A
book review at Nature starts:
What is our conscience, and where does it come from? In her highly readable Conscience, the philosopher Patricia Churchland argues that “we would have no moral stance on anything unless we were social”.
That
we have a conscience at all relates to how evolution has shaped our
neurobiology for social living. Thus, we judge what is right or wrong
using feelings that urge us in a general direction and judgement that
shapes these urges into actions. Such judgement typically reflects “some
standard of a group to which the individual feels attached”. This idea
of conscience as a neurobiological capacity for internalizing social
norms contrasts with strictly philosophical accounts of how and why we
tell right from wrong.
It seems she is very even handed in her criticisms of moral philosophers, hating both Kant:
She eviscerates moral philosophers who believe that moral rules can be
utterly divorced from biology and find a foundation based on reasoning
alone. She points out that the assumption that morality is not properly
philosophically grounded unless it is universal is itself merely a
rebuttable stipulation. She notes that decades of attempts to define
universal rules have not succeeded. And finally, she shows that most
moral dilemmas are just that: dilemmas in which it is impossible to
satisfy all the constraints, and which put ostensibly universal
principles into conflict with each other.
but she's no fan of utilitarianism too:
Neither does she have much use for utilitarians, with their simple
calculus of adding up the greatest good for the greatest number. She
rightly points out that living in a utilitarian society would be
unsatisfying for most people, because we are not partial to all members
of our society equally. We prefer our own groups, our own friends, our
own families. For most people, as she argues, “love for one’s family
members is a colossal neurobiological and psychological fact that mere
ideology cannot wish away”. She concludes that utilitarianism is
irresolvably at odds with how our brains function, given that we evolved
to care more deeply about people we know than about those whom we do
not.
Could be a good read...
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