Thursday, July 27, 2017

the biology of morality

Authentic morality comes out of a realistic assessment of human nature.  Human beings are not blank slates.  We are born with moral inclinations.  Except for those of us who suffer from personality disorders, we all have innate psychological traits that not only facilitate moral behavior but also incline us to value it.  Had these genetic traits not represented a competitive advantage in the survival game, they would not have been what was produced by the evolutionary process.  I’m not going to attempt to explain the exact evolutionary mechanisms by which the human capacities for love, loyalty, and social cooperation were selected, but we can at least know that had there not been a clear evolutionary advantage to the traits and inclinations that we have inherited genetically, we would not have them.

While human beings are certainly capable of being ruthless or unscrupulous in the pursuit of their own self-interest, that is not surprising given what we know about the evolutionary pressures that have shaped our DNA.  We expect drives associated with self-preservation to be strong.  What is surprising is how common human behaviors that serve a greater good than self-interest are.  Not only is each individual born with a significant capacity for personal virtue; she also has talent for cultural creativity by which she can contribute to and participate in collective moral understandings. 

The social contract is not just a bright idea that some idealistic visionary came up with recently; it has been a matter of survival for millenia.  Human existence has always depended on a critical mass of individuals behaving in ways that contributed to the wellbeing of the whole community.  Our biology has been shaped by that reality.  For the vast majority of time human beings have been evolving, our ancestors lived as hunter-gatherers and absolutely depended being a part of communities.  Who we are genetically is largely the product of the evolutionary pressures that were associated with that.  Individuals who didn’t have the psychological traits that supported participation in social cooperation were not as likely to survive and pass on their DNA.

Consequently, we are genetically hardwired with the capacity to be guided by an internal ethical template somewhat along the lines of the golden rule.  The fact is that supporting the social contract is in virtually everyone’s interest.  Different cultures have different understandings of the social contract, but even though the specific moral expectations are different, the equation is basically the same.  The ability to comprehend the need for a social contract and intuitively knowing how to participate in it are innate.  That is not to say that human beings are especially virtuous.  Self-preservation is still a much stronger drive than altruism.  We have to work with rather than against our natural tendencies.  Given the basic selfishness of human nature, the most stable basis for morality is always going to be enlightened self-interest, the recognition that being a decent human being is the best long term strategy even if we are purely selfish.

Ethical choices never occur in a vacuum.  There is more to morally constructive choices than relying on an inborn sense of right and wrong.  We are capable of morality because of the best in us, but we value it because of the worst.  Moral behavior is almost always a blend of doing the right thing for its own sake and doing it because we want to avoid negative consequences.  Whatever sublime pleasure we might derive from just being good as an end in itself, most of us also find ourselves making many choices based on the recognition that behaving badly will catch up with us in the long run. 

Doing the right thing is always a blend of nature and nurture.  We are born with the capacity for making moral choices, but actual choices are always influenced by the collective wisdom that is embedded in cultural understandings.  At the intersection of individual freedom and the desire to be virtuous, there is a precarious balance between the legitimate right to pursue my own interests and the obligation to play fair.  What is best for each of us, even from a selfish point of view, is some optimal blend of the two.  The idea that what is best for us is always getting as much of what we want as we can is childish and unrealistic, but expecting people to always sacrifice for the sake of the community is not realistic.

Evolutionary biology testifies that cultural commitments that offset pure selfishness make us better competitors in the survival game; otherwise, natural selection would not have given us the many traits that support them.  Some cultures are better than others at fostering socially cooperative behaviors.  Ideally, how cultural moral understandings are shaped is a blend of conscience and intelligent, open reflection on ethical dilemmas.  The individual has a responsibility at the macro as well as the micro level and a responsibility to participate in the shaping of the collective conscience as well as the responsibility to heed it.  The collective conscience is constantly being informed by actual experience and by publicly shared reflection on that experience.  I have a responsibility to speak up when social mores are a function of small-mindedness rather than truly promoting socially constructive behaviors.

An illustration of the tension between the social contract and self-interest is a game theory application called the prisoner’s dilemma.  The prisoner’s dilemma is based on a scenario where two suspects are in two different interrogation rooms and are each offered a deal.  Each of them can win sympathy with the prosecutor by snitching on the other one.  A suspect who doesn’t snitch but is snitched on receives the greatest penalty.  A suspect who snitches but isn’t snitched on does the best for himself.  Either of them can improve her own fate by snitching on the other, but if neither snitches, they both get off relatively easy.  So the best outcome for both of them is if neither cuts a deal with the prosecutor.   Unfortunately for them though, that is an unstable solution because each of them can do better by screwing the other one, no matter what the other chooses.  It turns out that the most likely outcome is that they both snitch and thus both lose. 

It is easy to see the how the prisoner’s dilemma game parallels real social situations.  Putting aside the fact that the characters in the scenario are criminals who are presumably involved in antisocial behavior, choosing to not snitch can be seen as socially cooperative behavior.  It is more beneficial to the other guy than it is for me.  Most of the time any one of us can improve our short term gain by being selfish mercenaries.  The curious fact though is that, in real life, socially cooperative behaviors happen anyway.  In order to more adequately model actual social cooperation, game theorists have expanded the prisoner’s dilemma game to a serialized format known as the iterated prisoner’s dilemma game.  It turns out that if the players know that snitching in one round will likely be punished in a subsequent round, they are less likely to snitch.  The take-home lesson is that the most stable basis for social cooperation seems to be an approach that combines enlightened self-interest with a means of holding each other accountable. 

Truly moral behavior is a blend of the following elements:
·         I have a basic sense of the difference between right and wrong, and I care.  In other words, I have a conscience.  All other things being equal, I generally prefer right over wrong. 
·         I am willing and able to be honest as I reflect on the ethical implications of my decisions, commitments, and actions.
·         My self-interest is enlightened by my understanding of ultimate consequences.  Getting what I truly want in the long run usually involves acting in good faith along the way.
·         I am committed to the social contract for consciously selfish as well as virtuous reasons.
·         I want to have a reputation for being decent, trustworthy, and fair.
·         I participate actively in the shaping of the collective conscience, and I make ethical decisions in the light of collective wisdom.
·         I resist the pressures of groupthink and speak up when the collective conscience becomes small-minded condemnation of those who are marginalized.
·         I guard with special care the rights of minorities because their voice is a crucial corrective to blind spots of the majority perspective in the process of collective discernment, and how I treat those who can’t push back is the truest reflection of my own ethical commitments.
·         I value the rule of law because without it the strong devour the weak and there is no justice.
·         I am supportive in word and deed of formal and informal retributive justice as a deterrent (though I guard against getting carried away by reckless vigilantism).
·         I support checks and balances on power.  This includes public servants, law enforcement personnel, teachers of children, authority figures, religious leaders, experts, persons who enjoy wealth and privilege, and demagogues.
·         When I find it necessary to dissent, I am guided by an understanding of the principles of civil disobedience.

This is not a foolproof process that guarantees positive outcomes.  It is a deliberative process that is characterized by struggles, uncertainty, and failure, but it is a more sound and realistic strategy than any version of traditional morality.  It is an eyes-wide-open approach to moral choices.


Saturday, July 15, 2017

accountability

Most of us recognize that a well-functioning society depends on people doing the right thing even when it goes against what is strictly in their own personal interest. No one practices that perfectly. Some violate it with impunity. And there is profound disagreement as to exactly what is the right thing to do in a given situation.

The greatest source of disagreement has mainly to do with the question of authority. By what authority is right and wrong determined? To what or to whom are we accountable? What are we obligated to do or not do? The most significant fault line is that which runs between those who believe that adhering to traditional morality is what is most important and those who believe that having an eye toward actual consequences is what is most important.

The vast majority of traditional morality is quite sound. It is hard to imagine a society functioning without understandings of right and wrong being passed down from one generation to the next. However, certain appropriations of traditional morality don't make sense in our culturally and religiously pluralistic society.

Being smugly indifferent to actual consequences (and sometimes even seeming to enjoy inflicting pain on other people) clearly reflects a perverse understanding of morality.  Christians who claim to hold to traditional morality would do well to pay attention to what their own tradition says: "Those who say, 'I love God,' and hate their brothers or sisters, are liars; for those who do not love a brother or sister whom they have seen, cannot love God whom they have not seen." (1 John 4:20 NRSV)

If what this biblical passage is talking about weren't a common tendency that its author believed needed to be fought, it would never have been considered necessary to include it in the Bible. And even though those who are most guilty of it deny their own culpability, it is still a problem today. They say that they "hate the sin, but love the sinner", but their actions speak louder than their words.

Monday, July 10, 2017

fully and fruitfully human

Recovering humanity encompasses the full range of human experience – fallibility, frailty, and fickleness as well as brilliance, courage, and gritty determination. It calls for a comprehensive engagement on every front, engagement of our whole selves, engagement of the highs and lows that make life rich and interesting, engagement of the challenges that disturb our complacency when we dare to dream, engagement of our unquenchable thirst for freedom as well as of our inescapable dependence on the goodwill, fair-mindedness, and cooperative spirit of others, and engagement in the discipline of intelligent, honest reflection by which we can learn from our experience. It is about being in touch with our deepest longings, being inspired by our highest aspirations, keeping our wits about us, and staying on our toes, aloft but alert, buoyant but with feet still touching the ground. Enlivened by our hearts, compassionate, and truly kind, but also mindful in every sense of the word – aware, attentive, thoughtful, sensible, reality-based, actively practicing self-examination, welcoming feedback, we establish a sturdy foundation strengthened by humility.

Stepping up to the challenge of being fully human is not an undertaking for the faint of heart. When we stake our reputations, security, and wellbeing on interdependence, on daring to imagine what we can accomplish if we work together, on kindling, nurturing, and on encouraging our own and each other’s surprisingly complementary peculiarities, we rouse a sleeping giant. Unleashing raw, unbridled humanity can be a roller coaster ride. Stirring up ardent likes and dislikes; calling forth unrefined, uncensored responses; and emboldening unwieldy forces that are latent within the human heart can be risky. What is most obvious about being human are the many ways that we miss the mark. We are afflicted by bad judgment, fall short of what we sincerely and earnestly intend, or get swept away by incendiary emotionalism. Having been burned in the past by misplaced trust, we are wary of letting our guard down and opening ourselves up to being taken advantage of. Our perceptions are distorted by past trauma, resentment, and fear. We are touchy, suspicious, defensive, cruel, or passive-aggressive. We withdraw into our shells, stonewall, or overreact with hair trigger nastiness or unmerited condemnation. We are easily manipulated by unscrupulous charlatans and demagogues who the flames of an already perilous mob mentality. Nevertheless, the very fact that our humanity is a mixed bag is all the more reason to cherish, cultivate, and count on abundant human goodness and to pursue a full embodiment of that which makes us human – heart and head, vulnerabilities and strengths, the depths of our despair, the heights of our triumphs, and the breadth of our imagination – the entire package.

Unless we show up, come together, do what it takes to follow through, “keep it real”, refuse to pull any punches, and decline dumbing down the truth, we are contributing to the problem by perpetuating the apathy, cynicism, factionalist enmities, and free floating rage that have gotten us where we are. Recovering humanity is about having the courage to put aside the defense mechanisms that get in the way, to let go of the excuses that hold us back, and to leave behind accumulated baggage like wounded pride, jealousy, and retaliatory spitefulness. We thereby approach rather than avoid, advance rather than retreat, and live our way into lives that are characterized by:
     the robust buoyancy that comes with tapping into the wellspring of innate generosity and goodwill deep within each of us
     having a solid relationship with evidence-based reality
     being deftly guided by consideration in two senses of the word: being considerate and considering the facts at hand
     routinely stepping back, taking a deep breath, and allowing time for circumspection, thereby averting whatever tendencies we might have to be carelessly swept away by emotionalism or impulsiveness
     benefiting from a big picture perspective
     using strategic, collaborative intelligence to solve difficult problems
     playing well with others
     fostering win/win interpersonal dynamics
     welcoming the complementary strengths that come with diversity
     surfacing unsuspected inner resources 
     recognizing previously unimaginable opportunities
     accumulating experiences of effectiveness that strengthen self-confidence and increase personal empowerment
     profiting from ongoing learning