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© Michael Lacewing Moral motivation as natural disposition Michael Lacewing enquiries@alevelphilosophy.co.uk
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Hume The foundation of morality is a feeling of approval/disapproval –‘That which pronounces characters praiseworthy or blameable depends on some internal sense or feeling, which nature has made universal in the whole species’ Praise of a person always attaches to happiness and satisfaction society receives from his presence and actions (utility)
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Why are we pleased by utility? Approval is not based on self-interest –we approve of things that seem to have nothing to do with our interests – and a real feeling can’t arise from an imaginary interest; –we can distinguish affection for virtue and private advantage – and can respect it in enemies; –we try to persuade others without referring to their self-interest
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Sympathy Approval is based on sympathy We are clearly moved by effects of misery; can we be indifferent to its causes? And likewise with happiness From sympathy with those affected by the action, we approve or disapprove of its motive
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Sympathy and self-interest But can sympathy overcome self-interest? There is no fundamental conflict: –‘Are we apprehensive lest those social affections interfere… with private utility, and cannot be gratified, without some important sacrifice of honour and advantage? If so, we are but ill- instructed in the nature of the human passions, and are more influenced by verbal distinctions than by real differences.’(Enquiry, 230)
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Can morality be based on sympathy? Sympathy is stronger for those we know and love, but moral judgment treats everyone as equal Hume agrees; to generate moral judgments, we must render our feelings ‘more public and social’ This can involve reasoning
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Moral authority Can sympathy explain our saying ‘you must do this’? Can’t someone simply reply that they don’t care about sympathy? Yes - we can’t argue someone into being moral But anyone completely without sympathy is a sociopath
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Morality beyond sympathy According to Hume, we approve of what is pleasurable and useful, and disapprove of what is not But what about ideas of self-denial, self-sacrifice and penitence? –Hume rejects them
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