|
Intellectuals
Rediscover Absolutes
by Tibor R. Machan, Ph.D.
In this age of moral relativism, we periodically
encounter great displays of moral outrage, ones
that presume a fixed standard of right and wrong.
We are told daily that some CEOs of large companies
have engaged in outrageously immoral conduct and
should be justly punished for doing so. If you
doubt that the business of business ethics is just
as easy as this, you are suspected of improper
pro-business bias.
This is very interesting. For the nearly 40
years I have been studying and working in the
academy, I have encountered a great many ideas
opposed to ethics. Most notable and forthright
among them was the late B. F. Skinner, a professor
of psychology at Harvard University, whose
best-selling book, Beyond Freedom and
Dignity (1971), denied both that we are free to
choose our conduct and that there is any standard
of right and wrong by which such conduct could be
evaluated.
But Skinner is only the most up-front of the
moral skeptics. There are thousands of them at our
universities, in psychology, sociology, economics,
and philosophy departments. And a great many of
those also think that we act because we have to,
not because we choose to.
Skepticism and determinism are the dominant
views. Some advocate a hybrid called compatibilism,
according to which we are both determined to behave
as we do and are also responsible for it, all at
once.
And there are those who deny there is any
bona fide ethics but who think moral
exhortation functions as a kind of training, like
it would when we praise or blame domestic
animals.
Just how these work beats me, but the idea they
advance is out there, admittedly.
Now, people in academe are rarely shy. Most
publish books, articles, papers, and essays galore
and have no compunction about championing their
views anywhere there's a welcoming host for them.
Yet, and here is my puzzle, when scandals like the
ones at Enron Corporation and WorldCom come around,
I do not hear a peep from these skeptics.
I do not find them penning op-ed pieces for
The New York Times in which they proclaim
that blaming Enron executives is nonsense because
there are no standards of right and wrong, no one
can know how they ought to have behaved, and, in
any case, they weren't free agents but merely did
what they had to do.
Evolutionary biologists, who often say that we
are hard-wired by our genes to do what we do, are
also nowhere to be seen or heard -- on op-ed pages
of newspapers or the more or less erudite talk
shows across the electromagnetic spectrum --
telling us not to blame these folks who cheated
thousands out of their pension funds and carried
out innumerable forms of malpractice because, well,
no one can help doing what he or she does; it's all
que sera, sera.
I don't get it. I am a defender of business as a
perfectly honorable profession, have written to
that effect in numerous forums, and am sad when
business executives behave badly. Anyone who has
violated other people's rights should get what
justly is coming to him.
I enthusiastically defend the profession of
business, as well as business ethics professors,
against the likes of Katherine Mangan of The
Chronicle of Higher Education, who asks in a
recent piece, "Or does the bottom-line-first ethos
that many of them [business ethics
professors] promote in the classroom help
create a system that breeds corruption?"
No, heeding the bottom line first is no
different from heeding accuracy in reporting or
health in medicine: it does not cancel out ethics;
it's just the service one happens to offer in a
certain profession!
But those who think ethics is bogus -- and there
are literally thousands of them in universities and
colleges across the globe -- seem to think mum's
the word when it comes to addressing issues from
their own point of view. Why don't they champion
skepticism and moral ambiguity when it would be
relevant, pertinent to do so?
So, perhaps the bulk of academics are just a
bunch of cowards. They refuse to enter the
controversial public arenas when things are a bit
hot to handle. But that constitutes no less a
betrayal of their own oaths of office, namely, to
serve truth above all.
Machan
Archive
Tibor Machan,
adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute, teaches at
the Argyros School of Business and Economics at
Chapman University.
Dr. Machan can be reached at:
machan@chapman.edu
and machatr@home.com
You can respond to this
essay in The Radical Academy Forum
|