Hat tip to Ash. More on wrongology and the limits of reason.

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/07/reasons-matter-when-intuitions-dont-object/

Reasons Matter (When Intuitions Don’t Object)


This post by the psychologist Jonathan Haidt is a response to two previous 
articles in The Stone — one by Gary Gutting, the other by Michael P. Lynch — 
which argued against certain views on reason found in Haidt’s recent book, “The 
Righteous Mind.”

~~~~

Among the most memorable scenes in movie history is Toto’s revelation that the 
thundering head of the Wizard of Oz is actually animated by a small man behind 
a curtain, who lamely says, “Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.” 
Modern psychology has, to some extent, pulled the curtain back on human 
reasoning and shown it to be much less impressive than it sometimes pretends to 
be, and much more driven by the hidden force of intuition.

I never said that reasons were irrelevant. I said that they were no match for 
intuition.
In separate essays in The Stone last week, Michael P. Lynch and Gary Gutting 
both argued that reason can do far more than I give it credit for in my recent 
book, “The Righteous Mind.” Lynch in particular urges us not to give up hope 
for a democracy based on the exchange of reasons, and he tries to use my own 
arguments to counter my cynicism: “The judgment that reasons play no role in 
judgment is itself a judgment. And Haidt has defended it with reasons.” But I 
never said that reason plays no role in judgment. Rather, I urged that we be 
realistic about reasoning and recognize that reasons persuade others on moral 
and political issues only under very special circumstances.

I developed an idea from Howard Margolis, the distinguished social scientist 
who died in 2009, that two basic kinds of cognitive events are “seeing-that” 
and “reasoning-why.” (These terms correspond roughly to what the psychologist 
Daniel Kahneman and others call “System 1” and “System 2” and that I call the 
“elephant” and the “rider.”) We effortlessly and intuitively “see that” 
something is true, and then we work to find justifications, or “reasons why,” 
which we can give to others.  Both processes are crucial for understanding 
belief and persuasion. Both are needed for the kind of democratic deliberation 
that Lynch (and I) want to promote.

I’d like to show how these two processes work together by offering here a 
figure that I cut from my book a few months before turning in the manuscript, 
thinking it would be too confusing for a broad audience.


In the figure (adapted from Margolis) I’ve drawn a two-dimensional 
epistemological space showing the four cognitive states you might be in as you 
hear and discuss a story about X — let’s suppose that X is two adult siblings 
having consensual safe sex. The horizontal dimension is intuition: you 
intuitively “see that” X is bad (in which case you start on the left edge of 
the figure). The vertical dimension is “reasoning-why”: you search for reasons 
why X is bad (you try to reason your way downward). There are only two safe, 
comfortable spots on the table: the lower-left corner, where your intuitions 
say that X is bad and you have reasons to support your condemnation, and the 
upper-right corner, where your intuitions say that X is good and you have 
reasons to support that claim. People in those two corners believe that they 
have knowledge, or justified true belief. So how does a typical moral argument 
proceed?

Leif Parsons
Let’s suppose you find yourself in the lower-left corner: you intuitively 
condemn Julie and Mark (the two siblings), and you think you have good reasons 
to back up that condemnation. Your opponent is a libertarian who believes that 
people should be able to do whatever they want, as long as they don’t infringe 
on anyone else’s rights, so she starts off in the upper-right corner. She has 
an intuitive sense of the importance of personal autonomy, and she has reasons 
to support her endorsement of Julie’s and Mark’s autonomy. According to 
Margolis, people don’t change their minds unless they move along the horizontal 
dimension. Intuition is what most matters for belief. Yet a moral argument 
generally consists of round after round of reasoning. Each person tries to pull 
the other along the vertical dimension. Therefore, if your opponent succeeds in 
defeating your reasons, you are unlikely to change your judgment. You’ve been 
dragged into the upper-left quadrant, but you still feel, intuitively, that 
it’s wrong for Julie and Mark to have sex. You start sounding like the 
participants in my studies, one of whom said, “Gosh, this is hard. I really — 
um, I mean, there’s just no way I could change my mind, but I just don’t know 
how to — how to show what I’m feeling.”

This, I suggest, is how moral arguments proceed when people have strong 
intuitions anchoring their beliefs. And intuitions are rarely stronger than 
when they are part of our partisan identities. So I’m not saying that reasons 
“play no role in moral judgment.” In fact, four of the six links in my Social 
Intuitionist Model are reasoning links. Most of what’s going on during an 
argument is reasoning. Rather, I’m saying that reason is far less powerful than 
intuition, so if you’re arguing (or deliberating) with a partner who lives on 
the other side of the political spectrum from you, and you approach issues such 
as abortion, gay marriage or income inequality with powerfully different 
intuitive reactions, you are unlikely to effect any persuasion no matter how 
good your arguments and no matter how much time you give your opponent to 
reflect upon your logic.

If Lynch’s “hope for reason” is that we can someday create a political culture 
in which partisans will change their minds as a result of democratic 
discussions that focus on the vertical dimension only, then I do not share his 
hope. But as an intuitionist, I see hope in an approach to deliberative 
democracy that uses social psychology to calm the passions and fears that make 
horizontal movement so difficult.

One of the issues I am most passionate about is political civility. I co-run a 
site at www.CivilPolitics.org where we define civility as “the ability to 
disagree with others while respecting their sincerity and decency.” We explain 
our goals like this: “We believe this ability [civility] is best fostered by 
indirect methods (changing contexts, payoffs and institutions) rather than by 
direct methods (such as pleading with people to be more civil, or asking people 
to sign civility pledges).” In other words, we hope to open up space for civil 
disagreement by creating contexts in which elephants (automatic processes and 
intuitions) are calmer, rather than by asking riders (controlled processes, 
including reasoning) to try harder.

We are particularly interested in organizations that try to create a sense of 
community and camaraderie as a precondition for political discussions. For 
example, a group called To the Village Square holds bipartisan events for 
citizens and community leaders in Tallahassee, Fla. They usually eat together 
before talking about politics — an effort to push a primitive cooperation 
button by breaking bread together. They talk a lot about their common identity 
as Tallahasseans.  These are all efforts to manipulate participants — to change 
the warp of the epistemological table so that the horizontal dimension isn’t so 
steeply tilted, which opens up the possibility that good arguments offered by 
friends will move people, at least a trace, along the vertical dimension.

This is the approach that I took when writing “The Righteous Mind.” Lynch and 
Gutting both assert that if my argument about the limits of reason were 
correct, then I contradicted myself by writing a book offering reasons why my 
argument was correct. But I never said that reasons were irrelevant. I said 
that they were no match for intuition, and that they were usually a servant of 
one’s own intuitions. Therefore, if you want to persuade someone, talk to the 
elephant first. Trigger the right intuitions first. And that’s exactly what I 
did in the book.  I didn’t rush in with summaries of the scientific literature. 
Rather, as I explained to readers (on p. 50):

I decided to weave together the history of moral psychology and my own personal 
story to create a sense of movement from rationalism to intuitionism. I threw 
in historical anecdotes, quotations from the ancients, and praise of a few 
visionaries. I set up metaphors (such as the rider and the elephant) that will 
recur throughout the book. I did these things in order to “tune up” your 
intuitions about moral psychology.

Gutting grants that my strategy is effective: “Haidt is convincing largely 
because his experiments resonate so well with what we find in our 
pre-scientific experience.” Would Lynch and Gutting say that I was being 
manipulative by trying to create such intuitive resonance? Was this the moral 
equivalent of dropping a drug in the water supply to cause people to agree with 
me?

I don’t think I was being any more manipulative than To the Village Square, or 
than Martin Luther King Jr., who used metaphors and oratorical skills to make 
his moral arguments intuitively resonant. As I see it, I was addressing myself 
to the horizontal dimension of the epistemological space first, trying to pull 
skeptical readers over to the right, or at least to the midline of the map (in 
Chapters 1 and 2 of the book) before offering them reams of evidence and 
arguments (in Chapters 3 and 4) to try to pull them up into the upper right 
corner. Reasons matter, reasons produce movement on the epistemological map, 
but only at the right time, when countervailing intuitions have been turned off.

This is why there has been such rapid movement on gay marriage and gay rights. 
It’s not because good arguments have suddenly appeared, which nobody thought of 
in the 1990s. The polling data show a clear demographic transition. Older 
people, who grew up in an environment where homosexuality was hidden and 
shameful, often still feel a visceral disgust at the thought of it. But younger 
people, who grew up knowing gay people and seeing gay couples on television, 
have no such disgust. For them, the arguments are much more persuasive.

To move on to another point, Gutting argues that I oversimplified the 
rationalism of the great moral philosophers, and surely I have. I am 
particularly pleased to learn that Plato was more keenly aware than I had 
realized of the importance of social context for the cultivation of good 
reasoning. But when Gutting suggests that I don’t take such philosophers 
seriously “because they don’t proceed like empirical scientists, testing their 
ideas through experiments,” I must disagree.

Throughout my career I have sought insights into morality from many 
disciplines. I found the experimental work in moral psychology to be mostly 
sterile and uninspiring. My early heroes were philosophers (like David Hume, 
Allan Gibbard and Owen Flanagan), sociologists (like Emile Durkheim), 
historians (like Keith Thomas) and anthropologists (like Richard Shweder and 
Alan Fiske). My heroes were the ones who had what I thought was the right view 
of human nature, emphasizing emotions, intuitions and the power of social and 
cultural forces. (Gutting is right that I should have cited Nietzsche, 
MacIntyre and Nussbaum.) To the extent that I seem disrespectful toward 
rationalist philosophers, it is because I found it frustrating to read the 
false psychological assumptions woven into many of their arguments.

But I hope I did not come across as disdainful of philosophy in general. I love 
Aristotle’s emphasis on habit — and I had a long section on virtue ethics in 
Chapter 6 that got cut at the last minute, but which I have just now posted 
online here. And in my last book, “The Happiness Hypothesis,” I quoted and 
praised philosophers in most of the 10 chapters, from Epictetus and Boethius 
through Montaigne and Nietzsche. Philosophers were the best psychologists for 
more than 2,000 years, and many of their insights have been validated by 
experimental psychology.

I should also say that philosophers have the best norms for good thinking that 
I have ever encountered. When my work is critiqued by a philosopher I can be 
certain that he or she has read me carefully, including the footnotes, and will 
not turn me into a straw man. More than any other subculture I know, the 
philosophical community embodies the kinds of normative pressures for 
reason-giving and responsiveness to reasons that Allan Gibbard describes in 
“Wise Choices, Apt Feelings.” I wish such norms could be sprinkled into the 
water supply of Washington. Alas, as Plato tells us, paraphrased by Gutting, 
truth arises “only from the right sort of discussion among inquirers 
accountable to one another.” Politics is a very different game from philosophy, 
and partisans are accountable to their teammates and their funders, not to one 
another. If we’re ever going to tone down the demonizing and open up space for 
compromise and collaboration in our political lives, I’d start by hiring 
Glaucon as a management consultant, and I’d work with him to redesign the 
social world of Washington and the institutions within which politicians work. 
I’d want to make good thinking and openness to compromise redound to a 
politicians credit, and make hyperpartisan posturing and inflexibility become 
sources of shame.

Jonathan Haidt is a professor of business ethics at the NYU-Stern School of 
Business. He is the author of “The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided 
by Politics and Religion” and of “The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern 
Truth in Ancient Wisdom.”


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