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A
Dialectic of Morals
Part 4: The
Order of Goods and Happiness
by Mortimer J. Adler, Ph.D.
We must now begin by asking the student whether
he is willing to agree that we cannot desire
everything as a means. Some things we may desire
simply as means, and some as ends which are in turn
means to further ends, but must we not desire at
least one thing simply as an end, and in no sense
as a means?
"I suppose so", the student will probably say,
"but I don't see why."
The reason is not hard to find. You admit that
whatever is desired as a means is sought for the
sake of its end, and unless the end is desired,
whatever may be a means to it is not desirable. Now
although an end is the last thing we actually
achieve in the course of our conduct (for if an end
could be achieved before some of its means, those
means would be utterly dispensable), the end must
be the first thing we actually desire, for unless
we desire the end, we have no reason for desiring
things which are good only as means to it. Hence if
every good which we regard as an end could also be
regarded as a means to some further end, and so on
indefinitely, there would be no beginning. Just as
you cannot begin to walk in a definite direction
unless you know where you are going before you
start, so you cannot desire anything all as a means
unless you desire something simply as an end.
"Granted", says the student, "something must be
desired as an end. You seem to be implying that
there is only one end for each person, the same for
everyone. Why cannot a person have several distinct
ends? And why cannot different people have
different ends?"
Let us first consider the problem of several
distinct ends for a single man. Suppose A and B to
represent two objects, each of which is desired for
its own sake, simply as an end. Now either the man
seeks both ends together, as parts of a whole we
shall call X, or he chooses between them. But if he
chooses between them, he is exercising preference.
And he must exercise this preference before he
desires any other goods which are means either to A
or to B, for until his end is determined, he cannot
select the means. But on what ground shall he
choose between A and B as ends? Since neither is a
means, he cannot decide between them as he might be
able to decide between alternative means to the
same end. Therefore, if he prefers one end to
another, he must do so because -- because --
"Because he likes it more", the student answers,
"and we are right back to where we started. The
preference for A over B (now called ends) must be
made as I originally said every preference was made
-- in terms of a person's likes and dislikes, in
terms of the quantity of pleasure to be obtained.
Or, if you want me to avoid such words as
"pleasure", I'll say that the man will choose the
end which satisfies him most."
It only seems as if we have fallen back;
on the contrary, we have made a great advance. Let
us show this to the student by asking him whether
if a person could get some satisfaction out
of having A, and some also out of having B,
would the person not get more satisfaction out of
having X, consisting in the sum of A and B. In
which case, if the criterion which determines a
"choice of ends" (in our suppositious case) is the
amount of satisfaction to be derived from
possessing it, then whatever gives the utmost
satisfaction should always be chosen. And if, again
in our suppositious case, A and B are the only two
possibilities as ends, then neither can really be
the end, for the end must be X, the whole which
includes them as parts. If a person seeks either A
or B when he or she can seek X, the person is
seeking less satisfaction than he or she can have.
And even though A and B are ends, they must also be
regarded as means: the parts of a whole are means
for getting the whole itself. Therefore, there is
only one thing which is the end for any person. It
is always the totality of all the goods he or she
is capable of possessing, and possessing each
derives some satisfaction therefrom.
Complete satisfaction occurs only when the totality
is somehow possessed. The end, therefore, is always
the whole of goods; the parts of this whole are the
different kinds of goods, each of which as a part
is a constitutive means to the whole --
constitutive in the sense that it is a means
whereby the whole can be constituted.
The constitutive means, or we can call
them partial goods, may be related to one
another as means are to ends, but all of them,
in so far as they are parts, are equally
constitutive means with respect to the whole. That
is why A and B as partial goods may be ends in
relation to other partial goods (C and D, let us
say) serving them as means. But in so far as they
are partial goods, neither A nor B can be
the end, and both together, along with C and
D, and all other partial goods, must be regarded as
constitutive means with respect to X, which now
stands for the complete totality of goods or
desirables. Hence there is always only one real and
ultimate end, never desired as a means, and since
there is only one, it can never be the object of
choice or preference. It must be desired,
because there is no alternative to it.
"You are going too fast for me", the student
confesses. "I am particularly bothered by two
things. One is that you seem to be assuming that
all the partial goods are always compatible with
one another, so that it is always possible for a
person to have all of them. The other is that you
seem to be reverting to an earlier position, or
even worse than that, you seem to be saying the
opposite of what you said before. You said before
that satisfaction cannot be an object of desire,
and yet now you seem to be saying that X must be
taken as the end, rather than A or B, because it is
more satisfying than they are. Furthermore, if the
totality of goods is always the end,
then it is silly to say that people should
seek to achieve this totality, since they cannot
seek otherwise. In fact, I don't see that we are
saying now any more than we said before when we
said that a person should seek to maximize
pleasure, or satisfaction -- only it now appears
there is no should about it."
Let us meet the student's first point by
reminding him how the diversity of partial goods is
generated. There are many different kinds of good
because human beings have different capacities to
be fulfilled. Now, of course, it is possible for
human capacities to be so related that any attempt
to fulfill one would necessarily interfere with the
fulfillment of one or more of the others. But that,
as a matter of fact, does not seem to be the case.
In the light of the facts about human nature, we
can say, then, that so long as the variety of goods
corresponds somehow to the diversity in human
capacities, this variety will include no
incompatible partial goods. Hence, a variety so
constituted can always be summated in a totality.
If A, B, C, D . . . . N represents an exhaustive
enumeration of partial goods, each can be a part of
the totality, X, for they can be taken together as
means to constitute that whole.
Before we leave this point, we can clarify
another related matter. The student will recall
that in the concrete cases of preference which we
considered earlier, the need for choice arose from
the fact that the alternatives were exclusive of
one another. That always is the case when we are
faced with particular instances of the same sort of
good -- this particular way of getting sensual
pleasure, for example, as opposed to that. It is
precisely in such cases that the criterion of
quantity becomes operative -- in fact, is
indispensable. As between competing particular
goods of essentially the same sort, a person should
choose the greater -- assuming, of course, that it
is right for him or her, all else being considered,
to choose that sort of good at all. But when the
choice is between particular goods essentially
different in kind, the criterion of quantity no
longer operates in the same way.
In the first place, different kinds of good
cannot be compared with respect to quantity, for
each yields a different kind of satisfaction, in
whatever amount that may be. In the second place,
different kinds of good are not competing but
completing -- if we have been right in saying that
each kind in a correctly enumerated variety of
goods is as indispensable as every other kind. This
does not mean that we are never forced to choose
between particular goods of different kinds; it
means rather that the criterion of quantity now
operates only with respect to the end -- the
totality -- and in view of that end, we must make
this particular choice here and now in such a way
that we can ultimately obtain every kind of good,
even though at this moment we do that by giving up
one particular good for a particular good of
another kind. The totality of goods is achieved not
by possessing every particular good, but
goods of every kind. We shall return to this
point later in discussing the order of goods.
Let us now consider the student's second point.
He is right in noticing a reversion to an earlier
stage of our discussion, and even in detecting an
apparent contradiction of what was said before. We
said that the satisfaction derived from possessing
a particular desirable object (a particular
instance of a kind of good) could not be the object
of that desire, for then the satisfaction, not the
object itself, would be desirable. Nor can it be
said that the object is desirable only for the sake
of the satisfaction to be derived, for, in the
first place, that generates an infinite regress of
objects of desire; and, in the second place, we
have seen that a choice between two sorts of
objects cannot be explained or justified in this
way. It should be noted, therefore, that this
earlier point was not relevant to the problem of
preference in so far as it involved two kinds of
goods as the alternatives. But we have now seen
that the amount of satisfaction, without becoming
the object of desire, can operate as a criterion
(though, perhaps, not the only criterion) in
choosing between two particular instances of the
same sort of good. And when we come to the question
of the ultimate end, at which point there is no
problem of preference at all, the "amount" of
satisfaction, now understood heterogeneously,
rather than homogeneously, as including every kind
of satisfaction, properly becomes the only
criterion.
Since we have used the word "criterion" to mean
that by which we judge in our acts of choice or
preference, it might be better to say that the
amount of satisfaction is the sign, rather
than the criterion, of the ultimate end, which is
the totality of goods. The end should be that which
leaves nothing to be desired. The end, in a sense,
puts an end to desire by the completeness of the
satisfaction which results from possessing, not
every particular good, which is impossible, but
every kind of good, which is quite possible.
It may be worthwhile to try to say this in
another way. The end can be described by the words
"all good things," which must be understood to mean
a totality of kinds of goods, not all the
particular goods in each kind. The end, as a
totality of goods, cannot itself be regarded as a
good, for then the whole would belong to itself as
a part. If we refer to the end, thus conceived, as
an object of desire -- and it can be an object of
desire, though not of choice or preference -- we
must refer to it as the good. And for every
person there can be only one object of desire which
is the good, though there are many objects
of desire, subject to choice or preference, which
are particular instances of goods, either of the
same kind or of different kinds.
So far we have spoken of goods objectively -- as
objects of desire. Now we can say the same thing
subjectively, in terms of the satisfaction of
desire. Satisfaction results from the possession of
any object of desire, but the peculiar subjective
sign of the object which is the good
is that satisfaction is complete when it is
possessed. Because of the peculiar relation between
the end objectively conceived as a heterogeneous
totality of kinds of good, and the end subjectively
realized as a heterogeneous sum of satisfactions,
we can always speak of the end subjectively as well
as objectively. We cannot do this in the case of
any partial good, for unless we name the
kind of object desired, we cannot know the
kind of satisfaction derived. But if one
were to say that the end of all desire is "complete
satisfaction," one would know this to be the
subjective counterpart of that unique object of
desire which consists in "all good things."
The student was wrong in thinking that we had
become involved in a contradiction, but he was
right in noticing that our present discussion of
the end gives new significance to our earlier
discussion of pleasure. When we are concerned with
objects of desire -- alternatives for preference --
pleasure is not the only good; nor is it ever the
sufficient criterion for determining a choice
between particular objects. But when the maxim
concerning the desirability of the greatest
quantity of pleasure is properly understood in
terms of the sum of satisfactions, that maxim
directs us to the end of all our desires -- a
totality of diverse goods. To say that every human
being wants as much pleasure as possible is to say
that every human being wants a good life -- a life
enriched by every sort of good. In short, the end
must be so conceived that if it could be obtained
by one decision, no-one could resist making this
decision, no-one could choose or prefer anything
else because, by the very nature of the case,
everything else must be less good. And the end we
have now envisaged meets that test, whether we
think of it as a totality of diverse goods or as
the utmost in pleasure, the complete satisfaction
of desire.
"I am still not sure I understand what you are
driving at", says the student. "For one thing, what
makes you think it is possible for a person to get
all good things? Everyone may want as much pleasure
as possible, but unless as much as possible can
really be obtained, I don't see that the end you
have envisaged is any better than the pot of gold
at the end of the rainbow. You'll have to show the
man from Missouri how he can get all good things.
And, in the second place, the rule which directs a
person to seek the end, as you have defined it, no
longer seems to be a moral rule by your own
criterion, for it is obviously inviolable. A person
could not seek anything else. You have really
admitted what I have always suspected -- that it is
a natural law, not a moral law, of
human nature, for people to try to get as much as
they can. You have simply described human behavior,
and so far as I can see it is no different from
animal behavior."
Let us begin with the student's second point.
But before we do that, there is one other point to
be made. The student previously asked us to show
that the end is the same for all human beings. We
have so far only succeeded in showing that for a
given person there is just one end, because the end
is never a good, but always the good.
But when the good is conceived as a totality
of diverse goods, including every sort of desirable
object, is it not clear at once that the
good must be the same for everyone? The reasoning
here is simple: all people have the same human
nature; hence they have the same set of capacities
to be fulfilled, however much they may differ
individually in the degree to which they possess
this or that capacity; hence for every human being
the variety of objects which can fulfill these
capacities and satisfy the plurality of human
desires will include the same diversity of kinds of
good; therefore, the end, conceived as all good
things (and understood as an heterogeneous
totality of goods or satisfactions, not of course,
as an undifferentiated maximum quantity) must be
the same for all people.
"The reasoning is all right", says the student.
"It should have been obvious to me, I suppose, that
if you could prove there is only one end for each
person, you could also show that the end is the
same for every person, for in both cases the
reasoning depends on human nature. But the joke is
on you, because you have now strengthened my point
that the end as you have defined it simply
describes what in fact everyone
seeks. If there is any truth in what you have been
saying, it is a psychological truth, not a moral
truth. Remember that you yourself told me that a
moral rule had to be violable. Well, if you were to
phrase a rule about the end -- such as, Seek all
good things -- it couldn't be violated."
It may be appropriate at this juncture to tell
the student that, in the tradition of moral
science, the rule about the end is regarded as the
first principle of morality. Whether it be
expressed by such words as "Seek all good
things" or even more simply by "Seek the
good," this rule is said to be the first precept of
the natural moral law. The student should now be
able to see why the first principle of moral
knowledge must be a rule about the end, since he
has come to realize that every object which is not
the good, but only a good, is good only as a
means, and hence good in terms of the end. He has
realized, though perhaps vaguely, that only by
reference to the end can a choice between means be
determined. That is why the end is the first
principle, without which the problem of preference
cannot be solved. How that problem is solved
remains to be seen, but first we must meet the
student's objection to the rule about the
end&endash;not as a natural law, but as a
moral principle.
Some time back the student admitted that all
people desire to live. (Those who do not have no
moral problems!) He was even willing to say that
all people desire to live well, though he added the
qualification that what one person meant by "living
well" might differ considerably from what another
meant. He should now be prepared, however, to relax
that qualification somewhat; for if the words
"living well" name the end which all people seek,
and be understood as equivalent to "a life enriched
by the possession of all good things," then it
would appear that, in one sense at least, all
people must agree about what they mean by "living
well." Let us call the sense in which all people
agree about the end a formal conception of
it. All people subscribe to the same formula: a
totality of diverse goods, a maximum of diverse
satisfactions. But the student would be quite right
in insisting that, though people may not differ
about this formula, they appear to differ
considerably about how they interpret it. Far from
disputing with the student on this point, we, too,
insist upon it, because herein lies the clue to the
violable, hence moral, character of
the first principle -- the rule about the end.
To carry the analysis further, it might prove
useful here to introduce a new term --
happiness. The way in which people
ordinarily use the word "happiness" justifies us in
identifying happiness with the end. They regard
happiness as something desirable entirely for its
own sake. No one would ever speak of wanting
happiness for the sake of obtaining some further or
other good. The happy person is one who wants for
nothing more. Hence it is clear that happiness is
not a good; it is not even accurate to speak of it
as "the highest good" if such words signify that
happiness is one good among others, albeit the
greatest. Happiness is the same as what we have
called the good, the supreme good; but it is
summum bonum only in the sense of being the
totality or sum of every kind of good (totum
bonum). Furthermore, we can identify happiness
with living well, or with a good human life, since
the formula is the same in both cases. The relation
between happiness and pleasure is also clear:
surely happiness is not the same as sensual
pleasure, which is merely one kind of good; nor is
happiness, considered objectively, the same as
pleasure in the sense of satisfaction; but when we
consider happiness, or the end, subjectively, it
can be understood in terms of pleasure, for in
possessing all good things the happy person enjoys
every sort of satisfaction and in this sense has
maximized pleasure.
That all human beings desire happiness seems to
be the law of their nature. Though this be true, we
also know as a matter of fact that people lead
different sorts of lives. If we examine the matter
closely, we find that there are great differences
in the accounts they give of happiness -- of what
they are seeking, of what they are trying to get
out of life. What is the source of these
differences? Since the formula of happiness is the
same for all -- a whole of diverse goods, a sum of
diverse satisfactions -- there are only two ways in
which people can differ in putting matter into the
formula, i.e., in passing from a formal to a
material conception of their end, or
happiness. (1) They can differ in their enumeration
of the kinds of goods. (2) They can differ in the
way they order whatever goods they have enumerated;
by "order" here is meant an estimation of the
relative worth of the various sorts of goods --
some of which should be preferred to others,
some of which, within the plurality of goods
itself, are related to others as means are to ends.
Now according as people differ in either of these
ways, or both together, the happiness they seek
will be differently constituted, for happiness as a
totality of goods is a whole constituted by the
variety and order of its parts. Will the student
now agree that we have described the facts which he
had in mind when he said that though all people may
seek the same end (to live well, happiness), they
do not seek the same thing? Will he permit us to
express this truth more precisely -- and less
paradoxically -- by saying that the end all people
seek is the same formally, but different
materially?
"Yes", says the student, "your language says
what I mean. But I don't see how this is going to
show the natural law of human behavior to be a
moral rule -- a rule (about the end) which is
violable."
We are now prepared to show the student that.
Only one new point needs to be added. Considered
materially, there are many different conceptions of
happiness. The differences are, for the most part,
with respect to the order of goods -- one person
emphasizing wealth, let us say, another friendship,
another knowledge, and so forth. There may be
differences in the listing of the goods; though
this is less frequently the case, some people have
omitted sensual pleasure as a good, others have
omitted the social goods, and some have even
omitted knowledge and what has been called "moral
virtue." Now the new point we must add (and prove)
is simply this: that among all the different
conceptions of happiness which people have
recorded, there is only one right conception, in
material detail, of the variety and order of goods.
If a person seeks anything other than happiness as
rightly constituted, the person is not really
seeking happiness at all, but a false or illusory
version of it, even though the wrong thing is
sought as the person's ultimate end because
the person conceives it under the same formula.
Let us call the end as rightly conceived the
real good; let us call the end as wrongly
conceived the apparent good. Using words
this way, we can see that if the rule about the end
is expressed by "Seek the good, real or apparent,"
then it cannot be violated, for it is simply a
natural law, a description of how human beings must
in fact behave -- and being a description it
is incorrectly expressed as a prescription,
in the imperative mood rather than the declarative.
But if the rule is expressed by "Seek the
real good," then it is violated by every
human being who wrongly conceives his or her end,
and we have a moral law, truly prescriptive, saying
what human beings should seek. The same
thing can be said in terms of happiness: "Seek
happiness properly constituted by a correct
enumeration and a right ordering of goods" can be
violated in many ways; but "Seek happiness as any
collection of goods in any order" cannot be
violated at all. In short, if materially
there is one right, and many wrong, conceptions of
happiness, the fact that all people seek the same
end formally does not mean there is no violable
rule about the end. On the contrary, there is a
rule the violation of which leads away from rather
than toward real happiness.
"IF," says the student, " -- if.
Everything seems to depend now upon your hypothesis
that people can be mistaken about how their
happiness is constituted. The hypothesis being
granted, I can see that much will follow. Those who
have mistaken notions about what their happiness
really consists in will probably not do what they
should do in order to live well or become
happy. But why should I grant your hypothesis?"
The student is right to raise this question.
Once he affirms the hypothesis, he ceases to be a
skeptic or a relativist about morals, for every
other moral truth can, in a way, be drawn from a
true conception of the end. The student's question
has, however, already been answered. Though perhaps
he did not realize it at the time, he affirmed the
hypothesis when he agreed to the reasoning by which
we proved, in terms of every human being's having
the same capacities, rooted in the same human
nature, that "the variety of objects which can
fulfill these capacities and satisfy the plurality
of human desires will include the same diversity of
kinds of good" for every human being. The
truth about happiness is thus seen to follow from
the truth about human nature, and that is why the
first principle of conduct (the rule about the end)
is not only moral, because violable, but also
natural. It is not only natural for human beings
everywhere and at all times to seek all good
things, but it is also in terms of their nature
that the variety and order of goods constituting
this whole should be the same for all. Human
beings cannot act contrary to their nature by
wanting to be dissatisfied, or, if you will, by
wanting less than complete satisfaction. But they
can make mistakes in understanding their nature,
and as a result of such mistakes set up a wrong
conception of happiness which, if followed, must
ultimately lead them to frustration -- the
achievement of less than is possible to their
nature.
Thus, for example, if a person should make the
error of supposing no essential difference to exist
between human nature and that of brute animals, and
if, accordingly, the person should conceive himself
or herself as having no capacities beyond those
possessed by brutes, he or she will misconceive
human happiness by omitting from its constitution
those distinctively human goods which fulfill
capacities which humankind alone has. Such an error
here may not be one of simple omission; it may take
the form of misunderstanding the distinctive
character of the specifically human goods. However
the error is made, the result will be the same. A
human being cannot become happy by trying to live a
good animal life. A human being must try to live a
good human life.
In a manner of speaking, one can say that
animals seek "happiness" in so far as they, too,
live according to natural law. According to the law
of their nature, there is a sum of goods which can
fulfill their capacities, a totality which they are
driven instinctively to seek. But there are two
profoundly significant differences between the
natural law which governs animal and that which
governs human conduct. One we have already seen --
the difference in what is the sum of goods for each
according to its nature. The other is that, in
detail as well as generally, animal seeking is
instinctively determined, and hence there can be no
discrepancy between what animals do seek and
what they should seek; whereas human seeking
is "instinctively" determined only with respect to
the end as formally conceived; hence human beings
may in fact not seek what they should. This is just
another way of saying that human beings, unlike
brute animals, are able to think about their end,
and since wherever thinking occurs, error may
happen, human beings can misconceive their
happiness. Unable to think abstractly, animals
cannot conceive, and hence cannot misconceive,
their end. Therefore, there is only a natural law,
but no moral law, of animal behavior, whereas human
conduct is susceptible of direction by a natural
moral law.
"I have gradually come to realize", the student
confesses, "how important a role the conception of
human nature plays in the discovery of universal
moral principles. But it never occurred to me
before that I had to swallow all this stuff about
the essential difference between humans and
animals. All the psychology I have studied --
experimental psychology, animal psychology -- as
well as all the biology, and especially the
business about evolution, is against such a notion.
If this new point is indispensable to the argument,
you've got a lot more proving to do. For the moment
I don't see that it is indispensable, and so I'll
waive the point in order to ask another
question.
"I'll grant that all human beings have the same
human nature whether or not that is essentially
different from the nature of animals. I can see
how, in terms of that common nature, happiness must
be really the same for all people, in the sense of
including the same variety of goods; and I can also
see that, if people misconceive their nature, they
will probably misconceive what is really good for
them. But you pointed out before that people
misconceive happiness in two ways -- both with
respect to the variety of parts which constitute
the whole of goods, and also with respect to the
ordering of these parts. Moreover, you said that
the most frequent errors occur with respect to the
ordering of the partial goods, rather than in their
enumeration. This requires some explanation. I
don't see why there need be any ordering of goods.
If a person should rightly enumerate the parts of
happiness, why should not he or she get the whole
by going after the parts in any order?"
To answer this very difficult question, let us
begin by reminding the student that, at an earlier
point, he wondered whether it is possible
for a person to get all good things. He
compared the end, thus envisaged, to the rainbow's
end. He wanted to be shown just how a person
can get all good things.
Now, in the first place, let us remember that
all good things does not mean every
particular good, but only some of every kind of
good. If this were not so, it would take an
infinitely long life to get all good things, and,
furthermore, the pursuit of happiness would be
competitive -- as is the attempt to corner the
market and possess every piece of a certain
commodity. But this is not the case; however much
in fact they do, people need not
interfere with one another in the pursuit of
happiness.
In the second place, let us remember that all
good things is a possible whole because the
various kinds of good which are its parts do not
exclude one another. They are all
compossible with one another; if they were
not, the whole we have supposed to be constituted
by them would be self-contradictory and
impossible.
In the third place, there is a new
consideration: the point about order. Either the
order in which we go after the various partial
goods makes no difference, or it does. Suppose it
makes no difference. Then happiness would be easily
achieved by everyone who made a right enumeration
of the partial goods. Regardless of whether such
people subordinated wealth to knowledge, or
knowledge to wealth, regardless of whether they
spent a great deal of their time and effort in
search of sensual pleasures or postponed taking
care of their health until after they had achieved
public honor, they would not be prevented from
becoming happy so long as they included every
sort of good among the objects of their
pursuit. But this appears to be contrary to the
facts of life as we know them. The familiar saying
that "there can be too much of a good thing"
applies to some of the partial goods which enter
into the constitution of happiness: too much of
some of them can disbar us entirely from
others.
Not only must the degree to which we seek
certain types of good be proportioned to their
worth as parts of the whole, in order to prevent
them from interfering with our possession of other
types, but each kind of good must be seen in its
functional relation to every other kind, according
to the functional interdependence of the capacities
of human nature, which these different kinds of
objects are able to fulfill. We must conclude,
therefore, that a person cannot become happy
unless, in seeking all good things, he or
she does so in the right order and with due
proportion. That is why happiness is difficult to
achieve, even for a person who has correctly
enumerated the various partial goods.
It is necessary to tell the student that we have
not fully answered his question. To do that would
require a lengthy and elaborate analysis whereby we
might be able to show him all the reasons for one
precise ordering of goods as the only correct
disposition of the parts of happiness. We shall
have to be content with making two points about the
order and proportion of partial goods.
First, the order of these goods, like the
enumeration of their variety, depends upon our
understanding of the various capacities of human
nature in their relation to one another.
Second, it depends upon our recognition of what
is distinctively human, in contrast to that part of
his nature which humankind shares with brute
animals. In the order of partial goods, those are
higher which fulfill humankind's rational
capacities; the lower goods are objects commonly
pursued by humans and animals. The lower serve the
higher as means serve ends; in order to live
well, we must first live. We struggle
to subsist, not merely to be alive, but to live as
humanly as possible, and this means
subordinating and proportioning the goods which
fulfill our animal capacities so that we shall be
able to enjoy a fuller life than animals can lead
-- enriched by goods that fulfill capacities which
only we, as human beings, possess. Just as a true
conception of human nature is indispensable to a
true conception of happiness, with respect to the
variety of goods, so is it also with respect to
their order. And the student is wrong in supposing
that the point about the essential difference
between human beings and brutes is dispensable. It
is indispensable to a true conception of human
happiness, and equally with respect to both aspects
of its constitution -- both the variety and the
order of its parts.
"I am sorry that you insist upon this last
point", the student says, "because it is a
stumbling block in the way of my agreement with
you. You simply haven't proved the point in any
way, and, without obstinacy, I must stand on what I
know -- which is contrary to what you say is the
case. I can see, however, that, assuming what you
say to be true, the rest follows. And even though
you have not given me the analysis which shows the
precise order of the partial goods, I can surmise
how that might be done. But I am still worried
about the possibility of happiness, as you
have defined it. I still don't see how it is
possible for a person to be happy if he or she has
to possess every sort of good thing altogether and
at once."
The very language the student has used in
raising this question is crucial to the answer.
Strictly speaking, a person cannot ever be happy.
He or she can only become happy. A human
life is something in the process of becoming. It is
a temporal whole, the parts of which cannot
coexist. A life is a whole only in the way in which
a day or a game is a whole -- as an orderly
succession of moments. The becoming of the whole is
not completed until the process is actually
finished. That is why Solon, a wise man of ancient
Greece, made what at first seems to be a
paradoxical point, namely, that you cannot tell
whether a person is happy until the person is dead.
Stated less paradoxically, the point is that
happiness is the quality of a whole life, not of
its parts. Another ancient, the Roman Boethius,
defined happiness as the state of those made
perfect by the possession in aggregate of all good
things. The student may think that this is the
definition of happiness we have been employing. His
attention must be called, therefore, to two
important differences.
First, happiness may be the state of
immortal souls in eternity -- and that is probably
what Boethius had in mind -- but in this life,
which is from beginning to end a process, a
becoming, happiness is never realized
statically. In the realm of time and change,
it must exist dynamically -- coming to be
just as the life which it pervades becomes complete
in time. Second, in so far as the happiness we have
defined is a quality of this temporal life, the
possession of all good things must be successive;
it cannot be a simultaneous aggregate. Modifying
the words of Boethius, we can define temporal
happiness as a whole life made perfect by the
successive enjoyment of all good things. Thus
understood, there is nothing impossible about
becoming happy, any more than it is impossible to
complete a whole life by living from day to
day.
It may be useful here to remind the student that
a person cannot become happy by making one
decision. A person becomes happy only through
making many decisions, choosing many times between
one particular good and another, exercising
countless preferences. If a single decision
could do it, the person who made it correctly could
be happy as a result. But even a person who
has correctly conceived happiness may fail to
become happy unless the many choices he or she has
to make from day to day conform to the pattern of
life he or she has conceived -- a whole rounded out
by every sort of good. Acts of choice or preference
are always with respect to means, to partial goods.
Throughout life we are forever at work putting the
parts together to form the whole. The student
should now be able to see how the problem of
preference is solved in general, if not in detail.
Faced with a choice between objects which are
particular instances of partial goods, we
should choose in such a way that we make
progress toward the possession -- in our life as a
whole -- of all good things. The end we have in
view determines our choice of the means; our
conception of the whole determines our manipulation
of the parts.
It has been said that the means are the
end in the process of becoming. This is the sum of
moral knowledge. In the building of a life, as in
the building of a house, it is true that as the
parts are properly chosen and properly put
together, the perfection of the whole gradually
becomes. In every particular case, the ultimate
criterion of choice is the end: the choice is right
or wrong according as the realization of the end is
furthered or hindered. At the beginning of life
all good things is a possibility; when life
is over, the possibility either has been realized
or not, and that will depend upon the choices which
have been made.
The universal principles of moral knowledge
consist of rules about the end to be sought and
about the means to be chosen. If the end is
properly conceived, the rules about the means will
be properly formulated, since the conception of the
end, when fully developed, consists of an ordering
and proportioning of the means. If people know
what they should seek, they will know
how they should seek it. Based upon
human nature, the rules of morality, directing us
toward our end and prescribing our choice of means,
have universality in the sense that they are the
same for every person, but this does not mean that
any person can avoid the task of applying these
generalities according to the peculiar conditions
of his or her individual life, and the particular
circumstances of each case in which a choice must
be made. And since these rules are the work of
reason, not the gift of instinct, the moral
judgments of human beings, about end or means, are
susceptible to error.
"I think I see", the student says, "how what you
have called a true conception of the end of life is
a first principle from which all the rest can be
derived. I know I don't see the detailed steps
here, but that would be too much to expect. I do
understand how, in a general way, the problem of
preference is solved -- at least in so far as the
value to be placed on different things in relation
to one another follows from what you have called
the order and proportion of goods, which in turn
follows from the way in which we conceive happiness
to be constituted as a whole of parts. I am sure I
don't understand any of this well enough to know
how to think correctly in a particular case, facing
particular alternatives -- assuming, of course,
that I had previously thought correctly about the
end, and through it about the means in general. But
what bothers me most of all is still the point
about the violability of moral rules. Am I right in
supposing, from what you have said, that people
fail to do what they should do simply because of
bad thinking -- wrongly conceiving happiness, which
means making errors about the order or variety of
goods, and consequently misjudging the relative
worth of objects in particular cases of
preference?"
No, the student must be told at once, to suppose
that all misconduct -- bad choices leading to bad
acts -- follows from bad thinking is itself a great
error in thinking; as a matter of fact, a famous
one in the history of moral theory. The quickest
way to show the student that bad thinking is
only one of the sources of misconduct is to
remind him of something we saw toward the close of
the first part of our discussion -- when we still
supposed pleasure to be the only criterion of
preference. Remember the rule of conduct we had
then formulated: "In any case in which a choice can
be made, a person should prefer the
alternative which, in the long run or viewing life
as a whole, maximizes pleasure and minimizes
displeasure." The student should now be able to see
how that rule contains in germ almost all the truth
we have subsequently discovered, for the maxim
could be thus rephrased: in any case in which a
choice can be made, a person should prefer
the alternative which, considering the possibility
of living a whole life well, tends to realize the
possibility of happiness. Now we saw, in our
earlier discussion, that the rule is violable in
two ways. We distinguished between two sorts of
mistakes we can make -- mistakes of calculation and
mistakes of acting contrary to our calculations.
Even though a person has thought correctly about
the end and the means in general, and in this sense
knows what is really good for him or her, the
person may in a particular case be seduced by what
is apparently better at that time, even though it
is really worse in the long run.
Human beings are not simply rational
beings. They are rational animals.
They are creatures of passion, of animal appetites,
but they are also capable of abstract thought, by
which they can form a conception of happiness and
of the goods in general which constitute it. All
the goods we have been talking about -- happiness
itself, or the various kinds of partial
goods -- are rational or intelligible objects. They
certainly cannot be perceived by the senses,
although particular instances of the partial goods
may somehow present themselves in that way. But
precisely because human beings are creatures of
sense as well as of reason, and because their
desires can be determined by what they sense as
well as by their abstract thinking, the
alternatives which they face in particular cases of
preference are, as objects, both sensible and
intelligible, and make their appeal both to their
animal appetites and to their wills -- the latter
being the desire for objects rationally judged to
be good, the former being the desire for what is
sensed as good.
We cannot here fully explain all the
psychological points that are involved. For our
present purposes, suffice it to say that, in the
conflict between sensible and intelligible goods,
the former may win out because they are
apparently better at the time, though not
really better in terms of the conception of
life as a whole. Whenever they do win out, you have
a case in which misconduct is due to weakness of
will, rather than error in thought. Instead of
following the dictates of reason, a person may
choose according to the promptings of his or her
passions. Thus we see that the violation of moral
truth has two sources: one, bad thinking --
misconception of the end, and of the means in
general; the other, weak willing -- preference for
the apparent good, under the influence of
the passions, rather than for the real good which
reason has determined. And we also see how the very
nature of human morality (revealed to us by the
sources of misconduct) depends on the nature of
humankind -- their essential distinction from brute
animals. For, lacking reason, animals know and
desire only through sense and instinct; lacking
reason, they are not able to conceive their end,
and hence cannot misconceive it; lacking reason,
their desires are all instinctively determined and
subject to whatever objects dominate the sensible
present, whereas human beings have free will to
choose between sensible and intelligible goods. In
short, unlike animals, humans can be moral or
immoral according as they think well or poorly, and
according as, in the exercise of their free will,
they act according to what right reason prescribes,
or contrary to it.
"There is no point in going any further", the
student finally says. "I told you before that I
wasn't prepared to accept your assumption about an
essential difference between humans and animals. I
am even more opposed to it now that I see it
includes the notion of free will. You were quite
fair to admit that you had not, and probably could
not here, explain all the psychological points that
are involved; but until you do explain them, until
you do prove that human thinking is different from
animal intelligence, and above all until you can
show what you mean by free will and that there is
such a thing, it would be unprofitable to carry our
discussion any further. I am willing to agree that
your conclusions have cogency for anyone who grants
your hypotheses. If humankind is peculiarly
rational, if humankind has this mysterious
free will, then you are right about
morality, and its principles, and the way they can
be violated. Until I agree to these ifs, my
position is exactly what it was when we started --
though perhaps, I should admit that I now
understand better the theory which I, as a moral
skeptic, have been rejecting. In fact, I can now
give you more clearly the basic reason for my moral
skepticism. It is simply that human beings do not
have free will. If I had not let you somehow
obfuscate this point at the beginning, our
discussion would have stopped almost as soon as it
started. I tried to tell you at the very start that
I didn't think there was any problem of preference;
I tried to say there was no why for any
choice, no why in the sense of a reason
which justified it, but only a cause.
"Every choice a human being appears to
make is just like any choice an animal makes. It is
no choice at all, but a pre-determined event --
arising from instinctive determinations, and all
the accidental conditionings which have occurred in
the course of life up to that point. If there is no
problem of preference, because there is no free
will, then all the rest of our discussion was
totally beside the point. Or, to put it another
way, there is a problem of preference, but only for
the psychologist who tries to find the
causes of behavior and to describe
what humans and animals in fact do; but there is no
problem for the moralist who tries to find the
reasons for human conduct and to
prescribe what people should do. If I am
right about the facts, then you must admit that the
moral skeptic is justified in thinking that all the
different moral systems which people have invented
-- yours among them -- are nothing but intricate
and elaborate rationalizations, fostered by the
delusion that human beings are free."
The student is right that there is no point in
going further without first satisfying him on the
major psychological questions which underlie all
moral discourse. It would not be sufficient here to
remind him that he did admit certain facts,
such as that people do appear to act contrary to
their best lights and seem to suffer repentance for
their folly -- facts which suggest human
freedom. He rightly asks for proof, and the task of
proof in this case is long and arduous, as it is
also on the other point about humankind's
rationality as their essential distinction from
brutes. All of this requires another and separate
discussion, one in which we would probably find the
student a skeptic about the truths of philosophical
psychology. We might then discover that his moral
skepticism was rooted in a deeper doubt -- the
doubt about the validity of any philosophical
knowledge.
By way of concluding this discussion, it might,
however, be worth while to remind him of one thing.
He has learned one truth which he may not have
known before. All through the discussion he has
admitted seeing the connection between human nature
and the principles of human morality. Now if our
hypotheses concerning human nature and human
freedom can be affirmed, then he must admit the
consequences (and he has indicated his willingness
to do so) -- namely, the conception of happiness,
the order and variety of goods, and the principles
by which the moral problem of preference can be
solved. Furthermore, since whatever human nature is
it is the same for people at all times and
everywhere, the student must also agree that there
cannot be a number of different "moral systems"
each equally acceptable. He must agree that there
is only one true doctrine, only one which accords
with the truth about human nature, just as he
agreed that in the light of human nature there is
only one right interpretation of the natural moral
law to seek the good, only one right
conception of happiness and of the means
thereto.
If the student wonders where this discussion
would turn next -- were it continued after the
psychological questions had been satisfactorily
answered -- we should, in parting, tell him that
what remains to be considered is the very heart of
moral knowledge, namely, good habits (which
the ancients denominated "virtues"), and especially
the habits of right desire and right action which
are called the moral virtues. All the principles we
have so far discussed become operative only through
virtue. The virtues must be possessed, not only as
among the goods which are constitutive means of
happiness, but also as a special sort of means --
generative of happiness. And this is especially
true of the moral virtues, which are habits of
right choice in particular cases, habits which have
been formed in the light of a proper ordering of
goods and which enable us to act according to
reason, to prefer the real to the apparent good.
The major part of moral theory, therefore, is
concerned with the definition of these virtues, and
with the rules for acquiring them.
We have previously said that the means
are the end in the process of becoming. The
end is rightly understood only so far as we rightly
apprehend the means which constitute it. It is also
true that the end is possessed at any moment only
to the extent that we possess the means which
generate it -- the habits from which our conduct
flows. At any given moment in his life a person is
more or less on the way to becoming happy according
to the state of his or her habits, especially the
moral habits -- the virtues or vices --
which make his or her character what it is.
Aristotle thus summarized the whole of his
Ethics when he said. "According as a man's
character is, so does the end appear to
him." Until a life is over, you cannot judge
whether it is a happy one; but so far as you
can see into a person's character, you can tell,
even while life is going on, whether a person is
becoming happy.
The Dialectic
of Morals - Part 5
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