Appealing to broadly held values about human life and human dignity.
:*concepts from video...
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::*Appealing to cultural and local norms that may be considered well justified.
 
+
::*Appealing to objective knowledge claims that may support or invalidate premises.
::*Virtue — general idea of being an excellent person.  Also, specific lists of virtues (vary by time and culture)
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::*Calling into question these norms or their application, often by:
 
+
:::*1. Conceptual analysis -- What does it mean to value human life? How will we know that we are guaranteeing human dignity?
:*A bit of Aristotle’s theory of virtue and human nature:  fixed nature, species eternal, '''proper function (telos),''' distinctive aspect of function: being rational and political.  (Note that modern virtue theorists aren't committed to some of A's false ideas.)
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:::*2. Advocacy for specific understanding of human nature or human needs.   
 
+
:::*3. Showing that some value proposition will or will not function to promote desirable outcomes.
::*Virtue is natural to us. Like an acorn becoming a tree. Being virtuous is being the best of the kind of thing you are.  A deep intuition supports this developmental approach. (Pause to consider personal examples of the reality of moral development.)
 
 
 
::*Theory of the Golden Mean: Virtue as mean between extremes of emotion:  Ex. Courage (story of stopping the mugger), Honesty, Generosity. (Let's give our own examples.)  Virtue as training of emotional response in relation to knowledge of circumstances and the good.
 
 
 
::*How do you acquire virtue? Experience.  Practical Wisdom cultivated through habituation.  Follow a moral exemplar (virtue coach). Good parenting and shaping by healthy family.  It's a training program in becoming the best human you can be based on your "telos". 
 
 
 
::*What if we don’t want to become virtuous? What is the motivation to virtue? The pursuit of a happy life that “goes well”.  Eudaimonia.  Human flourishing.  Challenge and development of talents. Should be attractive. Connection between virtue and happiness not guaranteed for Aristotle, but could be tighter in other versions.
 
 
 
:*Additional points:
 
 
 
::*centrality of virtues and practical wisdom. Is practical wisdom real?  
 
::*historic variability and list of virtues. Curiosity was a vice in Medieval Europe.  Check out virtue lists on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtue Virtue Wiki].
 
 
 
:*From Aristotle to Evolutionary theory. Eternality of the species.  What if you drop this false belief?  Human excellence may have to do with meeting or exceeding the challenges posed by our environment.  Then the idea that virtues change by time and culture makes more sense.  The pursuit of the good life is the objective and constant part of morality, and the everything that changes is part of the challenge of knowing the human good.
 

Latest revision as of 17:50, 5 September 2024

4: SEP 5.

Assigned

  • Hare and Woods – “Humans Evolved to be Friendly” – (1-19; 18) -- Key concepts: self-domestication, cooperative communication
  • Practice Writing Due last night.

In-Class

  • Everyday Ethics: What kind of conversation is an ethical conversation
  • Practice Writing update.

Hare and Woods – “Humans Evolved to be Friendly”

  • Homo is the genus — there were others, not just Neanderthals. (Ok, let’s watch a Geico Caveman commercial [1]).
  • Not obvious that we were going to succeed. Neanderthals were smart, had culture, fine motor skills (maybe speech). Bigger, stronger.
  • Major claim: Sapiens advantages may have include self-domestication and the changes that comes with that.
  • cooperative communication, shared intentionality, theory of mind.
  • morphology of skeletons and skulls is influenced by neurohormones. Evidence trail.
  • bonobos are “wild domesticates”. - dogs are the best example. Also engage in cooperative communication. And they typically love us!
  • dogs and wolves have common ancestor, the Ice Age wolf. Domestication involve genomic change, not just about “taming a wild animal”. Physical traits of domestication syndrome (3).
  • Belyaev wolf breeding experiments in Siberia — 1959 — 50 generations foxes to domesticate. General story: relatively friendly member of wild species hang out near human garbage dump, reproductive advantage, interbred. Then maybe we warmed up to them too. So maybe wolves were somewhat self-domesticated at first. (In Food studies, also pigs.).
  • 14K to 40K y.ago. Humans almost eradicate wild wolves. 300K wolves, 1 billion dogs.
  • And us? Changes around 80K y.ago. Middle Pleistocene. (5) read Human domesticate are “feminized” versions of earlier Homo Sapien.
  • Experimental corroboration - SSRI treated baby mice get globular head shape. Neanderthals football shaped heads. Lower testosterone, higher serotonin, more oxytocin. Research links oxytocin to cooperative behaviors.
  • Chimps, bonobos, humans on strangers: we have a category “intragroup stranger” (a stranger who we regard as a group member). Chimps generally hostile to strangers, bonobos friendlier to bonobo strangers. What did this do for us? (6).
  • Also about 80K y.ago we got more consistent in implementing the kind of culture that comes from cooperation. Expanded social networks mean more information flows. 50K y.ago jewelry, cool 3d animal paintings.
  • 7: But we are also an incredibly cruel species.
  • Oxytocin has another side. “Mama bear hormone”. Hamster moms. Social bonding and aggression to out groups go together.
  • What Wrangham calls “the Goodness Paradox” “Humans become more violent when those we evolved to live more intensely were threatened.”
  • Positive implications. We can expand the circle. Whites/Black schooled together have more cooperative behaviors in later life (ok with interracial marriage, have friends from other group…)
  • Very interesting comment — Changing behavior changes attitudes.

Everyday Ethics: What kind of conversation is an ethical conversation

  • Ethical conversations and analyses are about evaluating "values and expectations" - claims that we ought to adopt or reject some value(s) and the associated behavior motivated by those values.
  • So what are some of the unwritten, but widely acknowledged rules for having an ethical conversation? What are the legitimate "moves" you can make in an ethical conversation? What moves would earn you a yellow or red card.
  • Illegitimate moves:
  • Appealing to only one person's or group's interests.
  • "What's right is what serves my interests!" vs. "In this circumstance, it is morally permissible for everyone to pursue their interests"
  • Denying the standing (need for consideration) of a person or group arbitrarily. "
  • "Everyone deserves human rights except group X"
  • Most illicit appeals in informal logic (fallacies): ad hominems and appeals to pity, ignorance, etc.
  • Legitimate moves:
  • Appealing to broadly held values about human life and human dignity.
  • Appealing to cultural and local norms that may be considered well justified.
  • Appealing to objective knowledge claims that may support or invalidate premises.
  • Calling into question these norms or their application, often by:
  • 1. Conceptual analysis -- What does it mean to value human life? How will we know that we are guaranteeing human dignity?
  • 2. Advocacy for specific understanding of human nature or human needs.
  • 3. Showing that some value proposition will or will not function to promote desirable outcomes.