Steve, Platt,

Steve quoted Sam Harris:
"A rational approach to ethics becomes possible once we realize that questions 
of right and wrong are really questions about the happiness and suffering of 
sentient creatures."

Platt said:
A clear statement alright, but arrogant beyond belief -- as if he, Sam Harris, 
knows what constitutes happiness and suffering. Whatever happened to no pain, 
no gain?

Matt:
No, come on Platt: nothing in the quote seems to imply any of that.  Unless 
you've read Harris enough to know better how interpret that snippet, I think 
you're jumping a long way from it, at least without the proper framing.  It's 
not that suffering is always bad, Harris is saying that ethical questions are 
questions about happiness and suffering, which is a reframing of the issue, not 
a definitive answer in any direction.  Harris is still well within conceptual 
rights of being able to claim that pain is sometimes needed for moral 
development.

What I suspect you're seeing, Platt, is that "rational approach" is often code 
for "objective," as in "there is an objective standard for right and wrong, for 
happiness and suffering calculation."  This is what Enlightenment-style atheist 
philosophers have often said (or maybe even only construed as saying) to bash 
down religion.  The old superstition vs. reason dichotomy.  There are few 
stupid utilitarians left, however, and it is probably bad policy to think 
anybody would deny that there is not beauty in pain.  (It would be like holding 
Pirsig to his word in Lila, that the low value situation of the stove comes 
before words and everything else--a seeming disallowance of masochistic 
enjoyment.  But we know Pirsig doesn't think that.)

Pragmatists and Pirsigians should have no truck with the traditional dichotomy 
between superstition and reason, between "irrational" religious beliefs and 
"rational" scientific/philosophical beliefs.  In this sense, I think Platt is 
right to protest Harris.  The problem is that the implication in Harris' 
statement here is that we haven't had a rational approach to ethics yet, and in 
particular, religion can't offer it (at least, I imagine those would bare out 
in Harris' text).  This, I think, is silly because for pragmatists, and here 
Rorty and Dewey count the same, being rational is being consistent, it's about 
being able to trace inferential lines in your belief system, about having "good 
reasons" for your beliefs.  What count as "good reasons," of course, is why 
perfectly consistent people have different ethical, religious, and political 
beliefs.  One person's good reason is another's stupid.  But all of this is 
perfectly consistent with being able to converse and exchange
  arguments about ethics and morality, and I think pragmatists and Pirsigians 
should not pursue a more rigid definition of rationality (that being the 
problem Pirsig had with Plato in ZMM).

All of the above is still consistent with thinking any of the following things:
1) religion is the best teacher of good/right/virtue/ethics
2) religion is a good teacher, but that is not all it's about
3) religion is a bad teacher of good/right/virtue/ethics
4) religion has been a good teacher in the past, and maybe is now, but it is 
time to separate God from ethics
5) religion is as good a teacher as any, but because there are so many 
different places that we learn good ethical behavior, we should perceive these 
"teachers" neutrally when in forums where we need to discuss ethics (like 
politics)

My point is that I don't think a Pirsigian approach to philosophy, where value 
is the root of everything, helps us out all that much when dealing with the 
many tangled problems of religion and ethics.  What it is good for is telling 
us that people like Harris are full of it (and, indeed, exhibit a bit of 
philosophical arrogance, as Platt put it) when they say that they have the key, 
the answer we've been waiting for--finally, now we can do ethics as it was 
meant to be done.  What we have are a lot of conflicting static patterns of 
value.

Even sorting out which ones are the social and which ones the intellectual 
won't help much.  I don't think identifying countries or cultures as "social" 
or "intellectual" does any good because people have been making those kinds of 
polemical distinctions for ages and ages, and they haven't helped all that much 
yet.  I am always baffled by the perception of many that Pirsig is quite novel 
in this--I'm not sure Pirsig ever thought he was very novel in this.  Novelty 
aside, it might be a useful sorting mechanism occasionally, but it doesn't help 
much in arguing with anybody.  

What I don't think anybody has really explicitly acknowledged (at least in my 
acquaintance) is that, while on the one hand Pirsigians enjoy claiming that 
Pirsig's philosophy does a great job in clarifying moral conflict, specifically 
in its distinction between social and intellectual levels, on the other hand, 
Pirsig's notion of "discrete levels" almost completely demolishes the work 
desired.  The claim is that we should be able to tell when a social pattern and 
an intellectual pattern is at work, and when there's conflict, intellectual 
wins.  But search the analogous situations: inorganic vs. biological.  That's 
the most clear cut distinction we have (before arguments about what, exactly, 
the top two levels are), but how is it exactly that the two levels come in 
conflict?  When a bird flies?  Sure, the bird is flouting the law of gravity.  
Sure, we can frame it as a great contest between the strength of the bird and 
the ruthless tyranny of gravity.  But by "discrete's" own d
 iction, the inorganic level is totally unaware of any conflict and the bird's 
struggle against its uncomprehending opponent is better termed metaphoric than 
literal.  Were we really warring against gravity when we flew to space?  Or was 
gravity just doing what it does and we were just doing what we do, albeit we do 
more things than gravity does?

There are many definitional problem areas to be sorted out when splitting up 
bio-social-intellectual.  It can be done, and probably done in any number of 
interesting and profitable ways.  But whenever it is done, I think we should 
own up to the fact that whatever conflict is occurring is a one-way 
conflict--one side doesn't know about the conflict and the other side is doing 
it, not because it is more moral, but because it can: a bird flies, we fly, 
because we can--not because we are more moral than gravity.

Matt
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