DMB said:
...If we comply simply to avoid punishment, that is not morality at all.
It's merely fear-driven obedience, coerced compliance. This is how
most psychopaths stay out of jail. They will avoid murder because it
puts them at risk of going to jail. It's not because THEY think it's
morally wrong, but because they know that other people think it's
wrong. One philosopher who looked into this says the immoral
psychopath knows what's moral in the same way that an atheist can
have knowledge of theology without actually believing any of it
himself.

To make an important distinction here, psychopath and sociopath are not interchangable words. A psychopath experiences a break with reality, whereas a sociopath has no conscience. A psychopath may be operating in a completely moral position when he acts, based on whatever delusion is in charge at the moment. A sociopath feels nothing for anyone other than him/herself. As an example, there was a program on several years ago that involved talking with prisoners who were sentenced to life terms, without parole. One of the prisoners explained that when he killed his brother, sister-in-law and her brother, he was functioning as the "Red Knight" and was serving the greater good by getting on his motorcycle and taking out the people he saw as completely evil. Wasn't that a moral position? A sociopath, on the other hand, has no problem breaking laws, as he/she doesn't believe those laws apply. Laws are for other people. The sociopath may be completely aware that what he/she is doing is considered wrong, or immoral, but aren't bothered by that fact. (For the record, it's no longer called "sociopath" and is now called "Antisocial Personality Disorder" in the DSM IV (TR). The definition of the disorder is: "The essential feature of Antisocial Personality Disorder is a pervasive pattern of disregard for, and violation of, the rights of others that begins in childhood or early adolescence and continues into adulthood.")

Based on the definition provided by the American Psychological Association, it would appear that ALL morality is based in the intellect. One definition of evil is intelligence without compassion. I think that the intelligence part is necessary. A tiger that kills an antelope isn't being evil, it's being a tiger.

Matt:
The reason why Dave's comment appears to erect a
prudence-morality distinction is because it sounds like the kinds of
things social critics who also viewed themselves as upholding the
Kantian distinction while being against utilitarianism would say.  The
last half of the 19th-century especially gave birth to this kind of line
of thought because Kantian liberals wanted to distinguish themselves
from the wildly successful utilitarian liberals (with origins in
Smith/Hume, but mainly the Bentham-Mill-Mill sequence).  The
19th-century utilitarians were also taking advantage of their alliance
with science, by which I mean the rhetoric of science.  As the heirs
of epistemological empiricism, they told everyone that their method
was science applied to ethics/politics.  People attracted to saying
that the avoidance of punishment does not count as moral behavior
were, then, largely Christians and rationalists (by which I mean,
rationalists who had lost to empiricism, and so reconstituted
themselves as Kantian idealists).

It would seem that a sociopath would be able to learn not to harm others, either from a desire to avoid punishment or to achieve some kind of reward. Based on the above, this would NOT be moral behavior. For the behavior to be moral, it must stem from inside the person, rather than from an outside agency. From this perspective, would it be possible for someone to behave in a moral manner without feeling anything for the person their dealing with?



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