It was stated, at the beginning of the last chapter, that the ethical theory we are considering—the theory stated in the first two chapters—does not maintain with regard to any class of voluntary actions, that, if an action of the class in question is once right, any other action of the same class must always be right. And this is true, in the sense, in which the statement would, I think, be naturally understood. But it is now important to emphasize that, in a certain sense, the statement is untrue. Our theory does assert that, if any voluntary action is once right, then any other voluntary action which resembled it in one particular respect (or rather in a combination of two respects) must always be right; and since, if we take the word class in the widest possible sense, any set of actions which resemble one another in any respect whatever may be said to form a class, it follows that, in this wide sense, our theory does maintain that there are many classes of action, such that, if an action belonging to one of them is once right, any action belonging to the same class would always be right.(Ch. 4 ¶ 1)
Exactly what our theory does assert under this head cannot, I think, be stated accurately except in rather a complicated way; but it is important to state it as precisely as possible. The precise point is this. This theory asserted, as we saw, that the question whether a voluntary action is right or wrong always depends upon what its total effects are, as compared with the total effects of all the alternative actions, which we could have done instead. Let us suppose, then, that we have an action X, which is right, and whose total effects are A; and let us suppose that the total effects of all the possible alternative actions would have been respectively B, C, D and E. The precise principle with which we are now concerned may then be stated as follows. Our theory implies, namely, that any action Y which resembled X in both the two respects (1) that its total effects were precisely similar to A and (2) that the total effects of all the possible alternatives were precisely similar to B, C, D and E, would necessarily also be right, if X was right, and would necessarily also be wrong, if X was wrong. It is important to emphasise the point that this will only be true of actions which resemble X in both these two respects at once. We cannot say that any action Y, whose total effects are precisely similar to those of X, will also be right if X is right. It is absolutely essential that the other condition should also be satisfied; namely, that the total effects of all the possible alternatives should also be precisely similar in both the two cases. For if they were not—if in the case of Y, some alternative was possible, which would have quite different effects, from any that would have produced by any alternative that was possible in the case of X—then, according to our theory, it is possible that the total effects of this other alternative would be intrinsically better than those of Y, and in that case Y will be wrong, even though its total effects are precisely similar to those of X and X was right. Both conditions must, therefore, be satisfied simultaneously. But our theory does imply that any action which does resemble another in both these two respects at once, must be right if the first be right, and wrong if the first be wrong.(Ch. 4 ¶ 2)
This is the precise principle with which we are now concerned. It may perhaps be stated more conveniently in the form in which it was stated in the second chapter: namely, that if it is ever right to do an action whose total effects are A in preference to one whose total effects are B, it must always be right to do any action whose total effects are precisely similar to A in preference to one whose total effects are precisely similar to B. It is also, I think, what is commonly meant by saying, simply, that the question whether an action is right or wrong always depends upon its total effects or consequences; but this will not do as an accurate statement of it, because, as we shall see, it may be held that right and wrong do, in a sense, always depend upon an action’s total consequences and yet that this principle is untrue. It is also sometimes expressed by saying that if an action is once right, any precisely similar action, done in circumstances which are also precisely similar in all respects, must be right too. But this is both too narrow and too wide. It is too narrow, because our principle does not confine itself to an assertion about precisely similar actions. Our principle asserts that any action Y, whose effects are precisely similar to those of another X, will be right, if X is right, provided the effects of all the alternatives possible in the two cases are also precisely similar, even though Y itself is not precisely similar to X, but utterly different from it. And it is too wide, because it does not follow from the fact that two actions are both precisely similar in themselves and also done in precisely similar circumstances, that their effects must also be precisely similar. This does, of course, follow, so long as the laws of nature remain the same. But if we suppose the laws of nature to change, or if we conceive a Universe in which different laws of nature hold from those which hold in this one, then plainly a precisely similar action done in precisely similar circumstances, must both be right, if one is right, though true as applied to this Universe, provided (as is commonly supposed) the laws of nature cannot change, is not true absolutely unconditionally. But our principle asserts absolutely unconditionally that if it is once right to prefer a set of total effects A to another set B, it must always, in any conceivable Universe, be right to prefer a set precisely similar to A to a set precisely similar to B.(Ch. 4 ¶ 3)
This, then, is a second very fundamental principle, which
our theory asserts—a principle which is, in a sense, concerned with
classes of actions, and not merely with particular actions.
And in asserting this principle also it seems to me that our theory is right.
But many different views have been held, which, while admitting that one and the
same action cannot be both right and wrong, yet assert or imply that this second
principle is untrue. And I propose in this chapter to deal with those among them
which resemble the theories dealt with in the last chapter in one particular
respect—namely, that they depend upon some view as to the
meaning of the word right
or as to the
meaning of the word good.
(Ch. 4 ¶ 4)
And, first of all, we may briefly mention a theory, which is very similar to some of those dealt with in the last chapter and which is, I think, often confused with them, but which yet differs from them in one very important respect. This is the theory that to say that an action is right or wrong is the same thing as to say that a majority of all mankind have, more often than not, some particular feeling (or absence of feeling) towards actions of the class to which it belongs. This theory differs from those considered in the last chapter, because it does not imply that one and the same action ever actually is both right and wrong. For, however much the feelings of different men and different societies may differ at different times, yet, if we take strictly a majority of all mankind at all times past, present and future, any class of action which is, for instance, generally approved by such an absolute majority of all mankind, will not also be disapproved by an absolute majority of all mankind, although it may be disapproved by a majority of any one society, or by a majority of all the men living at any one period. This proposal, therefore, to say that, when we assert an action to be right or wrong, we are making an assertion about the feelings of an absolute majority of all mankind does not conflict with the principle that one and the same action cannot be both right and wrong. It allows us to say that any particular action always is either right or wrong, in spite of the fact that different men and different societies may feel differently towards actions of that class at the same or different times. What it does conflict with is the principle we are now considering. Since it implies that if a majority of mankind did not happen to have a particular feeling towards actions of one class A, it would not be right to prefer actions of this class to those of another class B, even though the effects of A and B, respectively, might be precisely similar to what they now are. It implies, that is to say, that in a Universe in which there were no men, or in which the feelings of the majority were different from what they are in this one, it might not be right to prefer one total set of effects A to another B, even though in this Universe it is always right to prefer them.(Ch. 4 ¶ 5)
Now I do not know if this theory has ever been expressly held; but some philosophers have certainly argued as if it were true. Great pains have, for instance, been taken to show that mankind are, in general, pleased with actions which lead to a maximum of pleasure, and displeased with those which lead to less than a maximum; and the proof that this is so has been treated as if it were, at the same time, a proof that it is always right to do what leads to a maximum of pleasure, and wrong to do what leads to less than a maximum. But obviously, unless to show that mankind are generally pleased with a particular sort of action is the same thing as to show that that sort of action is always right, some independent proof is needed to show that what mankind are generally pleased with is always right. And some of those who have used this argument do not seem to have seen that any such proof is needed. So soon as we recognise quite clearly that to say that an action is right is not the same thing as to say that mankind are generally pleased with it, it becomes obvious that to show that mankind are generally pleased with a particular sort of action is not sufficient to show that it is right. And hence it is, I think, fair to say that those who have argued as if it were sufficient, have argued as if to say that an action is right were the same thing as saying that mankind are generally pleased with it; although, perhaps, if this assumption had been expressly put before them, they would have rejected it.(Ch. 4 ¶ 6)
We may therefore say, I think, that the theory that to call
an action right or wrong is the same thing as to say that an absolute majority
of all mankind have some particular feeling (or absence of feeling) towards
actions of that kind, has often been assumed, even if it has not been expressly
held. And it is, therefore, perhaps worth while to point out that it is exposed
to exactly the same objection as two of the theories dealt with in the last chapter. The objection is that it is quite
certain, as a matter of fact, that a man may have no doubt that an action is
right, even where he does doubt whether an absolute
majority of all mankind have a particular feeling (or absence of feeling)
towards it, no matter what feeling we take. And what this shows is that,
whatever he is thinking, when he thinks the action to be right, he is not merely
thinking that a majority of mankind have any particular feeling towards it.
Even, therefore, if it be true that what is approved or liked by an absolute
majority of mankind is, as a matter of fact, always right
(and this we are not disputing), it is quite certain that to say that it is
right is not the same thing as to say that it is thus
approved. And with this we come to the end of a certain type of theories with
regard to the meaning of the words right
and
wrong.
We are now entitled to the conclusion that, whatever the
meaning of these words may be, it is not identical with any assertion whatever
about either the feelings or the thoughts of
men—neither those of any particular man, nor those of
of any particular society, nor those of some man or other, nor those of mankind
as a whole. To predicate of an action that it is right or wrong is to predicate
of it something quite different from the mere fact that any man or set of men
have any particular feeling towards, or opinion about, it.(Ch. 4 ¶ 7)
But there are some philosophers who, while feeling the strongest objection to the view that one and the same action can ever be both right and wrong, and also to any view which implies that the question whether an action is right or wrong depends in any way upon what men—even the majority of men—actually feel or think about it, yet seem to be so strongly convinced that to call an action right must be merely to make an assertion about the attitude of some being towards it, that they have adopted the view that there is some being other than any man or set of men, whose attitude towards the same action or class of actions never changes, and that, when we assert actions to be right or wrong, what we are doing is merely to make an assertion about the attitude of this non-human being. And theories of this type are the next which I wish to consider.(Ch. 4 ¶ 8)
Those who have held some theory of this type have, I think, generally held that what we mean by calling an action right or wrong is not that the non-human being in question has or has not some feeling towards actions of the class to which it belongs, but that it has or has not towards them one of the mental attitudes which we call willing or commanding or forbidding; a kind of mental attitude with which we are all familiar, and which is not generally classed under the head of feelings, but under a quite separate head. To forbid actions of a certain class is the same thing as to will or command that they should not be done. And the view generally held is, I think, that to say that an action ought to be done, is the same thing as to say that it belongs to a class which the non-human being wills or commands; to say that it is right, is to say that it belongs to a class which the non-human being does not forbid; and to say that it is wrong or ought not to be done is to say that it belongs to a class which the non-human being does forbid. All assertions about right and wrong are, accordingly, by theories of this type, identified with assertions about the will of some non-human being. And there are two obvious reasons why we should hold that, if judgments of right and wrong are judgments about any mental attitude at all, they are judgments about the mental attitude which we call willing, rather than about any of those which we call feelings.(Ch. 4 ¶ 9)
The first is that the notion which we express by the word
right
seems to be obviously closely connected with that which we
express by the word ought,
in the manner explained in Chapter I (¶¶ 19–25); and that there
are many usages of language which seem to suggest that the word
ought
expresses a command. The very name of the Ten Commandments
is a familiar instance, and so is the language in which they are expressed.
Everybody understands these Commandments as assertions to the effect that
certain actions ought, and that others ought
not to be done. But yet they are called
Commandments,
and if we look at what they
actually say we find such expressions as Thou shalt
do no murder,
Thou shalt not steal
— expressions which are obviously equivalent to the imperatives,
Do no murder,
Do
not steal,
and which strictly, therefore, should express commands. For
this reason alone it is very natural to suppose that the word
ought
always expresses a command. And there
is yet another reason in faovur of the same supposition—namely, that the
fact that actions of a certain class ought or ought not to be done is often
called a moral law,
a name which naturally
suggests that such facts are in some way analogous to laws,
in
the legal sense—the sense in which we talk of the laws of England or of
any other country. But if we look to see what is meant by saying that any given
thing is, in this sense, part of the law
of a given community,
there are a good many facts in favour of the view that nothing can be part of
the law of any community, unless it has either itself been willed by some person
or persons having the necessary authority over that community, or can be deduced
from something which has been so willed. It is, indeed, not at all an easy thing
to define what is meant by having the necessary
authority,
or, in other words, to say in what relation a
person or set of persons must stand to a community, if it is to be true that
nothing can be a law of that community except what these persons have willed, or
what can be deduced from something which they have willed. But still it may be
true that there always is some person or set of persons whose will or consent is
necessary to make a law a law. And whether this is so or not, it does seem to be
the case that every law, which is the law of any community, is, in a certain
sense, dependent upon the human will. This is true in the
sense that, in the case of every law whatever, there always are
some men, who, by performing certain acts of will, could
make it cease to be the law; and also that, in the case of anything whatever
which is not the law, there always are
some men, who, by performing certain acts of will, could
make it be the law: though, of course, any given set of men who could effect the
change in the case of some laws, could very often not
effect it in the case of others, but in their case another set of men would be
required: and, of course, in some cases the number of men whose co-operation
would be required would be very large. It does seem, therefore, as if laws, in
the legal sense, were essentially dependent on the human will; and this fact
naturally suggests that moral laws also are dependent on the will of some
being.(Ch. 4 ¶ 10)
These are, I think, the two chief reasons which have led
people to suppose that moral judgments are judgments about the
will, rather than about the feelings,
of some being or beings. And there are, of course, the same objections to
supposing, in the case of moral laws, that the being or
beings in question can be any man or set of men, as there are to the supposition that judgments about
right and wrong can be merely judgments about men’s feelings or
opinions. In this way, therefore, there has naturally arisen the view
we are now considering—the view that to say of an action that it ought to
be done, or is right, or ought not to be done, is the same thing as to say that
it belongs to a class of actions which has been commanded, or permitted, or
forbidden by some non-human being. Different views have, of
course, been taken as to who or what the non-human being is. One of the simplest
is that it is God: that is to say, that, when we call an action wrong, we mean
to say that God has forbidden it. But other philosophers have supposed that it
is a being which may be called Reason,
or one called The
Practical Reason,
or one called The Pure Will,
or one
called The Universal Will,
or one called The True
Self.
In some cases, the beings called by these names have been supposed
to be merely faculties
of the human mind, or some other entity,
resident in, or forming a part of, the minds of all men. And, where this is the
case, it may seem unfair to call these supposed entities
non-human.
But all that I mean by calling them this is to
emphasise the fact that even if they are faculties of, or entities resident in,
the human mind, they are, at least, not human
beings—that is to say, they are not
men—either any one particular man or any set of men.
For ex hypothesi they are beings which can never
will what is wrong, whereas it is admitted that all men
can, and sometimes do, will what is wrong. No doubt sometimes, when philosophers
speak as if they believed in the existence of beings of this kind, they are
speaking metaphorically and do not really hold any such belief. Thus a
philosopher may often speak of an ethical truth as a dictate of
Reason,
without really meaning to imply that there is any faculty or
part of our mind which invariably leads us right and never leads us wrong. But I
think there is no doubt that such language is not always metaphorical. THe view
is held that whenever I judge truly or will rightly, there really is a something
in me which does these things—the same something on every different
occasion; and that this something never judges falsely or
wills wrongly; so that, when I judge falsely and will wrongly, it is a
different something in me which does so.(Ch. 4 ¶ 11)
Now it may seem to many people that the most serious objection to views of this kind is that it is, to say the least, extremely doubtful whether there is any being, such as they suppose to exist—any being, who never wills what is wrong but always only what is right; and I think myself that, in all probability, there is no such being—neither a God, nor any being such as philosophers have called by the names I have mentioned. But adequately to discuss the reasons for and against supposing that there is one would take us far too long. And fortunately it is unnecessary for our present purpose; since the only question we need to answer is whether, even supposing there is such a being, who commands all that ought to be done and only what ought to be done, and forbids all that is wrong and only what is wrong, what we mean by saying that an action ought or ought not to be done can possibly be merely that this being commands it or forbids it. And it seems to me there is a conclusive argument against supposing that this can be all that we mean, even if there really is, in fact, such a being.(Ch. 4 ¶ 12)
The argument is simply that, whether there is such a being or not, there certainly are many people who do not believe that there is one, and that such people, in spite of not believing in its existence, can nevertheless continue to believe that actions are right and wrong. But this would be quite impossible if the view we are considering were true. According to that view, to believe that an action is wrong is the same thing as to believe that it is forbidden by one of these non-human beings; so that any one whatever who ever does believe that an action is wrong is, ipso facto, believing in the existence of such a being. It maintains, therefore, that everybody who believes that actions are right or wrong does, as a matter of fact, believe in the existence of one of these beings. And this contention seems to be plainly contrary to fact. It might, indeed, be urged that when we say there are some people who do not believe in any of these beings, all that is really true is that there are some people who think they do not believe in them; while, in fact, everybody really does. But it is surely impossible seriously to maintain that, in all cases, they are so mistaken as to the nature of their own beliefs. But if so, then it follows absolutely that even if wrong actions always are in fact forbidden by some non-human being, yet to say that they are wrong is not identical with saying that they are so forbidden.(Ch. 4 ¶ 13)
And it is important also, as an argument against views of this class, to insist upon the reason why they contradict the principle which we are considering in this chapter. They contradict this principle, because they imply that there is absolutely no class of actions of which we can say that it always would, in any conceivable Universe, be right or wrong. They imply this because they imply that if the non-human being, whom they suppose to exist, did not exist, nothing would be right or wrong. Thus, for instance, if it is held that to call an action wrong is the same thing as to say that it is forbidden by God, it will follow that, if God did not exist, nothing would be wrong; and hence that we cannot possibly hold that God forbids what is wrong, because it is wrong. We must hold, on the contrary, that the wrongness of what is wrong consists simply and solely in the fact that God does forbid it—a view to which many even of those, who believe that what is wrong is in fact forbidden by God, will justly feel an objection.(Ch. 4 ¶ 14)
For these reasons, it seems to me, we may finally conclude that, when we assert any action to be right or wrong, we are not merely making an assertion about the attitude of mind towards it of any being or set of beings whatever—no matter what attitude of mind we take to be the one in question, whether one of feeling or thinking or willing, and no matter what being or beings we take, whether human or non-human; and that hence no proof to the effect that any particular being or set of beings has or has not a particular attitude of mind towards an action is sufficient to prove that the action really is right or wrong.(Ch. 4 ¶ 15)
But there are many philosophers who fully admit
this—who admit that the predicates which we denote by the words
right
and wrong
do not consist in the having of
any relation whatever to any being’s feelings or thoughts or will; and who
will even go further than this and admit that the question whether an action is
right or wrong does depend, in a sense, solely upon its consequences, namely, in
the sense, that no action ever can be right, if it was possible for the agent to
do something else which would have had better total
consequences; but who, while admitting all this, nevertheless maintain that to
call one set of consequences better than another is the
same thing as to say that one set is related to some mind or minds in a way in
which the other is not related. That is to say, while admitting that to call an
action right or wrong is not merely to assert that some
particular mental attitude is taken up towards it, they hold that to call a
thing good
or bad
is merely
to assert this. And of course, if it be true that no action ever can be right
unless its total effects are as good as possible, then this
view as to the meaning of the words good
and bad
will contradict the principle we are considering in this chapter as effectively
as if the corresponding view be held about the meaning of the words
right
and wrong.
For if, in saying that one set of
effects A is better than another
B we merely mean to say that A has a
relation to some mind or minds which B has
not got, then it will follow that a set of effects
precisely similar to A will not be
better than a set precisely similar to B, if they do not
happen to have the required relations to any mind. And hence it will follow that
even though, on one occasion or in one Universe, it is right to prefer
A to B, yet on another occasion or in
another Universe, it may quite easily not be right to
prefer a set of effects precisely similar to A to a set
precisely similar to B.(Ch. 4 ¶ 16)
For this reason, the view that the meaning of the words
good
and bad
is merely that some being has some
mental attitude towards the thing so called, may constitute a fatal objection to
the principle that we are considering. It will, indeed, only do so, if we admit
that it must always be right to do what has the best
possible total effects. But it may be held that this is self-evident, and many
persons, who hold this view with regard to the meaning of good
and bad
would, I think, be inclined to admit that it is so. Hence
it becomes important to consider this new objection to our principle.(Ch. 4 ¶ 17)
This view that by calling a thing good
or
bad
we merely mean that some being or beings have a certain
mental attitude towards it, has been even more commonly held than the
corresponding view with regard to right
and wrong
;
and it may be held in as many different forms. Thus it may be held that to say
that a thing is good
is the same thing as to say that somebody
thinks it is good—a view which may be refuted by the
same general argument which was used in the case of the corresponding view about
right
and wrong.
Again it may be held that each
man when he calls a thing good
or bad
merely means
that he himself thinks it to be so or has some feeling
towards it; a view from which it will follow, as in the case of right and wrong,
that no two men can ever differ in opinion as to whether a thing is good or bad.
Again, also, in most of the forms, in which it can be held it will certainly
follow that one and the same thing can be both good and
bad; since, whatever pair of mental attitudes or single mental attitude we take,
it seems as certain here, as in the case of right and wrong, that different men
will sometimes have different mental attitudes towards the same thing. This has,
however, been very often disputed in the case of one particular mental attitude,
which deserves to be specially mentioned.(Ch. 4 ¶ 18)
One of the chief differences between the views which have
been held with regard to the meaning of good
and
bad,
and those which have been held with regard to the meaning of
right
and wrong,
is that in the former case it has
been very often held that what we mean by calling a thing good
is
that it is desired, or desired in some particular way; and
this attitude of desire
is one that I did not mention in the case
of right
and wrong
because, so far as I know,
nobody has ever held that to call an action right
is the same
thing as to say that it is desired. But the commonest of all views with regard
to the meaning of the word good,
is that to call a thing good is
to say that it is desired, or desired for its own sake; and curiously enough
this view has been used as an argument in favour of the very theory stated in
our first two chapters, on the ground that no man ever desires (or desires for
its own sake) anything at all except pleasure (or
his own pleasure), and that hence, since
good
means desired,
any set of effects which
contains more pleasure must always be better than one which
contains less. Of course, even if it were true that no man
ever desires anything except pleasure, it would not really follow, as this
argument assumes, that a whole which contains more pleasure must
always be better than one which contains less. On the
contrary, the very opposite would follow; since it would follow that
if any beings did happen to desire something other than
pleasure (and we can easily conceive that some might) then wholes which
contained more pleasure might easily not always be better
than those which contained less. But it is now generally recognised that it is a
complete mistake to suppose even that men desire nothing
but pleasure, or even that they desire nothing else for its own sake. And,
whether it is so or not, the question is irrelevant to our present purpose,
which is to find some quite general arguments to show that to call a thing
good
is, in any case, not the same thing as
merely to say that it is desired or desired for its own sake, nor yet that any
other mental attitude whatever is taken up towards it. What arguments can we
find to show this?(Ch. 4 ¶ 19)
One point should be carefully noticed to begin with;
namely, that we have no need to show that when we call a thing
good
we never mean simply that somebody has
some mental attitude towards it. There are many reasons for thinking that the
word good
is ambiguous—that we use it in different senses
on different occasions; and, if so, it is quite possible that, in
some of its uses, it should stand merely for the assertion
that somebody has some feeling or some other mental attitude towards the thing
called good,
although, in other uses, it
does not. We are not, therefore, concerned to show that it may not
sometimes merely stand for this; all that we need to show
is that sometimes it does not. For what we have to do is
merely to meet the argument that, if we assert, It would always be wrong
to prefer a worse set of total consequences to a
better,
we must, in this
proposition, mean merely by worse
and better,
consequences to which a certain mental attitude is taken up—a conclusion
from which it would follow that, even though a set of consequences
A was once better than a set
B, a set precisely similar to A would not
always necessarily be better than a set precisely similar to
B. And obviously all that we need to do, to show this, is to
show that some sense can be given to the words
better
and worse,
quite other than this; or, in
other words, that to call a thing good
does not
always mean merely that some mental attitude is taken up
towards it.(Ch. 4 ¶ 20)
It will be best, therefore, in order to make the problem
definite, to concentrate attention upon one particular usage of the word, in
which it seems clearly not to mean this. And I will take as an example that
usage in which we make judgments of what
was called in Chapter II intrinsic
value
; that is to say,
where we judge, concerning a particular state of things that it would be worth
while—would be a good thing
—that that state of things
should exist, even if nothing else were to exist besides,
either at the same time or afterwards. We do not, of course, so constantly make
judgments of this kind, as we do some other judgments about the goodness of
things. But we certainly can make them, and it seems quite
clear that we mean something by them. We
can consider with regard to any particular state of things
whether it would be worth while that it should exist, even if there were
absolutely nothing else in the Universe besides; whether, for instance, it would
have been worth while that the Universe, as it has existed up till now, should
have existed, even if absolutely nothing were to follow, but its existence were
to be cut short at the present moment; we can consider
whether the existence of such a Universe would have been better than nothing, or
whether it would have been just as good as that nothing at all should ever have
existed. In the case of such judgments as these it seems to me there are strong
reasons for holding that we are not merely making an assertion either about our
own or about anybody else’s attitude of mind towards the state of things
in question. And if we can show this, in this one case, that is sufficient for
our purpose.(Ch. 4 ¶ 21)
What, then, are the reasons for holding it?(Ch. 4 ¶ 22)
I think we should distinguish two different cases, according to the kind of attitude of mind about which it is supposed that we are making an assertion.(Ch. 4 ¶ 23)
If it is held that what we are asserting is merely that the state of things in question is one that we or somebody else is pleased at the idea of, or one that is or would be desired or desired for its own sake (and these are the views that seem to be most commonly held), the following argument seems to me to be conclusive against all views of this type. Namely, that a man certainly can believe with regard to a given thing or state of things, that the idea of it does please somebody, and is desired, and even desired for its own sake, and yet not believe that it would be at all worth while that it should exist, if it existed quite alone. He may even believe that it would be a positively bad thing—worse than nothing—that it should exist quite alone, in spite of the fact that he knows that it is desired and strongly desired for its own sake, even by himself. That some men can and do make such judgments—that they can and do judge that things which they themselves desire or are pleased with, are nevertheless intrinsically bad (that is to say would be bad, quite apart from their consequences, and even if they existed quite alone) is, I think, undeniable; and no doubt men make this judgment even more frequently with regard to things which are desired by others. And if this is so, then it shows conclusively that to judge that a thing is intrinsically good is not the same thing as to judge that some man is pleased with it or desires it or desires it for its own sake. Of course, it may be held that anybody who makes such a judgment is wrong; that, as a matter of fact, anything whatever which is desired, always is intrinsically good. But that is not the question. We are not disputing for the moment that this may be so as a matter of fact. All that we are trying to show is that, even if it is so, yet, to say that a thing is intrinsically good is not the same thing as to say that it is desired: and this follows absolutely, if even in a single case, a man believes that a thing is desired and yet does not believe that it is intrinsically good.(Ch. 4 ¶ 24)
But I am not sure that this argument will hold against all
forms in which the view might be held, although it does hold against those in
which it is most commonly held. There are, I think, feelings with regard to
which it is much more plausible to hold that to believe that they are felt
towards a given thing is the same thing as to believe that the thing is
intrinsically good, than it is to hold this with regard to the mere feeling of
pleasure, or desire, or desire of a thing for its own sake.
For
instance, it may, so far as I can see, be true that there really is some very
special feeling of such a nature that any man who knows that he himself or
anybody else really feels it towards any state of things cannot doubt that the
state of things in question is intrinsically good. If this be so, then the last
argument will not hold against the view that when we call a thing intrinsically
good, we may mean merely that this special feeling is felt
towards it. And against any such view, if it were held, the only obvious
argument I can find is that it is surely plain that, even if the special feeling
in question had not been felt by any one towards the given
state of things, yet the state of things would have been
intrinsically good.(Ch. 4 ¶ 25)
But, in order fully to make plain the force of this
argument, it is necessary to guard against one misunderstanding, which is very
commonly made and which is apt to obscure the whole question which we are now
discussing. That is to say, we are not now urging that anything would be any
good at all, unless somebody had some feeling towards
something; nor are we urging that there are not many
things, which are good, in one sense
of the word, and which yet would not be any good at all unless somebody had some
feeling towards them. On the contrary, both these propositions, which are very
commonly held, seem to me to be perfectly true. I think it is true that no whole
can be intrinsically good, unless it contains some feeling
towards something as a part of itself; and true also that,
in a very important sense of the word good
(though not in the
sense to which I have given the name intrinsically good
), many
things which are good would not be good, unless somebody
had some feeling towards them. We must, therefore, clearly distinguish the
question whether these things are so, from the question which we are now
discussing. The question we are now discussing is merely whether, granted that
nothing can be intrinsically good unless it contains some
feeling, a thing which is thus good and
does contain this feeling cannot be good without
anybody’s needing to have another feeling towards
it. The point may be simply illustrated by taking the case
of pleasure. Let us suppose, for the moment, that nothing can be intrinsically
good unless unless it contains some pleasure, and that every whole which
contains more pleasure than pain is intrinsically good. The question we are now
discussing is merely whether, supposing this to be so, any whole which did
contain more pleasure than pain, would not be good, even if
nobody had any further feeling towards it. It seems to me
quite plain that it would be so. But if so, then, to say that a state of things
is intrinsically good cannot possibly be the same thing as to say that anybody
has any kind of feelings towards it, even though no state
of things can be intrinsically good unless it contains some
feeling towards something.(Ch. 4 ¶ 26)
But, after all, I do not know whether the strongest
argument against any view which asserts that to call a thing good
is the same thing as to say that some mental attitude is taken up towards it,
does not merely consist in the fact that two propositions about
right
and wrong
are self-evident: namely (1) that,
if it were once the duty of any being, who knew that the
total effects of one action would be A, and those of another
B, to choose the action which produced A
rather than that which produced B, it must
always be the duty of any being who had to choose between
the two actions, one of which he knew would have total effects precisely similar
to A and the other total effects precisely similar to
B, to choose the former rather than the latter, and (2) that
it must always be the duty of any being who had to choose between two actions,
one of which he knew would have better
total effects than the other, to choose the former. From these two propositions
taken together it absolutely follows that if one set of total effects
A is once better than another
B, any set precisely similar to A must
always be better than any set precisely similar to
B. And, if so, then better
and
worse
cannot stand for any relation to any
attitude of mind; since we cannot be entitled to say that if a given attitude is
once taken up towards A and B, the same
attitude would always necessarily be taken up towards any
pair of wholes precisely similar to A and
B.(Ch. 4 ¶ 27)
Ethics was written by G. E. Moore, and published in in 1912. It is now available in the Public Domain.