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Good
Will Before All Else
by George J. Irbe
Introduction
It cannot be said that the term 'good will' has
been in popular use among philosophers. The term is
seldom encountered in their works. Of course, it is
understandable that 'good will' does not preoccupy
the thoughts of the moral relativists and
utilitarians of modern times. To them the term is
of little or no concern to start with, being, in
their view, a rather unnecessary, or entirely
fictitious, concept. But, it seems to me that even
those philosophers who borrow from the Aristotelian
heritage to a greater or lesser extent; who do
recognize 'good' as an absolute value, and
categorize the virtues and character attributes of
man that add up to - in total - to a moral life;
even so, to them also the concept of the 'good
will' holds no particular significance, no discrete
position, in the hierarchy of value-terms.
It is worth noting here that, to my knowledge,
Aristotle - that great Greek philosopher, the
expounder and explicator of the code of ethics
which contributed most significantly to the
evolution of Western civilization - also did not
recognize good will by itself as an important
character attribute or a virtue. He mentions good
will only briefly, as a precursor to different
kinds of friendship, in the Nicomachean
Ethics, Book 9, Chapter 5. However, in what is
perhaps the most notable passage in the
Nicomachean Ethics, Book 6, Chapter 2,
Aristotle defines moral virtue in terms of
'disposition of the mind,' 'true principle,' 'right
desire,' and 'good choice' which necessarily imply
the presence of a 'good will' in the
individual:
- . . . inasmuch as moral virtue is a
disposition of the mind in regard to choice, and
choice is deliberate desire, it follows that, if
the choice is to be good, both the principle
must be true and the desire right, and that
desire must pursue the same thing as principle
affirms. . . [T]he function . . . of the
practical intellect is the attainment of truth
corresponding to right desire [i.e. truth
about the means to the attainment of the rightly
desired End].
Furthermore, the idea of a 'good will' is
implicit in the terms that Aristotle uses
frequently to describe a man's character, such as
'a good man' and 'a virtuous man.'
Immanuel Kant is the one philosopher who is
renowned for his use of the term 'Good Will' and
for the particular meaning which he has ascribed to
it. It seems almost as if Kant and his followers
have patented the term - appropriated it solely for
their own use and invested it forever with an
immutable content and value of their making. Kant
made his well-known declaration on the 'good will'
in his characteristically imperative manner at the
opening of the first section of his Grounding
for the Metaphysics of Morals, which
states:
- There is no possibility of thinking of
anything at all in the world, or even out of it,
which can be regarded as good without
qualification, except a good will.
Kant's absolutist approach to just about
everything has made him an easy and tempting target
for criticism by all non-Kantians; it is usually
only in the course of such criticism that Kant's
patented 'Good Will' is mentioned by the other
philosophers. So it is not at all exceptional that
I should have first encountered the term 'good
will,' as I recall, in one of Mortimer Adler's
books, in a section criticizing Kant's inflexible
absolutist view on morality. After reading
Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals, my
own opinion of Kant is simply that he never
recognized human nature, or, if he did, he
certainly did not understand it at all.
Since I became aware of Kant's 'Good Will' and
the critical responses it has engendered from other
philosophers, I have felt intuitively that the
concept of a 'good will' deserves a different
meaning and usage than the one accorded to it by
Kant, as well as, perforce, by his critics. In
short, I think that the 'good will', rather than
being a 'good' in the Kantian sense, should be
recognized as an intimate part of the human
soul.
Eventually I discovered that my intuitive sense
that the 'good will' is to be found in the soul is
perhaps not an entirely foolish notion. I draw
support for it from the thoughts of Thomas Hill
Green. In his Prolegomena to Ethics, Green
criticizes Kant's conception of the 'good will' in
a moderate and not entirely dismissive manner. In
addition, Green modifies the Kantian meaning of the
term 'good will,' creates its inverse, i.e., 'the
will to be good,' and posits it as a key ingredient
in the evolution of our moral consciousness since
the times of the ancient Greek philosophers. I will
quote here selected pertinent sections from some
paragraphs, numbered consecutively in the
Prolegomena to Ethics by the author, which
give an indication of how Green understands the
meaning of the 'good will'. Incidentally, one also
cannot help noting how strongly these quotes
resound with Green's optimistic belief - which is
his trade-mark among philosophers - in the
perfectibility of man and man's society:
- . . . we have no knowledge of the perfection
of man as the unconditional good, but that which
we have of his goodness or the good will, in the
format which it has assumed as a means to, or in
the effort after, the unconditional good; a good
which is not an object of speculative knowledge
to man, but of which the idea -- the conviction
of there being such a thing -- is the influence
through which his life is directed to its
attainment. [#195]
-
- [Kant's] good will may be taken to
mean a will possessed by some abstract idea of
goodness or of moral law and, if such possession
were possible at all, except perhaps during
moments of special spiritual detachment from the
actualities of life, it would amount to a
paralysis of the will for all effectual
application to great objects of human interest.
It would no longer be the will of the good
workman, the good father, or the good citizen.
But it is not thus that we understand the good
will. The principle which it is here sought to
maintain is that the perfection of human
character -- a perfection of individuals which
is also that of society, and of society which is
also that of individuals -- is for man the only
object of absolute or intrinsic value;
[#247]
-
- With Kant, for instance, whatever his rigor
in identifying moral badness with selfishness
and this with pleasure-seeking, it was never
doubtful that the goodness of the good will lay
in the prevalence of interest in a worthy
object, badness in such failure of the worthy
interest as enables the desire for pleasure to
prevail. His error consisted in his too abstract
view of the interest on which he held that true
goodness must depend, and which he seems to
reduce to interest in the fulfillment of moral
law according to the most abstract possible
conception of it. [#262]
-
- Socrates and his followers are not rightly
regarded as the originators of an interesting
moral speculation . . . They represent, though
it might be too much to say that they
introduced, a new demand, or at least a fuller
expression of an old demand, of the moral
nature. Now though our actual moral attainment
may always be far below what our conscience
requires of us, it does tend to rise in response
to a heightened requirement of conscience, and
will not rise without it. Such a requirement is
implied in the conception of the unity of
virtue, as determined by one idea of practical
good which was to be the conscious spring of the
perfectly virtuous life -- an idea of it as
consisting in some intrinsic excellence, some
full realization of the capabilities, of the
thinking and willing soul. Here we have -- not
indeed in its source, but in that first clear
expression through which it manifests its life
-- the conviction that every form of real
goodness must rest on a will to be good, which
has no object but its own fulfillment.
[#251]
-
- And when we come to ask ourselves what are
the essential forms in which, however otherwise
modified, the will for the true good (which is
the will to be good) must appear, our answer
follows the outlines of the Greek classification
of the virtues. [#256]
-
- In the root of the matter the Greek
conception of these virtues is thoroughly sound.
They are considered genuine only when resting on
a pure and good will, which is a will to be good
-- a will directed not to anything external, or
anything in respect of which it is passive, but
to its own perfection, to the attainment of what
is noblest in human character and action.
[#279]
Being a devoted Aristotelian, I was happy to
learn that, as the above quotes from the
Prolegomena clearly indicate, Thomas Hill
Green found the genesis of the 'good will,' or its
inverse, 'the will to be good,' in the virtues as
conceived by the ancient Greeks. Furthermore, I was
encouraged to pursue my intuition that the 'good
will' resides in the soul by Green's words, in
paragraph #251, that: " . . our moral attainment .
. tend[s] to rise in response to a
heightened requirement of conscience, and will not
rise without it . ."; that it involves " . . the
thinking and willing soul . ."; and that ". . every
form of real goodness must rest on a will to be
good . .".
The Will is in the Soul
Before I attempt to justify my intuition about
the 'good will' residing in the soul, I must first
provide background information on my beliefs
regarding the soul, which are by no means
conventional. In what follows I will re-state some
passages form two of my previous essays: (1)
The
Dark Side of Human Nature, and (2) How
it all comes together: God -- Life -- Soul; for
brevity, I will refer to the essays, as numbered
above.
First of all, as I state in (2), I belong to a
sub-set of cosmological theists who believe that
the Creator imparts an immaterial soul to human
beings. I go even further, following in Aristotle's
footsteps (but with a different understanding of
God and the soul), by positing that all living
things are imparted with a soul, where the soul is
the very essence of the meaning of 'life'. The soul
is an essential component of my understanding of
human nature. Furthermore, in my opinion it is the
soul which possesses the 'free will.'
Second, as I state in (1): The soul, also, just
as its biological host, has progressed through an
evolutionary process planned and controlled by a
Supreme Intelligence. Therefore, there are simple,
primitive souls and more developed souls,
culminating with the soul of man. The level of
intelligence, and the corresponding extent of the
free will associated with it, conforms to the
degree of development of the soul. The
extraordinary thing about Homo sapiens is that,
compared to other life forms on Earth, his soul and
intelligence have been not only hugely increased,
but that they have been raised to an entirely
different plane. Nevertheless, this soul which
could be dubbed the 'super-soul,' if you wish,
still carries within its blueprint the structures
from more primitive models of the past.
In (1) I have presented the details of my theory
of how the soul functions, which I will not repeat
here, except for this concluding remark, which
says: In a real sense the human soul is burdened
with a heavy responsibility by the Supreme
Intelligence in return for the near-limitless power
of intelligence it has been granted. It is as if
the Supreme Intelligence has decreed: "You are
largely on your own. It is very hard to do, but try
your utmost to get it right." So far, getting it
right has proven to be almost impossible; the human
soul carries within it the vestiges, faint as they
may be, from other souls of other species, reaching
back into the primordial past. The great
intelligence of the human soul is a blessing, but
it can also be seen as a curse: the God-given
innate urge, given to the soul of man, just as it
is given to the souls of other species, to excel in
the pursuit of status and possession of goods,
enables man to excel at what is best, but it also
enables him to excel at the worst that can be
imagined. The human soul can use the best powers of
reason at its command to rationalize the necessity
for the most evil acts. That is why envy and greed
and other vices show up as very glaring and
integral parts of human nature, much more so than
in the lower life forms.
At this point a few remarks are in order
concerning our amorphous understanding and use of
the term 'human nature.' I use it myself in the
title of "The Dark Side of Human Nature." The
conventional view of human nature recognizes that
it has some innate undesirable and unpredictable
facets which cannot be eliminated, but which must
be taken into account when trying to anticipate the
behavior of individuals, or society as a whole.
This view is held by most practitioners of
politics, law-makers, and sociologists in civil
societies. Only the coercive utopians refuse to
accept human nature for what it is and stubbornly
insist on amending, homogenizing, or perfecting it
by force, in spite of their many disastrous
attempts to do so, as witnessed by history.
I would, however, like to suggest that there
really is no such thing as one 'human nature' which
is characteristic of all humans; there are, rather,
the individual natures of individual human beings
which have some common traits. In my view, the
qualities and characteristics that are
conventionally attributed to 'human nature' really
belong to the soul; or, it is the soul that
expresses the nature of a human being. I have
explained above how every human soul carries within
it common elements, some of which could be
described as vestiges of savage, undesirable traits
and impulses which it has inherited through the
course of evolution from earlier life forms. Thus,
when the sociologist, or pragmatic politician, or
law-giver factor 'human nature' into their
respective deliberations, they are factoring in
contingencies to deal with the most prevalent of
the undesirable and unpredictable latent traits of
millions of human souls.
There is a most important aspect of the human
soul that leads directly to the proposition that it
holds within itself the quality of 'the will to be
good,' which leads, in turn, to the initiation of
actions that demonstrate a spirit of 'good will.'
As I say in (2), the human soul is a very special
exnihilated creation; its perfection culminates in
self-consciousness, which is not the case for other
mammals whose souls have only consciousness. This
self-consciousness is what sets man apart from all
other living things.
Next, I would like to state something that we
all know, often almost intuitively, from the
experience of living with our own self, i.e. our
self-consciousness, and with other human beings: we
can recognize, as I have said in (2), between a
human soul that is merely self-conscious and one
that is self-conscious and, to put it simply, also
has a conscience. Conscience is the understanding
and self-acknowledgement by the soul of the
difference between right and wrong thinking and
acting; it is a persistent inner force which
compels the soul always to think and do right to
the best of one's ability. Conscience is both
backward- and forward-looking. It is a faculty that
the human soul is capable of developing for
self-examination as to what it has done and what it
will do. It is the only attribute of the human soul
that raises it above the souls of other life
forms.
We have, then, the two challenges that the soul
faces continuously, without surcease: (a)
constraining the latent inherited vestiges of
primitive traits from ancestral species, and (b)
performing up to the standards set by its own
conscience. There is only one instrument the soul
can conceivably use to perform both of these
functions -- its will.
It appears quite obvious to me that there can
never be the absolutely perfect soul which will
never weaken, never flag, never err, in facing up
to the two challenges. Such a soul would be truly
super-human, endowed with a super-human will.
(a) The first challenge concerns what are
commonly known as instinctive actions. Instinctive
actions are usually instant, often violent, and, at
times, self-preserving. They are often described as
'kill or be killed' choices. Even so, the soul, if
it has a conscience, will put it to use to examine
critically such actions after the fact: was the
severity of the action necessary?, were there
alternatives?, etc. Other instinctive actions, for
instance the instinctive sexual urge to procreate,
and the urge for rapacious consumption of material
goods, are other issues that the soul's conscience
must struggle with and resolve.
(b) I believe that the ultimate destiny of the
soul depends on whether it develops a conscience.
The challenge to our souls to strive for the
highest standards of conscience comes from the
Creator himself. However, because we are masters of
our own free will, we are expected to meet this
challenge voluntarily. It is on this point that
human souls show a great variation from one to
another, and why there is no universal, homogeneous
'human nature'. There are millions of souls on
Earth at any given time which exist with little or
no conscience to speak of, and thus have hardly any
standard of conscience to live up to.
As I have stated in (1), by using its God-given
powerful intelligence the soul can always construe,
if it so chooses, and perhaps only to ease its own
conscience, arguments which are rational on the
surface but which are in fact clever manipulations
and inversions of wrong into right and vice versa.
Moreover, the powerful intelligence of the human
soul enables it to use envy, hate, and other
negative feelings in very sophisticated ways; the
soul uses its great powers of reason to construe
and to justify the inversion of right and wrong,
and to carry such inversion into action, no matter
how bad the reasoning and action might be.
The Will to be Good and the Good Will
Having decided that the will is the soul's
instrument, it follows that the will to be good and
the good will also come from the soul. A
distinction can be made between the 'will to be
good' and the 'good will.' The first is a general
resolve of the soul to always keep itself, as best
it can, within a discipline of thinking and acting
virtuously. I interject 'as best it can' because
there is not a human soul which is capable of
sustaining the will to be good forever without
faltering. We cannot ever honestly claim that we
constantly harbor a will to be good.
The second term, 'good will,' is what the soul
projects outwardly, in thought and action, towards
the world at large, towards other living things,
other people, and also towards its own physical
self. Just as sustaining a will to be good without
a break is impossible, so it is likewise impossible
to maintain a good will towards everyone and
everything in the world, not even towards
ourselves, as the psychologists tell us.
My theory on the soul and the soul's will leads
me to conclude that both the will to be good and
the good will is found to occur to different
degrees and with different frequencies in different
individuals, according to the varying qualities of
their individual consciences. The soul's ability to
sustain its will to be good and its good will, and
its ability to restore them after the inevitable
occasional lapses, depend completely on the level
of cultivation and sensitization achieved by the
soul's conscience.
I consider conscience to be a first principle of
morality, to borrow Aristotle's terminology.
Therefore it seems idle to me to look for its
causes. Thomas Hill Green says:
- Whenever and wherever, then, the interest in
a social good has come to carry with it any
distinct idea of social merit -- of qualities
that make the good member of a family, or a good
tribesman, or a good citizen -- we have the
beginning of that education of the conscience of
which the end is the conviction that the only
true good is to be good. [#244]
However, he talks of the beginning of the
education of conscience, not of the beginning of
conscience. Conscience could well be an innate
property of the soul. The soul itself is an
incorporeal entity, so we are dealing here with an
enigma within an enigma. I would like to think of
conscience as similar to a potential source of
energy which, if not developed cannot be used. It
may well be the same situation for the soul and its
conscience: undeveloped, it languishes unused. And
if conscience is left in dormancy, so is the will
to be good and the good will.
Conclusion
It seems to me that Immanuel Kant missed the
mark on 'good will': he recognized the paramount
value of it, but for the wrong reason. He sought
for its origin outside of man, instead of inside,
in the soul of man.
Thomas Hill Green is the one philosopher I know
of, though there may be others of which I am
unaware, who has argued, (convincingly, in my
opinion), that the ancient Greek philosophers, who
confronted man's nature as it really is, enunciated
the essence of the good will through their espousal
of the traditional virtues. Green's exposition of
the will to be good/ good will differs from mine
only in that Green is inclined to be idealistic and
to focus on the societal aspects of mankind,
whereas I focus entirely on the soul of the
individual, with all its warts.
I hope that I have made a convincing argument,
in light of the blemishes and shortcomings of the
human soul discussed above, that the presence of
the 'will to be good' and the 'good will' truly
rank in importance above any of the traditional
virtues, or the goods associated with them. Without
the will to be good there can be no genuine good
will, nor a genuine display of virtue. That is why
I deemed the title of this essay: "Good Will Before
All Else" to be very appropriate.
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J. Irbe
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