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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Principia Ethica, by George Edward Moore
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-Title: Principia Ethica
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-
-
-PRINCIPIA ETHICA
-
-
-
-
- CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
- C. F. CLAY, MANAGER
- LONDON: FETTER LANE, E.C. 4
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN CO.
- BOMBAY }
- CALCUTTA } MACMILLAN AND CO., LTD.
- MADRAS }
- TORONTO: THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
- TOKYO: MARUZEN-KABUSHIKI-KAISHA
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-
-
-
- PRINCIPIA ETHICA
-
- BY
- GEORGE EDWARD MOORE
-
- LITT.D. CAMBRIDGE, HON. LL.D. ST ANDREWS,
- FELLOW OF THE BRITISH ACADEMY,
- LECTURER IN MORAL SCIENCE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
-
-
- “Everything is what it is,
- and not another thing”
- BISHOP BUTLER
-
-
- CAMBRIDGE
- AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS
- 1922
-
-
-
-
- _First Edition_ 1903
- _Reprinted_ 1922
-
-
-
-
- DOCTORIBUS AMICISQUE CANTABRIGIENSIBUS
- DISCIPULUS AMICUS CANTABRIGIENSIS
- PRIMITIAS
- D. D. D.
- AUCTOR
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-It appears to me that in Ethics, as in all other philosophical studies,
-the difficulties and disagreements, of which its history is full, are
-mainly due to a very simple cause: namely to the attempt to answer
-questions, without first discovering precisely _what_ question it
-is which you desire to answer. I do not know how far this source of
-error would be done away, if philosophers would _try_ to discover what
-question they were asking, before they set about to answer it; for the
-work of analysis and distinction is often very difficult: we may often
-fail to make the necessary discovery, even though we make a definite
-attempt to do so. But I am inclined to think that in many cases a
-resolute attempt would be sufficient to ensure success; so that, if
-only this attempt were made, many of the most glaring difficulties
-and disagreements in philosophy would disappear. At all events,
-philosophers seem, in general, not to make the attempt; and, whether in
-consequence of this omission or not, they are constantly endeavouring
-to prove that ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ will answer questions, to which _neither_
-answer is correct, owing to the fact that what they have before their
-minds is not one question, but several, to some of which the true
-answer is ‘No,’ to others ‘Yes.’
-
-I have tried in this book to distinguish clearly two kinds of question,
-which moral philosophers have always professed to answer, but which,
-as I have tried to shew, they have almost always confused both with one
-another and with other questions. These two questions may be expressed,
-the first in the form: What kind of things ought to exist for their
-own sakes? the second in the form: What kind of actions ought we to
-perform? I have tried to shew exactly what it is that we ask about a
-thing, when we ask whether it ought to exist for its own sake, is good
-in itself or has intrinsic value; and exactly what it is that we ask
-about an action, when we ask whether we ought to do it, whether it is a
-right action or a duty.
-
-But from a clear insight into the nature of these two questions, there
-appears to me to follow a second most important result: namely, what
-is the nature of the evidence, by which alone any ethical proposition
-can be proved or disproved, confirmed or rendered doubtful. Once we
-recognise the exact meaning of the two questions, I think it also
-becomes plain exactly what kind of reasons are relevant as arguments
-for or against any particular answer to them. It becomes plain that,
-for answers to the _first_ question, no relevant evidence whatever
-can be adduced: from no other truth, except themselves alone, can it
-be inferred that they are either true or false. We can guard against
-error only by taking care, that, when we try to answer a question of
-this kind, we have before our minds that question only, and not some
-other or others; but that there is great danger of such errors of
-confusion I have tried to shew, and also what are the chief precautions
-by the use of which we may guard against them. As for the _second_
-question, it becomes equally plain, that any answer to it _is_ capable
-of proof or disproof--that, indeed, so many different considerations
-are relevant to its truth or falsehood, as to make the attainment of
-probability very difficult, and the attainment of certainty impossible.
-Nevertheless the _kind_ of evidence, which is both necessary and alone
-relevant to such proof and disproof, is capable of exact definition.
-Such evidence must contain propositions of two kinds and of two kinds
-only: it must consist, in the first place, of truths with regard to
-the results of the action in question--of _causal_ truths--but it must
-_also_ contain ethical truths of our first or self-evident class. Many
-truths of both kinds are necessary to the proof that any action ought
-to be done; and any other kind of evidence is wholly irrelevant. It
-follows that, if any ethical philosopher offers for propositions of
-the first kind any evidence whatever, or if, for propositions of the
-second kind, he either fails to adduce both causal and ethical truths,
-or adduces truths that are neither, his reasoning has not the least
-tendency to establish his conclusions. But not only are his conclusions
-totally devoid of weight: we have, moreover, reason to suspect him
-of the error of confusion; since the offering of irrelevant evidence
-generally indicates that the philosopher who offers it has had before
-his mind, not the question which he professes to answer, but some other
-entirely different one. Ethical discussion, hitherto, has perhaps
-consisted chiefly in reasoning of this totally irrelevant kind.
-
-One main object of this book may, then, be expressed by slightly
-changing one of Kant’s famous titles. I have endeavoured to write
-‘Prolegomena to any future Ethics that can possibly pretend to be
-scientific.’ In other words, I have endeavoured to discover what are
-the fundamental principles of ethical reasoning; and the establishment
-of these principles, rather than of any conclusions which may be
-attained by their use, may be regarded as my main object. I have,
-however, also attempted, in Chapter VI, to present some conclusions,
-with regard to the proper answer of the question ‘What is good in
-itself?’ which are very different from any which have commonly been
-advocated by philosophers. I have tried to define the classes within
-which all great goods and evils fall; and I have maintained that very
-many different things are good and evil in themselves, and that
-neither class of things possesses any other property which is both
-common to all its members and peculiar to them.
-
-In order to express the fact that ethical propositions of my _first_
-class are incapable of proof or disproof, I have sometimes followed
-Sidgwick’s usage in calling them ‘Intuitions.’ But I beg it may be
-noticed that I am not an ‘Intuitionist,’ in the ordinary sense of
-the term. Sidgwick himself seems never to have been clearly aware
-of the immense importance of the difference which distinguishes his
-Intuitionism from the common doctrine, which has generally been called
-by that name. The Intuitionist proper is distinguished by maintaining
-that propositions of my _second_ class--propositions which assert that
-a certain action is _right_ or a _duty_--are incapable of proof or
-disproof by any enquiry into the results of such actions. I, on the
-contrary, am no less anxious to maintain that propositions of _this_
-kind are _not_ ‘Intuitions,’ than to maintain that propositions of my
-_first_ class _are_ Intuitions.
-
-Again, I would wish it observed that, when I call such propositions
-‘Intuitions,’ I mean _merely_ to assert that they are incapable of
-proof; I imply nothing whatever as to the manner or origin of our
-cognition of them. Still less do I imply (as most Intuitionists have
-done) that any proposition whatever is true, _because_ we cognise it in
-a particular way or by the exercise of any particular faculty: I hold,
-on the contrary, that in every way in which it is possible to cognise a
-true proposition, it is also possible to cognise a false one.
-
-When this book had been already completed, I found, in Brentano’s
-‘Origin of the Knowledge of Right and Wrong[1],’ opinions far more
-closely resembling my own, than those of any other ethical writer with
-whom I am acquainted. Brentano appears to agree with me completely
-(1) in regarding all ethical propositions as defined by the fact that
-they predicate a single unique objective concept; (2) in dividing such
-propositions sharply into the same two kinds; (3) in holding that the
-first kind are incapable of proof; and (4) with regard to the kind of
-evidence which is necessary and relevant to the proof of the second
-kind. But he regards the fundamental ethical concept as being, not
-the simple one which I denote by ‘good,’ but the complex one which I
-have taken to define ‘beautiful’; and he does not recognise, but even
-denies by implication, the principle which I have called _the principle
-of organic unities_. In consequence of these two differences, his
-conclusions as to what things are good in themselves, also differ very
-materially from mine. He agrees, however, that there are many different
-goods, and that the love of good and beautiful objects constitutes an
-important class among them.
-
- [1] ‘The Origin of the Knowledge of Right and Wrong.’ By Franz
- Brentano. English Translation by Cecil Hague. Constable, 1902.--I
- have written a review of this book, which will, I hope, appear
- in the _International Journal of Ethics_ for October, 1903. I
- may refer to this review for a fuller account of my reasons for
- disagreeing with Brentano.
-
-I wish to refer to one oversight, of which I became aware only when
-it was too late to correct it, and which may, I am afraid, cause
-unnecessary trouble to some readers. I have omitted to discuss directly
-the mutual relations of the several different notions, which are
-all expressed by the word ‘end.’ The consequences of this omission
-may perhaps be partially avoided by a reference to my article on
-‘Teleology’ in Baldwin’s _Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology_.
-
-If I were to rewrite my work now, I should make a very different, and
-I believe that I could make a much better book. But it may be doubted
-whether, in attempting to satisfy myself, I might not merely render
-more obscure the ideas which I am most anxious to convey, without a
-corresponding gain in completeness and accuracy. However that may be,
-my belief that to publish the book as it stands was probably the best
-thing I could do, does not prevent me from being painfully aware that
-it is full of defects.
-
-TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.
-_August_, 1903.
-
-
-[This book is now reprinted without any alteration whatever, except
-that a few misprints and grammatical mistakes have been corrected. It
-is reprinted, because I am still in agreement with its main tendency
-and conclusions; and it is reprinted without alteration, because I
-found that, if I were to begin correcting what in it seemed to me to
-need correction, I could not stop short of rewriting the whole book.
-
- G. E. M.]
-
-CAMBRIDGE, 1922.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF ETHICS.
-
- A.
-
- SECTION. PAGE
-
- =1.= In order to define Ethics, we must discover what is both
- common and peculiar to all undoubted ethical judgments; 1
-
- =2.= but this is not that they are concerned with human
- conduct, but that they are concerned with a certain predicate
- ‘good,’ and its converse ‘bad,’ which may be applied both to
- conduct and to other things. 1
-
- =3.= The subjects of the judgments of a scientific Ethics are
- not, like those of some studies, ‘particular things’; 3
-
- =4.= but it includes all _universal_ judgments which assert
- the relation of ‘goodness’ to any subject, and hence includes
- Casuistry. 3
-
- B.
-
- =5.= It must, however, enquire not only what things are
- universally related to goodness, but also, what this predicate,
- to which they are related, is: 5
-
- =6.= and the answer to this question is that it is indefinable 6
-
- =7.= or simple: for if by definition be meant the analysis of
- an object of thought, only complex objects can be defined; 7
-
- =8.= and of the three senses in which ‘definition’ can be used,
- this is the most important. 8
-
- =9.= What is thus indefinable is not ‘the good,’ or the whole
- of that which always possesses the predicate ‘good,’ but this
- predicate itself. 8
-
- =10.= ‘Good,’ then, denotes one unique simple object of thought
- among innumerable others; but this object has very commonly
- been identified with some other--a fallacy which may be called
- ‘the naturalistic fallacy’ 9
-
- =11.= and which reduces what is used as a fundamental principle
- of Ethics either to a tautology or to a statement about the
- meaning of a word. 10
-
- =12.= The nature of this fallacy is easily recognised; 12
-
- =13.= and if it were avoided, it would be plain that the only
- alternatives to the admission that ‘good’ is indefinable, are
- either that it is complex or that there is no notion at all
- peculiar to Ethics--alternatives which can only be refuted by
- an appeal to inspection, but which can be so refuted. 15
-
- =14.= The ‘naturalistic fallacy’ illustrated by Bentham; and
- the importance of avoiding it pointed out. 17
-
- C.
-
- =15.= The relations which ethical judgments assert to hold
- universally between ‘goodness’ and other things are of two
- kinds: a thing may be asserted either to _be_ good itself or to
- be causally related to something else which is itself good--to
- be ‘good as a means.’ 21
-
- =16.= Our investigations of the latter kind of relation cannot
- hope to establish more than that a certain kind of action will
- _generally_ be followed by the best possible results; 22
-
- =17.= but a relation of the former kind, if true at all,
- will be true of all cases. All ordinary ethical judgments
- assert _causal_ relations, but they are commonly treated as
- if they did not, because the two kinds of relation are not
- distinguished. 23
-
- D.
-
- =18.= The investigation of intrinsic values is complicated by
- the fact that the value of a whole may be different from the
- sum of the values of its parts, 27
-
- =19.= in which case the part has to the whole a relation, which
- exhibits an equally important difference from and resemblance
- to that of means to end. 29
-
- =20.= The term ‘organic whole’ might well be used to denote
- that a whole has this property, since, of the two other
- properties which it is commonly used to imply, 30
-
- =21.= one that of reciprocal causal dependence between parts,
- has no necessary relation to this one, 31
-
- =22.= and the other, upon which most stress has been laid, can
- be true of no whole whatsoever, being a self-contradictory
- conception due to confusion. 33
-
- =23.= Summary of chapter. 36
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- NATURALISTIC ETHICS.
-
- =24.= This and the two following chapters will consider certain
- proposed answers to the second of ethical questions: What is
- _good in itself_? These proposed answers are characterised by
- the facts (1) that they declare some _one_ kind of thing to be
- alone good in itself; and (2) that they do so, because they
- suppose this _one_ thing to define the meaning of ‘good.’ 37
-
- =25.= Such theories may be divided into two groups (1)
- Metaphysical, (2) Naturalistic: and the second group may be
- subdivided into two others, (_a_) theories which declare some
- natural object, other than pleasure, to be sole good, (_b_)
- Hedonism. The present chapter will deal with (_a_). 38
-
- =26.= Definition of what is meant by ‘Naturalism.’ 39
-
- =27.= The common argument that things are good, because they
- are ‘natural,’ may involve either (1) the false proposition
- that the ‘normal,’ as such, is good; 41
-
- =28.= or (2) the false proposition that the ‘necessary,’ as
- such, is good. 44
-
- =29.= But a _systematised_ appeal to Nature is now most
- prevalent in connection with the term ‘Evolution.’ An
- examination of Mr Herbert Spencer’s Ethics will illustrate this
- form of Naturalism. 45
-
- =30.= Darwin’s scientific theory of ‘natural selection,’ which
- has mainly caused the modern vogue of the term ‘Evolution,’
- must be carefully distinguished from certain ideas which are
- commonly associated with the latter term. 47
-
- =31.= Mr Spencer’s connection of Evolution with Ethics seems to
- shew the influence of the naturalistic fallacy; 48
-
- =32.= but Mr Spencer is vague as to the ethical relations of
- ‘pleasure’ and ‘evolution,’ and his Naturalism may be mainly
- Naturalistic Hedonism. 49
-
- =33.= A discussion of the third chapter of the _Data of Ethics_
- serves to illustrate these two points and to shew that Mr
- Spencer is in utter confusion with regard to the fundamental
- principles of Ethics. 51
-
- =34.= Three possible views as to the relation of Evolution to
- Ethics are distinguished from the naturalistic view to which
- it is proposed to confine the name ‘Evolutionistic Ethics.’ On
- any of these three views the relation would be unimportant, and
- the ‘Evolutionistic’ view, which makes it important, involves a
- double fallacy. 54
-
- =35.= Summary of chapter. 58
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- HEDONISM.
-
- =36.= The prevalence of Hedonism is mainly due to the
- naturalistic fallacy. 59
-
- =37.= Hedonism may be defined as the doctrine that ‘Pleasure is
- the sole good’: this doctrine has always been held by Hedonists
- and used by them as a fundamental ethical principle, although
- it has commonly been confused with others. 61
-
- =38.= The method pursued in this chapter will consist in
- exposing the reasons commonly offered for the truth of Hedonism
- and in bringing out the reasons, which suffice to shew it
- untrue, by a criticism of J. S. Mill & H. Sidgwick. 63
-
- A.
-
- =39.= Mill declares that ‘Happiness is the only thing desirable
- as an end,’ and insists that ‘Questions of ultimate ends are
- not amenable to direct proof’; 64
-
- =40.= yet he gives a proof of the first proposition, which
- consists in (1) the fallacious confusion of ‘desirable’ with
- ‘desired,’ 66
-
- =41.= (2) an attempt to shew that nothing but pleasure is
- desired. 67
-
- =42.= The theory that nothing but pleasure is desired seems
- largely due to a confusion between the _cause_ and the _object_
- of desire: pleasure is certainly not the sole _object_ of
- desire, and, even if it is always among the _causes_ of desire,
- that fact would not tempt anyone to think it a good. 68
-
- =43.= Mill attempts to reconcile his doctrine that pleasure is
- the sole object of desire with his admission that other things
- are desired, by the absurd declaration that what is a means to
- happiness is ‘part’ of happiness. 71
-
- =44.= Summary of Mill’s argument and of my criticism. 72
-
- B.
-
- =45.= We must now proceed to consider the principle of Hedonism
- as an ‘Intuition,’ as which it has been clearly recognised
- by Prof. Sidgwick alone. That it should be thus incapable of
- _proof_ is not, in itself, any reason for dissatisfaction. 74
-
- =46.= In thus beginning to consider what things are good in
- themselves, we leave the refutation of Naturalism behind, and
- enter on the second division of ethical questions. 76
-
- =47.= Mill’s doctrine that some pleasures are superior ‘in
- quality’ to others implies both (1) that judgments of ends must
- be ‘intuitions’; 77
-
- =48.= and (2) that pleasure is _not_ the sole good. 79
-
- =49.= Prof. Sidgwick has avoided these confusions made by
- Mill: in considering his arguments we shall, therefore, merely
- consider the question ‘Is pleasure the sole good?’ 81
-
- =50.= Prof. Sidgwick first tries to shew that nothing outside
- of Human Existence can be good. Reasons are given for doubting
- this. 81
-
- =51.= He then goes on to the far more important proposition
- that no part of Human Existence, except pleasure, is desirable. 85
-
- =52.= But _pleasure_ must be distinguished from _consciousness
- of pleasure_, and (1) it is plain that, when so distinguished,
- _pleasure_ is not the sole good; 87
-
- =53.= and (2) it may be made equally plain that _consciousness
- of pleasure_ is not the sole good, if we are equally careful to
- distinguish it from its usual accompaniments. 90
-
- =54.= Of Prof. Sidgwick’s two arguments for the contrary view,
- the second is equally compatible with the supposition that
- pleasure is a mere _criterion_ of what is _right_; 91
-
- =55.= and in his first, the appeal to reflective intuition,
- he fails to put the question clearly (1) in that he does not
- recognise the principle of _organic unities_; 92
-
- =56.= and (2) in that he fails to emphasize that the agreement,
- which he has tried to shew, between hedonistic judgments and
- those of Common Sense, only holds of _judgments of means_:
- hedonistic judgments of _ends_ are flagrantly paradoxical. 94
-
- =57.= I conclude, then, that a reflective intuition, if proper
- precautions are taken, will agree with Common Sense that it is
- absurd to regard mere consciousness of pleasure as the sole
- good. 95
-
- C.
-
- =58.= It remains to consider Egoism and Utilitarianism. It
- is important to distinguish the former, as the doctrine that
- ‘my own pleasure is sole good,’ from the doctrine, opposed to
- Altruism, that to pursue my own pleasure exclusively is right
- _as a means_. 96
-
- =59.= Egoism proper is utterly untenable, being
- self-contradictory: it fails to perceive that when I declare
- a thing to be my own good, I must be declaring it to be _good
- absolutely_ or else not good at all. 97
-
- =60.= This confusion is further brought out by an examination
- of Prof. Sidgwick’s contrary view; 99
-
- =61.= and it is shewn that, in consequence of this confusion,
- his representation of ‘the relation of Rational Egoism to
- Rational Benevolence’ as ‘the profoundest problem of Ethics,’
- and his view that a certain hypothesis is required to ‘make
- Ethics rational,’ are grossly erroneous. 102
-
- =62.= The same confusion is involved in the attempt to infer
- Utilitarianism from Psychological Hedonism, as commonly held,
- _e.g._ by Mill. 104
-
- =63.= Egoism proper seems also to owe its plausibility to its
- confusion with Egoism, as a doctrine of means. 105
-
- =64.= Certain ambiguities in the conception of Utilitarianism
- are noticed; and it is pointed out (1) that, as a doctrine
- of the end to be pursued, it is finally refuted by the
- refutation of Hedonism, and (2) that, while the arguments most
- commonly urged in its favour could, at most, only shew it to
- offer a correct _criterion_ of right action, they are quite
- insufficient even for this purpose. 105
-
- =65.= Summary of chapter. 108
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- METAPHYSICAL ETHICS.
-
- A.
-
- =66.= The term ‘metaphysical’ is defined as having reference
- primarily to any object of knowledge which is not a part of
- Nature--does not exist in time, as an object of perception; but
- since metaphysicians, not content with pointing out the truth
- about such entities, have always supposed that what does not
- exist in Nature, must, at least, _exist_, the term also has
- reference to a supposed ‘supersensible reality’: 110
-
- =67.= and by ‘metaphysical Ethics’ I mean those systems which
- maintain or imply that the answer to the question ‘What is
- good?’ _logically depends_ upon the answer to the question
- ‘What is the nature of supersensible reality?.’ All such
- systems obviously involve the same fallacy--the ‘naturalistic
- fallacy’--by the use of which Naturalism was also defined. 113
-
- =68.= Metaphysics, as dealing with a ‘supersensible reality,’
- may have a bearing upon _practical_ Ethics (1) if its
- supersensible reality is conceived as something future, which
- our actions can affect; and (2) since it will prove that
- _every_ proposition of practical Ethics is false, if it can
- shew that an eternal reality is either the only real thing
- or the only good thing. Most metaphysical writers, believing
- in a reality of the latter kind, do thus imply the complete
- falsehood of every practical proposition, although they fail to
- see that their Metaphysics thus contradicts their Ethics. 115
-
- B.
-
- =69.= But the theory, by which I have defined Metaphysical
- Ethics, is _not_ that Metaphysics has a logical bearing upon
- the question involved in _practical_ Ethics ‘What effects will
- my action produce?,’ but that it has such a bearing upon the
- fundamental ethical question ‘What is good in itself?.’ This
- theory has been refuted by the proof, in Chap. I, that the
- naturalistic fallacy is a fallacy: it only remains to discuss
- certain confusions which seem to have lent it plausibility. 118
-
- =70.= One such source of confusion seems to lie in the failure
- to distinguish between the proposition ‘This is good,’ when
- it means ‘This _existing_ thing is good,’ and the same
- proposition, when it means ‘The existence of this _kind_ of
- thing would be good’; 118
-
- =71.= and another seems to lie in the failure to distinguish
- between that which _suggests_ a truth, or is a _cause_ of
- our knowing it, and that upon which it _logically_ depends,
- or which is a _reason_ for believing it: in the former
- sense fiction has a more important bearing upon Ethics than
- Metaphysics can have. 121
-
- C.
-
- =72.= But a more important source of confusion seems to lie
- in the supposition that ‘to be good’ is _identical_ with the
- possession of some supersensible property, which is also
- involved in the definition of ‘reality.’ 122
-
- =73.= One cause of this supposition seems to be the logical
- prejudice that all propositions are of the most familiar
- type--that in which subject and predicate are both existents. 123
-
- =74.= But ethical propositions cannot be reduced to this type:
- in particular, they are obviously to be distinguished 125
-
- =75.= (1) from Natural Laws; with which one of Kant’s most
- famous doctrines confuses them, 126
-
- =76.= and (2) from Commands; with which they are confused both
- by Kant and by others. 127
-
- D.
-
- =77.= This latter confusion is one of the sources of the
- prevalent modern doctrine that ‘being good’ is _identical_ with
- ‘being willed’; but the prevalence of this doctrine seems to be
- chiefly due to other causes. I shall try to shew with regard
- to it (1) what are the chief errors which seem to have led to
- its adoption; and (2) that, apart from it, the Metaphysics of
- Volition can hardly have the smallest logical bearing upon
- Ethics. 128
-
- =78.= (1) It has been commonly held, since Kant, that
- ‘goodness’ has the same relation to Will or Feeling, which
- ‘truth’ or ‘reality’ has to Cognition: that the proper method
- for Ethics is to discover what is _implied_ in Will or Feeling,
- just as, according to Kant, the proper method for Metaphysics
- was to discover what is _implied_ in Cognition. 129
-
- =79.= The actual relations between ‘goodness’ and Will or
- Feeling, from which this false doctrine is inferred, seem to
- be mainly (_a_) the _causal_ relation consisting in the fact
- that it is only by reflection upon the experiences of Will and
- Feeling that we become aware of ethical distinctions; (_b_) the
- facts that a cognition of goodness is perhaps _always_ included
- in certain kinds of Willing and Feeling, and is _generally_
- accompanied by them: 130
-
- =80.= but from neither of these _psychological_ facts does it
- follow that ‘to be good’ is identical with being willed or
- felt in a certain way: the supposition that it does follow
- is an instance of the fundamental contradiction of modern
- Epistemology--the contradiction involved in both distinguishing
- and identifying the _object_ and the _act_ of Thought, ‘truth’
- itself and its supposed _criterion_: 131
-
- =81.= and, once this analogy between Volition and Cognition is
- accepted, the view that ethical propositions have an essential
- reference to Will or Feeling, is strengthened by another error
- with regard to the nature of Cognition--the error of supposing
- that ‘perception’ denotes _merely_ a certain way of cognising
- an object, whereas it actually includes the assertion that the
- object is also _true_. 133
-
- =82.= The argument of the last three §§ is recapitulated; and
- it is pointed out (1) that Volition and Feeling are _not_
- analogous to Cognition, (2) that, even if they were, still ‘to
- be good’ could not _mean_ ‘to be willed or felt in a certain
- way.’ 135
-
- =83.= (2) If ‘being good’ and ‘being willed’ are not
- _identical_, then the latter could only be a _criterion_ of the
- former; and, in order to shew that it was so, we should have
- to establish _independently_ that many things were good--that
- is to say, we should have to establish most of our ethical
- conclusions, before the Metaphysics of Volition could possibly
- give us the smallest assistance. 137
-
- =84.= The fact that the metaphysical writers who, like Green,
- attempt to _base_ Ethics on Volition, do not even attempt this
- independent investigation, shews that they start from the false
- assumption that goodness is _identical_ with being willed, and
- hence that their ethical reasonings have no value whatsoever. 138
-
- =85.= Summary of chapter. 139
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- ETHICS IN RELATION TO CONDUCT.
-
- =86.= The question to be discussed in this chapter must
- be clearly distinguished from the two questions hitherto
- discussed, namely (1) What is the nature of the proposition:
- ‘This is good in itself’? 142
-
- =87.= and (2) What things are good in themselves? to which we
- gave one answer in deciding that pleasure was not the only
- thing good in itself. 144
-
- =88.= In this chapter we shall deal with the _third_ object of
- ethical enquiry: namely answers to the question ‘What conduct
- is a _means_ to good results?’ or ‘What ought we to do?’ This
- is the question of _Practical_ Ethics, and its answer involves
- an assertion of _causal_ connection. 146
-
- =89.= It is shewn that the assertions ‘This action is right’
- or ‘is my duty’ are equivalent to the assertion that the total
- results of the action in question will be the best possible; 146
-
- =90.= and the rest of the chapter will deal with certain
- conclusions, upon which light is thrown by this fact. Of which
- the first is (1) that Intuitionism is mistaken; since no
- proposition with regard to duty can be self-evident. 148
-
- =91.= (2) It is plain that we cannot hope to prove which
- among all the actions, which it is possible for us to perform
- on every occasion, will produce the best total results:
- to discover what is our ‘duty,’ in this strict sense, is
- impossible. It may, however, be possible to shew which among
- the actions, which we are _likely_ to perform, will produce
- the best results. 149
-
- =92.= The distinction made in the last § is further explained;
- and it is insisted that all that Ethics has done or can do, is,
- _not_ to determine absolute duties, but to point out which,
- among a _few_ of the alternatives, possible under _certain_
- circumstances, will have the better results. 150
-
- =93.= (3) Even this latter task is immensely difficult, and
- no adequate proof that the total results of one action are
- superior to those of another, has ever been given. For (_a_)
- we can only calculate actual results within a comparatively
- near future: we must, therefore, assume that no results of the
- same action in the infinite future beyond, will reverse the
- balance--an assumption which perhaps _can_ be, but certainly
- has not been, justified; 152
-
- =94.= and (_b_) even to decide that, of any two actions, one
- has a better total result than the other _in the immediate
- future_, is very difficult; and it is very improbable, and
- quite impossible to prove, that any single action is _in all
- cases_ better as means than its probable alternative. Rules
- of duty, even in this restricted sense, can only, at most, be
- _general_ truths. 154
-
- =95.= But (_c_) most of the actions, most universally approved
- by Common Sense, may perhaps be shewn to be _generally_ better
- as means than any probable alternative, on the following
- principles. (1) With regard to some rules it may be shewn
- that their general observance would be useful in any state of
- society, where the instincts to preserve and propagate life and
- to possess property were as strong as they seem always to be;
- and this utility may be shewn, independently of a right view as
- to what is good in itself, since the observance is a means to
- things which are a necessary condition for the attainment of
- _any_ great goods in considerable quantities. 155
-
- =96.= (2) Other rules are such that their general observance
- can only be shewn to be useful, as means to the preservation
- of society, under more or less temporary conditions: if any of
- these are to be proved useful in _all_ societies, this can only
- be done by shewing their causal relation to things good or evil
- in themselves, which are not generally recognised to be such. 158
-
- =97.= It is plain that rules of class (1) may _also_ be
- justified by the existence of such temporary conditions as
- justify those of class (2); and among such temporary conditions
- must be reckoned the so-called _sanctions_. 159
-
- =98.= In this way, then, it may be possible to prove the
- _general_ utility, for the present, of those actions, which in
- our society are _both_ generally recognised as duties _and_
- generally practised; but it seems very doubtful whether a
- conclusive case can be established for any proposed change in
- social custom, without an independent investigation of what
- things are good or bad in themselves. 159
-
- =99.= And (_d_) if we consider the distinct question of how a
- single individual should decide to act (α) in cases where the
- _general_ utility of the action in question is certain, (β) in
- other cases: there seems reason for thinking that, with regard
- to (α), where the generally useful rule is also generally
- observed, he should _always_ conform to it; but these reasons
- are not conclusive, if _either_ the general observance _or_ the
- general utility is wanting: 162
-
- =100.= and that (β) in all other cases, _rules of action_
- should not be followed at all, but the individual should
- consider what positive goods, _he_, in his particular
- circumstances, seems likely to be able to effect, and what
- evils to avoid. 164
-
- =101.= (4) It follows further that the distinction denoted by
- the terms ‘duty’ and ‘expediency’ is not primarily ethical:
- when we ask ‘Is this really expedient?’ we are asking precisely
- the same question as when we ask ‘Is this my duty?,’ viz.
- ‘Is this a means to the best possible?.’ ‘Duties’ are mainly
- distinguished by the non-ethical marks (1) that many people
- are often tempted to avoid them, (2) that their most prominent
- effects are on others than the agent, (3) that they excite
- the moral sentiments: so far as they _are_ distinguished by
- an ethical peculiarity, this is not that they are peculiarly
- useful to perform, but that they are peculiarly useful to
- sanction. 167
-
- =102.= The distinction between ‘duty’ and ‘interest’ is
- also, in the main, the same non-ethical distinction: but
- the term ‘interested’ does also refer to a distinct ethical
- predicate--that an action is to ‘my interest’ asserts only that
- it will have the best possible effects of one particular kind,
- not that its total effects will be the best possible. 170
-
- =103.= (5) We may further see that ‘virtues’ are not to be
- defined as dispositions that are good in themselves: they are
- not necessarily more than dispositions to perform actions
- generally good as means, and of these, for the most part,
- only those classed as ‘duties’ in accordance with section
- (4). It follows that to decide whether a disposition is or is
- not ‘virtuous’ involves the difficult causal investigation
- discussed in section (3); and that what is a virtue in one
- state of society may not be so in another. 171
-
- =104.= It follows also that we have no reason to presume, as
- has commonly been done, that the exercise of virtue in the
- performance of ‘duties’ is ever good in itself--far less, that
- it is the sole good: 173
-
- =105.= and, if we consider the intrinsic value of such
- exercise, it will appear (1) that, in most cases, it has no
- value, and (2) that even the cases, where it has some value,
- are far from constituting the sole good. The truth of the
- latter proposition is generally inconsistently implied, even by
- those who deny it; 174
-
- =106.= but in order fairly to decide upon the intrinsic value
- of virtue, we must distinguish three different kinds of
- disposition, each of which is commonly so called and has been
- maintained to be the only kind deserving the name. Thus (_a_)
- the mere unconscious ‘habit’ of performing duties, which is the
- commonest type, has no intrinsic value whatsoever; Christian
- moralists are right in implying that mere ‘external rightness’
- has no intrinsic value, though they are wrong in saying that it
- is therefore not ‘virtuous,’ since this implies that it has no
- value even as a means: 175
-
- =107.= (_b_) where virtue consists in a disposition to have,
- and be moved by, a sentiment of love towards really good
- consequences of an action and of hatred towards really evil
- ones, it has some intrinsic value, but its value may vary
- greatly in degree: 177
-
- =108.= finally (_c_) where virtue consists in
- ‘conscientiousness,’ _i.e._ the disposition not to act, in
- certain cases, until we believe and feel that our action is
- right, it seems to have some intrinsic value: the value of this
- feeling has been peculiarly emphasized by Christian Ethics, but
- it certainly is not, as Kant would lead us to think, either the
- sole thing of value, or always good even as a means. 178
-
- =109.= Summary of chapter. 180
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE IDEAL.
-
- =110.= By an ‘ideal’ state of things may be meant either (1)
- the Summum Bonum or absolutely best, or (2) the best which the
- laws of nature allow to exist in this world, or (3) anything
- greatly good in itself: this chapter will be principally
- occupied with what is ideal in sense (3)--with answering the
- fundamental question of Ethics; 183
-
- =111.= but a correct answer to this question is an essential
- step towards a correct view as to what is ‘ideal’ in senses (1)
- and (2). 184
-
- =112.= In order to obtain a correct answer to the question
- ‘What is good in itself?’ we must consider what value things
- would have if they existed absolutely by themselves; 187
-
- =113.= and, if we use this method, it is obvious that personal
- affection and aesthetic enjoyments include by far the greatest
- goods with which we are acquainted. 188
-
- =114.= If we begin by considering I. _Aesthetic Enjoyments_, it
- is plain (1) that there is always _essential_ to these some one
- of a great variety of different emotions, though these emotions
- may have little value _by themselves_: 189
-
- =115.= and (2) that a cognition of really beautiful qualities
- is equally essential, and has equally little value by itself. 190
-
- =116.= But (3) granted that the appropriate combination of
- these two elements is always a considerable good and may be
- a very great one, we may ask whether, where there is _added_
- to this _a true belief in the existence of the object of the
- cognition_, the whole thus formed is not much more valuable
- still. 192
-
- =117.= I think that this question should be answered in the
- affirmative; but in order to ensure that this judgment is
- correct, we must carefully distinguish it 194
-
- =118.= from the two judgments (_a_) that knowledge is valuable
- _as a means_, (_b_) that, where the object of the cognition
- is itself a good thing, its existence, of course, adds to the
- value of the whole state of things: 195
-
- =119.= if, however, we attempt to avoid being biassed by these
- two facts, it still seems that mere true belief may be a
- condition essential to great value. 197
-
- =120.= We thus get a _third_ essential constituent of many
- great goods; and in this way we are able to justify (1) the
- attribution of value to _knowledge_, over and above its value
- as a means, and (2) the intrinsic superiority of the proper
- appreciation of a _real_ object over the appreciation of an
- equally valuable object of mere imagination: emotions directed
- towards real objects may thus, even if the object be inferior,
- claim equality with the highest imaginative pleasures. 198
-
- =121.= Finally (4) with regard to the _objects_ of the
- cognition which is essential to these good wholes, it is the
- business of Aesthetics to analyse their nature: it need only be
- here remarked (1) that, by calling them ‘beautiful,’ we mean
- that they have this relation to a _good_ whole; and (2) that
- they are, for the most part, themselves complex wholes, such
- that the admiring contemplation of the whole greatly exceeds
- in value the sum of the values of the admiring contemplation of
- the parts. 200
-
- =122.= With regard to II. _Personal Affection_, the object is
- here not merely beautiful but also good in itself; it appears,
- however, that the appreciation of what is thus good in itself,
- viz. the mental qualities of a person, is certainly, by itself,
- not so great a good as the whole formed by the combination
- with it of an appreciation of corporeal beauty; it is doubtful
- whether it is even so great a good as the mere appreciation of
- corporeal beauty; but it is certain that the combination of
- both is a far greater good than either singly. 203
-
- =123.= It follows from what has been said that we have every
- reason to suppose that a cognition of _material qualities_, and
- even their existence, is an essential constituent of the Ideal
- or Summum Bonum: there is only a bare possibility that they are
- not included in it. 205
-
- =124.= It remains to consider _positive evils_ and _mixed
- goods_. I. _Evils_ may be divided into three classes, namely 207
-
- =125.= (1) evils which consist in the love, or admiration, or
- enjoyment of what is evil or ugly 208
-
- =126.= (2) evils which consist in the hatred or contempt of
- what is good or beautiful 211
-
- =127.= and (3) the consciousness of intense pain: this appears
- to be the only thing, either greatly good or greatly evil,
- which does not involve _both_ a cognition _and_ an emotion
- directed towards its object; and hence it is not analogous to
- pleasure in respect of its intrinsic value, while it also seems
- not to add to the vileness of a whole, _as a whole_, in which
- it is combined with another bad thing, whereas pleasure does
- add to the goodness of a whole, in which it is combined with
- another good thing; 212
-
- =128.= but pleasure and pain are completely analogous in this,
- that pleasure by no means always increases, and pain by no
- means always decreases, the total value of a whole in which it
- is included: the converse is often true. 213
-
- =129.= In order to consider II. _Mixed Goods_, we must first
- distinguish between (1) the value of a whole _as a whole_,
- and (2) its value _on the whole_ or total value: (1) = the
- difference between (2) and the sum of the values of the parts.
- In view of this distinction, it then appears: 214
-
- =130.= (1) That the mere combination of two or more evils is
- never positively good _on the whole_, although it may certainly
- have great intrinsic value _as a whole_; 216
-
- =131.= but (2) That a whole which includes a cognition of
- something evil or ugly may yet be a great positive good _on the
- whole_: most virtues, which have any intrinsic value whatever,
- seem to be of this kind, _e.g._ (_a_) courage and compassion,
- and (_b_) moral goodness; all these are instances of the hatred
- or contempt of what is evil or ugly; 216
-
- =132.= but there seems no reason to think that, where the evil
- object _exists_, the total state of things is ever positively
- good _on the whole_, although the existence of the evil may add
- to its value _as a whole_. 219
-
- =133.= Hence (1) no actually existing evil is necessary to the
- Ideal, (2) the contemplation of imaginary evils is necessary to
- it, and (3) where evils already exist, the existence of mixed
- virtues has a value independent both of its consequences and of
- the value which it has in common with the proper appreciation
- of imaginary evils. 220
-
- =134.= Concluding remarks. 222
-
- =135.= Summary of chapter. 224
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF ETHICS.
-
-
-=1.= It is very easy to point out some among our every-day judgments,
-with the truth of which Ethics is undoubtedly concerned. Whenever
-we say, ‘So and so is a good man,’ or ‘That fellow is a villain’;
-whenever we ask, ‘What ought I to do?’ or ‘Is it wrong for me to do
-like this?’; whenever we hazard such remarks as ‘Temperance is a virtue
-and drunkenness a vice’--it is undoubtedly the business of Ethics
-to discuss such questions and such statements; to argue what is the
-true answer when we ask what it is right to do, and to give reasons
-for thinking that our statements about the character of persons or
-the morality of actions are true or false. In the vast majority of
-cases, where we make statements involving any of the terms ‘virtue,’
-‘vice,’ ‘duty,’ ‘right,’ ‘ought,’ ‘good,’ ‘bad,’ we are making
-ethical judgments; and if we wish to discuss their truth, we shall be
-discussing a point of Ethics.
-
-So much as this is not disputed; but it falls very far short of
-defining the province of Ethics. That province may indeed be defined as
-the whole truth about that which is at the same time common to all such
-judgments and peculiar to them. But we have still to ask the question:
-What is it that is thus common and peculiar? And this is a question to
-which very different answers have been given by ethical philosophers
-of acknowledged reputation, and none of them, perhaps, completely
-satisfactory.
-
-
-=2.= If we take such examples as those given above, we shall not be
-far wrong in saying that they are all of them concerned with the
-question of ‘conduct’--with the question, what, in the conduct of us,
-human beings, is good, and what is bad, what is right, and what is
-wrong. For when we say that a man is good, we commonly mean that he
-acts rightly; when we say that drunkenness is a vice, we commonly mean
-that to get drunk is a wrong or wicked action. And this discussion of
-human conduct is, in fact, that with which the name ‘Ethics’ is most
-intimately associated. It is so associated by derivation; and conduct
-is undoubtedly by far the commonest and most generally interesting
-object of ethical judgments.
-
-Accordingly, we find that many ethical philosophers are disposed to
-accept as an adequate definition of ‘Ethics’ the statement that it
-deals with the question what is good or bad in human conduct. They hold
-that its enquiries are properly confined to ‘conduct’ or to ‘practice’;
-they hold that the name ‘practical philosophy’ covers all the matter
-with which it has to do. Now, without discussing the proper meaning
-of the word (for verbal questions are properly left to the writers of
-dictionaries and other persons interested in literature; philosophy,
-as we shall see, has no concern with them), I may say that I intend to
-use ‘Ethics’ to cover more than this--a usage, for which there is, I
-think, quite sufficient authority. I am using it to cover an enquiry
-for which, at all events, there is no other word: the general enquiry
-into what is good.
-
-Ethics is undoubtedly concerned with the question what good conduct
-is; but, being concerned with this, it obviously does not start at the
-beginning, unless it is prepared to tell us what is good as well as
-what is conduct. For ‘good conduct’ is a complex notion: all conduct is
-not good; for some is certainly bad and some may be indifferent. And on
-the other hand, other things, beside conduct, may be good; and if they
-are so, then, ‘good’ denotes some property, that is common to them and
-conduct; and if we examine good conduct alone of all good things, then
-we shall be in danger of mistaking for this property, some property
-which is not shared by those other things: and thus we shall have made
-a mistake about Ethics even in this limited sense; for we shall not
-know what good conduct really is. This is a mistake which many writers
-have actually made, from limiting their enquiry to conduct. And hence
-I shall try to avoid it by considering first what is good in general;
-hoping, that if we can arrive at any certainty about this, it will be
-much easier to settle the question of good conduct: for we all know
-pretty well what ‘conduct’ is. This, then, is our first question: What
-is good? and What is bad? and to the discussion of this question (of
-these questions) I give the name of Ethics, since that science must, at
-all events, include it.
-
-
-=3.= But this is a question which may have many meanings. If, for
-example, each of us were to say ‘I am doing good now’ or ‘I had a
-good dinner yesterday,’ these statements would each of them be some
-sort of answer to our question, although perhaps a false one. So, too,
-when A asks B what school he ought to send his son to, B’s answer
-will certainly be an ethical judgment. And similarly all distribution
-of praise or blame to any personage or thing that has existed, now
-exists, or will exist, does give some answer to the question ‘What is
-good?’ In all such cases some particular thing is judged to be good or
-bad: the question ‘What?’ is answered by ‘This.’ But this is not the
-sense in which a scientific Ethics asks the question. Not one, of all
-the many million answers of this kind, which must be true, can form a
-part of an ethical system; although that science must contain reasons
-and principles sufficient for deciding on the truth of all of them.
-There are far too many persons, things and events in the world, past,
-present, or to come, for a discussion of their individual merits to be
-embraced in any science. Ethics, therefore, does not deal at all with
-facts of this nature, facts that are unique, individual, absolutely
-particular; facts with which such studies as history, geography,
-astronomy, are compelled, in part at least, to deal. And, for this
-reason, it is not the business of the ethical philosopher to give
-personal advice or exhortation.
-
-
-=4.= But there is another meaning which may be given to the question
-‘What is good?’ ‘Books are good’ would be an answer to it, though
-an answer obviously false; for some books are very bad indeed. And
-ethical judgments of this kind do indeed belong to Ethics; though
-I shall not deal with many of them. Such is the judgment ‘Pleasure
-is good’--a judgment, of which Ethics should discuss the truth,
-although it is not nearly as important as that other judgment, with
-which we shall be much occupied presently--‘Pleasure _alone_ is
-good.’ It is judgments of this sort, which are made in such books on
-Ethics as contain a list of ‘virtues’--in Aristotle’s ‘Ethics’ for
-example. But it is judgments of precisely the same kind, which form
-the substance of what is commonly supposed to be a study different
-from Ethics, and one much less respectable--the study of Casuistry.
-We may be told that Casuistry differs from Ethics, in that it is much
-more detailed and particular, Ethics much more general. But it is
-most important to notice that Casuistry does not deal with anything
-that is absolutely particular--particular in the only sense in which
-a perfectly precise line can be drawn between it and what is general.
-It is not particular in the sense just noticed, the sense in which
-this book is a particular book, and A’s friend’s advice particular
-advice. Casuistry may indeed be _more_ particular and Ethics _more_
-general; but that means that they differ only in degree and not in
-kind. And this is universally true of ‘particular’ and ‘general,’ when
-used in this common, but inaccurate, sense. So far as Ethics allows
-itself to give lists of virtues or even to name constituents of the
-Ideal, it is indistinguishable from Casuistry. Both alike deal with
-what is general, in the sense in which physics and chemistry deal with
-what is general. Just as chemistry aims at discovering what are the
-properties of oxygen, _wherever it occurs_, and not only of this or
-that particular specimen of oxygen; so Casuistry aims at discovering
-what actions are good, _whenever they occur_. In this respect Ethics
-and Casuistry alike are to be classed with such sciences as physics,
-chemistry and physiology, in their absolute distinction from those of
-which history and geography are instances. And it is to be noted that,
-owing to their detailed nature, casuistical investigations are actually
-nearer to physics and to chemistry than are the investigations usually
-assigned to Ethics. For just as physics cannot rest content with the
-discovery that light is propagated by waves of ether, but must go on
-to discover the particular nature of the ether-waves corresponding to
-each several colour; so Casuistry, not content with the general law
-that charity is a virtue, must attempt to discover the relative merits
-of every different form of charity. Casuistry forms, therefore, part
-of the ideal of ethical science: Ethics cannot be complete without it.
-The defects of Casuistry are not defects of principle; no objection can
-be taken to its aim and object. It has failed only because it is far
-too difficult a subject to be treated adequately in our present state
-of knowledge. The casuist has been unable to distinguish, in the cases
-which he treats, those elements upon which their value depends. Hence
-he often thinks two cases to be alike in respect of value, when in
-reality they are alike only in some other respect. It is to mistakes of
-this kind that the pernicious influence of such investigations has been
-due. For Casuistry is the goal of ethical investigation. It cannot be
-safely attempted at the beginning of our studies, but only at the end.
-
-
-=5.= But our question ‘What is good?’ may have still another meaning.
-We may, in the third place, mean to ask, not what thing or things are
-good, but how ‘good’ is to be defined. This is an enquiry which belongs
-only to Ethics, not to Casuistry; and this is the enquiry which will
-occupy us first.
-
-It is an enquiry to which most special attention should be directed;
-since this question, how ‘good’ is to be defined, is the most
-fundamental question in all Ethics. That which is meant by ‘good’
-is, in fact, except its converse ‘bad,’ the _only_ simple object of
-thought which is peculiar to Ethics. Its definition is, therefore,
-the most essential point in the definition of Ethics; and moreover a
-mistake with regard to it entails a far larger number of erroneous
-ethical judgments than any other. Unless this first question be fully
-understood, and its true answer clearly recognised, the rest of Ethics
-is as good as useless from the point of view of systematic knowledge.
-True ethical judgments, of the two kinds last dealt with, may indeed
-be made by those who do not know the answer to this question as well
-as by those who do; and it goes without saying that the two classes
-of people may lead equally good lives. But it is extremely unlikely
-that the _most general_ ethical judgments will be equally valid, in
-the absence of a true answer to this question: I shall presently try
-to shew that the gravest errors have been largely due to beliefs in a
-false answer. And, in any case, it is impossible that, till the answer
-to this question be known, any one should know _what is the evidence_
-for any ethical judgment whatsoever. But the main object of Ethics,
-as a systematic science, is to give correct _reasons_ for thinking
-that this or that is good; and, unless this question be answered, such
-reasons cannot be given. Even, therefore, apart from the fact that a
-false answer leads to false conclusions, the present enquiry is a most
-necessary and important part of the science of Ethics.
-
-
-=6.= What, then, is good? How is good to be defined? Now, it may be
-thought that this is a verbal question. A definition does indeed often
-mean the expressing of one word’s meaning in other words. But this
-is not the sort of definition I am asking for. Such a definition can
-never be of ultimate importance in any study except lexicography. If I
-wanted that kind of definition I should have to consider in the first
-place how people generally used the word ‘good’; but my business is not
-with its proper usage, as established by custom. I should, indeed, be
-foolish, if I tried to use it for something which it did not usually
-denote: if, for instance, I were to announce that, whenever I used the
-word ‘good,’ I must be understood to be thinking of that object which
-is usually denoted by the word ‘table.’ I shall, therefore, use the
-word in the sense in which I think it is ordinarily used; but at the
-same time I am not anxious to discuss whether I am right in thinking
-that it is so used. My business is solely with that object or idea,
-which I hold, rightly or wrongly, that the word is generally used to
-stand for. What I want to discover is the nature of that object or
-idea, and about this I am extremely anxious to arrive at an agreement.
-
-But, if we understand the question in this sense, my answer to it
-may seem a very disappointing one. If I am asked ‘What is good?’ my
-answer is that good is good, and that is the end of the matter. Or if
-I am asked ‘How is good to be defined?’ my answer is that it cannot
-be defined, and that is all I have to say about it. But disappointing
-as these answers may appear, they are of the very last importance. To
-readers who are familiar with philosophic terminology, I can express
-their importance by saying that they amount to this: That propositions
-about the good are all of them synthetic and never analytic; and that
-is plainly no trivial matter. And the same thing may be expressed more
-popularly, by saying that, if I am right, then nobody can foist upon
-us such an axiom as that ‘Pleasure is the only good’ or that ‘The good
-is the desired’ on the pretence that this is ‘the very meaning of the
-word.’
-
-
-=7.= Let us, then, consider this position. My point is that ‘good’
-is a simple notion, just as ‘yellow’ is a simple notion; that, just
-as you cannot, by any manner of means, explain to any one who does
-not already know it, what yellow is, so you cannot explain what good
-is. Definitions of the kind that I was asking for, definitions which
-describe the real nature of the object or notion denoted by a word,
-and which do not merely tell us what the word is used to mean, are
-only possible when the object or notion in question is something
-complex. You can give a definition of a horse, because a horse has many
-different properties and qualities, all of which you can enumerate.
-But when you have enumerated them all, when you have reduced a horse
-to his simplest terms, then you can no longer define those terms. They
-are simply something which you think of or perceive, and to any one who
-cannot think of or perceive them, you can never, by any definition,
-make their nature known. It may perhaps be objected to this that we
-are able to describe to others, objects which they have never seen or
-thought of. We can, for instance, make a man understand what a chimaera
-is, although he has never heard of one or seen one. You can tell him
-that it is an animal with a lioness’s head and body, with a goat’s head
-growing from the middle of its back, and with a snake in place of a
-tail. But here the object which you are describing is a complex object;
-it is entirely composed of parts, with which we are all perfectly
-familiar--a snake, a goat, a lioness; and we know, too, the manner
-in which those parts are to be put together, because we know what is
-meant by the middle of a lioness’s back, and where her tail is wont to
-grow. And so it is with all objects, not previously known, which we are
-able to define: they are all complex; all composed of parts, which may
-themselves, in the first instance, be capable of similar definition,
-but which must in the end be reducible to simplest parts, which can no
-longer be defined. But yellow and good, we say, are not complex: they
-are notions of that simple kind, out of which definitions are composed
-and with which the power of further defining ceases.
-
-
-=8.= When we say, as Webster says, ‘The definition of horse is “A
-hoofed quadruped of the genus Equus,”’ we may, in fact, mean three
-different things. (1) We may mean merely: ‘When I say “horse,” you are
-to understand that I am talking about a hoofed quadruped of the genus
-Equus.’ This might be called the arbitrary verbal definition: and I
-do not mean that good is indefinable in that sense. (2) We may mean,
-as Webster ought to mean: ‘When most English people say “horse,” they
-mean a hoofed quadruped of the genus Equus.’ This may be called the
-verbal definition proper, and I do not say that good is indefinable
-in this sense either; for it is certainly possible to discover how
-people use a word: otherwise, we could never have known that ‘good’ may
-be translated by ‘gut’ in German and by ‘bon’ in French. But (3) we
-may, when we define horse, mean something much more important. We may
-mean that a certain object, which we all of us know, is composed in a
-certain manner: that it has four legs, a head, a heart, a liver, etc.,
-etc., all of them arranged in definite relations to one another. It is
-in this sense that I deny good to be definable. I say that it is not
-composed of any parts, which we can substitute for it in our minds when
-we are thinking of it. We might think just as clearly and correctly
-about a horse, if we thought of all its parts and their arrangement
-instead of thinking of the whole: we could, I say, think how a horse
-differed from a donkey just as well, just as truly, in this way, as now
-we do, only not so easily; but there is nothing whatsoever which we
-could so substitute for good; and that is what I mean, when I say that
-good is indefinable.
-
-
-=9.= But I am afraid I have still not removed the chief difficulty
-which may prevent acceptance of the proposition that good is
-indefinable. I do not mean to say that _the_ good, that which is good,
-is thus indefinable; if I did think so, I should not be writing
-on Ethics, for my main object is to help towards discovering that
-definition. It is just because I think there will be less risk of error
-in our search for a definition of ‘the good,’ that I am now insisting
-that _good_ is indefinable. I must try to explain the difference
-between these two. I suppose it may be granted that ‘good’ is an
-adjective. Well ‘the good,’ ‘that which is good,’ must therefore be the
-substantive to which the adjective ‘good’ will apply: it must be the
-whole of that to which the adjective will apply, and the adjective must
-_always_ truly apply to it. But if it is that to which the adjective
-will apply, it must be something different from that adjective itself;
-and the whole of that something different, whatever it is, will be
-our definition of _the_ good. Now it may be that this something will
-have other adjectives, beside ‘good,’ that will apply to it. It may be
-full of pleasure, for example; it may be intelligent: and if these two
-adjectives are really part of its definition, then it will certainly be
-true, that pleasure and intelligence are good. And many people appear
-to think that, if we say ‘Pleasure and intelligence are good,’ or if we
-say ‘Only pleasure and intelligence are good,’ we are defining ‘good.’
-Well, I cannot deny that propositions of this nature may sometimes be
-called definitions; I do not know well enough how the word is generally
-used to decide upon this point. I only wish it to be understood that
-that is not what I mean when I say there is no possible definition of
-good, and that I shall not mean this if I use the word again. I do most
-fully believe that some true proposition of the form ‘Intelligence is
-good and intelligence alone is good’ can be found; if none could be
-found, our definition of _the_ good would be impossible. As it is,
-I believe _the_ good to be definable; and yet I still say that good
-itself is indefinable.
-
-
-=10.= ‘Good,’ then, if we mean by it that quality which we assert to
-belong to a thing, when we say that the thing is good, is incapable
-of any definition, in the most important sense of that word. The most
-important sense of ‘definition’ is that in which a definition states
-what are the parts which invariably compose a certain whole; and in
-this sense ‘good’ has no definition because it is simple and has no
-parts. It is one of those innumerable objects of thought which are
-themselves incapable of definition, because they are the ultimate
-terms by reference to which whatever _is_ capable of definition must
-be defined. That there must be an indefinite number of such terms is
-obvious, on reflection; since we cannot define anything except by
-an analysis, which, when carried as far as it will go, refers us to
-something, which is simply different from anything else, and which by
-that ultimate difference explains the peculiarity of the whole which we
-are defining: for every whole contains some parts which are common to
-other wholes also. There is, therefore, no intrinsic difficulty in the
-contention that ‘good’ denotes a simple and indefinable quality. There
-are many other instances of such qualities.
-
-Consider yellow, for example. We may try to define it, by describing
-its physical equivalent; we may state what kind of light-vibrations
-must stimulate the normal eye, in order that we may perceive it. But a
-moment’s reflection is sufficient to shew that those light-vibrations
-are not themselves what we mean by yellow. _They_ are not what we
-perceive. Indeed we should never have been able to discover their
-existence, unless we had first been struck by the patent difference of
-quality between the different colours. The most we can be entitled to
-say of those vibrations is that they are what corresponds in space to
-the yellow which we actually perceive.
-
-Yet a mistake of this simple kind has commonly been made about ‘good.’
-It may be true that all things which are good are _also_ something
-else, just as it is true that all things which are yellow produce a
-certain kind of vibration in the light. And it is a fact, that Ethics
-aims at discovering what are those other properties belonging to all
-things which are good. But far too many philosophers have thought that
-when they named those other properties they were actually defining
-good; that these properties, in fact, were simply not ‘other,’ but
-absolutely and entirely the same with goodness. This view I propose
-to call the ‘naturalistic fallacy’ and of it I shall now endeavour to
-dispose.
-
-
-=11.= Let us consider what it is such philosophers say. And first it is
-to be noticed that they do not agree among themselves. They not only
-say that they are right as to what good is, but they endeavour to prove
-that other people who say that it is something else, are wrong. One,
-for instance, will affirm that good is pleasure, another, perhaps, that
-good is that which is desired; and each of these will argue eagerly
-to prove that the other is wrong. But how is that possible? One of
-them says that good is nothing but the object of desire, and at the
-same time tries to prove that it is not pleasure. But from his first
-assertion, that good just means the object of desire, one of two things
-must follow as regards his proof:
-
-(1) He may be trying to prove that the object of desire is not
-pleasure. But, if this be all, where is his Ethics? The position he is
-maintaining is merely a psychological one. Desire is something which
-occurs in our minds, and pleasure is something else which so occurs;
-and our would-be ethical philosopher is merely holding that the latter
-is not the object of the former. But what has that to do with the
-question in dispute? His opponent held the ethical proposition that
-pleasure was the good, and although he should prove a million times
-over the psychological proposition that pleasure is not the object of
-desire, he is no nearer proving his opponent to be wrong. The position
-is like this. One man says a triangle is a circle: another replies
-‘A triangle is a straight line, and I will prove to you that I am
-right: _for_’ (this is the only argument) ‘a straight line is not a
-circle.’ ‘That is quite true,’ the other may reply; ‘but nevertheless
-a triangle is a circle, and you have said nothing whatever to prove
-the contrary. What is proved is that one of us is wrong, for we agree
-that a triangle cannot be both a straight line and a circle: but which
-is wrong, there can be no earthly means of proving, since you define
-triangle as straight line and I define it as circle.’--Well, that is
-one alternative which any naturalistic Ethics has to face; if good is
-_defined_ as something else, it is then impossible either to prove that
-any other definition is wrong or even to deny such definition.
-
-(2) The other alternative will scarcely be more welcome. It is that the
-discussion is after all a verbal one. When A says ‘Good means pleasant’
-and B says ‘Good means desired,’ they may merely wish to assert that
-most people have used the word for what is pleasant and for what is
-desired respectively. And this is quite an interesting subject for
-discussion: only it is not a whit more an ethical discussion than the
-last was. Nor do I think that any exponent of naturalistic Ethics
-would be willing to allow that this was all he meant. They are all so
-anxious to persuade us that what they call the good is what we really
-ought to do. ‘Do, pray, act so, because the word “good” is generally
-used to denote actions of this nature’: such, on this view, would be
-the substance of their teaching. And in so far as they tell us how we
-ought to act, their teaching is truly ethical, as they mean it to be.
-But how perfectly absurd is the reason they would give for it! ‘You are
-to do this, because most people use a certain word to denote conduct
-such as this.’ ‘You are to say the thing which is not, because most
-people call it lying.’ That is an argument just as good!--My dear sirs,
-what we want to know from you as ethical teachers, is not how people
-use a word; it is not even, what kind of actions they approve, which
-the use of this word ‘good’ may certainly imply: what we want to know
-is simply what _is_ good. We may indeed agree that what most people
-do think good, is actually so; we shall at all events be glad to know
-their opinions: but when we say their opinions about what _is_ good, we
-do mean what we say; we do not care whether they call that thing which
-they mean ‘horse’ or ‘table’ or ‘chair,’ ‘gut’ or ‘bon’ or ‘ἀγαθός’; we
-want to know what it is that they so call. When they say ‘Pleasure is
-good,’ we cannot believe that they merely mean ‘Pleasure is pleasure’
-and nothing more than that.
-
-
-=12.= Suppose a man says ‘I am pleased’; and suppose that is not a lie
-or a mistake but the truth. Well, if it is true, what does that mean?
-It means that his mind, a certain definite mind, distinguished by
-certain definite marks from all others, has at this moment a certain
-definite feeling called pleasure. ‘Pleased’ _means_ nothing but having
-pleasure, and though we may be more pleased or less pleased, and even,
-we may admit for the present, have one or another kind of pleasure;
-yet in so far as it is pleasure we have, whether there be more or less
-of it, and whether it be of one kind or another, what we have is one
-definite thing, absolutely indefinable, some one thing that is the
-same in all the various degrees and in all the various kinds of it
-that there may be. We may be able to say how it is related to other
-things: that, for example, it is in the mind, that it causes desire,
-that we are conscious of it, etc., etc. We can, I say, describe its
-relations to other things, but define it we can _not_. And if anybody
-tried to define pleasure for us as being any other natural object; if
-anybody were to say, for instance, that pleasure _means_ the sensation
-of red, and were to proceed to deduce from that that pleasure is a
-colour, we should be entitled to laugh at him and to distrust his
-future statements about pleasure. Well, that would be the same fallacy
-which I have called the naturalistic fallacy. That ‘pleased’ does not
-mean ‘having the sensation of red,’ or anything else whatever, does not
-prevent us from understanding what it does mean. It is enough for us to
-know that ‘pleased’ does mean ‘having the sensation of pleasure,’ and
-though pleasure is absolutely indefinable, though pleasure is pleasure
-and nothing else whatever, yet we feel no difficulty in saying that we
-are pleased. The reason is, of course, that when I say ‘I am pleased,’
-I do _not_ mean that ‘I’ am the same thing as ‘having pleasure.’ And
-similarly no difficulty need be found in my saying that ‘pleasure
-is good’ and yet not meaning that ‘pleasure’ is the same thing as
-‘good,’ that pleasure _means_ good, and that good _means_ pleasure.
-If I were to imagine that when I said ‘I am pleased,’ I meant that
-I was exactly the same thing as ‘pleased,’ I should not indeed call
-that a naturalistic fallacy, although it would be the same fallacy
-as I have called naturalistic with reference to Ethics. The reason
-of this is obvious enough. When a man confuses two natural objects
-with one another, defining the one, by the other, if for instance,
-he confuses himself, who is one natural object, with ‘pleased’ or
-with ‘pleasure’ which are others, then there is no reason to call the
-fallacy naturalistic. But if he confuses ‘good,’ which is not in the
-same sense a natural object, with any natural object whatever, then
-there is a reason for calling that a naturalistic fallacy; its being
-made with regard to ‘good’ marks it as something quite specific, and
-this specific mistake deserves a name because it is so common. As for
-the reasons why good is not to be considered a natural object, they may
-be reserved for discussion in another place. But, for the present, it
-is sufficient to notice this: Even if it were a natural object, that
-would not alter the nature of the fallacy nor diminish its importance
-one whit. All that I have said about it would remain quite equally
-true: only the name which I have called it would not be so appropriate
-as I think it is. And I do not care about the name: what I do care
-about is the fallacy. It does not matter what we call it, provided we
-recognise it when we meet with it. It is to be met with in almost every
-book on Ethics; and yet it is not recognised: and that is why it is
-necessary to multiply illustrations of it, and convenient to give it a
-name. It is a very simple fallacy indeed. When we say that an orange is
-yellow, we do not think our statement binds us to hold that ‘orange’
-means nothing else than ‘yellow,’ or that nothing can be yellow but an
-orange. Supposing the orange is also sweet! Does that bind us to say
-that ‘sweet’ is exactly the same thing as ‘yellow,’ that ‘sweet’ must
-be defined as ‘yellow’? And supposing it be recognised that ‘yellow’
-just means ‘yellow’ and nothing else whatever, does that make it any
-more difficult to hold that oranges are yellow? Most certainly it does
-not: on the contrary, it would be absolutely meaningless to say that
-oranges were yellow, unless yellow did in the end mean just ‘yellow’
-and nothing else whatever--unless it was absolutely indefinable. We
-should not get any very clear notion about things, which are yellow--we
-should not get very far with our science, if we were bound to hold that
-everything which was yellow, _meant_ exactly the same thing as yellow.
-We should find we had to hold that an orange was exactly the same thing
-as a stool, a piece of paper, a lemon, anything you like. We could
-prove any number of absurdities; but should we be the nearer to the
-truth? Why, then, should it be different with ‘good’? Why, if good is
-good and indefinable, should I be held to deny that pleasure is good?
-Is there any difficulty in holding both to be true at once? On the
-contrary, there is no meaning in saying that pleasure is good, unless
-good is something different from pleasure. It is absolutely useless,
-so far as Ethics is concerned, to prove, as Mr Spencer tries to do,
-that increase of pleasure coincides with increase of life, unless good
-_means_ something different from either life or pleasure. He might just
-as well try to prove that an orange is yellow by shewing that it always
-is wrapped up in paper.
-
-
-=13.= In fact, if it is not the case that ‘good’ denotes something
-simple and indefinable, only two alternatives are possible: either it
-is a complex, a given whole, about the correct analysis of which there
-may be disagreement; or else it means nothing at all, and there is no
-such subject as Ethics. In general, however, ethical philosophers have
-attempted to define good, without recognising what such an attempt
-must mean. They actually use arguments which involve one or both of
-the absurdities considered in § 11. We are, therefore, justified in
-concluding that the attempt to define good is chiefly due to want of
-clearness as to the possible nature of definition. There are, in fact,
-only two serious alternatives to be considered, in order to establish
-the conclusion that ‘good’ does denote a simple and indefinable notion.
-It might possibly denote a complex, as ‘horse’ does; or it might have
-no meaning at all. Neither of these possibilities has, however, been
-clearly conceived and seriously maintained, as such, by those who
-presume to define good; and both may be dismissed by a simple appeal to
-facts.
-
-(1) The hypothesis that disagreement about the meaning of good is
-disagreement with regard to the correct analysis of a given whole,
-may be most plainly seen to be incorrect by consideration of the fact
-that, whatever definition be offered, it may be always asked, with
-significance, of the complex so defined, whether it is itself good. To
-take, for instance, one of the more plausible, because one of the more
-complicated, of such proposed definitions, it may easily be thought,
-at first sight, that to be good may mean to be that which we desire
-to desire. Thus if we apply this definition to a particular instance
-and say ‘When we think that A is good, we are thinking that A is one
-of the things which we desire to desire,’ our proposition may seem
-quite plausible. But, if we carry the investigation further, and ask
-ourselves ‘Is it good to desire to desire A?’ it is apparent, on a
-little reflection, that this question is itself as intelligible, as the
-original question ‘Is A good?’--that we are, in fact, now asking for
-exactly the same information about the desire to desire A, for which
-we formerly asked with regard to A itself. But it is also apparent
-that the meaning of this second question cannot be correctly analysed
-into ‘Is the desire to desire A one of the things which we desire to
-desire?’: we have not before our minds anything so complicated as the
-question ‘Do we desire to desire to desire to desire A?’ Moreover any
-one can easily convince himself by inspection that the predicate of
-this proposition--‘good’--is positively different from the notion of
-‘desiring to desire’ which enters into its subject: ‘That we should
-desire to desire A is good’ is _not_ merely equivalent to ‘That A
-should be good is good.’ It may indeed be true that what we desire to
-desire is always also good; perhaps, even the converse may be true: but
-it is very doubtful whether this is the case, and the mere fact that we
-understand very well what is meant by doubting it, shews clearly that
-we have two different notions before our minds.
-
-(2) And the same consideration is sufficient to dismiss the hypothesis
-that ‘good’ has no meaning whatsoever. It is very natural to make the
-mistake of supposing that what is universally true is of such a nature
-that its negation would be self-contradictory: the importance which has
-been assigned to analytic propositions in the history of philosophy
-shews how easy such a mistake is. And thus it is very easy to conclude
-that what seems to be a universal ethical principle is in fact an
-identical proposition; that, if, for example, whatever is called ‘good’
-seems to be pleasant, the proposition ‘Pleasure is the good’ does not
-assert a connection between two different notions, but involves only
-one, that of pleasure, which is easily recognised as a distinct entity.
-But whoever will attentively consider with himself what is actually
-before his mind when he asks the question ‘Is pleasure (or whatever
-it may be) after all good?’ can easily satisfy himself that he is not
-merely wondering whether pleasure is pleasant. And if he will try
-this experiment with each suggested definition in succession, he may
-become expert enough to recognise that in every case he has before his
-mind a unique object, with regard to the connection of which with any
-other object, a distinct question may be asked. Every one does in
-fact understand the question ‘Is this good?’ When he thinks of it, his
-state of mind is different from what it would be, were he asked ‘Is
-this pleasant, or desired, or approved?’ It has a distinct meaning for
-him, even though he may not recognise in what respect it is distinct.
-Whenever he thinks of ‘intrinsic value,’ or ‘intrinsic worth,’ or
-says that a thing ‘ought to exist,’ he has before his mind the unique
-object--the unique property of things--which I mean by ‘good.’
-Everybody is constantly aware of this notion, although he may never
-become aware at all that it is different from other notions of which
-he is also aware. But, for correct ethical reasoning, it is extremely
-important that he should become aware of this fact; and, as soon as the
-nature of the problem is clearly understood, there should be little
-difficulty in advancing so far in analysis.
-
-
-=14.= ‘Good,’ then, is indefinable; and yet, so far as I know, there
-is only one ethical writer, Prof. Henry Sidgwick, who has clearly
-recognised and stated this fact. We shall see, indeed, how far many of
-the most reputed ethical systems fall short of drawing the conclusions
-which follow from such a recognition. At present I will only quote one
-instance, which will serve to illustrate the meaning and importance of
-this principle that ‘good’ is indefinable, or, as Prof. Sidgwick says,
-an ‘unanalysable notion.’ It is an instance to which Prof. Sidgwick
-himself refers in a note on the passage, in which he argues that
-‘ought’ is unanalysable[2].
-
- [2] _Methods of Ethics_, Bk. I, Chap. iii, § 1 (6th edition).
-
-‘Bentham,’ says Sidgwick, ‘explains that his fundamental principle
-“states the greatest happiness of all those whose interest is in
-question as being the right and proper end of human action”’; and yet
-‘his language in other passages of the same chapter would seem to
-imply’ that he _means_ by the word “right” “conducive to the general
-happiness.” Prof. Sidgwick sees that, if you take these two statements
-together, you get the absurd result that ‘greatest happiness is the
-end of human action, which is conducive to the general happiness’; and
-so absurd does it seem to him to call this result, as Bentham calls
-it, ‘the fundamental principle of a moral system,’ that he suggests
-that Bentham cannot have meant it. Yet Prof. Sidgwick himself states
-elsewhere[3] that Psychological Hedonism is ‘not seldom confounded with
-Egoistic Hedonism’; and that confusion, as we shall see, rests chiefly
-on that same fallacy, the naturalistic fallacy, which is implied in
-Bentham’s statements. Prof. Sidgwick admits therefore that this fallacy
-is sometimes committed, absurd as it is; and I am inclined to think
-that Bentham may really have been one of those who committed it. Mill,
-as we shall see, certainly did commit it. In any case, whether Bentham
-committed it or not, his doctrine, as above quoted, will serve as a
-very good illustration of this fallacy, and of the importance of the
-contrary proposition that good is indefinable.
-
- [3] _Methods of Ethics_, Bk. I, Chap. iv, § 1.
-
-Let us consider this doctrine. Bentham seems to imply, so Prof.
-Sidgwick says, that the word ‘right’ _means_ ‘conducive to general
-happiness.’ Now this, by itself, need not necessarily involve
-the naturalistic fallacy. For the word ‘right’ is very commonly
-appropriated to actions which lead to the attainment of what
-is good; which are regarded as _means_ to the ideal and not as
-ends-in-themselves. This use of ‘right,’ as denoting what is good as
-a means, whether or not it be also good as an end, is indeed the use
-to which I shall confine the word. Had Bentham been using ‘right’ in
-this sense, it might be perfectly consistent for him to _define_ right
-as ‘conducive to the general happiness,’ _provided only_ (and notice
-this proviso) he had already proved, or laid down as an axiom, that
-general happiness was _the_ good, or (what is equivalent to this)
-that general happiness alone was good. For in that case he would have
-already defined _the_ good as general happiness (a position perfectly
-consistent, as we have seen, with the contention that ‘good’ is
-indefinable), and, since right was to be defined as ‘conducive to _the_
-good,’ it would actually _mean_ ‘conducive to general happiness.’
-But this method of escape from the charge of having committed the
-naturalistic fallacy has been closed by Bentham himself. For his
-fundamental principle is, we see, that the greatest happiness of all
-concerned is the _right_ and proper _end_ of human action. He applies
-the word ‘right,’ therefore, to the end, as such, not only to the means
-which are conducive to it; and, that being so, right can no longer be
-defined as ‘conducive to the general happiness,’ without involving the
-fallacy in question. For now it is obvious that the definition of right
-as conducive to general happiness can be used by him in support of the
-fundamental principle that general happiness is the right end; instead
-of being itself derived from that principle. If right, by definition,
-means conducive to general happiness, then it is obvious that general
-happiness is the right end. It is not necessary now first to prove or
-assert that general happiness is the right end, before right is defined
-as conducive to general happiness--a perfectly valid procedure; but on
-the contrary the definition of right as conducive to general happiness
-proves general happiness to be the right end--a perfectly invalid
-procedure, since in this case the statement that ‘general happiness is
-the right end of human action’ is not an ethical principle at all, but
-either, as we have seen, a proposition about the meaning of words, or
-else a proposition about the _nature_ of general happiness, not about
-its rightness or goodness.
-
-Now, I do not wish the importance I assign to this fallacy to be
-misunderstood. The discovery of it does not at all refute Bentham’s
-contention that greatest happiness is the proper end of human action,
-if that be understood as an ethical proposition, as he undoubtedly
-intended it. That principle may be true all the same; we shall consider
-whether it is so in succeeding chapters. Bentham might have maintained
-it, as Professor Sidgwick does, even if the fallacy had been pointed
-out to him. What I am maintaining is that the _reasons_ which he
-actually gives for his ethical proposition are fallacious ones so
-far as they consist in a definition of right. What I suggest is that
-he did not perceive them to be fallacious; that, if he had done so,
-he would have been led to seek for other reasons in support of his
-Utilitarianism; and that, had he sought for other reasons, he _might_
-have found none which he thought to be sufficient. In that case he
-would have changed his whole system--a most important consequence. It
-is undoubtedly also possible that he would have thought other reasons
-to be sufficient, and in that case his ethical system, in its main
-results, would still have stood. But, even in this latter case, his
-use of the fallacy would be a serious objection to him as an ethical
-philosopher. For it is the business of Ethics, I must insist, not only
-to obtain true results, but also to find valid reasons for them. The
-direct object of Ethics is knowledge and not practice; and any one who
-uses the naturalistic fallacy has certainly not fulfilled this first
-object, however correct his practical principles may be.
-
-My objections to Naturalism are then, in the first place, that it
-offers no reason at all, far less any valid reason, for any ethical
-principle whatever; and in this it already fails to satisfy the
-requirements of Ethics, as a scientific study. But in the second place
-I contend that, though it gives a reason for no ethical principle, it
-is a _cause_ of the acceptance of false principles--it deludes the mind
-into accepting ethical principles, which are false; and in this it is
-contrary to every aim of Ethics. It is easy to see that if we start
-with a definition of right conduct as conduct conducive to general
-happiness; then, knowing that right conduct is universally conduct
-conducive to the good, we very easily arrive at the result that the
-good is general happiness. If, on the other hand, we once recognise
-that we must start our Ethics without a definition, we shall be much
-more apt to look about us, before we adopt any ethical principle
-whatever; and the more we look about us, the less likely are we to
-adopt a false one. It may be replied to this: Yes, but we shall look
-about us just as much, before we settle on our definition, and are
-therefore just as likely to be right. But I will try to shew that this
-is not the case. If we start with the conviction that a definition of
-good can be found, we start with the conviction that good _can mean_
-nothing else than some one property of things; and our only business
-will then be to discover what that property is. But if we recognise
-that, so far as the meaning of good goes, anything whatever may be
-good, we start with a much more open mind. Moreover, apart from the
-fact that, when we think we have a definition, we cannot logically
-defend our ethical principles in any way whatever, we shall also be
-much less apt to defend them well, even if illogically. For we shall
-start with the conviction that good must mean so and so, and shall
-therefore be inclined either to misunderstand our opponent’s arguments
-or to cut them short with the reply, ‘This is not an open question: the
-very meaning of the word decides it; no one can think otherwise except
-through confusion.’
-
-
-=15.= Our first conclusion as to the subject-matter of Ethics is, then,
-that there is a simple, indefinable, unanalysable object of thought by
-reference to which it must be defined. By what name we call this unique
-object is a matter of indifference, so long as we clearly recognise
-what it is and that it does differ from other objects. The words which
-are commonly taken as the signs of ethical judgments all do refer to
-it; and they are expressions of ethical judgments solely because they
-do so refer. But they may refer to it in two different ways, which
-it is very important to distinguish, if we are to have a complete
-definition of the range of ethical judgments. Before I proceeded to
-argue that there was such an indefinable notion involved in ethical
-notions, I stated (§ 4) that it was necessary for Ethics to enumerate
-all true universal judgments, asserting that such and such a thing was
-good, whenever it occurred. But, although all such judgments do refer
-to that unique notion which I have called ‘good,’ they do not all refer
-to it in the same way. They may either assert that this unique property
-does always attach to the thing in question, or else they may assert
-only that the thing in question is _a cause or necessary condition_
-for the existence of other things to which this unique property does
-attach. The nature of these two species of universal ethical judgments
-is extremely different; and a great part of the difficulties, which
-are met with in ordinary ethical speculation, are due to the failure
-to distinguish them clearly. Their difference has, indeed, received
-expression in ordinary language by the contrast between the terms ‘good
-as means’ and ‘good in itself,’ ‘value as a means’ and ‘intrinsic
-value.’ But these terms are apt to be applied correctly only in the
-more obvious instances; and this seems to be due to the fact that the
-distinction between the conceptions which they denote has not been made
-a separate object of investigation. This distinction may be briefly
-pointed out as follows.
-
-
-=16.= Whenever we judge that a thing is ‘good as a means,’ we are
-making a judgment with regard to its causal relations: we judge
-_both_ that it will have a particular kind of effect, _and_ that that
-effect will be good in itself. But to find causal judgments that
-are universally true is notoriously a matter of extreme difficulty.
-The late date at which most of the physical sciences became exact,
-and the comparative fewness of the laws which they have succeeded
-in establishing even now, are sufficient proofs of this difficulty.
-With regard, then, to what are the most frequent objects of ethical
-judgments, namely actions, it is obvious that we cannot be satisfied
-that any of our universal causal judgments are true, even in the
-sense in which scientific laws are so. We cannot even discover
-hypothetical laws of the form ‘Exactly this action will always, under
-these conditions, produce exactly that effect.’ But for a correct
-ethical judgment with regard to the effects of certain actions we
-require more than this in two respects. (1) We require to know
-that a given action will produce a certain effect, _under whatever
-circumstances it occurs_. But this is certainly impossible. It is
-certain that in different circumstances the same action may produce
-effects which are utterly different in all respects upon which the
-value of the effects depends. Hence we can never be entitled to more
-than a _generalisation_--to a proposition of the form ‘This result
-_generally_ follows this kind of action’; and even this generalisation
-will only be true, if the circumstances under which the action occurs
-are generally the same. This is in fact the case, to a great extent,
-within any one particular age and state of society. But, when we take
-other ages into account, in many most important cases the normal
-circumstances of a given kind of action will be so different, that the
-generalisation which is true for one will not be true for another.
-With regard then to ethical judgments which assert that a certain
-kind of action is good as a means to a certain kind of effect, none
-will be _universally_ true; and many, though _generally_ true at one
-period, will be generally false at others. But (2) we require to know
-not only that _one_ good effect will be produced, but that, among all
-subsequent events affected by the action in question, the balance
-of good will be greater than if any other possible action had been
-performed. In other words, to judge that an action is generally a means
-to good is to judge not only that it generally does _some_ good, but
-that it generally does the greatest good of which the circumstances
-admit. In this respect ethical judgments about the effects of action
-involve a difficulty and a complication far greater than that involved
-in the establishment of scientific laws. For the latter we need only
-consider a single effect; for the former it is essential to consider
-not only this, but the effects of that effect, and so on as far as our
-view into the future can reach. It is, indeed, obvious that our view
-can never reach far enough for us to be certain that any action will
-produce the best possible effects. We must be content, if the greatest
-possible balance of good seems to be produced within a limited period.
-But it is important to notice that the whole series of effects within
-a period of considerable length is actually taken account of in our
-common judgments that an action is good as a means; and that hence
-this additional complication, which makes ethical generalisations so
-far more difficult to establish than scientific laws, is one which is
-involved in actual ethical discussions, and is of practical importance.
-The commonest rules of conduct involve such considerations as the
-balancing of future bad health against immediate gains; and even if we
-can never settle with any certainty how we shall secure the greatest
-possible total of good, we try at least to assure ourselves that
-probable future evils will not be greater than the immediate good.
-
-
-=17.= There are, then, judgments which state that certain kinds of
-things have good effects; and such judgments, for the reasons just
-given, have the important characteristics (1) that they are unlikely to
-be true, if they state that the kind of thing in question _always_ has
-good effects, and (2) that, even if they only state that it _generally_
-has good effects, many of them will only be true of certain periods
-in the world’s history. On the other hand there are judgments which
-state that certain kinds of things are themselves good; and these
-differ from the last in that, if true at all, they are all of them
-universally true. It is, therefore, extremely important to distinguish
-these two kinds of possible judgments. Both may be expressed in the
-same language: in both cases we commonly say ‘Such and such a thing is
-good.’ But in the one case ‘good’ will mean ‘good as means,’ _i.e._
-merely that the thing is a means to good--will have good effects:
-in the other case it will mean ‘good as end’--we shall be judging
-that the thing itself has the property which, in the first case, we
-asserted only to belong to its effects. It is plain that these are very
-different assertions to make about a thing; it is plain that either or
-both of them may be made, both truly and falsely, about all manner of
-things; and it is certain that unless we are clear as to which of the
-two we mean to assert, we shall have a very poor chance of deciding
-rightly whether our assertion is true or false. It is precisely this
-clearness as to the meaning of the question asked which has hitherto
-been almost entirely lacking in ethical speculation. Ethics has always
-been predominantly concerned with the investigation of a limited
-class of actions. With regard to these we may ask _both_ how far they
-are good in themselves _and_ how far they have a general tendency to
-produce good results. And the arguments brought forward in ethical
-discussion have always been of both classes--both such as would prove
-the conduct in question to be good in itself and such as would prove
-it to be good as a means. But that these are the only questions which
-any ethical discussion can have to settle, and that to settle the one
-is _not_ the same thing as to settle the other--these two fundamental
-facts have in general escaped the notice of ethical philosophers.
-Ethical questions are commonly asked in an ambiguous form. It is asked
-‘What is a man’s duty under these circumstances?’ or ‘Is it right to
-act in this way?’ or ‘What ought we to aim at securing?’ But all these
-questions are capable of further analysis; a correct answer to any
-of them involves both judgments of what is good in itself and causal
-judgments. This is implied even by those who maintain that we have a
-direct and immediate judgment of absolute rights and duties. Such a
-judgment can only mean that the course of action in question is _the_
-best thing to do; that, by acting so, every good that _can_ be secured
-will have been secured. Now we are not concerned with the question
-whether such a judgment will ever be true. The question is: What
-does it imply, if it is true? And the only possible answer is that,
-whether true or false, it implies both a proposition as to the degree
-of goodness of the action in question, as compared with other things,
-and a number of causal propositions. For it cannot be denied that the
-action will have consequences: and to deny that the consequences matter
-is to make a judgment of their intrinsic value, as compared with the
-action itself. In asserting that the action is _the_ best thing to do,
-we assert that it together with its consequences presents a greater sum
-of intrinsic value than any possible alternative. And this condition
-may be realised by any of the three cases:--(_a_) If the action itself
-has greater intrinsic value than any alternative, whereas both its
-consequences and those of the alternatives are absolutely devoid
-either of intrinsic merit or intrinsic demerit; or (_b_) if, though
-its consequences are intrinsically bad, the balance of intrinsic value
-is greater than would be produced by any alternative; or (_c_) if, its
-consequences being intrinsically good, the degree of value belonging
-to them and it conjointly is greater than that of any alternative
-series. In short, to assert that a certain line of conduct is, at a
-given time, absolutely right or obligatory, is obviously to assert
-that more good or less evil will exist in the world, if it be adopted,
-than if anything else be done instead. But this implies a judgment as
-to the value both of its own consequences and of those of any possible
-alternative. And that an action will have such and such consequences
-involves a number of causal judgments.
-
-Similarly, in answering the question ‘What ought we to aim at
-securing?’ causal judgments are again involved, but in a somewhat
-different way. We are liable to forget, because it is so obvious,
-that this question can never be answered correctly except by naming
-something which _can_ be secured. Not everything can be secured; and,
-even if we judge that nothing which cannot be obtained would be of
-equal value with that which can, the possibility of the latter, as
-well as its value, is essential to its being a proper end of action.
-Accordingly neither our judgments as to what actions we ought to
-perform, nor even our judgments as to the ends which they ought to
-produce, are pure judgments of intrinsic value. With regard to
-the former, an action which is absolutely obligatory _may_ have no
-intrinsic value whatsoever; that it is perfectly virtuous may mean
-merely that it causes the best possible effects. And with regard to the
-latter, these best possible results which justify our action can, in
-any case, have only so much of intrinsic value as the laws of nature
-allow us to secure; and they in their turn _may_ have no intrinsic
-value whatsoever, but may merely be a means to the attainment (in a
-still further future) of something that has such value. Whenever,
-therefore, we ask ‘What ought we to do?’ or ‘What ought we to try to
-get?’ we are asking questions which involve a correct answer to two
-others, completely different in kind from one another. We must know
-_both_ what degree of intrinsic value different things have, _and_
-how these different things may be obtained. But the vast majority of
-questions which have actually been discussed in Ethics--_all_ practical
-questions, indeed--involve this double knowledge; and they have been
-discussed without any clear separation of the two distinct questions
-involved. A great part of the vast disagreements prevalent in Ethics is
-to be attributed to this failure in analysis. By the use of conceptions
-which involve both that of intrinsic value and that of causal relation,
-as if they involved intrinsic value only, two different errors have
-been rendered almost universal. Either it is assumed that nothing has
-intrinsic value which is not possible, or else it is assumed that what
-is necessary must have intrinsic value. Hence the primary and peculiar
-business of Ethics, the determination what things have intrinsic
-value and in what degrees, has received no adequate treatment at all.
-And on the other hand a _thorough_ discussion of means has been also
-largely neglected, owing to an obscure perception of the truth that
-it is perfectly irrelevant to the question of intrinsic values. But
-however this may be, and however strongly any particular reader may be
-convinced that some one of the mutually contradictory systems which
-hold the field has given a correct answer either to the question what
-has intrinsic value, or to the question what we ought to do, or to
-both, it must at least be admitted that the questions what is best
-in itself and what will bring about the best possible, are utterly
-distinct; that both belong to the actual subject-matter of Ethics; and
-that the more clearly distinct questions are distinguished, the better
-is our chance of answering both correctly.
-
-
-=18.= There remains one point which must not be omitted in a complete
-description of the kind of questions which Ethics has to answer. The
-main division of those questions is, as I have said, into two; the
-question what things are good in themselves, and the question to what
-other things these are related as effects. The first of these, which is
-the primary ethical question and is presupposed by the other, includes
-a correct comparison of the various things which have intrinsic value
-(if there are many such) in respect of the degree of value which they
-have; and such comparison involves a difficulty of principle which has
-greatly aided the confusion of intrinsic value with mere ‘goodness
-as a means.’ It has been pointed out that one difference between a
-judgment which asserts that a thing is good in itself, and a judgment
-which asserts that it is a means to good, consists in the fact that
-the first, if true of one instance of the thing in question, is
-necessarily true of all; whereas a thing which has good effects under
-some circumstances may have bad ones under others. Now it is certainly
-true that all judgments of intrinsic value are in this sense universal;
-but the principle which I have now to enunciate may easily make it
-appear as if they were not so but resembled the judgment of means in
-being merely general. There is, as will presently be maintained, a
-vast number of different things, each of which has intrinsic value;
-there are also very many which are positively bad; and there is a still
-larger class of things, which appear to be indifferent. But a thing
-belonging to any of these three classes may occur as part of a whole,
-which includes among its other parts other things belonging both to
-the same and to the other two classes; and these wholes, as such, may
-also have intrinsic value. The paradox, to which it is necessary to
-call attention, is that _the value of such a whole bears no regular
-proportion to the sum of the values of its parts_. It is certain that
-a good thing may exist in such a relation to another good thing that
-the value of the whole thus formed is immensely greater than the sum
-of the values of the two good things. It is certain that a whole formed
-of a good thing and an indifferent thing may have immensely greater
-value than that good thing itself possesses. It is certain that two
-bad things or a bad thing and an indifferent thing may form a whole
-much worse than the sum of badness of its parts. And it seems as if
-indifferent things may also be the sole constituents of a whole which
-has great value, either positive or negative. Whether the addition of
-a bad thing to a good whole may increase the positive value of the
-whole, or the addition of a bad thing to a bad may produce a whole
-having positive value, may seem more doubtful; but it is, at least,
-possible, and this possibility must be taken into account in our
-ethical investigations. However we may decide particular questions, the
-principle is clear. _The value of a whole must not be assumed to be the
-same as the sum of the values of its parts._
-
-A single instance will suffice to illustrate the kind of relation in
-question. It seems to be true that to be conscious of a beautiful
-object is a thing of great intrinsic value; whereas the same object, if
-no one be conscious of it, has certainly comparatively little value,
-and is commonly held to have none at all. But the consciousness of a
-beautiful object is certainly a whole of some sort in which we can
-distinguish as parts the object on the one hand and the being conscious
-on the other. Now this latter factor occurs as part of a different
-whole, whenever we are conscious of anything; and it would seem that
-some of these wholes have at all events very little value, and may
-even be indifferent or positively bad. Yet we cannot always attribute
-the slightness of their value to any positive demerit in the object
-which differentiates them from the consciousness of beauty; the object
-itself may approach as near as possible to absolute neutrality. Since,
-therefore, mere consciousness does not always confer great value upon
-the whole of which it forms a part, even though its object may have
-no great demerit, we cannot attribute the great superiority of the
-consciousness of a beautiful thing over the beautiful thing itself
-to the mere addition of the value of consciousness to that of the
-beautiful thing. Whatever the intrinsic value of consciousness may
-be, it does not give to the whole of which it forms a part a value
-proportioned to the sum of its value and that of its object. If this
-be so, we have here an instance of a whole possessing a different
-intrinsic value from the sum of that of its parts; and whether it be so
-or not, what is meant by such a difference is illustrated by this case.
-
-
-=19.= There are, then, wholes which possess the property that their
-value is different from the sum of the values of their parts; and the
-relations which subsist between such parts and the whole of which they
-form a part have not hitherto been distinctly recognised or received
-a separate name. Two points are especially worthy of notice. (1) It
-is plain that the existence of any such part is a necessary condition
-for the existence of that good which is constituted by the whole. And
-exactly the same language will also express the relation between a
-means and the good thing which is its effect. But yet there is a most
-important difference between the two cases, constituted by the fact
-that the part is, whereas the means is not, a part of the good thing
-for the existence of which its existence is a necessary condition. The
-necessity by which, if the good in question is to exist, the means to
-it must exist is merely a natural or causal necessity. If the laws of
-nature were different, exactly the same good might exist, although
-what is now a necessary condition of its existence did not exist.
-The existence of the means has no intrinsic value; and its utter
-annihilation would leave the value of that which it is now necessary
-to secure entirely unchanged. But in the case of a part of such a
-whole as we are now considering, it is otherwise. In this case the
-good in question cannot conceivably exist, unless the part exist also.
-The necessity which connects the two is quite independent of natural
-law. What is asserted to have intrinsic value is the existence of the
-whole; and the existence of the whole includes the existence of its
-part. Suppose the part removed, and what remains is _not_ what was
-asserted to have intrinsic value; but if we suppose a means removed,
-what remains is just what _was_ asserted to have intrinsic value. And
-yet (2) the existence of the part may _itself_ have no more intrinsic
-value than that of the means. It is this fact which constitutes the
-paradox of the relation which we are discussing. It has just been
-said that what has intrinsic value is the existence of the whole, and
-that this includes the existence of the part; and from this it would
-seem a natural inference that the existence of the part has intrinsic
-value. But the inference would be as false as if we were to conclude
-that, because the number of two stones was two, each of the stones was
-also two. The part of a valuable whole retains exactly the same value
-when it is, as when it is not, a part of that whole. If it had value
-under other circumstances, its value is not any greater, when it is
-part of a far more valuable whole; and if it had no value by itself,
-it has none still, however great be that of the whole of which it now
-forms a part. We are not then justified in asserting that one and the
-same thing is under some circumstances intrinsically good, and under
-others not so; as we are justified in asserting of a means that it
-sometimes does and sometimes does not produce good results. And yet we
-are justified in asserting that it is far more desirable that a certain
-thing should exist under some circumstances than under others; namely
-when other things will exist in such relations to it as to form a more
-valuable whole. _It_ will not have more intrinsic value under these
-circumstances than under others; _it_ will not necessarily even be a
-means to the existence of things having more intrinsic value: but it
-will, like a means, be a necessary condition for the existence of that
-which _has_ greater intrinsic value, although, unlike a means, it will
-itself form a part of this more valuable existent.
-
-
-=20.= I have said that the peculiar relation between part and whole
-which I have just been trying to define is one which has received no
-separate name. It would, however, be useful that it should have one;
-and there is a name, which might well be appropriated to it, if only
-it could be divorced from its present unfortunate usage. Philosophers,
-especially those who profess to have derived great benefit from the
-writings of Hegel, have latterly made much use of the terms ‘organic
-whole,’ ‘organic unity,’ ‘organic relation.’ The reason why these terms
-might well be appropriated to the use suggested is that the peculiar
-relation of parts to whole, just defined, is one of the properties
-which distinguishes the wholes to which they are actually applied with
-the greatest frequency. And the reason why it is desirable that they
-should be divorced from their present usage is that, as at present
-used, they have no distinct sense and, on the contrary, both imply and
-propagate errors of confusion.
-
-To say that a thing is an ‘organic whole’ is generally understood
-to imply that its parts are related to one another and to itself
-as means to end; it is also understood to imply that they have a
-property described in some such phrase as that they have ‘no meaning
-or significance apart from the whole’; and finally such a whole is
-also treated as if it had the property to which I am proposing that
-the name should be confined. But those who use the term give us, in
-general, no hint as to how they suppose these three properties to be
-related to one another. It seems generally to be assumed that they are
-identical; and always, at least, that they are necessarily connected
-with one another. That they are not identical I have already tried to
-shew; to suppose them so is to neglect the very distinctions pointed
-out in the last paragraph; and the usage might well be discontinued
-merely because it encourages such neglect. But a still more cogent
-reason for its discontinuance is that, so far from being necessarily
-connected, the second is a property which can attach to nothing, being
-a self-contradictory conception; whereas the first, if we insist on its
-most important sense, applies to many cases, to which we have no reason
-to think that the third applies also, and the third certainly applies
-to many to which the first does not apply.
-
-
-=21.= These relations between the three properties just distinguished
-may be illustrated by reference to a whole of the kind from which
-the name ‘organic’ was derived--a whole which is an organism in the
-scientific sense--namely the human body.
-
-(1) There exists between many parts of our body (though not between
-all) a relation which has been familiarised by the fable, attributed
-to Menenius Agrippa, concerning the belly and its members. We can
-find in it parts such that the continued existence of the one is a
-necessary condition for the continued existence of the other; while the
-continued existence of this latter is also a necessary condition for
-the continued existence of the former. This amounts to no more than
-saying that in the body we have instances of two things, both enduring
-for some time, which have a relation of mutual causal dependence on one
-another--a relation of ‘reciprocity.’ Frequently no more than this is
-meant by saying that the parts of the body form an ‘organic unity,’ or
-that they are mutually means and ends to one another. And we certainly
-have here a striking characteristic of living things. But it would be
-extremely rash to assert that this relation of mutual causal dependence
-was only exhibited by living things and hence was sufficient to define
-their peculiarity. And it is obvious that of two things which have this
-relation of mutual dependence, neither may have intrinsic value, or
-one may have it and the other lack it. They are not necessarily ‘ends’
-to one another in any sense except that in which ‘end’ means ‘effect.’
-And moreover it is plain that in this sense the whole cannot be an end
-to any of its parts. We are apt to talk of ‘the whole’ in contrast to
-one of its parts, when in fact we mean only _the rest_ of the parts.
-But strictly the whole must include all its parts and no part can
-be a cause of the whole, because it cannot be a cause of itself. It
-is plain, therefore, that this relation of mutual causal dependence
-implies nothing with regard to the value of either of the objects which
-have it; and that, even if both of them happen also to have value, this
-relation between them is one which cannot hold between part and whole.
-
-But (2) it may also be the case that our body as a whole has a value
-greater than the sum of values of its parts; and this may be what is
-meant when it is said that the parts are means to the whole. It is
-obvious that if we ask the question ‘Why _should_ the parts be such as
-they are?’ a proper answer may be ‘Because the whole they form has so
-much value.’ But it is equally obvious that the relation which we thus
-assert to exist between part and whole is quite different from that
-which we assert to exist between part and part when we say ‘This part
-exists, because that one could not exist without it.’ In the latter
-case we assert the two parts to be causally connected; but, in the
-former, part and whole cannot be causally connected, and the relation
-which we assert to exist between them may exist even though the parts
-are not causally connected either. All the parts of a picture do not
-have that relation of mutual causal dependence, which certain parts of
-the body have, and yet the existence of those which do not have it may
-be absolutely essential to the value of the whole. The two relations
-are quite distinct in kind, and we cannot infer the existence of the
-one from that of the other. It can, therefore, serve no useful purpose
-to include them both under the same name; and if we are to say that
-a whole is organic because its parts are (in this sense) ‘means’ to
-the whole, we must _not_ say that it is organic because its parts are
-causally dependent on one another.
-
-
-=22.= But finally (3) the sense which has been most prominent in
-recent uses of the term ‘organic whole’ is one whereby it asserts the
-parts of such a whole to have a property which the parts of no whole
-can possibly have. It is supposed that just as the whole would not
-be what it is but for the existence of the parts, so the parts would
-not be what they are but for the existence of the whole; and this is
-understood to mean not merely that any particular part could not exist
-unless the others existed too (which is the case where relation (1)
-exists between the parts), but actually that the part is no distinct
-object of thought--that the whole, of which it is a part, is in its
-turn a part of it. That this supposition is self-contradictory a very
-little reflection should be sufficient to shew. We may admit, indeed,
-that when a particular thing is a part of a whole, it does possess a
-predicate which it would not otherwise possess--namely that it is a
-part of that whole. But what cannot be admitted is that this predicate
-alters the nature or enters into the definition of the thing which has
-it. When we think of the part _itself_, we mean just _that which_ we
-assert, in this case, to _have_ the predicate that it is part of the
-whole; and the mere assertion that _it_ is a part of the whole involves
-that it should itself be distinct from that which we assert of it.
-Otherwise we contradict ourselves since we assert that, not _it_, but
-something else--namely it together with that which we assert of it--has
-the predicate which we assert of it. In short, it is obvious that no
-part contains analytically the whole to which it belongs, or any other
-parts of that whole. The relation of part to whole is _not_ the same
-as that of whole to part; and the very definition of the latter is
-that it does contain analytically that which is said to be its part.
-And yet this very self-contradictory doctrine is the chief mark which
-shews the influence of Hegel upon modern philosophy--an influence which
-pervades almost the whole of orthodox philosophy. This is what is
-generally implied by the cry against falsification by abstraction: that
-a whole is always a part of its part! ‘If you want to know the truth
-about a part,’ we are told, ‘you must consider _not_ that part, but
-something else--namely the whole: _nothing_ is true of the part, but
-only of the whole.’ Yet plainly it must be true of the part at least
-that it is a part of the whole; and it is obvious that when we say it
-is, we do _not_ mean merely that the whole is a part of itself. This
-doctrine, therefore, that a part can have ‘no meaning or significance
-apart from its whole’ must be utterly rejected. It implies itself that
-the statement ‘This is a part of that whole’ has a meaning; and in
-order that this may have one, both subject and predicate must have a
-distinct meaning. And it is easy to see how this false doctrine has
-arisen by confusion with the two relations (1) and (2) which may really
-be properties of wholes.
-
-(_a_) The _existence_ of a part may be connected by a natural or
-causal necessity with the existence of the other parts of its whole;
-and further what is a part of a whole and what has ceased to be such a
-part, although differing intrinsically from one another, may be called
-by one and the same name. Thus, to take a typical example, if an arm
-be cut off from the human body, we still call it an arm. Yet an arm,
-when it is a part of the body, undoubtedly differs from a dead arm:
-and hence we may easily be led to say ‘The arm which is a part of the
-body would not be what it is, if it were not such a part,’ and to think
-that the contradiction thus expressed is in reality a characteristic
-of things. But, in fact, the dead arm never was a part of the body;
-it is only _partially_ identical with the living arm. Those parts of
-it which are identical with parts of the living arm are exactly the
-same, whether they belong to the body or not; and in them we have an
-undeniable instance of one and the same thing at one time forming
-a part, and at another not forming a part of the presumed ‘organic
-whole.’ On the other hand those properties which _are_ possessed by
-the living, and _not_ by the dead, arm, do not exist in a changed form
-in the latter: they simply do not exist there _at all_. By a causal
-necessity their existence depends on their having that relation to the
-other parts of the body which we express by saying that they form part
-of it. Yet, most certainly, _if_ they ever did not form part of the
-body, they _would_ be exactly what they are when they do. That they
-differ intrinsically from the properties of the dead arm and that they
-form part of the body are propositions not analytically related to one
-another. There is no contradiction in supposing them to retain such
-intrinsic differences and yet not to form part of the body.
-
-But (_b_) when we are told that a living arm has no _meaning_ or
-_significance_ apart from the body to which it belongs, a different
-fallacy is also suggested. ‘To have meaning or significance’ is
-commonly used in the sense of ‘to have importance’; and this again
-means ‘to have value either as a means or as an end.’ Now it is quite
-possible that even a living arm, apart from its body, would have no
-intrinsic value whatever; although the whole of which it is a part
-has great intrinsic value owing to its presence. Thus we may easily
-come to say that, _as_ a part of the body, it has great value, whereas
-_by itself_ it would have none; and thus that its whole ‘meaning’
-lies in its relation to the body. But in fact the value in question
-obviously does not belong to _it_ at all. To have value merely as a
-part is equivalent to having no value at all, but merely being a part
-of that which has it. Owing, however, to neglect of this distinction,
-the assertion that a part has value, _as a part_, which it would
-not otherwise have, easily leads to the assumption that it is also
-different, as a part, from what it would otherwise be; for it is, in
-fact, true that two things which have a different value must also
-differ in other respects. Hence the assumption that one and the same
-thing, because it is a part of a more valuable whole at one time than
-at another, therefore has more intrinsic value at one time than at
-another, has encouraged the self-contradictory belief that one and the
-same thing may be two different things, and that only in one of its
-forms is it truly what it is.
-
-For these reasons, I shall, where it seems convenient, take the
-liberty to use the term ‘organic’ with a special sense. I shall use
-it to denote the fact that a whole has an intrinsic value different
-in amount from the sum of the values of its parts. I shall use it to
-denote this and only this. The term will not imply any causal relation
-whatever between the parts of the whole in question. And it will not
-imply either, that the parts are inconceivable except as parts of that
-whole, or that, when they form parts of such a whole, they have a value
-different from that which they would have if they did not. Understood
-in this special and perfectly definite sense the relation of an organic
-whole to its parts is one of the most important which Ethics has to
-recognise. A chief part of that science should be occupied in comparing
-the relative values of various goods; and the grossest errors will be
-committed in such comparison if it be assumed that wherever two things
-form a whole, the value of that whole is merely the sum of the values
-of those two things. With this question of ‘organic wholes,’ then, we
-complete the enumeration of the kind of problems, with which it is the
-business of Ethics to deal.
-
-
-=23.= In this chapter I have endeavoured to enforce the following
-conclusions. (1) The peculiarity of Ethics is not that it investigates
-assertions about human conduct, but that it investigates assertions
-about that property of things which is denoted by the term ‘good,’ and
-the converse property denoted by the term ‘bad.’ It must, in order
-to establish its conclusions, investigate the truth of _all_ such
-assertions, _except_ those which assert the relation of this property
-only to a single existent (1-4). (2) This property, by reference to
-which the subject-matter of Ethics must be defined, is itself simple
-and indefinable (5-14). And (3) all assertions about its relation to
-other things are of two, and only two, kinds: they either assert in
-what degree things themselves possess this property, or else they
-assert causal relations between other things and those which possess
-it (15-17). Finally, (4) in considering the different degrees in which
-things themselves possess this property, we have to take account of
-the fact that a whole may possess it in a degree different from that
-which is obtained by summing the degrees in which its parts possess it
-(18-22).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-NATURALISTIC ETHICS.
-
-
-=24.= It results from the conclusions of Chapter I, that all ethical
-questions fall under one or other of three classes. The first class
-contains but one question--the question What is the nature of that
-peculiar predicate, the relation of which to other things constitutes
-the object of all other ethical investigations? or, in other words,
-What is _meant_ by good? This first question I have already attempted
-to answer. The peculiar predicate, by reference to which the sphere of
-Ethics must be defined, is simple, unanalysable, indefinable. There
-remain two classes of questions with regard to the relation of this
-predicate to other things. We may ask either (1) To what things and
-in what degree does this predicate directly attach? What things are
-good in themselves? or (2) By what means shall we be able to make what
-exists in the world as good as possible? What causal relations hold
-between what is best in itself and other things?
-
-In this and the two following chapters, I propose to discuss certain
-theories, which offer us an answer to the question What is good in
-itself? I say advisedly--_an_ answer: for these theories are all
-characterised by the fact that, if true, they would simplify the study
-of Ethics very much. They all hold that there is only _one_ kind of
-fact, of which the existence has any value at all. But they all also
-possess another characteristic, which is my reason for grouping them
-together and treating them first: namely that the main reason why the
-single kind of fact they name has been held to define the sole good,
-is that it has been held to define what is meant by ‘good’ itself. In
-other words they are all theories of the end or ideal, the adoption of
-which has been chiefly caused by the commission of what I have called
-the naturalistic fallacy: they all confuse the first and second of the
-three possible questions which Ethics can ask. It is, indeed, this fact
-which explains their contention that only a single kind of thing is
-good. That a thing should be good, it has been thought, _means_ that
-it possesses this single property: and hence (it is thought) only what
-possesses this property is good. The inference seems very natural; and
-yet what is meant by it is self-contradictory. For those who make it
-fail to perceive that their conclusion ‘what possesses this property is
-good’ is a significant proposition: that it does not mean either ‘what
-possesses this property, possesses this property’ or ‘the word “good”
-denotes that a thing possesses this property.’ And yet, if it does
-_not_ mean one or other of these two things, the inference contradicts
-its own premise.
-
-I propose, therefore, to discuss certain theories of what is good in
-itself, which are _based_ on the naturalistic fallacy, in the sense
-that the commission of this fallacy has been the main cause of their
-wide acceptance. The discussion will be designed both (1) further to
-illustrate the fact that the naturalistic fallacy is a fallacy, or, in
-other words, that we are all aware of a certain simple quality, which
-(and not anything else) is what we mainly mean by the term ‘good’;
-and (2) to shew that not one, but many different things, possess this
-property. For I cannot hope to recommend the doctrine that things which
-are good do not owe their goodness to their common possession of any
-other property, without a criticism of the main doctrines, opposed
-to this, whose power to recommend themselves is proved by their wide
-prevalence.
-
-
-=25.= The theories I propose to discuss may be conveniently divided
-into two groups. The naturalistic fallacy always implies that when
-we think ‘This is good,’ what we are thinking is that the thing in
-question bears a definite relation to some one other thing. But this
-one thing, by reference to which good is defined, may be either
-what I may call a natural object--something of which the existence
-is admittedly an object of experience--or else it may be an object
-which is only inferred to exist in a supersensible real world. These
-two types of ethical theory I propose to treat separately. Theories
-of the second type may conveniently be called ‘metaphysical,’ and I
-shall postpone consideration of them till Chapter IV. In this and
-the following chapter, on the other hand, I shall deal with theories
-which owe their prevalence to the supposition that good can be defined
-by reference to a _natural object_; and these are what I mean by the
-name, which gives the title to this chapter, ‘Naturalistic Ethics.’ It
-should be observed that the fallacy, by reference to which I define
-‘Metaphysical Ethics,’ is the same in kind; and I give it but one name,
-the naturalistic fallacy. But when we regard the ethical theories
-recommended by this fallacy, it seems convenient to distinguish those
-which consider goodness to consist in a relation to something which
-exists here and now, from those which do not. According to the former,
-Ethics is an empirical or positive science: its conclusions could be
-all established by means of empirical observation and induction. But
-this is not the case with Metaphysical Ethics. There is, therefore,
-a marked distinction between these two groups of ethical theories
-based on the same fallacy. And within Naturalistic theories, too, a
-convenient division may also be made. There is one natural object,
-namely pleasure, which has perhaps been as frequently held to be the
-sole good as all the rest put together. And there is, moreover, a
-further reason for treating Hedonism separately. That doctrine has, I
-think, as plainly as any other, owed its prevalence to the naturalistic
-fallacy; but it has had a singular fate in that the writer, who first
-clearly exposed the fallacy of the naturalistic arguments by which
-it had been attempted to _prove_ that pleasure was the sole good,
-has maintained that nevertheless it _is_ the sole good. I propose,
-therefore, to divide my discussion of Hedonism from that of other
-Naturalistic theories; treating of Naturalistic Ethics in general in
-this chapter, and of Hedonism, in particular, in the next.
-
-
-=26.= The subject of the present chapter is, then, ethical theories
-which declare that no intrinsic value is to be found except in the
-possession of some one _natural_ property, other than pleasure; and
-which declare this because it is supposed that to be ‘good’ _means_ to
-possess the property in question. Such theories I call ‘Naturalistic.’
-I have thus appropriated the name Naturalism to a particular method
-of approaching Ethics--a method which, strictly understood, is
-inconsistent with the possibility of any Ethics whatsoever. This
-method consists in substituting for ‘good’ some one property of a
-natural object or of a collection of natural objects; and in thus
-replacing Ethics by some one of the natural sciences. In general, the
-science thus substituted is one of the sciences specially concerned
-with man, owing to the general mistake (for such I hold it to be)
-of regarding the matter of Ethics as confined to human conduct. In
-general, Psychology has been the science substituted, as by J. S. Mill;
-or Sociology, as by Professor Clifford, and other modern writers.
-But any other science might equally well be substituted. It is the
-same fallacy which is implied, when Professor Tyndall recommends us
-to ‘conform to the laws of matter’: and here the science which it is
-proposed to substitute for Ethics is simply Physics. The name then is
-perfectly general; for, no matter what the something is that good is
-held to mean, the theory is still Naturalism. Whether good be defined
-as yellow or green or blue, as loud or soft, as round or square, as
-sweet or bitter, as productive of life or productive of pleasure, as
-willed or desired or felt: whichever of these or of any other object in
-the world, good may be held to _mean_, the theory, which holds it to
-_mean_ them, will be a naturalistic theory. I have called such theories
-naturalistic because all of these terms denote properties, simple
-or complex, of some simple or complex natural object; and, before I
-proceed to consider them, it will be well to define what is meant by
-‘nature’ and by ‘natural objects.’
-
-By ‘nature,’ then, I do mean and have meant that which is the
-subject-matter of the natural sciences and also of psychology. It may
-be said to include all that has existed, does exist, or will exist in
-time. If we consider whether any object is of such a nature that it may
-be said to exist now, to have existed, or to be about to exist, then
-we may know that that object is a natural object, and that nothing, of
-which this is not true, is a natural object. Thus for instance, of our
-minds we should say that they did exist yesterday, that they do exist
-to-day, and probably will exist in a minute or two. We shall say that
-we had thoughts yesterday, which have ceased to exist now, although
-their effects may remain: and in so far as those thoughts did exist,
-they too are natural objects.
-
-There is, indeed, no difficulty about the ‘objects’ themselves, in
-the sense in which I have just used the term. It is easy to say which
-of them are natural, and which (if any) are not natural. But when we
-begin to consider the properties of objects, then I fear the problem
-is more difficult. Which among the properties of natural objects are
-natural properties and which are not? For I do not deny that good is a
-property of certain natural objects: certain of them, I think, _are_
-good; and yet I have said that ‘good’ itself is not a natural property.
-Well, my test for these too also concerns their existence in time.
-Can we imagine ‘good’ as existing _by itself_ in time, and not merely
-as a property of some natural object? For myself, I cannot so imagine
-it, whereas with the greater number of properties of objects--those
-which I call the natural properties--their existence does seem to me to
-be independent of the existence of those objects. They are, in fact,
-rather parts of which the object is made up than mere predicates which
-attach to it. If they were all taken away, no object would be left, not
-even a bare substance: for they are in themselves substantial and give
-to the object all the substance that it has. But this is not so with
-good. If indeed good were a feeling, as some would have us believe,
-then it would exist in time. But that is why to call it so is to commit
-the naturalistic fallacy. It will always remain pertinent to ask,
-whether the feeling itself is good; and if so, then good cannot itself
-be identical with any feeling.
-
-
-=27.= Those theories of Ethics, then, are ‘naturalistic’ which declare
-the sole good to consist in some one property of things, which exists
-in time; and which do so because they suppose that ‘good’ itself can
-be defined by reference to such a property. And we may now proceed to
-consider such theories.
-
-And, first of all, one of the most famous of ethical maxims is that
-which recommends a ‘life according to nature.’ That was the principle
-of the Stoic Ethics; but, since their Ethics has some claim to be
-called metaphysical, I shall not attempt to deal with it here. But
-the same phrase reappears in Rousseau; and it is not unfrequently
-maintained even now that what we ought to do is to live naturally. Now
-let us examine this contention in its general form. It is obvious, in
-the first place, that we cannot say that everything natural is good,
-except perhaps in virtue of some metaphysical theory, such as I shall
-deal with later. If everything natural is equally good, then certainly
-Ethics, as it is ordinarily understood, disappears: for nothing is
-more certain, from an ethical point of view, than that some things
-are bad and others good; the object of Ethics is, indeed, in chief
-part, to give you general rules whereby you may avoid the one and
-secure the other. What, then, does ‘natural’ mean, in this advice to
-live naturally, since it obviously cannot apply to everything that is
-natural?
-
-The phrase seems to point to a vague notion that there is some such
-thing as natural good; to a belief that Nature may be said to fix and
-decide what shall be good, just as she fixes and decides what shall
-exist. For instance, it may be supposed that ‘health’ is susceptible
-of a natural definition, that Nature has fixed what health shall be:
-and health, it may be said, is obviously good; hence in this case
-Nature has decided the matter; we have only to go to her and ask her
-what health is, and we shall know what is good: we shall have based an
-ethics upon science. But what is this natural definition of health? I
-can only conceive that health should be defined in natural terms as
-the _normal_ state of an organism for undoubtedly disease is also a
-natural product. To say that health is what is preserved by evolution,
-and what itself tends to preserve, in the struggle for existence, the
-organism which possesses it, comes to the same thing: for the point
-of evolution is that it pretends to give a causal explanation of why
-some forms of life are normal and others are abnormal; it explains the
-origin of species. When therefore we are told that health is natural,
-we may presume that what is meant is that it is normal; and that when
-we are told to pursue health as a natural end, what is implied is that
-the normal must be good. But is it so obvious that the normal must
-be good? Is it really obvious that health, for instance, is good?
-Was the excellence of Socrates or of Shakespeare normal? Was it not
-rather abnormal, extraordinary? It is, I think, obvious in the first
-place, that not all that is good is normal; that, on the contrary, the
-abnormal is often better than the normal: peculiar excellence, as well
-as peculiar viciousness, must obviously be not normal but abnormal.
-Yet it may be said that nevertheless the normal is good; and I myself
-am not prepared to dispute that health is good. What I contend is
-that this must not be taken to be obvious; that it must be regarded
-as an open question. To declare it to be obvious is to suggest the
-naturalistic fallacy: just as, in some recent books, a proof that
-genius is diseased, abnormal, has been used in order to suggest that
-genius ought not to be encouraged. Such reasoning is fallacious, and
-dangerously fallacious. The fact is that in the very words ‘health’
-and ‘disease’ we do commonly include the notion that the one is good
-and the other bad. But, when a so-called scientific definition of them
-is attempted, a definition in natural terms, the only one possible is
-that by way of ‘normal’ and ‘abnormal.’ Now, it is easy to prove that
-some things commonly thought excellent are abnormal; and it follows
-that they are diseased. But it does not follow, except by virtue of the
-naturalistic fallacy, that those things, commonly thought good, are
-therefore bad. All that has really been shewn is that in some cases
-there is a conflict between the common judgment that genius is good,
-and the common judgment that health is good. It is not sufficiently
-recognised that the latter judgment has not a whit more warrant for
-its truth than the former; that both are perfectly open questions. It
-may be true, indeed, that by ‘healthy’ we do commonly imply ‘good’;
-but that only shews that when we so use the word, we do not mean the
-same thing by it as the thing which is meant in medical science.
-That health, _when_ the word is used to denote something good, is
-good, goes no way at all to shew that health, when the word is used
-to denote something normal, is also good. We might as well say that,
-because ‘bull’ denotes an Irish joke and also a certain animal, the
-joke and the animal must be the same thing. We must not, therefore, be
-frightened by the assertion that a thing is natural into the admission
-that it is good; good does not, by definition, mean anything that is
-natural; and it is therefore always an open question whether anything
-that is natural is good.
-
-
-=28.= But there is another slightly different sense in which the
-word ‘natural’ is used with an implication that it denotes something
-good. This is when we speak of natural affections, or unnatural
-crimes and vices. Here the meaning seems to be, not so much that the
-action or feeling in question is normal or abnormal, as that it is
-necessary. It is in this connection that we are advised to imitate
-savages and beasts. Curious advice certainly; but, of course, there
-may be something in it. I am not here concerned to enquire under what
-circumstances some of us might with advantage take a lesson from the
-cow. I have really no doubt that such exist. What I am concerned with
-is a certain kind of reason, which I think is sometimes used to support
-this doctrine--a naturalistic reason. The notion sometimes lying at
-the bottom of the minds of preachers of this gospel is that we cannot
-improve on nature. This notion is certainly true, in the sense that
-anything we can do, that may be better than the present state of
-things, will be a natural product. But that is not what is meant by
-this phrase; nature is again used to mean a mere part of nature; only
-this time the part meant is not so much the normal as an arbitrary
-minimum of what is necessary for life. And when this minimum is
-recommended as ‘natural’--as the way of life to which Nature points her
-finger--then the naturalistic fallacy is used. Against this position
-I wish only to point out that though the performance of certain acts,
-not in themselves desirable, may be _excused_ as necessary means to
-the preservation of life, that is no reason for _praising_ them, or
-advising us to limit ourselves to those simple actions which are
-necessary, if it is possible for us to improve our condition even at
-the expense of doing what is in this sense unnecessary. Nature does
-indeed set limits to what is possible; she does control the means we
-have at our disposal for obtaining what is good; and of this fact,
-practical Ethics, as we shall see later, must certainly take account:
-but when she is supposed to have a preference for what is necessary,
-what is necessary means only what is necessary to obtain a certain end,
-presupposed as the highest good; and what the highest good is Nature
-cannot determine. Why should we suppose that what is merely necessary
-to life is _ipso facto_ better than what is necessary to the study of
-metaphysics, useless as that study may appear? It may be that life
-is only worth living, because it enables us to study metaphysics--is
-a necessary means thereto. The fallacy of this argument from nature
-has been discovered as long ago as Lucian. ‘I was almost inclined to
-laugh,’ says Callicratidas, in one of the dialogues imputed to him[4],
-‘just now, when Charicles was praising irrational brutes and the
-savagery of the Scythians: in the heat of his argument he was almost
-repenting that he was born a Greek. What wonder if lions and bears and
-pigs do not act as I was proposing? That which reasoning would fairly
-lead a man to choose, cannot be had by creatures that do not reason,
-simply because they are so stupid. If Prometheus or some other god had
-given each of them the intelligence of a man, then they would not have
-lived in deserts and mountains nor fed on one another. They would have
-built temples just as we do, each would have lived in the centre of
-his family, and they would have formed a nation bound by mutual laws.
-Is it anything surprising that brutes, who have had the misfortune
-to be unable to obtain by forethought any of the goods, with which
-reasoning provides us, should have missed love too? Lions do not love;
-but neither do they philosophise; bears do not love; but the reason
-is they do not know the sweets of friendship. It is only men, who, by
-their wisdom and their knowledge, after many trials, have chosen what
-is best.’
-
- [4] Ἔρωτες, 436-7.
-
-
-=29.= To argue that a thing is good _because_ it is ‘natural,’ or
-bad _because_ it is ‘unnatural,’ in these common senses of the term,
-is therefore certainly fallacious: and yet such arguments are very
-frequently used. But they do not commonly pretend to give a systematic
-theory of Ethics. Among attempts to _systematise_ an appeal to nature,
-that which is now most prevalent is to be found in the application to
-ethical questions of the term ‘Evolution’--in the ethical doctrines
-which have been called ‘Evolutionistic.’ These doctrines are those
-which maintain that the course of ‘evolution,’ while it shews us the
-direction in which we _are_ developing, thereby and for that reason
-shews us the direction in which we _ought_ to develop. Writers, who
-maintain such a doctrine, are at present very numerous and very
-popular; and I propose to take as my example the writer, who is
-perhaps the best known of them all--Mr Herbert Spencer. Mr Spencer’s
-doctrine, it must be owned, does not offer the _clearest_ example of
-the naturalistic fallacy as used in support of Evolutionistic Ethics.
-A clearer example might be found in the doctrine of Guyau[5], a writer
-who has lately had considerable vogue in France, but who is not so well
-known as Spencer. Guyau might almost be called a disciple of Spencer;
-he is frankly evolutionistic, and frankly naturalistic; and I may
-mention that he does not seem to think that he differs from Spencer by
-reason of his naturalism. The point in which he has criticised Spencer
-concerns the question how far the ends of ‘pleasure’ and of ‘increased
-life’ coincide as motives and means to the attainment of the ideal: he
-does not seem to think that he differs from Spencer in the fundamental
-principle that the ideal is ‘Quantity of life, measured in breadth
-as well as in length,’ or, as Guyau says, ‘Expansion and intensity
-of life’; nor in the naturalistic reason which he gives for this
-principle. And I am not sure that he does differ from Spencer in these
-points. Spencer does, as I shall shew, use the naturalistic fallacy in
-details; but with regard to his fundamental principles, the following
-doubts occur: Is he fundamentally a Hedonist? And, if so, is he a
-naturalistic Hedonist? In that case he would better have been treated
-in my next chapter. Does he hold that a tendency to increase quantity
-of life is merely a _criterion_ of good conduct? Or does he hold that
-such increase of life is marked out by nature as an end at which we
-ought to aim?
-
- [5] See _Esquisse d’une Morale sans Obligation ni Sanction_, par
- M. Guyau. 4me édition. Paris: F. Alcan, 1896.
-
-I think his language in various places would give colour to all these
-hypotheses; though some of them are mutually inconsistent. I will try
-to discuss the main points.
-
-
-=30.= The modern vogue of ‘Evolution’ is chiefly owing to Darwin’s
-investigations as to the origin of species. Darwin formed a strictly
-biological hypothesis as to the manner in which certain forms of animal
-life became established, while others died out and disappeared. His
-theory was that this might be accounted for, partly at least, in the
-following way. When certain varieties occurred (the cause of their
-occurrence is still, in the main, unknown), it might be that some of
-the points, in which they varied from their parent species or from
-other species then existing, made them better able to persist in the
-environment in which they found themselves--less liable to be killed
-off. They might, for instance, be better able to endure the cold or
-heat or changes of the climate; better able to find nourishment from
-what surrounded them; better able to escape from or resist other
-species which fed upon them; better fitted to attract or to master the
-other sex. Being thus less liable to die, their numbers relatively to
-other species would increase; and that very increase in their numbers
-might tend towards the extinction of those other species. This theory,
-to which Darwin gave the name ‘Natural Selection,’ was also called the
-theory of survival of the fittest. The natural process which it thus
-described was called evolution. It was very natural to suppose that
-evolution meant evolution from what was lower into what was higher;
-in fact it was observed that at least one species, commonly called
-higher--the species man--had so survived, and among men again it was
-supposed that the higher races, ourselves for example, had shewn a
-tendency to survive the lower, such as the North American Indians.
-We can kill them more easily than they can kill us. The doctrine of
-evolution was then represented as an explanation of how the higher
-species survives the lower. Spencer, for example, constantly uses
-‘more evolved’ as equivalent to ‘higher.’ But it is to be noted that
-this forms no part of Darwin’s scientific theory. That theory will
-explain, equally well, how by an alteration in the environment (the
-gradual cooling of the earth, for example) quite a different species
-from man, a species which we think infinitely lower, might survive us.
-The survival of the fittest does _not_ mean, as one might suppose, the
-survival of what is fittest to fulfil a good purpose best adapted to a
-good end: at the last, it means merely the survival of the fittest to
-survive; and the value of the scientific theory, and it is a theory of
-great value, just consists in shewing what are the causes which produce
-certain biological effects. Whether these effects are good or bad, it
-cannot pretend to judge.
-
-
-=31.= But now let us hear what Mr Spencer says about the application of
-Evolution to Ethics.
-
-‘I recur,’ he says[6], ‘to the main proposition set forth in these
-two chapters, which has, I think, been fully justified. Guided by
-the truth that as the conduct with which Ethics deals is part of
-conduct at large, conduct at large must be generally understood
-before this part can be specially understood; and guided by the
-further truth that to understand conduct at large we must understand
-the evolution of conduct; we have been led to see that Ethics has
-for its subject-matter, that form which universal conduct assumes
-during the last stages of its evolution. We have also concluded that
-these last stages in the evolution of conduct are those displayed
-by the _highest_[7] type of being when he is forced, by increase of
-numbers, to live more and more in presence of his fellows. And there
-has followed _the corollary that conduct gains ethical sanction_[7]
-in proportion as the activities, becoming less and less militant and
-more and more industrial, are such as do not necessitate mutual injury
-or hindrance, but consist with, and are furthered by, co-operation and
-mutual aid.
-
- [6] _Data of Ethics_, Chap. II, § 7, _ad fin._
-
- [7] The italics are mine.
-
-‘These implications of the Evolution-Hypothesis, we shall now see
-harmonize with the leading moral ideas men have otherwise reached.’
-
-Now, if we are to take the last sentence strictly--if the propositions
-which precede it are really thought by Mr Spencer to be _implications_
-of the Evolution-Hypothesis--there can be no doubt that Mr Spencer has
-committed the naturalistic fallacy. All that the Evolution-Hypothesis
-tells us is that certain kinds of conduct are more evolved than others;
-and this is, in fact, all that Mr Spencer has attempted to prove in
-the two chapters concerned. Yet he tells us that one of the things it
-has proved is that _conduct gains ethical sanction_ in proportion as it
-displays certain characteristics. What he has tried to prove is only
-that, in proportion as it displays those characteristics, it is _more
-evolved_. It is plain, then, that Mr Spencer _identifies_ the gaining
-of ethical sanction with the being more evolved: this follows strictly
-from his words. But Mr Spencer’s language is extremely loose; and we
-shall presently see that he seems to regard the view it here implies
-as false. We cannot, therefore, take it as Mr Spencer’s definite view
-that ‘better’ means nothing but ‘more evolved’; or even that what is
-‘more evolved’ is _therefore_ ‘better.’ But we are entitled to urge
-that he is influenced by these views, and therefore by the naturalistic
-fallacy. It is only by the assumption of such influence that we can
-explain his confusion as to what he has really proved, and the absence
-of any attempt to prove, what he says he has proved, that conduct
-which is more evolved is better. We shall look in vain for any attempt
-to shew that ‘ethical sanction’ is in proportion to ‘evolution,’ or
-that it is the ‘highest’ type of being which displays the most evolved
-conduct; yet Mr Spencer concludes that this is the case. It is only
-fair to assume that he is not sufficiently conscious how much these
-propositions stand in need of proof--what a very different thing is
-being ‘more evolved’ from being ‘higher’ or ‘better.’ It may, of
-course, be true that what is more evolved is also higher and better.
-But Mr Spencer does not seem aware that to assert the one is in any
-case not the same thing as to assert the other. He argues at length
-that certain kinds of conduct are ‘more evolved,’ and then informs
-us that he has proved them to gain ethical sanction in proportion,
-without any warning that he has omitted the most essential step in such
-a proof. Surely this is sufficient evidence that he does not see how
-essential that step is.
-
-
-=32.= Whatever be the degree of Mr Spencer’s own guilt, what has
-just been said will serve to illustrate the kind of fallacy which
-is constantly committed by those who profess to ‘base’ Ethics on
-Evolution. But we must hasten to add that the view which Mr Spencer
-elsewhere most emphatically recommends is an utterly different one. It
-will be useful briefly to deal with this, in order that no injustice
-may be done to Mr Spencer. The discussion will be instructive partly
-from the lack of clearness, which Mr Spencer displays, as to the
-relation of this view to the ‘evolutionistic’ one just described; and
-partly because there is reason to suspect that in this view also he is
-influenced by the naturalistic fallacy.
-
-We have seen that, at the end of his second chapter, Mr Spencer seems
-to announce that he has already proved certain characteristics of
-conduct to be a measure of its ethical value. He seems to think that
-he has proved this merely by considering the evolution of conduct; and
-he has certainly not given any such proof, unless we are to understand
-that ‘more evolved’ is a mere synonym for ‘ethically better.’ He
-now promises merely to _confirm_ this certain conclusion by shewing
-that it ‘harmonizes with the leading moral ideas men have otherwise
-reached.’ But, when we turn to his third chapter, we find that what
-he actually does is something quite different. He here asserts that
-to establish the conclusion ‘Conduct is better in proportion as it
-is more evolved’ an entirely new proof is necessary. That conclusion
-will be _false_, unless a certain proposition, of which we have heard
-nothing so far, is true--unless it be true that life is _pleasant_ on
-the whole. And the ethical proposition, for which he claims the support
-of the ‘leading moral ideas’ of mankind, turns out to be that ‘life
-is good or bad, according as it does, or does not, bring a surplus
-of agreeable feeling’ (§ 10). Here, then, Mr Spencer appears, not as
-an Evolutionist, but as a Hedonist, in Ethics. No conduct is better,
-_because_ it is more evolved. Degree of evolution can at most be a
-_criterion_ of ethical value; and it will only be that, if we can prove
-the extremely difficult generalisation that the more evolved is always,
-on the whole, the pleasanter. It is plain that Mr Spencer here rejects
-the naturalistic identification of ‘better’ with ‘more evolved’;
-but it is possible that he is influenced by another naturalistic
-identification--that of ‘good’ with ‘pleasant.’ It is possible that Mr
-Spencer is a naturalistic Hedonist.
-
-
-=33.= Let us examine Mr Spencer’s own words. He begins this third
-chapter by an attempt to shew that _we call_ ‘good the acts conducive
-to life, in self or others, and bad those which directly or indirectly
-tend towards death, special or general’ (§ 9). And then he asks: ‘Is
-there any assumption made’ in so calling them? ‘Yes’; he answers,
-‘an assumption of extreme significance has been made--an assumption
-underlying all moral estimates. The question to be definitely raised
-and answered before entering on any ethical discussion, is the question
-of late much agitated--Is life worth living? Shall we take the
-pessimist view? or shall we take the optimist view?... On the answer
-to this question depends every decision concerning the goodness or
-badness of conduct.’ But Mr Spencer does not immediately proceed to
-give the answer. Instead of this, he asks another question: ‘But now,
-have these irreconcilable opinions [pessimist and optimist] anything
-in common?’ And this question he immediately answers by the statement:
-‘Yes, there is one postulate in which pessimists and optimists agree.
-Both their arguments assume it to be self-evident that life is good or
-bad, according as it does, or does not, bring a surplus of agreeable
-feeling’ (§ 10). It is to the defence of this statement that the rest
-of the chapter is devoted; and at the end Mr Spencer formulates his
-conclusion in the following words: ‘No school can avoid taking for the
-ultimate moral aim a desirable state of feeling called by whatever
-name--gratification, enjoyment, happiness. Pleasure somewhere, at
-some time, to some being or beings, is an inexpugnable element of the
-conception’ (§ 16 _ad fin._).
-
-Now in all this, there are two points to which I wish to call
-attention. The first is that Mr Spencer does not, after all, tell us
-clearly what he takes to be the relation of Pleasure and Evolution in
-ethical theory. Obviously he should mean that pleasure is the _only_
-intrinsically desirable thing; that other good things are ‘good’ only
-in the sense that they are means to its existence. Nothing but this
-can properly be meant by asserting it to be ‘_the_ ultimate moral
-aim,’ or, as he subsequently says (§ 62 _ad fin._), ‘_the_ ultimately
-supreme end.’ And, if this were so, it would follow that the more
-evolved conduct was better than the less evolved, only because, and in
-proportion as, it gave more pleasure. But Mr Spencer tells us that two
-conditions are, taken together, _sufficient_ to prove the more evolved
-conduct better: (1) That it should tend to produce more life; (2) That
-life should be worth living or contain a balance of pleasure. And the
-point I wish to emphasise is that if these conditions are sufficient,
-then pleasure cannot be the sole good. For though to produce more life
-is, if the second of Mr Spencer’s propositions be correct, _one way_ of
-producing more pleasure, it is not the only way. It is quite possible
-that a small quantity of life, which was more intensely and uniformly
-present, should give a greater quantity of pleasure than the greatest
-possible quantity of life that was only just ‘worth living.’ And in
-that case, on the hedonistic supposition that pleasure is the only
-thing worth having, we should have to prefer the smaller quantity of
-life and therefore, according to Mr Spencer, the less evolved conduct.
-Accordingly, if Mr Spencer is a true Hedonist, the fact that life gives
-a balance of pleasure is _not_, as he seems to think, sufficient to
-prove that the more evolved conduct is the better. If Mr Spencer means
-us to understand that it _is_ sufficient, then his view about pleasure
-can only be, not that it is the sole good or ‘ultimately supreme end,’
-but that a balance of it is a necessary constituent of the supreme end.
-In short, Mr Spencer seems to maintain that more life is decidedly
-better than less, _if only_ it give a balance of pleasure: and that
-contention is inconsistent with the position that pleasure is ‘_the_
-ultimate moral aim.’ Mr Spencer implies that of two quantities of life,
-which gave an equal amount of pleasure, the larger would nevertheless
-be preferable to the less. And if this be so, then he must maintain
-that quantity of life or degree of evolution is itself an ultimate
-condition of value. He leaves us, therefore, in doubt whether he is
-not still retaining the Evolutionistic proposition, that the more
-evolved is better, simply because it is more evolved, alongside of
-the Hedonistic proposition, that the more pleasant is better, simply
-because it is more pleasant.
-
-But the second question which we have to ask is: What reasons has Mr
-Spencer for assigning to pleasure the position which he does assign
-to it? He tells us, we saw, that the ‘arguments’ both of pessimists
-and of optimists ‘assume it to be self-evident that life is good or
-bad, according as it does, or does not, bring a surplus of agreeable
-feeling’; and he betters this later by telling us that ‘since avowed or
-implied pessimists, and optimists of one or other shade, taken together
-constitute all men, it results that this postulate is universally
-accepted’ (§ 16). That these statements are absolutely false is,
-of course, quite obvious: but why does Mr Spencer think them true?
-and, what is more important (a question which Mr Spencer does not
-distinguish too clearly from the last), why does he think the postulate
-itself to be true? Mr Spencer himself tells us his ‘proof is’ that
-‘reversing the application of the words’ good and bad--applying the
-word ‘good’ to conduct, the ‘aggregate results’ of which are painful,
-and the word ‘bad’ to conduct, of which the ‘aggregate results’ are
-pleasurable--‘creates absurdities’ (§ 16). He does not say whether this
-is because it is absurd to think that the quality, which we _mean by
-the word_ ‘good,’ really applies to what is painful. Even, however,
-if we assume him to mean this, and if we assume that absurdities are
-thus created, it is plain he would only prove that what is painful is
-properly thought to be _so far_ bad, and what is pleasant to be _so
-far_ good: it would not prove at all that pleasure is ‘_the_ supreme
-end.’ There is, however, reason to think that part of what Mr Spencer
-means is the naturalistic fallacy: that he imagines ‘pleasant’ or
-‘productive of pleasure’ is the very meaning of the word ‘good,’ and
-that ‘the absurdity’ is due to this. It is at all events certain that
-he does not distinguish this possible meaning from that which would
-admit that ‘good’ denotes an unique indefinable quality. The doctrine
-of naturalistic Hedonism is, indeed, quite strictly implied in his
-statement that ‘virtue’ cannot ‘_be defined_ otherwise than in terms of
-happiness’ (§ 13); and, though, as I remarked above, we cannot insist
-upon Mr Spencer’s words as a certain clue to any definite meaning, that
-is only because he generally expresses by them several inconsistent
-alternatives--the naturalistic fallacy being, in this case, one such
-alternative. It is certainly impossible to find any further reasons
-given by Mr Spencer for his conviction that pleasure both is the
-supreme end, and is universally admitted to be so. He seems to assume
-throughout that we _must_ mean by good conduct what is productive of
-pleasure, and by bad what is productive of pain. So far, then, as he is
-a Hedonist, he would seem to be a naturalistic Hedonist.
-
-So much for Mr Spencer. It is, of course, quite possible that his
-treatment of Ethics contains many interesting and instructive remarks.
-It would seem, indeed, that Mr Spencer’s main view, that of which he
-is most clearly and most often conscious, is that pleasure is the
-sole good, and that to consider the direction of evolution is by far
-the best _criterion_ of the way in which we shall get most of it:
-and this theory, _if_ he could establish that amount of pleasure is
-always in direct proportion to amount of evolution _and also_ that it
-was plain what conduct was more evolved, _would_ be a very valuable
-contribution to the science of Sociology; it would even, if pleasure
-were the sole good, be a valuable contribution to Ethics. But the above
-discussion should have made it plain that, if what we want from an
-ethical philosopher is a scientific and systematic Ethics, not merely
-an Ethics professedly ‘based on science’; if what we want is a clear
-discussion of the fundamental principles of Ethics, and a statement of
-the ultimate reasons why one way of acting should be considered better
-than another--then Mr Spencer’s ‘Data of Ethics’ is immeasurably far
-from satisfying these demands.
-
-
-=34.= It remains only to state clearly what is definitely fallacious
-in prevalent views as to the relation of Evolution to Ethics--in
-those views with regard to which it seems so uncertain how far Mr
-Spencer intends to encourage them. I proposed to confine the term
-‘Evolutionistic Ethics’ to the view that we need only to consider the
-tendency of ‘evolution’ in order to discover the direction in which
-we _ought_ to go. This view must be carefully distinguished from
-certain others, which may be commonly confused with it. (1) It might,
-for instance, be held that the direction in which living things have
-hitherto developed is, as a matter of fact, the direction of progress.
-It might be held that the ‘more evolved’ is, as a matter of fact, also
-better. And in such a view no fallacy is involved. But, if it is to
-give us any guidance as to how we ought to act in the future, it does
-involve a long and painful investigation of the exact points in which
-the superiority of the more evolved consists. We cannot assume that,
-because evolution is progress _on the whole_, therefore every point
-in which the more evolved differs from the less is a point in which
-it is better than the less. A simple consideration of the course of
-evolution will therefore, on this view, by no means suffice to inform
-us of the course we ought to pursue. We shall have to employ all the
-resources of a strictly ethical discussion in order to arrive at a
-correct valuation of the different results of evolution--to distinguish
-the more valuable from the less valuable, and both from those which
-are no better than their causes, or perhaps even worse. In fact it
-is difficult to see how, on this view--if all that be meant is that
-evolution has _on the whole_ been a progress--the theory of evolution
-can give any assistance to Ethics at all. The judgment that evolution
-has been a progress is itself an independent ethical judgment; and even
-if we take it to be more certain and obvious than any of the detailed
-judgments upon which it must logically depend for confirmation, we
-certainly cannot use it as a datum from which to infer details. It is,
-at all events, certain that, if this had been the _only_ relation held
-to exist between Evolution and Ethics, no such importance would have
-been attached to the bearing of Evolution on Ethics as we actually find
-claimed for it. (2) The view, which, as I have said, seems to be Mr
-Spencer’s main view, may also be held without fallacy. It may be held
-that the more evolved, though not itself the better, is a _criterion_,
-because a concomitant, of the better. But this view also obviously
-involves an exhaustive preliminary discussion of the fundamental
-ethical question what, after all, is better. That Mr Spencer entirely
-dispenses with such a discussion in support of his contention that
-pleasure is the sole good, I have pointed out; and that, if we attempt
-such a discussion, we shall arrive at no such simple result, I shall
-presently try to shew. If however the good is not simple, it is by
-no means likely that we shall be able to discover Evolution to be a
-criterion of it. We shall have to establish a relation between two
-highly complicated sets of data; and, moreover, if we had once settled
-what were goods, and what their comparative values, it is extremely
-unlikely that we should need to call in the aid of Evolution as a
-criterion of how to get the most. It is plain, then, again, that if
-this were the only relation imagined to exist between Evolution and
-Ethics, it could hardly have been thought to justify the assignment
-of any importance in Ethics to the theory of Evolution. Finally, (3)
-it may be held that, though Evolution gives us no help in discovering
-what results of our efforts will be best, it does give some help in
-discovering what it is _possible_ to attain and what are the means to
-its attainment. That the theory really may be of service to Ethics in
-this way cannot be denied. But it is certainly not common to find this
-humble, ancillary bearing clearly and exclusively assigned to it. In
-the mere fact, then, that these non-fallacious views of the relation
-of Evolution to Ethics would give so very little importance to that
-relation, we have evidence that what is typical in the coupling of the
-two names is the fallacious view to which I propose to restrict the
-name ‘Evolutionistic Ethics.’ This is the view that we ought to move
-in the direction of evolution simply _because_ it is the direction
-of evolution. That the forces of Nature are working on that side is
-taken as a presumption that it is the right side. That such a view,
-apart from metaphysical presuppositions, with which I shall presently
-deal, is simply fallacious, I have tried to shew. It can only rest on
-a confused belief that somehow the good simply _means_ the side on
-which Nature is working. And it thus involves another confused belief
-which is very marked in Mr Spencer’s whole treatment of Evolution.
-For, after all, is Evolution the side on which Nature is working? In
-the sense, which Mr Spencer gives to the term, and in any sense in
-which it can be regarded as a fact that the more evolved is higher,
-Evolution denotes only a _temporary_ historical process. That things
-will permanently continue to evolve in the future, or that they have
-always evolved in the past, we have not the smallest reason to believe.
-For Evolution does not, in this sense, denote a natural _law_, like
-the law of gravity. Darwin’s theory of natural selection does indeed
-state a natural law: it states that, given certain conditions, certain
-results will always happen. But Evolution, as Mr Spencer understands
-it and as it is commonly understood, denotes something very different.
-It denotes only a process which has actually occurred at a given time,
-because the conditions at the beginning of that time happened to be of
-a certain nature. That such conditions will always be given, or have
-always been given, cannot be assumed; and it is only the process which,
-according to natural law, must follow from _these_ conditions and no
-others, that appears to be also on the whole a progress. Precisely the
-same natural laws--Darwin’s, for instance--would under other conditions
-render inevitable not Evolution--not a development from lower to
-higher--but the converse process, which has been called Involution. Yet
-Mr Spencer constantly speaks of the process which is exemplified in
-the development of man as if it had all the augustness of a universal
-Law of Nature: whereas we have no reason to believe it other than a
-temporary accident, requiring not only certain universal natural laws,
-but also the existence of a certain state of things at a certain time.
-The only _laws_ concerned in the matter are certainly such as, under
-other circumstances, would allow us to infer, not the development,
-but the extinction of man. And that circumstances will always be
-favourable to further development, that Nature will always work on the
-side of Evolution, we have no reason whatever to believe. Thus the
-idea that Evolution throws important light on Ethics seems to be due
-to a double confusion. Our respect for the process is enlisted by the
-representation of it as the Law of Nature. But, on the other hand, our
-respect for Laws of Nature would be speedily diminished, did we not
-imagine that this desirable process was one of them. To suppose that a
-Law of Nature is _therefore_ respectable, is to commit the naturalistic
-fallacy; but no one, probably, would be tempted to commit it, unless
-something which _is_ respectable, were represented as a Law of Nature.
-If it were clearly recognised that there is no evidence for supposing
-Nature to be on the side of the Good, there would probably be less
-tendency to hold the opinion, which on other grounds is demonstrably
-false, that no such evidence is required. And if both false opinions
-were clearly seen to be false, it would be plain that Evolution has
-very little indeed to say to Ethics.
-
-
-=35.= In this chapter I have begun the criticism of certain ethical
-views, which seem to owe their influence mainly to the naturalistic
-fallacy--the fallacy which consists in identifying the simple notion
-which we mean by ‘good’ with some other notion. They are views which
-profess to tell us what is good in itself; and my criticism of them
-is mainly directed (1) to bring out the negative result, that we have
-no reason to suppose that which they declare to be the sole good,
-really to be so, (2) to illustrate further the positive result, already
-established in Chapter I, that the fundamental principles of Ethics
-must be _synthetic_ propositions, declaring what things, and in what
-degree, possess a simple and unanalysable property which may be called
-‘intrinsic value’ or ‘goodness.’ The chapter began (1) by dividing the
-views to be criticised into (_a_) those which, supposing ‘good’ to
-be defined by reference to some supersensible reality, conclude that
-the sole good is to be found in such a reality, and may therefore be
-called ‘Metaphysical,’ (_b_) those which assign a similar position to
-some natural object, and may therefore be called ‘Naturalistic.’ Of
-naturalistic views, that which regards ‘pleasure’ as the sole good has
-received far the fullest and most serious treatment and was therefore
-reserved for Chapter III: all other forms of Naturalism may be first
-dismissed, by taking typical examples (24-26). (2) As typical of
-naturalistic views, other than Hedonism, there was first taken the
-popular commendation of what is ‘natural’: it was pointed out that by
-‘natural’ there might here be meant either ‘normal’ or ‘necessary,’
-and that neither the ‘normal’ nor the ‘necessary’ could be seriously
-supposed to be either always good or the only good things (27-28). (3)
-But a more important type, because one which claims to be capable of
-system, is to be found in ‘Evolutionistic Ethics.’ The influence of the
-fallacious opinion that to be ‘better’ _means_ to be ‘more evolved’ was
-illustrated by an examination of Mr Herbert Spencer’s Ethics; and it
-was pointed out that, but for the influence of this opinion, Evolution
-could hardly have been supposed to have any important bearing upon
-Ethics (29-34).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-HEDONISM.
-
-
-=36.= In this chapter we have to deal with what is perhaps the most
-famous and the most widely held of all ethical principles--the
-principle that nothing is good but pleasure. My chief reason for
-treating of this principle in this place is, as I said, that Hedonism
-appears in the main to be a form of Naturalistic Ethics: in other
-words, that pleasure has been so generally held to be the sole good,
-is almost entirely due to the fact that it has seemed to be somehow
-involved in the _definition_ of ‘good’--to be pointed out by the very
-meaning of the word. If this is so, then the prevalence of Hedonism has
-been mainly due to what I have called the naturalistic fallacy--the
-failure to distinguish clearly that unique and indefinable quality
-which we mean by good. And that it is so, we have very strong evidence
-in the fact that, of all hedonistic writers, Prof. Sidgwick alone has
-clearly recognised that by ‘good’ we do mean something unanalysable,
-and has alone been led thereby to emphasise the fact that, if
-Hedonism be true, its claims to be so must be rested solely on its
-self-evidence--that we must maintain ‘Pleasure is the sole good’ to be
-a mere _intuition_. It appeared to Prof. Sidgwick as a new discovery
-that what he calls the ‘method’ of Intuitionism must be retained as
-valid alongside of, and indeed as the foundation of, what he calls the
-alternative ‘methods’ of Utilitarianism and Egoism. And that it was a
-new discovery can hardly be doubted. In previous Hedonists we find no
-clear and consistent recognition of the fact that their fundamental
-proposition involves the assumption that a certain unique predicate
-can be directly seen to belong to pleasure alone among existents: they
-do not emphasise, as they could hardly have failed to have done had
-they perceived it, how utterly independent of all other truths this
-truth must be.
-
-Moreover it is easy to see how this unique position should have
-been assigned to pleasure without any clear consciousness of the
-assumption involved. Hedonism is, for a sufficiently obvious reason,
-the first conclusion at which any one who begins to reflect upon
-Ethics naturally arrives. It is very easy to notice the fact that we
-are pleased with things. The things we enjoy and the things we do not,
-form two unmistakable classes, to which our attention is constantly
-directed. But it is comparatively difficult to distinguish the fact
-that we _approve_ a thing from the fact that we are pleased with it.
-Although, if we look at the two states of mind, we must see that they
-are different, even though they generally go together, it is very
-difficult to see in _what respect_ they are different, or that the
-difference can in any connection be of more importance than the many
-other differences, which are so patent and yet so difficult to analyse,
-between one _kind_ of enjoyment and another. It is very difficult to
-see that by ‘approving’ of a thing we mean _feeling that it has a
-certain predicate_--the predicate, namely, which defines the peculiar
-sphere of Ethics; whereas in the enjoyment of a thing no such unique
-object of thought is involved. Nothing is more natural than the vulgar
-mistake, which we find expressed in a recent book on Ethics[8]: ‘The
-primary ethical fact is, we have said, that something is approved
-or disapproved: that is, in other words, the ideal representation
-of certain events in the way of sensation, perception, or idea, is
-attended with a feeling of pleasure or of pain.’ In ordinary speech,
-‘I want this,’ ‘I like this,’ ‘I care about this’ are constantly used
-as equivalents for ‘I think this good.’ And in this way it is very
-natural to be led to suppose that there is no distinct class of ethical
-judgments, but only the class ‘things enjoyed’; in spite of the fact,
-which is very clear, if not very common, that we do not always approve
-what we enjoy. It is of course, very obvious that from the supposition
-that ‘I think this good’ is identical with ‘I am pleased with this,’
-it cannot be _logically_ inferred that pleasure alone is good. But, on
-the other hand, it is very difficult to see what could be logically
-inferred from such a supposition; and it seems _natural_ enough that
-such an inference should suggest itself. A very little examination
-of what is commonly written on the subject will suffice to shew that
-a logical confusion of this nature is very common. Moreover the very
-commission of the naturalistic fallacy involves that those who commit
-it should not recognise clearly the meaning of the proposition ‘This
-is good’--that they should not be able to distinguish this from other
-propositions which seem to resemble it; and, where this is so, it is,
-of course, impossible that its logical relations should be clearly
-perceived.
-
- [8] A. E. Taylor’s _Problem of Conduct_, p. 120.
-
-
-=37.= There is, therefore, ample reason to suppose that Hedonism is in
-general a form of Naturalism--that its acceptance is generally due to
-the naturalistic fallacy. It is, indeed, only when we have detected
-this fallacy, when we have become clearly aware of the unique object
-which is meant by ‘good,’ that we are able to give to Hedonism the
-precise definition used above, ‘Nothing is good but pleasure’: and it
-may, therefore, be objected that, in attacking this doctrine under the
-name of Hedonism, I am attacking a doctrine which has never really been
-held. But it is very common to hold a doctrine, without being clearly
-aware what it is you hold; and though, when Hedonists argue in favour
-of what they call Hedonism, I admit that, in order to suppose their
-arguments valid, they must have before their minds something _other_
-than the doctrine I have defined, yet, in order to draw the conclusions
-that they draw, it is necessary that they should _also_ have before
-their minds this doctrine. In fact, my justification for supposing that
-I shall have refuted _historical_ Hedonism, if I refute the proposition
-‘Nothing is good but pleasure,’ is, that although Hedonists have
-rarely stated their principle in this form and though its truth, in
-this form, will certainly not follow from their arguments, yet their
-ethical _method_ will follow logically from nothing else. Any pretence
-of the hedonistic method, to discover to us practical truths which
-we should not otherwise have known, is founded on the principle that
-the course of action which will bring the greatest balance of pleasure
-is certainly the right one; and, failing an absolute proof that the
-greatest balance of pleasure _always_ coincides with the greatest
-balance of other goods, which it is not generally attempted to give,
-this principle can only be justified if pleasure be the sole good.
-Indeed it can hardly be doubted that Hedonists are distinguished by
-arguing, in disputed practical questions, _as if_ pleasure were the
-sole good; and that it is justifiable, for this among other reasons, to
-take this as _the_ ethical principle of Hedonism will, I hope, be made
-further evident by the whole discussion of this chapter.
-
-By Hedonism, then, I mean the doctrine that pleasure _alone_ is good
-as an end--‘good’ in the sense which I have tried to point out as
-indefinable. The doctrine that pleasure, _among other things_, is good
-as an end, is not Hedonism; and I shall not dispute its truth. Nor
-again is the doctrine that other things, beside pleasure, are good as
-means, at all inconsistent with Hedonism: the Hedonist is not bound
-to maintain that ‘Pleasure alone is good,’ if under good he includes,
-as we generally do, what is good as means to an end, _as well as_ the
-end itself. In attacking Hedonism, I am therefore simply and solely
-attacking the doctrine that ‘Pleasure _alone_ is good as an end or in
-itself’: I am not attacking the doctrine that ‘Pleasure _is_ good as an
-end or in itself,’ nor am I attacking any doctrine whatever as to what
-are the best means we can take in order to obtain pleasure or any other
-end. Hedonists do, in general, recommend a course of conduct which is
-very similar to that which I should recommend. I do not quarrel with
-them about most of their practical conclusions, I quarrel only with the
-reasons by which they seem to think their conclusions can be supported;
-and I do emphatically deny that the correctness of their conclusions is
-any ground for inferring the correctness of their principles. A correct
-conclusion may always be obtained by fallacious reasoning; and the good
-life or virtuous maxims of a Hedonist afford absolutely no presumption
-that his ethical philosophy is also good. It is his ethical philosophy
-alone with which I am concerned: what I dispute is the excellence of
-his reasoning, not the excellence of his character as a man or even as
-moral teacher. It may be thought that my contention is unimportant, but
-that is no ground for thinking that I am not in the right. What I am
-concerned with is knowledge only--that we should think correctly and so
-far arrive at some truth, however unimportant: I do not say that such
-knowledge will make us more useful members of society. If any one does
-not care for knowledge for its own sake, then I have nothing to say to
-him; only it should not be thought that a lack of interest in what I
-have to say is any ground for holding it untrue.
-
-
-=38.= Hedonists, then, hold that all other things but pleasure, whether
-conduct or virtue or knowledge, whether life or nature or beauty, are
-only good as means to pleasure or for the sake of pleasure, never
-for their own sakes or as ends in themselves. This view was held by
-Aristippus, the disciple of Socrates, and by the Cyrenaic school which
-he founded; it is associated with Epicurus and the Epicureans; and
-it has been held in modern times, chiefly by those philosophers who
-call themselves ‘Utilitarians’--by Bentham, and by Mill, for instance.
-Herbert Spencer, as we have seen, also says he holds it; and Professor
-Sidgwick, as we shall see, holds it too.
-
-Yet all these philosophers, as has been said, differ from one
-another more or less, both as to what they mean by Hedonism, and as
-to the reasons for which it is to be accepted as a true doctrine.
-The matter is therefore obviously not quite so simple as it might
-at first appear. My own object will be to shew quite clearly what
-the theory must imply, if it is made precise, if all confusions and
-inconsistencies are removed from the conception of it; and, when
-this is done, I think it will appear that all the various reasons
-given for holding it to be true, are really quite inadequate; that
-they are not reasons for holding Hedonism, but only for holding some
-other doctrine which is confused therewith. In order to attain this
-object I propose to take first Mill’s doctrine, as set forth in his
-book called _Utilitarianism_: we shall find in Mill a conception of
-Hedonism, and arguments in its favour, which fairly represent those
-of a large class of hedonistic writers. To these representative
-conceptions and arguments grave objections, objections which appear to
-me to be conclusive, have been urged by Professor Sidgwick. These I
-shall try to give in my own words; and shall then proceed to consider
-and refute Professor Sidgwick’s own much more precise conceptions and
-arguments. With this, I think, we shall have traversed the whole field
-of Hedonistic doctrine. It will appear, from the discussion, that the
-task of deciding what is or is not good in itself is by no means an
-easy one; and in this way the discussion will afford a good example
-of the method which it is necessary to pursue in attempting to arrive
-at the truth with regard to this primary class of ethical principles.
-In particular it will appear that two principles of method must be
-constantly kept in mind: (1) that the naturalistic fallacy must not
-be committed; (2) that the distinction between means and ends must be
-observed.
-
-
-=39.= I propose, then, to begin by an examination of Mill’s
-_Utilitarianism_. That is a book which contains an admirably clear and
-fair discussion of many ethical principles and methods. Mill exposes
-not a few simple mistakes which are very likely to be made by those
-who approach ethical problems without much previous reflection. But
-what I am concerned with is the mistakes which Mill himself appears
-to have made, and these only so far as they concern the Hedonistic
-principle. Let me repeat what that principle is. It is, I said, that
-pleasure is the only thing at which we ought to aim, the only thing
-that is good as an end and for its own sake. And now let us turn to
-Mill and see whether he accepts this description of the question at
-issue. ‘Pleasure,’ he says at the outset, ‘and freedom from pain, are
-the only things desirable as ends’ (p. 10[9]); and again, at the end
-of his argument, ‘To think of an object as desirable (unless for the
-sake of its consequences) and to think of it as pleasant are one and
-the same thing’ (p. 58). These statements, taken together, and apart
-from certain confusions which are obvious in them, seem to imply the
-principle I have stated; and if I succeed in shewing that Mill’s
-reasons for them do not prove them, it must at least be admitted that I
-have not been fighting with shadows or demolishing a man of straw.
-
- [9] My references are to the 13th edition, 1897.
-
-It will be observed that Mill adds ‘absence of pain’ to ‘pleasure’
-in his first statement, though not in his second. There is, in this,
-a confusion, with which, however, we need not deal. I shall talk of
-‘pleasure’ alone, for the sake of conciseness; but all my arguments
-will apply _à fortiori_ to ‘absence of pain’: it is easy to make the
-necessary substitutions.
-
-Mill holds, then, that ‘happiness is desirable, and _the only thing
-desirable_[10], as an end; all other things being only desirable
-as means to that end’ (p. 52). Happiness he has already defined as
-‘pleasure, and the absence of pain’ (p. 10); he does not pretend that
-this is more than an arbitrary verbal definition; and, as _such_, I
-have not a word to say against it. His principle, then, is ‘pleasure is
-the only thing desirable,’ if I may be allowed, when I say ‘pleasure,’
-to include in that word (so far as necessary) absence of pain. And
-now what are his reasons for holding that principle to be true? He
-has already told us (p. 6) that ‘Questions of ultimate ends are not
-amenable to direct proof. Whatever can be proved to be good, must be so
-by being shewn to be a means to something _admitted to be good without
-proof_.’ With this, I perfectly agree: indeed the chief object of my
-first chapter was to shew that this is so. Anything which is good as an
-end must be admitted to be good without proof. We are agreed so far.
-Mill even uses the same examples which I used in my second chapter.
-‘How,’ he says, ‘is it possible to prove that health is good?’ ‘What
-proof is it possible to give that pleasure is good?’ Well, in Chapter
-IV, in which he deals with the proof of his Utilitarian principle, Mill
-repeats the above statement in these words: ‘It has already,’ he says,
-‘been remarked, that questions of ultimate ends do not admit of proof,
-in the ordinary acceptation of the term’ (p. 52). ‘Questions about
-ends,’ he goes on in this same passage, ‘are, in other words, questions
-what things are desirable.’ I am quoting these repetitions, because
-they make it plain what otherwise might have been doubted, that Mill is
-using the words ‘desirable’ or ‘desirable as an end’ as absolutely and
-precisely equivalent to the words ‘good as an end.’ We are, then, now
-to hear, what reasons he advances for this doctrine that pleasure alone
-is good as an end.
-
- [10] My italics.
-
-
-=40.= ‘Questions about ends,’ he says (pp. 52-3), ‘are, in other words,
-questions what things are desirable. The utilitarian doctrine is, that
-happiness is desirable, and the only thing desirable, as an end; all
-other things being only desirable as means to that end. What ought to
-be required of this doctrine--what conditions is it requisite that the
-doctrine should fulfil--to make good its claim to be believed?
-
-‘The only proof capable of being given that a thing is visible, is that
-people actually see it. The only proof that a sound is audible, is
-that people hear it; and so of the other sources of our experience. In
-like manner, I apprehend, the sole evidence it is possible to produce
-that anything is desirable, is that people do actually desire it. If
-the end which the utilitarian doctrine proposes to itself were not,
-in theory and in practice, acknowledged to be an end, nothing could
-ever convince any person that it was so. No reason can be given why
-the general happiness is desirable, except that each person, so far
-as he believes it to be attainable, desires his own happiness. This,
-however, being the fact, we have not only all the proof which the case
-admits of, but all which it is possible to require, that happiness is
-a good: that each person’s happiness is a good to that person, and the
-general happiness, therefore, a good to the aggregate of all persons.
-Happiness has made out its title as _one_ of the ends of conduct, and
-consequently one of the criteria of morality.’
-
-There, that is enough. That is my first point. Mill has made as naïve
-and artless a use of the naturalistic fallacy as anybody could desire.
-‘Good,’ he tells us, means ‘desirable,’ and you can only find out what
-is desirable by seeking to find out what is actually desired. This is,
-of course, only one step towards the proof of Hedonism; for it may be,
-as Mill goes on to say, that other things beside pleasure are desired.
-Whether or not pleasure is the only thing desired is, as Mill himself
-admits (p. 58), a psychological question, to which we shall presently
-proceed. The important step for Ethics is this one just taken, the
-step which pretends to prove that ‘good’ means ‘desired.’ Well, the
-fallacy in this step is so obvious, that it is quite wonderful how Mill
-failed to see it. The fact is that ‘desirable’ does not mean ‘able to
-be desired’ as ‘visible’ means ‘able to be seen.’ The desirable means
-simply what _ought_ to be desired or _deserves_ to be desired; just
-as the detestable means not what can be but what ought to be detested
-and the damnable what deserves to be damned. Mill has, then, smuggled
-in, under cover of the word ‘desirable,’ the very notion about which
-he ought to be quite clear. ‘Desirable’ does indeed mean ‘what it is
-good to desire’; but when this is understood, it is no longer plausible
-to say that our only test of _that_, is what is actually desired. Is
-it merely a tautology when the Prayer Book talks of _good_ desires?
-Are not _bad_ desires also possible? Nay, we find Mill himself talking
-of a ‘better and nobler object of desire’ (p. 10), as if, after all,
-what is desired were not _ipso facto_ good, and good in proportion to
-the amount it is desired. Moreover, if the desired is _ipso facto_ the
-good; then the good is _ipso facto_ the motive of our actions, and
-there can be no question of finding motives for doing it, as Mill is
-at such pains to do. If Mill’s explanation of ‘desirable’ be _true_,
-then his statement (p. 26) that the rule of action may be _confounded_
-with the motive of it is untrue: for the motive of action will then be
-according to him _ipso facto_ its rule; there can be no distinction
-between the two, and therefore no confusion, and thus he has
-contradicted himself flatly. These are specimens of the contradictions,
-which, as I have tried to shew, must always follow from the use of
-the naturalistic fallacy; and I hope I need now say no more about the
-matter.
-
-
-=41.= Well, then, the first step by which Mill has attempted to
-establish his Hedonism is simply fallacious. He has attempted to
-establish the identity of the good with the desired, by confusing the
-proper sense of ‘desirable,’ in which it denotes that which it is good
-to desire, with the sense which it would bear, if it were analogous
-to such words as ‘visible.’ If ‘desirable’ is to be identical with
-‘good,’ then it must bear one sense; and if it is to be identical with
-‘desired,’ then it must bear quite another sense. And yet to Mill’s
-contention that the desired is necessarily good, it is quite essential
-that these two senses of ‘desirable’ should be the same. If he holds
-they are the same, then he has contradicted himself elsewhere; if
-he holds they are not the same, then the first step in his proof of
-Hedonism is absolutely worthless.
-
-But now we must deal with the second step. Having proved, as he thinks,
-that the good means the desired, Mill recognises that, if he is further
-to maintain that pleasure alone is good, he must prove that pleasure
-alone is really desired. This doctrine that ‘pleasure alone is the
-object of all our desires’ is the doctrine which Prof. Sidgwick has
-called Psychological Hedonism: and it is a doctrine which most eminent
-psychologists are now agreed in rejecting. But it is a necessary step
-in the proof of any such Naturalistic Hedonism as Mill’s; and it is
-so commonly held, by people not expert either in psychology or in
-philosophy, that I wish to treat it at some length. It will be seen
-that Mill does not hold it in this bare form. He admits that other
-things than pleasure are desired; and this admission is at once a
-contradiction of his Hedonism. One of the shifts by which he seeks
-to evade this contradiction we shall afterwards consider. But some
-may think that no such shifts are needed: they may say of Mill, what
-Callicles says of Polus in the _Gorgias_[11], that he has made this
-fatal admission through a most unworthy fear of appearing paradoxical;
-that they, on the other hand, will have the courage of their
-convictions, and will not be ashamed to go to any lengths of paradox,
-in defence of what they hold to be the truth.
-
- [11] 481 C-487 B.
-
-
-=42.= Well, then, we are supposing it held that pleasure is the object
-of all desire, that it is the universal end of all human activity.
-Now I suppose it will not be denied that people are commonly said to
-desire other things: for instance, we usually talk of desiring food
-and drink, of desiring money, approbation, fame. The question, then,
-must be of what is meant by desire, and by the object of desire. There
-is obviously asserted some sort of necessary or universal relation
-between something which is called desire, and another thing which is
-called pleasure. The question is of what sort this relation is; whether
-in conjunction with the naturalistic fallacy above mentioned, it will
-justify Hedonism. Now I am not prepared to deny that there is some
-universal relation between pleasure and desire; but I hope to shew,
-that, if there is, it is of such sort as will rather make against than
-for Hedonism. It is urged that pleasure is always the object of desire,
-and I am ready to admit that pleasure is always, in part at least, the
-_cause_ of desire. But this distinction is very important. Both views
-might be expressed in the same language; both might be said to hold
-that whenever we desire, we always desire _because of_ some pleasure:
-if I asked my supposed Hedonist, ‘Why do you desire that?’ he might
-answer, quite consistently with his contention, ‘Because there is
-pleasure there,’ and if he asked me the same question, I might answer,
-equally consistently with my contention, ‘Because there is pleasure
-here.’ Only our two answers would not mean the same thing. It is this
-use of the same language to denote quite different facts, which I
-believe to be the chief cause why Psychological Hedonism is so often
-held, just as it was also the cause of Mill’s naturalistic fallacy.
-
-Let us try to analyse the psychological state which is called ‘desire.’
-That name is usually confined to a state of mind in which the idea of
-some object or event, not yet existing, is present to us. Suppose,
-for instance, I am desiring a glass of port wine. I have the idea of
-drinking such a glass before my mind, although I am not yet drinking
-it. Well, how does pleasure enter in to this relation? My theory is
-that it enters in, in this way. The _idea_ of the drinking causes a
-feeling of pleasure in my mind, which helps to produce that state
-of incipient activity, which is called ‘desire.’ It is, therefore,
-because of a pleasure, which I already have--the pleasure excited
-by a mere idea--that I desire the wine, which I have not. And I am
-ready to admit that a pleasure of this kind, an actual pleasure, is
-always among the causes of every desire, and not only of every desire,
-but of every mental activity, whether conscious or sub-conscious. I
-am ready to _admit_ this, I say: I cannot vouch that it is the true
-psychological doctrine; but, at all events, it is not _primâ facie_
-quite absurd. And now, what is the other doctrine, the doctrine which
-I am supposing held, and which is at all events essential to Mill’s
-argument? It is this. That when I desire the wine, it is not the wine
-which I desire but the pleasure which I expect to get from it. In
-other words, the doctrine is that the idea of a pleasure _not actual_
-is always necessary to cause desire; whereas my doctrine was that the
-_actual_ pleasure caused by the idea of something else was always
-necessary to cause desire. It is these two different theories which I
-suppose the Psychological Hedonists to confuse: the confusion is, as
-Mr Bradley puts it[12], between ‘a pleasant thought’ and ‘the thought
-of a pleasure.’ It is in fact only where the latter, the ‘thought of
-a pleasure,’ is present, that pleasure can be said to be the _object_
-of desire, or the _motive_ to action. On the other hand, when only a
-pleasant thought is present, as, I admit, _may_ always be the case,
-then it is the object of the thought--that which we are thinking
-about--which is the object of desire and the motive to action; and the
-pleasure, which that thought excites, may, indeed, cause our desire or
-move us to action, but it is not our end or object nor our motive.
-
- [12] _Ethical Studies_, p. 232.
-
-Well, I hope this distinction is sufficiently clear. Now let us see how
-it bears upon Ethical Hedonism. I assume it to be perfectly obvious
-that the idea of the object of desire is not always and only the idea
-of a pleasure. In the first place, plainly, we are not always conscious
-of expecting pleasure, when we desire a thing. We may be only conscious
-of the thing which we desire, and may be impelled to make for it at
-once, without any calculation as to whether it will bring us pleasure
-or pain. And, in the second place, even when we do expect pleasure,
-it can certainly be very rarely pleasure _only_ which we desire. For
-instance, granted that, when I desire my glass of port wine, I have
-also an idea of the pleasure I expect from it, plainly that pleasure
-cannot be the only object of my desire; the port wine must be included
-in my object, else I might be led by my desire to take wormwood instead
-of wine. If the desire were directed _solely_ towards the pleasure,
-it could not lead me to take the wine; if it is to take a definite
-direction, it is absolutely necessary that the idea of the object, from
-which the pleasure is expected, should also be present and should
-control my activity. The theory then that what is desired is always and
-only pleasure must break down: it is impossible to prove that pleasure
-alone is good, by that line of argument. But, if we substitute for this
-theory, that other, possibly true, theory, that pleasure is always the
-cause of desire, then all the plausibility of our ethical doctrine
-that pleasure alone is good straightway disappears. For in this case,
-pleasure is not what I desire, it is not what I want: it is something
-which I already have, before I can want anything. And can any one feel
-inclined to maintain, that that which I already have, while I am still
-desiring something else, is always and alone the good?
-
-
-=43.= But now let us return to consider another of Mill’s arguments
-for his position that ‘happiness is the sole end of human action.’
-Mill admits, as I have said, that pleasure is not the only thing we
-actually desire. ‘The desire of virtue,’ he says, ‘is not as universal,
-but it is as authentic a fact, as the desire of happiness[13].’ And
-again, ‘Money is, in many cases, desired in and for itself[14].’ These
-admissions are, of course, in naked and glaring contradiction with
-his argument that pleasure is the only thing desirable, because it
-is the only thing desired. How then does Mill even attempt to avoid
-this contradiction? His chief argument seems to be that ‘virtue,’
-‘money’ and other such objects, when they are thus desired in and
-for themselves, are desired only as ‘a part of happiness[15].’ Now
-what does this mean? Happiness, as we saw, has been defined by Mill,
-as ‘pleasure and the absence of pain.’ Does Mill mean to say that
-‘money,’ these actual coins, which he admits to be desired in and
-for themselves, are a part either of pleasure or of the absence of
-pain? Will he maintain that those coins themselves are in my mind,
-and actually a part of my pleasant feelings? If this is to be said,
-all words are useless: nothing can possibly be distinguished from
-anything else; if these two things are not distinct, what on earth is?
-We shall hear next that this table is really and truly the same thing
-as this room; that a cab-horse is in fact indistinguishable from St
-Paul’s Cathedral; that this book of Mill’s which I hold in my hand,
-because it was his pleasure to produce it, is now and at this moment
-a part of the happiness which he felt many years ago and which has
-so long ceased to be. Pray consider a moment what this contemptible
-nonsense really means. ‘Money,’ says Mill, ‘is only desirable as a
-means to happiness.’ Perhaps so; but what then? ‘Why,’ says Mill,
-‘money is undoubtedly desired for its own sake.’ ‘Yes, go on,’ say we.
-‘Well,’ says Mill, ‘if money is desired for its own sake, it must be
-desirable as an end-in-itself: I have said so myself.’ ‘Oh,’ say we,
-‘but you also said just now that it was only desirable as a means.’ ‘I
-own I did,’ says Mill, ‘but I will try to patch up matters, by saying
-that what is only a means to an end, is the same thing as a part of
-that end. I daresay the public won’t notice.’ And the public haven’t
-noticed. Yet this is certainly what Mill has done. He has broken down
-the distinction between means and ends, upon the precise observance of
-which his Hedonism rests. And he has been compelled to do this, because
-he has failed to distinguish ‘end’ in the sense of what is desirable,
-from ‘end’ in the sense of what is desired: a distinction which,
-nevertheless, both the present argument and his whole book presupposes.
-This is a consequence of the naturalistic fallacy.
-
- [13] p. 53.
-
- [14] p. 55.
-
- [15] pp. 56-7.
-
-
-=44.= Mill, then, has nothing better to say for himself than this. His
-two fundamental propositions are, in his own words, ‘that to think of
-an object as desirable (unless for the sake of its consequences), and
-to think of it as pleasant, are one and the same thing; and that to
-desire anything except in proportion as the idea of it is pleasant,
-is a physical and metaphysical impossibility[16].’ Both of these
-statements are, we have seen, merely supported by fallacies. The first
-seems to rest on the naturalistic fallacy; the second rests partly on
-this, partly on the fallacy of confusing ends and means, and partly
-on the fallacy of confusing a pleasant thought with the thought of a
-pleasure. His very language shews this. For that the idea of a thing is
-pleasant, in his second clause, is obviously meant to be the same fact
-which he denotes by ‘thinking of it as pleasant,’ in his first.
-
- [16] p. 58.
-
-Accordingly, Mill’s arguments for the proposition that pleasure is the
-sole good, and our refutation of those arguments, may be summed up as
-follows:
-
-First of all, he takes ‘the desirable,’ which he uses as a synonym
-for ‘the good,’ to _mean_ what _can_ be desired. The test, again, of
-what can be desired, is, according to him, what actually is desired:
-if, therefore, he says, we can find some one thing which is always and
-alone desired, that thing will necessarily be the only thing that is
-desirable, the only thing that is good as an end. In this argument the
-naturalistic fallacy is plainly involved. That fallacy, I explained,
-consists in the contention that good _means_ nothing but some simple or
-complex notion, that can be defined in terms of natural qualities. In
-Mill’s case, good is thus supposed to _mean_ simply what is desired;
-and what is desired is something which can thus be defined in natural
-terms. Mill tells us that we ought to desire something (an ethical
-proposition), because we actually do desire it; but if his contention
-that ‘I ought to desire’ means nothing but ‘I do desire’ were true,
-then he is only entitled to say, ‘We do desire so and so, because we
-do desire it’; and that is not an ethical proposition at all; it is
-a mere tautology. The whole object of Mill’s book is to help us to
-discover what we ought to do; but, in fact, by attempting to define the
-meaning of this ‘ought,’ he has completely debarred himself from ever
-fulfilling that object: he has confined himself to telling us what we
-do do.
-
-Mill’s first argument then is that, because good means desired,
-therefore the desired is good; but having thus arrived at an ethical
-conclusion, by denying that any ethical conclusion is possible, he
-still needs another argument to make his conclusion a basis for
-Hedonism. He has to prove that we always do desire pleasure or freedom
-from pain, and that we never desire anything else whatever. This second
-doctrine, which Professor Sidgwick has called Psychological Hedonism,
-I accordingly discussed. I pointed out how obviously untrue it is that
-we never desire anything but pleasure; and how there is not a shadow
-of ground for saying even that, whenever we desire anything, we always
-desire pleasure _as well as_ that thing. I attributed the obstinate
-belief in these untruths partly to a confusion between the cause of
-desire and the object of desire. It may, I said, be true that desire
-can never occur unless it be preceded by some _actual_ pleasure; but
-even if this is true, it obviously gives no ground for saying that the
-object of desire is always some _future_ pleasure. By the object of
-desire is meant that, of which the idea causes desire in us; it is some
-pleasure, which we anticipate, some pleasure which we have not got,
-which is the object of desire, whenever we do desire pleasure. And any
-actual pleasure, which may be excited by the idea of this anticipated
-pleasure, is obviously not the same pleasure as that anticipated
-pleasure, of which only the idea is actual. This actual pleasure is not
-what we want; what we want is always something which we have not got;
-and to say that pleasure always causes us to want is quite a different
-thing from saying that what we want is always pleasure.
-
-Finally, we saw, Mill admits all this. He insists that we do _actually_
-desire other things than pleasure, and yet he says we do _really_
-desire nothing else. He tries to explain away this contradiction,
-by confusing together two notions, which he has before carefully
-distinguished--the notions of means and of end. He now says that a
-means to an end is the same thing as a part of that end. To this last
-fallacy special attention should be given, as our ultimate decision
-with regard to Hedonism will largely turn upon it.
-
-
-=45.= It is this ultimate decision with regard to Hedonism at which
-we must now try to arrive. So far I have been only occupied with
-refuting Mill’s naturalistic arguments for Hedonism; but the doctrine
-that pleasure alone is desirable may still be true, although Mill’s
-fallacies cannot prove it so. This is the question which we have now
-to face. This proposition, ‘pleasure alone is good or desirable,’
-belongs undoubtedly to that class of propositions, to which Mill at
-first rightly pretended it belonged, the class of first principles,
-which are not amenable to direct proof. But in this case, as he also
-rightly says, ‘considerations may be presented capable of determining
-the intellect either to give or withhold its assent to the doctrine’
-(p. 7). It is such considerations that Professor Sidgwick presents,
-and such also that I shall try to present for the opposite view. This
-proposition that ‘pleasure alone is good as an end,’ the fundamental
-proposition of Ethical Hedonism, will then appear, in Professor
-Sidgwick’s language, as an object of intuition. I shall try to shew you
-why my intuition denies it, just as his intuition affirms it. It _may_
-always be true notwithstanding; neither intuition can _prove_ whether
-it is true or not; I am bound to be satisfied, if I can ‘present
-considerations capable of determining the intellect’ to reject it.
-
-Now it may be said that this is a very unsatisfactory state of things.
-It is indeed; but it is important to make a distinction between two
-different reasons, which may be given for calling it unsatisfactory.
-Is it unsatisfactory because our principle cannot be proved? or is
-it unsatisfactory merely because we do not agree with one another
-about it? I am inclined to think that the latter is the chief reason.
-For the mere fact that in certain cases proof is impossible does not
-usually give us the least uneasiness. For instance, nobody can prove
-that this is a chair beside me; yet I do not suppose that any one is
-much dissatisfied for that reason. We all agree that it is a chair,
-and that is enough to content us, although it is quite possible we may
-be wrong. A madman, of course, might come in and say that it is not a
-chair but an elephant. We could not prove that he was wrong, and the
-fact that he did not agree with us might then begin to make us uneasy.
-Much more, then, shall we be uneasy, if some one, whom we do not think
-to be mad, disagrees with us. We shall try to argue with him, and we
-shall probably be content if we lead him to agree with us, although we
-shall not have proved our point. We can only persuade him by shewing
-him that our view is consistent with something else which he holds to
-be true, whereas his original view is contradictory to it. But it will
-be impossible to prove that that something else, which we both agree
-to be true, is really so; we shall be satisfied to have settled the
-matter in dispute by means of it, merely because we are agreed on it.
-In short, our dissatisfaction in these cases is almost always of the
-type felt by the poor lunatic in the story. ‘I said the world was
-mad,’ says he, ‘and the world said that I was mad; and, confound it,
-they outvoted me.’ It is, I say, almost always such a disagreement, and
-not the impossibility of proof, which makes us call the state of things
-unsatisfactory. For, indeed, who can prove that proof itself is a
-warrant of truth? We are all agreed that the laws of logic are true and
-therefore we accept a result which is proved by their means; but such
-a proof is satisfactory to us only because we are all so fully agreed
-that it is a warrant of truth. And yet we cannot, by the nature of the
-case, prove that we are right in being so agreed.
-
-Accordingly, I do not think we need be much distressed by our admission
-that we cannot prove whether pleasure alone is good or not. We may be
-able to arrive at an agreement notwithstanding; and if so, I think
-it will be satisfactory. And yet I am not very sanguine about our
-prospects of such satisfaction. Ethics, and philosophy in general,
-have always been in a peculiarly unsatisfactory state. There has been
-no agreement about them, as there is about the existence of chairs and
-lights and benches. I should therefore be a fool if I hoped to settle
-one great point of controversy, now and once for all. It is extremely
-improbable I shall convince. It would be highly presumptuous even to
-hope that in the end, say two or three centuries hence, it will be
-agreed that pleasure is not the sole good. Philosophical questions
-are so difficult, the problems they raise are so complex, that no one
-can fairly expect, now, any more than in the past, to win more than a
-very limited assent. And yet I confess that the considerations which
-I am about to present appear to me to be absolutely convincing. I do
-think that they _ought_ to convince, if only I can put them well.
-In any case, I can but try. I _shall_ try now to put an end to that
-unsatisfactory state of things, of which I have been speaking. I shall
-try to produce an agreement that the fundamental principle of Hedonism
-is very like an absurdity, by shewing what it must mean, if it is
-clearly thought out, and how that clear meaning is in conflict with
-other beliefs, which will, I hope, not be so easily given up.
-
-
-=46.= Well, then, we now proceed to discuss Intuitionistic Hedonism.
-And the beginning of this discussion marks, it is to be observed, a
-turning-point in my ethical method. The point I have been labouring
-hitherto, the point that ‘good is indefinable,’ and that to deny this
-involves a fallacy, is a point capable of strict proof: for to deny it
-involves contradictions. But now we are coming to the question, for
-the sake of answering which Ethics exists, the question what things or
-qualities are good. Of any answer to _this_ question no direct proof
-is possible, and that, just because of our former answer, as to the
-meaning of good, direct proof _was_ possible. We are now confined to
-the hope of what Mill calls ‘indirect proof,’ the hope of determining
-one another’s intellect; and we are now so confined, just because, in
-the matter of the former question we are not so confined. Here, then,
-is an intuition to be submitted to our verdict--the intuition that
-‘pleasure alone is good as an end--good in and for itself.’
-
-
-=47.= Well, in this connection it seems first desirable to touch on
-another doctrine of Mill’s--another doctrine which, in the interest
-of Hedonism, Professor Sidgwick has done very wisely to reject.
-This is the doctrine of ‘difference of quality in pleasures.’ ‘If I
-am asked,’ says Mill[17], ‘what I mean by difference of quality in
-pleasures, or what makes one pleasure more valuable than another,
-merely as a pleasure, except its being greater in amount, there is but
-one possible answer. Of two pleasures, if there be one to which all
-or almost all who have experience of both give a decided preference,
-irrespective of any feeling of moral obligation to prefer it, that is
-the more desirable pleasure. If one of the two is, by those who are
-competently acquainted with both, placed so far above the other that
-they prefer it, even though knowing it to be attended with a greater
-amount of discontent, and would not resign it for any quantity of the
-other pleasure which their nature is capable of, we are justified in
-ascribing to the preferred enjoyment a superiority in quality, so far
-outweighing quantity as to render it, in comparison, of small account.’
-
- [17] p. 12.
-
-Now it is well known that Bentham rested his case for Hedonism on
-‘quantity of pleasure’ alone. It was his maxim, that ‘quantity
-of pleasure being equal, pushpin is as good as poetry.’ And Mill
-apparently considers Bentham to have proved that nevertheless poetry
-is better than pushpin; that poetry does produce a greater quantity of
-pleasure. But yet, says Mill, the Utilitarians ‘might have taken the
-other and, as it may be called, higher ground, with entire consistency’
-(p. 11). Now we see from this that Mill acknowledges ‘quality of
-pleasure’ to be another or different ground for estimating pleasures,
-than Bentham’s quantity; and moreover, by that question-begging
-‘higher,’ which he afterwards translates into ‘superior,’ he seems to
-betray an uncomfortable feeling, that, after all, if you take quantity
-of pleasure for your only standard, something may be wrong and you
-may deserve to be called a pig. And it may presently appear that you
-very likely would deserve that name. But, meanwhile, I only wish to
-shew that Mill’s admissions as to quality of pleasure are either
-inconsistent with his Hedonism, or else afford no other ground for it
-than would be given by mere quantity of pleasure.
-
-It will be seen that Mill’s test for one pleasure’s superiority
-in quality over another is the preference of most people who have
-experienced both. A pleasure so preferred, he holds, is more desirable.
-But then, as we have seen, he holds that ‘to think of an object as
-desirable and to think of it as pleasant are one and the same thing’
-(p. 58). He holds, therefore, that the preference of experts merely
-proves that one pleasure is pleasanter than another. But if that is
-so, how can he distinguish this standard from the standard of quantity
-of pleasure? Can one pleasure be pleasanter than another, except in
-the sense that it gives _more_ pleasure? ‘Pleasant’ must, if words are
-to have any meaning at all, denote some one quality common to all the
-things that are pleasant; and, if so, then one thing can only be more
-pleasant than another, according as it has more or less of this one
-quality. But, then, let us try the other alternative, and suppose that
-Mill does not seriously mean that this preference of experts merely
-proves one pleasure to be pleasanter than another. Well, in this case
-what does ‘preferred’ mean? It cannot mean ‘more desired,’ since, as
-we know, the degree of desire is always, according to Mill, in exact
-proportion to the degree of pleasantness. But, in that case, the basis
-of Mill’s Hedonism collapses, for he is admitting that one thing may
-be preferred over another, and thus proved more desirable, although
-it is not more desired. In this case Mill’s judgment of preference is
-just a judgment of that intuitional kind which I have been contending
-to be necessary to establish the hedonistic or any other principle. It
-is a direct judgment that one thing is more desirable, or better than
-another; a judgment utterly independent of all considerations as to
-whether one thing is more desired or pleasanter than another. This is
-to admit that good is good and indefinable.
-
-
-=48.= And note another point that is brought out by this discussion.
-Mill’s judgment of preference, so far from establishing the principle
-that pleasure alone is good, is obviously inconsistent with it. He
-admits that experts can judge whether one pleasure is more desirable
-than another, because pleasures differ in quality. But what does this
-mean? If one pleasure can differ from another in quality, that means,
-that _a_ pleasure is something complex, something composed, in fact, of
-pleasure _in addition to_ that which produces pleasure. For instance,
-Mill speaks of ‘sensual indulgences’ as ‘lower pleasures.’ But what
-is a sensual indulgence? It is surely a certain excitement of some
-sense _together with_ the pleasure caused by such excitement. Mill,
-therefore, in admitting that a sensual indulgence can be directly
-judged to be lower than another pleasure, in which the degree of
-pleasure involved may be the same, is admitting that other things may
-be good, or bad, quite independently of the pleasure which accompanies
-them. _A_ pleasure is, in fact, merely a misleading term which
-conceals the fact that what we are dealing with is not pleasure but
-something else, which may indeed necessarily produce pleasure, but is
-nevertheless quite distinct from it.
-
-Mill, therefore, in thinking that to estimate quality of pleasure
-is quite consistent with his hedonistic principle that pleasure and
-absence of pain alone are desirable as ends, has again committed the
-fallacy of confusing ends and means. For take even the most favourable
-supposition of his meaning; let us suppose that by a pleasure he does
-not mean, as his words imply, that which produces pleasure and the
-pleasure produced. Let us suppose him to mean that there are various
-kinds of pleasure, in the sense in which there are various kinds of
-colour--blue, red, green, etc. Even in this case, if we are to say that
-our end is colour alone, then, although it is impossible we should
-have colour without having some particular colour, yet the particular
-colour we must have, is only a _means_ to our having colour, if colour
-is really our end. And if colour is our only possible end, as Mill says
-pleasure is, then there can be no possible reason for preferring one
-colour to another, red, for instance, to blue, except that the one is
-more of a colour than the other. Yet the opposite of this is what Mill
-is attempting to hold with regard to pleasures.
-
-Accordingly a consideration of Mill’s view that some pleasures are
-superior to others _in quality_ brings out one point which may ‘help
-to determine the intellect’ with regard to the intuition ‘Pleasure is
-the only good.’ For it brings out the fact that if you say ‘pleasure,’
-you must mean ‘pleasure’: you must mean some one thing common to all
-different ‘pleasures,’ some one thing, which may exist in different
-degrees, but which cannot differ in _kind_. I have pointed out that,
-if you say, as Mill does, that quality of pleasure is to be taken
-into account, then you are no longer holding that pleasure _alone_ is
-good as an end, since you imply that something else, something which
-is _not_ present in all pleasures, is _also_ good as an end. The
-illustration I have given from colour expresses this point in its most
-acute form. It is plain that if you say ‘Colour alone is good as an
-end,’ then you can give no possible reason for preferring one colour
-to another. Your only standard of good and bad will then be ‘colour’;
-and since red and blue both conform equally to this, the only standard,
-you can have no other whereby to judge whether red is better than blue.
-It is true that you cannot have colour unless you also have one or
-all of the particular colours: they, therefore, if colour is the end,
-will all be good as means, but none of them can be better than another
-even as a means, far less can any one of them be regarded as an end in
-itself. Just so with pleasure: If we do really mean ‘Pleasure alone
-is good as an end,’ then we must agree with Bentham that ‘Quantity
-of pleasure being equal, pushpin is as good as poetry.’ To have thus
-dismissed Mill’s reference to quality of pleasure, is therefore to have
-made one step in the desired direction. The reader will now no longer
-be prevented from agreeing with me, by any idea that the hedonistic
-principle ‘Pleasure alone is good as an end’ is consistent with the
-view that one pleasure may be of a better quality than another. These
-two views, we have seen, are contradictory to one another. We must
-choose between them: and if we choose the latter, then we must give up
-the principle of Hedonism.
-
-
-=49.= But, as I said, Professor Sidgwick has seen that they are
-inconsistent. He has seen that he must choose between them. He has
-chosen. He has rejected the test by quality of pleasure, and has
-accepted the hedonistic principle. He still maintains that ‘Pleasure
-alone is good as an end.’ I propose therefore to discuss the
-considerations which he has offered in order to convince us. I shall
-hope by that discussion to remove some more of such prejudices and
-misunderstandings as might prevent agreement with me. If I can shew
-that some of the considerations which Professor Sidgwick urges are such
-as we need by no means agree with, and that others are actually rather
-in my favour than in his, we may have again advanced a few steps nearer
-to the unanimity which we desire.
-
-
-=50.= The passages in the _Methods of Ethics_ to which I shall now
-invite attention are to be found in I. IX. 4 and in III. XIV. 4-5.
-
-The first of these two passages runs as follows:
-
-“I think that if we consider carefully such permanent results as are
-commonly judged to be good, other than qualities of human beings, we
-can find nothing that, on reflection, appears to possess this quality
-of goodness out of relation to human existence, or at least to some
-consciousness or feeling.
-
-“For example, we commonly judge some inanimate objects, scenes, etc. to
-be good as possessing beauty, and others bad from ugliness: still no
-one would consider it rational to aim at the production of beauty in
-external nature, apart from any possible contemplation of it by human
-beings. In fact when beauty is maintained to be objective, it is not
-commonly meant that it exists as beauty out of relation to any mind
-whatsoever: but only that there is some standard of beauty valid for
-all minds.
-
-“It may, however, be said that beauty and other results commonly judged
-to be good, though we do not conceive them to exist out of relation to
-human beings (or at least minds of some kind), are yet so far separable
-as ends from the human beings on whom their existence depends, that
-their realization may conceivably come into competition with the
-perfection or happiness of these beings. Thus, though beautiful
-things cannot be thought worth producing except as possible objects
-of contemplation, still a man may devote himself to their production
-without any consideration of the persons who are to contemplate them.
-Similarly knowledge is a good which cannot exist except in minds; and
-yet one may be more interested in the development of knowledge than in
-its possession by any particular minds; and may take the former as an
-ultimate end without regarding the latter.
-
-“Still, as soon as the alternatives are clearly apprehended, it will, I
-think, be generally held that beauty, knowledge, and other ideal goods,
-as well as all external material things, are only reasonably to be
-sought by men in so far as they conduce (1) to Happiness or (2) to the
-Perfection or Excellence of human existence. I say ‘human,’ for though
-most utilitarians consider the pleasure (and freedom from pain) of the
-inferior animals to be included in the Happiness which they take as the
-right and proper end of conduct, no one seems to contend that we ought
-to aim at perfecting brutes except as a means to our ends, or at least
-as objects of scientific or æsthetic contemplation for us. Nor, again,
-can we include, as a practical end, the existence of beings above the
-human. We certainly apply the idea of Good to the Divine Existence,
-just as we do to His work, and indeed in a preeminent manner: and
-when it is said that, ‘we should do all things to the glory of God,’
-it may seem to be implied that the existence of God is made better by
-our glorifying Him. Still this inference when explicitly drawn appears
-somewhat impious; and theologians generally recoil from it, and
-refrain from using the notion of a possible addition to the Goodness of
-the Divine Existence as a ground of human duty. Nor can the influence
-of our actions on other extra-human intelligences besides the Divine be
-at present made matter of scientific discussion.
-
-“I shall therefore confidently lay down, that if there be any Good
-other than Happiness to be sought by man, as an ultimate practical
-end, it can only be the Goodness, Perfection, or Excellence of Human
-Existence. How far this notion includes more than Virtue, what its
-precise relation to Pleasure is, and to what method we shall be
-logically led if we accept it as fundamental, are questions which we
-shall more conveniently discuss after the detailed examination of these
-two other notions, Pleasure and Virtue, in which we shall be engaged in
-the two following Books.”
-
-It will be observed that in this passage Prof. Sidgwick tries to limit
-the range of objects among which the ultimate end may be found. He does
-not yet say what that end is, but he does exclude from it everything
-but certain characters of Human Existence. And the possible ends, which
-he thus excludes, do not again come up for consideration. They are put
-out of court once for all by this passage and by this passage only. Now
-is this exclusion justified?
-
-I cannot think it is. ‘No one,’ says Prof. Sidgwick, ‘would consider
-it rational to aim at the production of beauty in external nature,
-apart from any possible contemplation of it by human beings.’ Well, I
-may say at once, that I, for one, do consider this rational; and let
-us see if I cannot get any one to agree with me. Consider what this
-admission really means. It entitles us to put the following case. Let
-us imagine one world exceedingly beautiful. Imagine it as beautiful as
-you can; put into it whatever on this earth you most admire--mountains,
-rivers, the sea; trees, and sunsets, stars and moon. Imagine these all
-combined in the most exquisite proportions, so that no one thing jars
-against another, but each contributes to increase the beauty of the
-whole. And then imagine the ugliest world you can possibly conceive.
-Imagine it simply one heap of filth, containing everything that is
-most disgusting to us, for whatever reason, and the whole, as far
-as may be, without one redeeming feature. Such a pair of worlds we
-are entitled to compare: they fall within Prof. Sidgwick’s meaning,
-and the comparison is highly relevant to it. The only thing we are
-not entitled to imagine is that any human being ever has or ever, by
-any possibility, _can_, live in either, can ever see and enjoy the
-beauty of the one or hate the foulness of the other. Well, even so,
-supposing them quite apart from any possible contemplation by human
-beings; still, is it irrational to hold that it is better that the
-beautiful world should exist, than the one which is ugly? Would it not
-be well, in any case, to do what we could to produce it rather than
-the other? Certainly I cannot help thinking that it would; and I hope
-that some may agree with me in this extreme instance. The instance is
-extreme. It is highly improbable, not to say, impossible, we should
-ever have such a choice before us. In any actual choice we should have
-to consider the possible effects of our action upon conscious beings,
-and among these possible effects there are always some, I think, which
-ought to be preferred to the existence of mere beauty. But this only
-means that in our present state, in which but a very small portion of
-the good is attainable, the pursuit of beauty for its own sake must
-always be postponed to the pursuit of some greater good, which is
-equally attainable. But it is enough for my purpose, if it be admitted
-that, _supposing_ no greater good were at all attainable, then beauty
-must in itself be regarded as a greater good than ugliness; if it be
-admitted that, in that case, we should not be left without any reason
-for preferring one course of action to another, we should not be left
-without any duty whatever, but that it would then be our positive duty
-to make the world more beautiful, so far as we were able, since nothing
-better than beauty could then result from our efforts. If this be once
-admitted, if in any imaginable case you do admit that the existence
-of a more beautiful thing is better in itself than that of one more
-ugly, quite apart from its effects on any human feeling, then Prof.
-Sidgwick’s principle has broken down. Then we shall have to include
-in our ultimate end something beyond the limits of human existence. I
-admit, of course, that our beautiful world would be better still, if
-there were human beings in it to contemplate and enjoy its beauty. But
-that admission makes nothing against my point. If it be once admitted
-that the beautiful world _in itself_ is better than the ugly, then it
-follows, that however many beings may enjoy it, and however much better
-their enjoyment may be than it is itself, yet its mere existence adds
-_something_ to the goodness of the whole: it is not only a means to our
-end, but also itself a part thereof.
-
-
-=51.= In the second passage to which I referred above, Prof. Sidgwick
-returns from the discussion of Virtue and Pleasure, with which he has
-meanwhile been engaged, to consider what among the parts of Human
-Existence to which, as we saw, he has limited the ultimate end, can
-really be considered as such end. What I have just said, of course,
-appears to me to destroy the force of this part of his argument too.
-If, as I think, other things than any part of Human Existence can be
-ends-in-themselves, then Prof. Sidgwick cannot claim to have discovered
-the Summum Bonum, when he has merely determined what parts of Human
-Existence are in themselves desirable. But this error may be admitted
-to be utterly insignificant in comparison with that which we are now
-about to discuss.
-
-“It may be said,” says Prof. Sidgwick (III. XIV. §§ 4-5), “that we
-may ... regard cognition of Truth, contemplation of Beauty, Free or
-Virtuous action, as in some measure preferable alternatives to Pleasure
-or Happiness--even though we admit that Happiness must be included as
-a part of Ultimate Good.... I think, however, that this view ought not
-to commend itself to the sober judgment of reflective persons. In order
-to shew this, I must ask the reader to use the same twofold procedure
-that I before requested him to employ in considering the absolute and
-independent validity of common moral precepts. I appeal firstly to
-his intuitive judgment after due consideration of the question when
-fairly placed before it: and secondly to a comprehensive comparison
-of the ordinary judgments of mankind. As regards the first argument,
-to me at least it seems clear after reflection that these objective
-relations of the conscious subject, when distinguished from the
-consciousness accompanying and resulting from them, are not ultimately
-and intrinsically desirable; any more than material or other objects
-are, when considered apart from any relation to conscious existence.
-Admitting that we have actual experience of such preferences as have
-just been described, of which the ultimate object is something that
-is not merely consciousness: it still seems to me that when (to use
-Butler’s phrase) we ‘sit down in a cool hour,’ we can only justify to
-ourselves the importance that we attach to any of these objects by
-considering its conduciveness, in one way or another, to the happiness
-of sentient beings.
-
-“The second argument, that refers to the common sense of mankind,
-obviously cannot be made completely cogent; since, as above stated,
-several cultivated persons do habitually judge that knowledge, art,
-etc.,--not to speak of Virtue--are ends independently of the pleasure
-derived from them. But we may urge not only that all these elements
-of ‘ideal good’ are productive of pleasure in various ways; but also
-that they seem to obtain the commendation of Common Sense, roughly
-speaking, in proportion to the degree of this productiveness. This
-seems obviously true of Beauty; and will hardly be denied in respect
-of any kind of social ideal: it is paradoxical to maintain that any
-degree of Freedom, or any form of social order, would still be commonly
-regarded as desirable even if we were certain that it had no tendency
-to promote the general happiness. The case of Knowledge is rather more
-complex; but certainly Common Sense is most impressed with the value
-of knowledge, when its ‘fruitfulness’ has been demonstrated. It is,
-however, aware that experience has frequently shewn how knowledge, long
-fruitless, may become unexpectedly fruitful, and how light may be shed
-on one part of the field of knowledge from another apparently remote:
-and even if any particular branch of scientific pursuit could be shewn
-to be devoid of even this indirect utility, it would still deserve some
-respect on utilitarian grounds; both as furnishing to the inquirer
-the refined and innocent pleasures of curiosity, and because the
-intellectual disposition which it exhibits and sustains is likely on
-the whole to produce fruitful knowledge. Still in cases approximating
-to this last, Common Sense is somewhat disposed to complain of the
-mis-direction of valuable effort; so that the meed of honour commonly
-paid to Science seems to be graduated, though perhaps unconsciously,
-by a tolerably exact utilitarian scale. Certainly the moment the
-legitimacy of any branch of scientific inquiry is seriously disputed,
-as in the recent case of vivisection, the controversy on both sides is
-generally conducted on an avowedly utilitarian basis.
-
-“The case of Virtue requires special consideration: since the
-encouragement in each other of virtuous impulses and dispositions is a
-main aim of men’s ordinary moral discourse; so that even to raise the
-question whether this encouragement can go too far has a paradoxical
-air. Still, our experience includes rare and exceptional cases in which
-the concentration of effort on the cultivation of virtue has seemed to
-have effects adverse to general happiness, through being intensified
-to the point of moral fanaticism, and so involving a neglect of other
-conditions of happiness. If, then, we admit as actual or possible
-such ‘infelicific’ effects of the cultivation of Virtue, I think we
-shall also generally admit that, in the case supposed, conduciveness
-to general happiness should be the criterion for deciding how far the
-cultivation of Virtue should be carried.”
-
-There we have Prof. Sidgwick’s argument completed. We ought not, he
-thinks, to aim at knowing the Truth, or at contemplating Beauty,
-except in so far as such knowledge or such contemplation contributes
-to increase the pleasure or to diminish the pain of sentient beings.
-Pleasure alone is good for its own sake: knowledge of the Truth is good
-only as a means to pleasure.
-
-
-=52.= Let us consider what this means. What is pleasure? It is
-certainly something of which we may be conscious, and which, therefore,
-may be distinguished from our consciousness of it. What I wish first to
-ask is this: Can it really be said that we value pleasure, except in
-so far as we are conscious of it? Should we think that the attainment
-of pleasure, of which we never were and never could be conscious, was
-something to be aimed at for its own sake? It may be impossible that
-such pleasure should ever exist, that it should ever be thus divorced
-from consciousness; although there is certainly much reason to believe
-that it is not only possible but very common. But, even supposing
-that it were impossible, that is quite irrelevant. Our question is:
-Is it the pleasure, as distinct from the consciousness of it, that we
-set value on? Do we think the pleasure valuable in itself, or must
-we insist that, if we are to think the pleasure good, we must have
-consciousness of it too?
-
-This consideration is very well put by Socrates in Plato’s dialogue
-_Philebus_ (21 A).
-
-‘Would _you_ accept, Protarchus,’ says Socrates, ‘to live your whole
-life in the enjoyment of the greatest pleasures?’ ‘Of course I would,’
-says Protarchus.
-
-_Socrates._ Then would you think you needed anything else besides, if
-you possessed this one blessing in completeness?
-
-_Protarchus._ Certainly not.
-
-_Socrates._ Consider what you are saying. You would not need to be wise
-and intelligent and reasonable, nor anything like this? Would you not
-even care to keep your sight?
-
-_Protarchus._ Why should I? I suppose I should have all I want, if I
-was pleased.
-
-_Socrates._ Well, then, supposing you lived so, you would enjoy always
-throughout your life the greatest pleasure?
-
-_Protarchus._ Of course.
-
-_Socrates._ But, on the other hand, inasmuch as you would _not_ possess
-intelligence and memory and knowledge and true opinion, you would, in
-the first place, necessarily be without the knowledge whether you were
-pleased or not. For you would be devoid of any kind of wisdom. You
-admit this?
-
-_Protarchus._ I do. The consequence is absolutely necessary.
-
-_Socrates._ Well, then, besides this, not having memory, you must
-also be unable to remember even that you ever were pleased; of the
-pleasure which falls upon you at the moment not the least vestige must
-afterwards remain. And again, not having true opinion, you cannot think
-that you are pleased when you are; and, being bereft of your reasoning
-faculties, you cannot even have the power to reckon that you will be
-pleased in future. You must live the life of an oyster, or of some
-other of those living creatures, whose home is the seas and whose
-souls are concealed in shelly bodies. Is all this so, or can we think
-otherwise than this?
-
-_Protarchus._ How can we?
-
-_Socrates._ Well, then, can we think such a life desirable?
-
-_Protarchus._ Socrates, your reasoning has left me utterly dumb.’
-
-Socrates, we see, persuades Protarchus that Hedonism is absurd. If
-we are really going to maintain that pleasure alone is good as an
-end, we must maintain that it is good, whether we are conscious of
-it or not. We must declare it reasonable to take as our ideal (an
-unattainable ideal it may be) that we should be as happy as possible,
-even on condition that we never know and never can know that we are
-happy. We must be willing to sell in exchange for the mere happiness
-every vestige of knowledge, both in ourselves and in others, both
-of happiness itself and of every other thing. Can we really still
-disagree? Can any one still declare it obvious that this is reasonable?
-That pleasure alone is good as an end?
-
-The case, it is plain, is just like that of the colours[18], only,
-as yet, not nearly so strong. It is far more possible that we should
-some day be able to produce the intensest pleasure, without any
-consciousness that it is there, than that we should be able to produce
-mere colour, without its being any particular colour. Pleasure and
-consciousness can be far more easily distinguished from one another,
-than colour from the particular colours. And yet even if this were
-not so, we should be bound to distinguish them if we really wished to
-declare pleasure alone to be our ultimate end. Even if consciousness
-were an inseparable accompaniment of pleasure, a _sine quâ non_ of
-its existence, yet, if pleasure is the only end, we are bound to call
-consciousness a mere _means_ to it, in any intelligible sense that can
-be given to the word _means_. And if, on the other hand, as I hope is
-now plain, the pleasure would be comparatively valueless without the
-consciousness, then we are bound to say that pleasure is _not_ the only
-end, that some consciousness at least must be included with it as a
-veritable part of the end.
-
- [18] § 48 _sup._
-
-For our question now is solely what the end is: it is quite another
-question how far that end may be attainable _by itself_, or must
-involve the simultaneous attainment of other things. It may well be
-that the _practical_ conclusions at which Utilitarians do arrive,
-and even those at which they ought logically to arrive, are not far
-from the truth. But in so far as their _reason_ for holding these
-conclusions to be true is that ‘Pleasure alone is good as an end,’ they
-are _absolutely_ wrong: and it is with _reasons_ that we are chiefly
-concerned in any scientific Ethics.
-
-
-=53.= It seems, then, clear that Hedonism is in error, so far as it
-maintains that pleasure alone, and not the consciousness of pleasure,
-is the sole good. And this error seems largely due to the fallacy which
-I pointed out above in Mill--the fallacy of confusing means and end.
-It is falsely supposed that, since pleasure must always be accompanied
-by consciousness (which is, itself, extremely doubtful), therefore
-it is indifferent whether we say that pleasure or the consciousness
-of pleasure is the sole good. _Practically_, of course, it would be
-indifferent at which we aimed, if it were certain that we could not
-get the one without the other; but where the question is of what is
-good in itself--where we ask: For the sake of what is it desirable to
-get that which we aim at?--the distinction is by no means unimportant.
-Here we are placed before an exclusive alternative. _Either_ pleasure
-by itself (even though we can’t get it) would be all that is desirable,
-_or_ a consciousness of it would be more desirable still. Both these
-propositions cannot be true; and I think it is plain that the latter is
-true; whence it follows that pleasure is _not_ the sole good.
-
-Still it may be said that, even if consciousness of pleasure, and
-not pleasure alone, is the sole good, this conclusion is not very
-damaging to Hedonism. It may be said that Hedonists have always meant
-by pleasure the consciousness of pleasure, though they have not been at
-pains to say so; and this, I think is, in the main, true. To correct
-their formula in this respect could, therefore, only be a matter of
-practical importance, if it is possible to produce pleasure without
-producing consciousness of it. But even this importance, which I think
-our conclusion so far really has, is, I admit, comparatively slight.
-What I wish to maintain is that even consciousness of pleasure is
-not the sole good: that, indeed, it is absurd so to regard it. And
-the chief importance of what has been said so far lies in the fact
-that the same method, which shews that consciousness of pleasure is
-more valuable than pleasure, seems also to shew that consciousness of
-pleasure is itself far less valuable than other things. The supposition
-that consciousness of pleasure is the sole good is due to a neglect of
-the same distinctions which have encouraged the careless assertion that
-pleasure is the sole good.
-
-The method which I employed in order to shew that pleasure itself
-was not the sole good, was that of considering what value we should
-attach to it, if it existed in absolute isolation, stripped of all its
-usual accompaniments. And this is, in fact, the only method that can
-be safely used, when we wish to discover what degree of value a thing
-has in itself. The necessity of employing this method will be best
-exhibited by a discussion of the arguments used by Prof. Sidgwick in
-the passage last quoted, and by an exposure of the manner in which they
-are calculated to mislead.
-
-
-=54.= With regard to the second of them, it only maintains that other
-things, which might be supposed to share with pleasure the attribute
-of goodness, ‘seem to obtain the commendation of Common Sense, roughly
-speaking, in proportion to the degree’ of their productiveness of
-pleasure. Whether even this rough proportion holds between the
-commendation of Common Sense and the felicific effects of that which it
-commends is a question extremely difficult to determine; and we need
-not enter into it here. For, even assuming it to be true, and assuming
-the judgments of Common Sense to be on the whole correct, what would it
-shew? It would shew, certainly, that pleasure was a good _criterion_
-of right action--that the same conduct which produced most pleasure
-would also produce most good on the whole. But this would by no means
-entitle us to the conclusion that the greatest pleasure _constituted_
-what was best on the whole: it would still leave open the alternative
-that the greatest quantity of pleasure was as a matter of fact, _under
-actual conditions_, generally accompanied by the greatest quantity
-of _other goods_, and that it therefore was _not_ the sole good. It
-might indeed seem to be a strange coincidence that these two things
-should always, even in this world, be in proportion to one another.
-But the strangeness of this coincidence will certainly not entitle us
-to argue directly that it does not exist--that it is an illusion, due
-to the fact that pleasure is really the sole good. The coincidence may
-be susceptible of other explanations; and it would even be our duty
-to accept it unexplained, if direct intuition seemed to declare that
-pleasure was not the sole good. Moreover it must be remembered that
-the need for assuming such a coincidence rests in any case upon the
-extremely doubtful proposition that felicific effects _are_ roughly in
-proportion to the approval of Common Sense. And it should be observed
-that, though Prof. Sidgwick maintains this to be the case, his detailed
-illustrations only tend to shew the very different proposition that a
-thing is not held to be good, unless it gives a balance of pleasure;
-not that the degree of commendation is in proportion to the quantity of
-pleasure.
-
-
-=55.= The decision, then, must rest upon Prof. Sidgwick’s first
-argument--‘the appeal’ to our ‘intuitive judgment after due
-consideration of the question when fairly placed before it.’ And here
-it seems to me plain that Prof. Sidgwick has failed, in two essential
-respects, to place the question fairly before either himself or his
-reader.
-
-(1) What he has to shew is, as he says himself, not merely that
-‘Happiness must be included as a part of Ultimate Good.’ This view,
-he says, ‘ought not to commend itself to the sober judgment of
-reflective persons.’ And why? Because ‘these objective relations,
-when distinguished from the consciousness accompanying and resulting
-from them, are not ultimately and intrinsically desirable.’ Now, this
-reason, which is offered as shewing that to consider Happiness as
-a mere part of Ultimate Good does not meet the facts of intuition,
-is, on the contrary, only sufficient to shew that it _is_ a part of
-Ultimate Good. For from the fact that no value resides in one part
-of a whole, considered by itself, we cannot infer that all the value
-belonging to the whole does reside in the other part, considered by
-itself. Even if we admit that there is much value in the enjoyment of
-Beauty, and none in the mere contemplation of it, which is one of the
-constituents of that complex fact, it does not follow that all the
-value belongs to the other constituent, namely, the pleasure which we
-take in contemplating it. It is quite possible that this constituent
-also has no value in itself; that the value belongs to the whole state,
-and to that only: so that _both_ the pleasure _and_ the contemplation
-are mere parts of the good, and both of them equally necessary parts.
-In short, Prof. Sidgwick’s argument here depends upon the neglect of
-that principle, which I tried to explain in my first chapter and which
-I said I should call the principle of ‘organic relations[19].’ The
-argument is calculated to mislead, because it supposes that, if we see
-a whole state to be valuable, and also see that one element of that
-state has no value _by itself_, then the other element, _by itself_,
-must have all the value which belongs to the whole state. The fact
-is, on the contrary, that, since the whole may be organic, the other
-element need have no value whatever, and that even if it have some, the
-value of the whole may be very much greater. For this reason, as well
-as to avoid confusion between means and end, it is absolutely essential
-to consider each distinguishable quality, _in isolation_, in order to
-decide what value it possesses. Prof. Sidgwick, on the other hand,
-applies this method of isolation only to _one_ element in the wholes
-he is considering. He does not ask the question: If consciousness
-of pleasure existed absolutely by itself, would a sober judgment be
-able to attribute much value to it? It is, in fact, always misleading
-to take a whole, that is valuable (or the reverse), and then to ask
-simply: To which of its constituents does this whole owe its value or
-its vileness? It may well be that it owes it to _none_; and, if one of
-them does appear to have some value in itself, we shall be led into the
-grave error of supposing that all the value of the whole belongs to it
-alone. It seems to me that this error has commonly been committed with
-regard to pleasure. Pleasure does seem to be a necessary constituent
-of most valuable wholes; and, since the other constituents, into which
-we may analyse them, may easily seem not to have any value, it is
-natural to suppose that all the value belongs to pleasure. That this
-natural supposition does not follow from the premises is certain; and
-that it is, on the contrary, ridiculously far from the truth appears
-evident to my ‘reflective judgment.’ If we apply either to pleasure or
-to consciousness of pleasure the only safe method, that of isolation,
-and ask ourselves: Could we accept, as a very good thing, that mere
-consciousness of pleasure, and absolutely nothing else, should exist,
-even in the greatest quantities? I think we can have no doubt about
-answering: No. Far less can we accept this as the _sole_ good. Even
-if we accept Prof. Sidgwick’s implication (which yet appears to me
-extremely doubtful) that consciousness of pleasure has a greater
-value by itself than Contemplation of Beauty, it seems to me that a
-pleasurable Contemplation of Beauty has certainly an immeasurably
-greater value than mere Consciousness of Pleasure. In favour of this
-conclusion I can appeal with confidence to the ‘sober judgment of
-reflective persons.’
-
- [19] pp. 27-30, 36.
-
-
-=56.= (2) That the value of a pleasurable whole does not belong solely
-to the pleasure which it contains, may, I think, be made still plainer
-by consideration of another point in which Prof. Sidgwick’s argument
-is defective. Prof. Sidgwick maintains, as we saw, the doubtful
-proposition, that the _conduciveness_ to pleasure of a thing is in
-rough proportion to its commendation by Common Sense. But he does
-not maintain, what would be undoubtedly false, that the pleasantness
-of every state is in proportion to the commendation of that state.
-In other words, it is only when you take into account _the whole
-consequences of any state_, that he is able to maintain the coincidence
-of quantity of pleasure with the objects approved by Common Sense.
-If we consider each state by itself, and ask what is the judgment of
-Common Sense as to its goodness _as an end_, quite apart from its
-goodness as a means, there can be no doubt that Common Sense holds many
-much less pleasant states to be better than many far more pleasant:
-that it holds, with Mill, that there are higher pleasures, which are
-more valuable, though less pleasant, than those which are lower. Prof.
-Sidgwick might, of course, maintain that in this Common Sense is merely
-confusing means and ends: that what it holds to be better as an end,
-is in reality only better as a means. But I think his argument is
-defective in that he does not seem to see sufficiently plainly that,
-as far as intuitions of goodness _as an end_ are concerned, he is
-running grossly counter to Common Sense; that he does not emphasise
-sufficiently the distinction between _immediate_ pleasantness and
-_conduciveness_ to pleasure. In order to place fairly before us
-the question what is good as an end we must take states that are
-immediately pleasant and ask if the more pleasant are always also the
-better; and whether, if some that are less pleasant appear to be so, it
-is only because we think they are likely to increase the number of the
-more pleasant. That Common Sense would deny both these suppositions,
-and rightly so, appears to me indubitable. It is commonly held that
-certain of what would be called the lowest forms of sexual enjoyment,
-for instance, are positively bad, although it is by no means clear that
-they are not the most pleasant states we ever experience. Common Sense
-would certainly not think it a sufficient justification for the pursuit
-of what Prof. Sidgwick calls the ‘refined pleasures’ here and now, that
-they are the best means to the future attainment of a heaven, in which
-there would be no more refined pleasures--no contemplation of beauty,
-no personal affections--but in which the greatest possible pleasure
-would be obtained by a perpetual indulgence in bestiality. Yet Prof.
-Sidgwick would be bound to hold that, if the greatest possible pleasure
-could be obtained in this way, and if it were attainable, such a state
-of things would be a heaven indeed, and that all human endeavours
-should be devoted to its realisation. I venture to think that this view
-is as false as it is paradoxical.
-
-
-=57.= It seems to me, then, that if we place fairly before us the
-question: Is consciousness of pleasure the sole good? the answer must
-be: No. And with this the last defence of Hedonism has been broken
-down. In order to put the question fairly we must isolate consciousness
-of pleasure. We must ask: Suppose we were conscious of pleasure only,
-and of nothing else, not even that we _were_ conscious, would that
-state of things, however great the quantity, be very desirable? No one,
-I think, can suppose it so. On the other hand, it seems quite plain,
-that we do regard as very desirable, many complicated states of mind
-in which the consciousness of pleasure is combined with consciousness
-of other things--states which we call ‘enjoyment of’ so and so. If
-this is correct, then it follows that consciousness of pleasure is not
-the sole good, and that many other states, in which it is included
-as a part, are much better than it. Once we recognise the principle
-of organic unities, any objection to this conclusion, founded on the
-supposed fact that the other elements of such states have no value in
-themselves, must disappear. And I do not know that I need say any more
-in refutation of Hedonism.
-
-
-=58.= It only remains to say something of the two forms in which a
-hedonistic doctrine is commonly held--Egoism and Utilitarianism.
-
-Egoism, as a form of Hedonism, is the doctrine which holds that we
-ought each of us to pursue our own greatest happiness as our ultimate
-end. The doctrine will, of course, admit that sometimes the best means
-to this end will be to give pleasure to others; we shall, for instance,
-by so doing, procure for ourselves the pleasures of sympathy, of
-freedom from interference, and of self-esteem; and these pleasures,
-which we may procure by sometimes aiming directly at the happiness of
-other persons, may be greater than any we could otherwise get. Egoism
-in this sense must therefore be carefully distinguished from Egoism
-in another sense, the sense in which Altruism is its proper opposite.
-Egoism, as commonly opposed to Altruism, is apt to denote merely
-selfishness. In this sense, a man is an egoist, if all his actions
-are actually directed towards gaining pleasure for himself; whether
-he holds that he ought to act so, because he will thereby obtain for
-himself the greatest possible happiness on the whole, or not. Egoism
-may accordingly be used to denote the theory that we should always aim
-at getting pleasure for ourselves, because that is the best _means_
-to the ultimate end, whether the ultimate end be our own greatest
-pleasure or not. Altruism, on the other hand, may denote the theory
-that we ought always to aim at other people’s happiness, on the ground
-that this is the best _means_ of securing our own as well as theirs.
-Accordingly an Egoist, in the sense in which I am now going to talk of
-Egoism, an Egoist, who holds that his own greatest happiness is the
-ultimate end, may at the same time be an Altruist: he may hold that
-he ought to ‘love his neighbour,’ as the best means to being happy
-himself. And conversely an Egoist, in the other sense, may at the same
-time be a Utilitarian. He may hold that he ought always to direct his
-efforts towards getting pleasure for himself on the ground that he is
-thereby most likely to increase the general sum of happiness.
-
-
-=59.= I shall say more later about this second kind of Egoism, this
-anti-altruistic Egoism, this Egoism as a doctrine of means. What I am
-now concerned with is that utterly distinct kind of Egoism, which holds
-that each man ought rationally to hold: My own greatest happiness is
-the only good thing there is; my actions can only be good as means, in
-so far as they help to win me this. This is a doctrine which is not
-much held by writers now-a-days. It is a doctrine that was largely
-held by English Hedonists in the 17th and 18th centuries: it is, for
-example, at the bottom of Hobbes’ Ethics. But even the English school
-appear to have made one step forward in the present century: they are
-most of them now-a-days Utilitarians. They do recognise that if my own
-happiness is good, it would be strange that other people’s happiness
-should not be good too.
-
-In order fully to expose the absurdity of this kind of Egoism, it is
-necessary to examine certain confusions upon which its plausibility
-depends.
-
-The chief of these is the confusion involved in the conception of
-‘my own good’ as distinguished from ‘the good of others.’ This is a
-conception which we all use every day; it is one of the first to which
-the plain man is apt to appeal in discussing any question of Ethics:
-and Egoism is commonly advocated chiefly because its meaning is not
-clearly perceived. It is plain, indeed, that the name ‘Egoism’ more
-properly applies to the theory that ‘my own good’ is the sole good,
-than that my own pleasure is so. A man may quite well be an Egoist,
-even if he be not a Hedonist. The conception which is, perhaps, most
-closely associated with Egoism is that denoted by the words ‘my own
-interest.’ The Egoist is the man who holds that a tendency to promote
-his own interest is the sole possible, and sufficient, justification
-of all his actions. But this conception of ‘my own interest’ plainly
-includes, in general, very much more than my own pleasure. It is,
-indeed, only because and in so far as ‘my own interest’ has been
-thought to consist solely in my own pleasure, that Egoists have been
-led to hold that my own pleasure is the sole good. Their course of
-reasoning is as follows: The only thing I ought to secure is my
-own interest; but my own interest consists in my greatest possible
-pleasure; and therefore the only thing I ought to pursue is my own
-pleasure. That it is very natural, _on reflection_, thus to identify
-my own pleasure with my own interest; and that it has been generally
-done by modern _moralists_, may be admitted. But, when Prof. Sidgwick
-points this out (III. XIV. § 5, Div. III.), he should have also pointed
-out that this identification has by no means been made in ordinary
-thought. When the plain man says ‘my own interest,’ he does _not_ mean
-‘my own pleasure’--he does not commonly even include this--he means
-my own advancement, my own reputation, the getting of a better income
-etc., etc. That Prof. Sidgwick should not have noticed this, and that
-he should give the reason he gives for the fact that the ancient
-_moralists_ did not identify ‘my own interest’ with my own pleasure,
-seems to be due to his having failed to notice that very confusion
-in the conception of ‘my own good’ which I am now to point out. That
-confusion has, perhaps, been more clearly perceived by Plato than
-by any other moralist, and to point it out suffices to refute Prof.
-Sidgwick’s own view that Egoism is rational.
-
-What, then, is meant by ‘my own good’? In what sense can a thing be
-good _for me_? It is obvious, if we reflect, that the only thing which
-can belong to me, which can be _mine_, is something which is good, and
-not the fact that it is good. When, therefore, I talk of anything I get
-as ‘my own good,’ I must mean either that the thing I get is good, or
-that my possessing it is good. In both cases it is only the thing or
-the possession of it which is _mine_, and not _the goodness_ of that
-thing or that possession. There is no longer any meaning in attaching
-the ‘my’ to our predicate, and saying: The possession of this _by me_
-is _my_ good. Even if we interpret this by ‘My possession of this is
-what _I_ think good,’ the same still holds: for _what_ I think is that
-my possession of it is good _simply_; and, if I think rightly, then
-the truth is that my possession of it _is_ good simply--not, in any
-sense, _my_ good; and, if I think wrongly, it is not good at all. In
-short, when I talk of a thing as ‘my own good’ all that I can mean
-is that something which will be exclusively mine, as my own pleasure
-is mine (whatever be the various senses of this relation denoted by
-‘possession’), is also _good absolutely_; or rather that my possession
-of it is _good absolutely_. The _good_ of it can in no possible sense
-be ‘private’ or belong to me; any more than a thing can _exist_
-privately or _for_ one person only. The only reason I can have for
-aiming at ‘my own good,’ is that it is _good absolutely_ that what I
-so call should belong to me--_good absolutely_ that I should _have_
-something, which, if I have it, others cannot have. But if it is _good
-absolutely_ that I should have it, then everyone else has as much
-reason for aiming at _my_ having it, as I have myself. If, therefore,
-it is true of _any_ single man’s ‘interest’ or ‘happiness’ that it
-ought to be his sole ultimate end, this can only mean that _that_ man’s
-‘interest’ or ‘happiness’ is _the sole good, the_ Universal Good,
-and the only thing that anybody ought to aim at. What Egoism holds,
-therefore, is that _each_ man’s happiness is the sole good--that a
-number of different things are _each_ of them the only good thing there
-is--an absolute contradiction! No more complete and thorough refutation
-of any theory could be desired.
-
-
-=60.= Yet Prof. Sidgwick holds that Egoism is rational; and it will be
-useful briefly to consider the reasons which he gives for this absurd
-conclusion. ‘The Egoist,’ he says (last Chap. § 1), ‘may avoid the
-proof of Utilitarianism by declining to affirm,’ either ‘implicitly or
-explicitly, that his own greatest happiness is not merely the ultimate
-rational end for himself, but a part of Universal Good.’ And in the
-passage to which he here refers us, as having there ‘seen’ this,
-he says: ‘It cannot be proved that the difference between his own
-happiness and another’s happiness is not _for him_ all-important’ (IV.
-ii. § 1). What does Prof. Sidgwick mean by these phrases ‘the ultimate
-rational end for himself,’ and ‘_for him_ all-important’? He does not
-attempt to define them; and it is largely the use of such undefined
-phrases which causes absurdities to be committed in philosophy.
-
-Is there any sense in which a thing can be an ultimate rational end for
-one person and not for another? By ‘ultimate’ must be meant at least
-that the end is good-in-itself--good in our undefinable sense; and
-by ‘rational,’ at least, that it is truly good. That a thing should
-be an ultimate rational end means, then, that it is truly good in
-itself; and that it is truly good in itself means that it is a part of
-Universal Good. Can we assign any meaning to that qualification ‘for
-himself,’ which will make it cease to be a part of Universal Good?
-The thing is impossible: for the Egoist’s happiness must _either_ be
-good in itself, and so a part of Universal Good, _or else_ it cannot
-be good in itself at all: there is no escaping this dilemma. And if
-it is not good at all, what reason can he have for aiming at it? how
-can it be a rational end for him? That qualification ‘for himself’ has
-no meaning unless it implies ‘_not_ for others’; and if it implies
-‘not for others,’ then it cannot be a rational end for him, since
-it cannot be truly good in itself: the phrase ‘an ultimate rational
-end for himself’ is a contradiction in terms. By saying that a thing
-is an end for one particular person, or good for him, can only be
-meant one of four things. Either (1) it may be meant that the end
-in question is something which will belong exclusively to him; but
-in that case, if it is to be rational for him to aim at it, that he
-should exclusively possess it must be a part of Universal Good. Or
-(2) it may be meant that it is the only thing at which he ought to
-aim; but this can only be, because, by so doing, he will do the most
-he can towards realising Universal Good: and this, in our case, will
-only give Egoism as a doctrine of _means_. Or (3) it may be meant that
-the thing is what he desires or thinks good; and then, if he thinks
-wrongly, it is not a rational end at all, and, if he thinks rightly,
-it is a part of Universal Good. Or (4) it may be meant that it is
-peculiarly appropriate that a thing which will belong exclusively to
-him should also by him be approved or aimed at; but, in this case,
-both that it should belong to him and that he should aim at it must be
-parts of Universal Good: by saying that a certain relation between two
-things is fitting or appropriate, we can only mean that the existence
-of that relation is absolutely good in itself (unless it be so as a
-means, which gives case (2)). By no possible meaning, then, that can
-be given to the phrase that his own happiness is the ultimate rational
-end for himself can the Egoist escape the implication that his own
-happiness is absolutely good; and by saying that it is _the_ ultimate
-rational end, he must mean that it is the only good thing--the whole of
-Universal Good: and, if he further maintains, that each man’s happiness
-is the ultimate rational end for _him_, we have the fundamental
-contradiction of Egoism--that an immense number of different things
-are, _each_ of them, _the sole good_.--And it is easy to see that the
-same considerations apply to the phrase that ‘the difference between
-his own happiness and another’s is _for him_ all-important.’ This can
-only mean either (1) that his own happiness is the only end which
-will affect him, or (2) that the only important thing for him (as a
-means) is to look to his own happiness, or (3) that it is only his
-own happiness which he cares about, or (4) that it is good that each
-man’s happiness should be the only concern of that man. And none of
-these propositions, true as they may be, have the smallest tendency to
-shew that if his own happiness is desirable at all, it is not a part
-of Universal Good. Either his own happiness is a good thing or it is
-not; and, in whatever sense it may be all-important for him, it must
-be true that, if it is not good, he is not justified in pursuing it,
-and that, if it is good, everyone else has an equal reason to pursue
-it, so far as they are able and so far as it does not exclude their
-attainment of other more valuable parts of Universal Good. In short
-it is plain that the addition of ‘for him’ ‘for me’ to such words as
-‘ultimate rational end,’ ‘good,’ ‘important’ can introduce nothing but
-confusion. The only possible reason that can justify any action is that
-by it the greatest possible amount of what is good absolutely should be
-realised. And if anyone says that the attainment of his own happiness
-justifies his actions, he must mean that this is the greatest possible
-amount of Universal Good which he can realise. And this again can only
-be true either because _he_ has no power to realise more, in which
-case he only holds Egoism as a doctrine of means; or else because his
-own happiness is the greatest amount of Universal Good which can be
-realised at all, in which case we have Egoism proper, and the flagrant
-contradiction that every person’s happiness is singly the greatest
-amount of Universal Good which can be realised at all.
-
-
-=61.= It should be observed that, since this is so, ‘the relation of
-Rational Egoism to Rational Benevolence,’ which Prof. Sidgwick regards
-‘as the profoundest problem of Ethics’ (III. XIII. § 5, _n._ 1),
-appears in quite a different light to that in which he presents it.
-‘Even if a man,’ he says, ‘admits the self-evidence of the principle
-of Rational Benevolence, he may still hold that his own happiness is
-an end which it is irrational for him to sacrifice to any other; and
-that therefore a harmony between the maxim of Prudence and the maxim of
-Rational Benevolence must be somehow demonstrated, if morality is to
-be made completely rational. This latter view is that which I myself
-hold’ (last Chap. § 1). Prof. Sidgwick then goes on to shew ‘that
-the inseparable connection between Utilitarian Duty and the greatest
-happiness of the individual who conforms to it cannot be satisfactorily
-demonstrated on empirical grounds’ (Ib. § 3). And the final paragraph
-of his book tells us that, since ‘the reconciliation of duty and
-self-interest is to be regarded as a hypothesis logically necessary
-to avoid a fundamental _contradiction_ in one chief department of
-our thought, it remains to ask how far this necessity constitutes a
-sufficient reason for accepting this hypothesis[20]’ (Ib. § 5). To
-‘assume the existence of such a Being, as God, by the _consensus_ of
-theologians, is conceived to be’ would, he has already argued, ensure
-the required reconciliation; since the Divine Sanctions of such a God
-‘would, of course, suffice to make it always every one’s interest to
-promote universal happiness to the best of his knowledge’ (Ib. § 5).
-
- [20] The italics are mine.
-
-Now what is this ‘reconciliation of duty and self-interest,’ which
-Divine Sanctions could ensure? It would consist in the mere fact that
-the same conduct which produced the greatest possible happiness of
-the greatest number would always also produce the greatest possible
-happiness of the agent. If this were the case (and our empirical
-knowledge shews that it is not the case in this world), ‘morality’
-would, Prof. Sidgwick thinks, be ‘completely rational’: we should avoid
-‘an ultimate and fundamental contradiction in our apparent intuitions
-of what is Reasonable in conduct.’ That is to say, we should avoid
-the necessity of thinking that it is as manifest an obligation to
-secure our own greatest Happiness (maxim of Prudence), as to secure
-the greatest Happiness on the whole (maxim of Benevolence). But it
-is perfectly obvious we should not. Prof. Sidgwick here commits the
-characteristic fallacy of Empiricism--the fallacy of thinking that
-an alteration in _facts_ could make a contradiction cease to be a
-contradiction. That a single man’s happiness should be _the sole
-good_, and that also everybody’s happiness should be _the sole good_,
-is a contradiction which cannot be solved by the assumption that the
-same conduct will secure both: it would be equally contradictory,
-however certain we were that that assumption was justified. Prof.
-Sidgwick strains at a gnat and swallows a camel. He thinks the Divine
-Omnipotence must be called into play to secure that what gives other
-people pleasure should also give it to him--that only so can Ethics
-be made rational; while he overlooks the fact that even this exercise
-of Divine Omnipotence would leave in Ethics a contradiction, in
-comparison with which his difficulty is a trifle--a contradiction,
-which would reduce all Ethics to mere nonsense, and before which the
-Divine Omnipotence must be powerless to all eternity. That _each_
-man’s happiness should be the _sole good_, which we have seen to be
-the principle of Egoism, is in itself a contradiction: and that it
-should also be true that the Happiness of all is the _sole good_,
-which is the principle of Universalistic Hedonism, would introduce
-another contradiction. And that these propositions should all be true
-might well be called ‘the profoundest problem in Ethics’: it would be
-a problem necessarily insoluble. But they _cannot_ all be true, and
-there is no reason, but confusion, for the supposition that they are.
-Prof. Sidgwick confuses this contradiction with the mere fact (in which
-there is no contradiction) that our own greatest happiness and that
-of all do not seem always attainable by the same means. This fact, if
-Happiness were the sole good, would indeed be of some importance; and,
-on any view, similar facts are of importance. But they are nothing but
-instances of the one important fact that in this world the quantity of
-good which is attainable is ridiculously small compared to that which
-is imaginable. That I cannot get the most possible pleasure for myself,
-if I produce the most possible pleasure on the whole, is no more _the_
-profoundest problem of Ethics, than that in any case I cannot get as
-much pleasure altogether as would be desirable. It only states that,
-if we get as much good as possible in one place, we may get less on
-the whole, because the quantity of attainable good is limited. To say
-that I have to choose between my own good and that of _all_ is a false
-antithesis: the only rational question is how to choose between my own
-and that of _others_, and the principle on which this must be answered
-is exactly the same as that on which I must choose whether to give
-pleasure to this other person or to that.
-
-
-=62.= It is plain, then, that the doctrine of Egoism is
-self-contradictory; and that one reason why this is not perceived,
-is a confusion with regard to the meaning of the phrase ‘my own
-good.’ And it may be observed that this confusion and the neglect
-of this contradiction are necessarily involved in the transition
-from Naturalistic Hedonism, as ordinarily held, to Utilitarianism.
-Mill, for instance, as we saw, declares: ‘Each person, so far as he
-believes it to be attainable, desires his own happiness’ (p. 53). And
-he offers this as a reason why the general happiness is desirable. We
-have seen that to regard it as such, involves, in the first place,
-the naturalistic fallacy. But moreover, even if that fallacy were
-not a fallacy, it could only be a reason for Egoism and not for
-Utilitarianism. Mill’s argument is as follows: A man desires his own
-happiness; therefore his own happiness is desirable. Further: A man
-desires nothing but his own happiness; therefore his own happiness is
-alone desirable. We have next to remember, that everybody, according
-to Mill, so desires his own happiness: and then it will follow
-that everybody’s happiness is alone desirable. And this is simply
-a contradiction in terms. Just consider what it means. Each man’s
-happiness is the only thing desirable: several different things are
-_each_ of them the _only_ thing desirable. This is the fundamental
-contradiction of Egoism. In order to think that what his arguments tend
-to prove is not Egoism but Utilitarianism, Mill must think that he can
-infer from the proposition ‘Each man’s happiness is his own good,’ the
-proposition ‘The happiness of all is the good of all’; whereas in fact,
-if we understand what ‘his own good’ means, it is plain that the latter
-can only be inferred from ‘The happiness of all is the good of each.’
-Naturalistic Hedonism, then, logically leads only to Egoism. Of course,
-a Naturalist might hold that what we aimed at was simply ‘pleasure’
-not our own pleasure; and _that_, always assuming the naturalistic
-fallacy, would give an unobjectionable ground for Utilitarianism. But
-more commonly he will hold that it is his own pleasure he desires, or
-at least will confuse this with the other; and then he must logically
-be led to adopt Egoism and not Utilitarianism.
-
-
-=63.= The second cause I have to give why Egoism should be thought
-reasonable, is simply its confusion with that other kind of
-Egoism--Egoism as a doctrine of means. This second Egoism has a right
-to say: You ought to pursue your own happiness, sometimes at all
-events; it may even say: Always. And when we find it saying this we
-are apt to forget its proviso: But only as a means to something else.
-The fact is we are in an imperfect state; we cannot get the ideal all
-at once. And hence it is often our bounden duty, we often _absolutely_
-‘_ought_,’ to do things which are good only or chiefly as means: we
-have to do the best we can, what is absolutely ‘right,’ but not what
-is absolutely good. Of this I shall say more hereafter. I only mention
-it here because I think it is much more plausible to say that we ought
-to pursue our own pleasure as a means than as an end, and that this
-doctrine, through confusion, lends some of its plausibility to the
-utterly different doctrine of Egoism proper: My own greatest pleasure
-is the only good thing.
-
-
-=64.= So much for Egoism. Of Utilitarianism not much need be said; but
-two points may seem deserving of notice.
-
-The first is that this name, like that of Egoism, does not naturally
-suggest that all our actions are to be judged according to the degree
-in which they are a means to _pleasure_. Its natural meaning is that
-the standard of right and wrong in conduct is its tendency to promote
-the _interest_ of everybody. And by _interest_ is commonly meant a
-variety of different goods, classed together only because they are
-what a man commonly desires for himself, so far as his desires have
-not that psychological quality which is meant by ‘moral.’ The ‘useful’
-thus means, and was in ancient Ethics systematically used to mean,
-what is a means to the attainment of goods other than moral goods. It
-is quite an unjustifiable assumption that these goods are only good
-as means to pleasure or that they are commonly so regarded. The chief
-reason for adopting the name ‘Utilitarianism’ was, indeed, merely to
-emphasize the fact that right and wrong conduct must be judged by its
-results--as a means, in opposition to the strictly Intuitionistic view
-that certain ways of acting were right and others wrong, whatever their
-results might be. In thus insisting that what is right must mean what
-produces the best possible results Utilitarianism is fully justified.
-But with this correct contention there has been historically, and very
-naturally, associated a double error. (1) The best possible results
-were assumed to consist only in a limited class of goods, roughly
-coinciding with those which were popularly distinguished as the
-results of merely ‘useful’ or ‘interested’ actions; and these again
-were hastily assumed to be good only as means to pleasure. (2) The
-Utilitarians tend to regard everything as a mere means, neglecting the
-fact that some things which are good as means are also good as ends.
-Thus, for instance, assuming pleasure to be a good, there is a tendency
-to value present pleasure only as a means to future pleasure, and
-not, as is strictly necessary if pleasure is good as an end, also to
-_weigh it against_ possible future pleasures. Much utilitarian argument
-involves the logical absurdity that what is here and now, never has
-any value in itself, but is only to be judged by its consequences;
-which again, of course, when they are realised, would have no value in
-themselves, but would be mere means to a still further future, and so
-on _ad infinitum_.
-
-The second point deserving notice with regard to Utilitarianism is
-that, when the name is used for a form of Hedonism, it does not
-commonly, even in its description of its _end_, accurately distinguish
-between means and end. Its best-known formula is that the result by
-which actions are to be judged is ‘the greatest happiness of the
-greatest number.’ But it is plain that, if pleasure is the sole good,
-provided the quantity be equally great, an equally desirable result
-will have been obtained whether it be enjoyed by many or by few, or
-even if it be enjoyed by nobody. It is plain that, if we ought to aim
-at the greatest happiness of the greatest number, this can only, on the
-hedonistic principle, be because the existence of pleasure in a great
-number of persons seems to be the best _means_ available for attaining
-the existence of the greatest quantity of pleasure. This may actually
-be the case; but it is fair to suspect that Utilitarians have been
-influenced, in their adoption of the hedonistic principle, by this
-failure to distinguish clearly between pleasure or consciousness of
-pleasure and its possession by a person. It is far easier to regard the
-possession of pleasure by a number of persons as the sole good, than so
-to regard the mere existence of an equally great quantity of pleasure.
-If, indeed, we were to take the Utilitarian principle strictly, and to
-assume them to mean that the possession of pleasure by many persons
-was good in itself, the principle is not hedonistic: it includes as
-a necessary part of the ultimate end, the existence of a number of
-persons, and this will include very much more than mere pleasure.
-
-Utilitarianism, however, as commonly held, must be understood to
-maintain that either mere consciousness of pleasure, or consciousness
-of pleasure together with the minimum adjunct which may be meant by
-the existence of such consciousness in at least one _person_, is the
-_sole good_. This is its significance as an ethical doctrine; and as
-such it has already been refuted in my refutation of Hedonism. The
-most that can be said for it is that it does not seriously mislead in
-its practical conclusions, on the ground that, as an empirical fact,
-the method of acting which brings most good on the whole does also
-bring most pleasure. Utilitarians do indeed generally devote most of
-their arguments to shewing that the course of action which will bring
-most pleasure is in general such as common sense would approve. We
-have seen that Prof. Sidgwick appeals to this fact as tending to shew
-that pleasure is the sole good; and we have also seen that it does not
-tend to shew this. We have seen how very flimsy the other arguments
-advanced for this proposition are; and that, if it be fairly considered
-by itself, it appears to be quite ridiculous. And, moreover, that the
-actions which produce most good on the whole do also produce most
-pleasure is extremely doubtful. The arguments tending to shew it are
-all more or less vitiated by the assumption that what appear to be
-necessary conditions for the attainment of most pleasure in the near
-future, will always continue so to be. And, even with this vicious
-assumption, they only succeed in making out a highly problematical
-case. How, therefore, this fact is to be explained, if it be a fact,
-need not concern us. It is sufficient to have shewn that many complex
-states of mind are much more valuable than the pleasure they contain.
-If this be so, _no form of Hedonism can be true_. And, since the
-practical guidance afforded by pleasure as a _criterion_ is small in
-proportion as the calculation attempts to be accurate, we can well
-afford to await further investigation, before adopting a guide, whose
-utility is very doubtful and whose trustworthiness we have grave reason
-to suspect.
-
-
-=65.= The most important points which I have endeavoured to establish
-in this chapter are as follows. (1) Hedonism must be strictly
-defined as the doctrine that ‘Pleasure is the only thing which is
-good in itself’: this view seems to owe its prevalence mainly to the
-naturalistic fallacy, and Mill’s arguments may be taken as a type of
-those which are fallacious in this respect; Sidgwick alone has defended
-it without committing this fallacy, and its final refutation must
-therefore point out the errors in his arguments (36-38). (2) Mill’s
-‘Utilitarianism’ is criticised: it being shewn (_a_) that he commits
-the naturalistic fallacy in identifying ‘desirable’ with ‘desired’;
-(_b_) that pleasure is not the only object of desire. The common
-arguments for Hedonism seem to rest on these two errors (39-44). (3)
-Hedonism is considered as an ‘Intuition,’ and it is pointed out (_a_)
-that Mill’s allowance that some pleasures are inferior in quality to
-others implies both that it is an Intuition and that it is a false
-one (46-48); (_b_) that Sidgwick fails to distinguish ‘pleasure’
-from ‘consciousness of pleasure,’ and that it is absurd to regard the
-former, at all events, as the sole good (49-52); (_c_) that it seems
-equally absurd to regard ‘consciousness of pleasure’ as the sole good,
-since, if it were so, a world in which nothing else existed might be
-absolutely perfect: Sidgwick fails to put to himself this question,
-which is the only clear and decisive one (53-57). (4) What are commonly
-considered to be the two main types of Hedonism, namely, Egoism and
-Utilitarianism, are not only different from, but strictly contradictory
-of, one another; since the former asserts ‘My own greatest pleasure
-is the _sole_ good,’ the latter ‘The greatest pleasure of all is the
-_sole_ good.’ Egoism seems to owe its plausibility partly to the
-failure to observe this contradiction--a failure which is exemplified
-by Sidgwick; partly to a confusion of Egoism as doctrine of end, with
-the same as doctrine of means. If Hedonism is true, Egoism cannot
-be so; still less can it be so, if Hedonism is false. The end of
-Utilitarianism, on the other hand, would, if Hedonism were true, be,
-not indeed the best conceivable, but the best possible for us to
-promote; but it is refuted by the refutation of Hedonism (58-64).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-METAPHYSICAL ETHICS.
-
-
-=66.= In this chapter I propose to deal with a type of ethical theory
-which is exemplified in the ethical views of the Stoics, of Spinoza,
-of Kant, and especially of a number of modern writers, whose views in
-this respect are mainly due to the influence of Hegel. These ethical
-theories have this in common, that they use some _metaphysical_
-proposition as a ground for inferring some fundamental proposition of
-Ethics. They all imply, and many of them expressly hold, that ethical
-truths follow logically from metaphysical truths--that Ethics should be
-based on _Metaphysics_. And the result is that they all describe the
-Supreme Good in _metaphysical_ terms.
-
-What, then, is to be understood by ‘metaphysical’? I use the term,
-as I explained in Chapter II., in opposition to ‘natural.’ I call
-those philosophers preeminently ‘metaphysical’ who have recognised
-most clearly that not everything which _is_ is a ‘natural object.’
-‘Metaphysicians’ have, therefore, the great merit of insisting that
-our knowledge is not confined to the things which we can touch and
-see and feel. They have always been much occupied, not only with that
-other class of natural objects which consists in mental facts, but also
-with the class of objects or properties of objects, which certainly do
-not exist in time, are not therefore parts of Nature, and which, in
-fact, do not exist at all. To this class, as I have said, belongs what
-we mean by the adjective ‘good.’ It is not _goodness_, but only the
-things or qualities which are good, which can exist in time--can have
-duration, and begin and cease to exist--can be objects of _perception_.
-But the most prominent members of this class are perhaps numbers. It
-is quite certain that two natural objects may exist; but it is equally
-certain that _two_ itself does not exist and never can. Two and two
-_are_ four. But that does not mean that either two or four exists.
-Yet it certainly means _something_. Two _is_ somehow, although it
-does not exist. And it is not only simple terms of propositions--the
-objects _about_ which we know truths--that belong to this class. The
-truths which we know about them form, perhaps, a still more important
-subdivision. No truth does, in fact, _exist_; but this is peculiarly
-obvious with regard to truths like ‘Two and two are four,’ in which
-the objects, _about_ which they are truths, do not exist either. It
-is with the recognition of such truths as these--truths which have
-been called ‘universal’--and of their essential unlikeness to what
-we can touch and see and feel, that metaphysics proper begins. Such
-‘universal’ truths have always played a large part in the reasonings of
-metaphysicians from Plato’s time till now; and that they have directed
-attention to the difference between these truths and what I have
-called ‘natural objects’ is the chief contribution to knowledge which
-distinguishes them from that other class of philosophers--‘empirical’
-philosophers--to which most Englishmen have belonged.
-
-But though, if we are to define ‘metaphysics’ by the contribution
-which it has actually made to knowledge, we should have to say that
-it has emphasized the importance of objects which do not exist at
-all, metaphysicians themselves have not recognised this. They have
-indeed recognised and insisted that there are, or may be, objects
-of knowledge which do not _exist in time_, or at least which we
-cannot perceive; and in recognising the _possibility_ of these, as
-an object of investigation, they have, it may be admitted, done a
-service to mankind. But they have in general supposed that whatever
-does not exist in time, must at least _exist_ elsewhere, if it is to
-_be_ at all--that, whatever does not exist in Nature, must exist in
-some supersensible reality, whether timeless or not. Consequently
-they have held that the truths with which they have been occupied,
-over and above the objects of perception, were in some way truths
-about such supersensible reality. If, therefore, we are to define
-‘metaphysics’ not by what it has attained, but by what it has
-attempted, we should say that it consists in the attempt to obtain
-knowledge, by processes of reasoning, of what exists but is _not_ a
-part of Nature. Metaphysicians have actually held that they could give
-us such knowledge of non-natural existence. They have held that their
-science consists in giving us such knowledge as can be supported by
-reasons, of that supersensible reality of which religion professes to
-give us a fuller knowledge, without any reasons. When, therefore, I
-spoke above of ‘metaphysical’ propositions, I meant propositions about
-the existence of something supersensible--of something which is not
-an object of perception, and which cannot be inferred from what is an
-object of perception by the same rules of inference by which we infer
-the past and future of what we call ‘Nature.’ And when I spoke of
-‘metaphysical’ terms, I meant terms which refer to qualities of such
-a supersensible reality, which do not belong to anything ‘natural.’
-I admit that ‘metaphysics’ should investigate what reasons there may
-be for belief in such a supersensible reality; since I hold that
-its peculiar province is the truth about all objects which are not
-natural objects. And I think that the most prominent characteristic of
-metaphysics, in history, has been its profession to _prove_ the truth
-about non-natural _existents_. I define ‘metaphysical,’ therefore, by
-a reference to supersensible _reality_; although I think that the only
-non-natural objects, about which it has _succeeded_ in obtaining truth,
-are objects which do not exist at all.
-
-So much, I hope, will suffice to explain what I mean by the term
-‘metaphysical,’ and to shew that it refers to a clear and important
-distinction. It was not necessary for my purpose to make the
-definition exhaustive or to shew that it corresponds in essentials
-with established usage. The distinction between ‘Nature’ and a
-supersensible reality is very familiar and very important: and since
-the metaphysician endeavours to _prove_ things with regard to a
-supersensible reality, and since he deals largely in truths which are
-_not_ mere natural facts, it is plain that his arguments, and errors
-(if any), will be of a more subtle kind than those which I have dealt
-with under the name of ‘Naturalism.’ For these two reasons it seemed
-convenient to treat ‘Metaphysical Ethics’ by themselves.
-
-
-=67.= I have said that those systems of Ethics, which I propose to
-call ‘Metaphysical,’ are characterised by the fact that they describe
-the Supreme Good in ‘metaphysical’ terms; and this has now been
-explained as meaning that they describe it in terms of something
-which (they hold) does exist, but does not exist in Nature--in terms
-of a supersensible reality. A ‘Metaphysical Ethics’ is marked by the
-fact that it makes the assertion: That which would be perfectly good
-is something which exists, but is not natural; that which has some
-characteristic possessed by a supersensible reality. Such an assertion
-was made by the Stoics when they asserted that a life in accordance
-with Nature was perfect. For they did not mean by ‘Nature,’ what I have
-so defined, but something supersensible which they inferred to exist,
-and which they held to be perfectly good. Such an assertion, again,
-is made by Spinoza when he tells us that we are more or less perfect,
-in proportion as we are more or less closely united with Absolute
-Substance by the ‘intellectual love’ of God. Such an assertion is made
-by Kant when he tells us that his ‘Kingdom of Ends’ is the ideal. And
-such, finally, is made by modern writers who tell us that the final and
-perfect end is to realise our _true_ selves--a self different both from
-the whole and from any part of that which exists here and now in Nature.
-
-Now it is plain that such ethical principles have a merit, not
-possessed by Naturalism, in recognising that for perfect goodness
-much more is required than any quantity of what exists here and now
-or can be inferred as likely to exist in the future. And moreover it
-is quite possible that their assertions should be true, if we only
-understand them to assert that something which is real possesses all
-the characteristics necessary for perfect goodness. But this is not
-all that they assert. They also imply, as I said, that this ethical
-proposition _follows_ from some proposition which is metaphysical: that
-the question ‘What is real?’ has some logical bearing upon the question
-‘What is good?’ It was for this reason that I described ‘Metaphysical
-Ethics’ in Chapter II. as based upon the naturalistic fallacy. To
-hold that from any proposition asserting ‘Reality is of this nature’
-we can infer, or obtain confirmation for, any proposition asserting
-‘This is good in itself’ is to commit the naturalistic fallacy. And
-that a knowledge of what is real supplies reasons for holding certain
-things to be good in themselves is either implied or expressly
-asserted by all those who define the Supreme Good in metaphysical
-terms. This contention is part of what is meant by saying that Ethics
-should be ‘based’ on Metaphysics. It is meant that some knowledge
-of supersensible reality is necessary _as a premise_ for correct
-conclusions as to what ought to exist. This view is, for instance,
-plainly expressed in the following statements: ‘The truth is that the
-theory of Ethics which seems most satisfactory has a metaphysical
-basis.... If we rest our view of Ethics on the idea of the development
-of the ideal self or of the rational universe, the significance of
-this cannot be made fully apparent without a metaphysical examination
-of the nature of self; _nor can its validity be established except
-by a discussion of the reality of the rational universe_[21].’ The
-validity of an ethical conclusion about the nature of the ideal, it
-is here asserted, cannot be established except by considering the
-question whether that ideal is _real_. Such an assertion involves
-the naturalistic fallacy. It rests upon the failure to perceive that
-any truth which asserts ‘This is good in itself’ is quite unique in
-kind--that it cannot be reduced to any assertion about reality, and
-therefore must remain unaffected by any conclusions we may reach
-about the nature of reality. This confusion as to the unique nature
-of ethical truths is, I have said, involved in all those ethical
-theories which I have called metaphysical. It is plain that, but for
-some confusion of the sort, no-one would think it worth while even to
-describe the Supreme Good in metaphysical terms. If, for instance,
-we are told that the ideal consists in the realisation of the ‘true
-self,’ the very words suggest that the fact that the self in question
-is _true_ is supposed to have some bearing on the fact that it is
-good. All the ethical truth which can possibly be conveyed by such
-an assertion would be just as well conveyed by saying that the ideal
-consisted in the realisation of a particular kind of self, which might
-be either real or purely imaginary. ‘Metaphysical Ethics,’ then,
-involve the supposition that Ethics can be _based_ on Metaphysics; and
-our first concern with them is to make clear that this supposition must
-be false.
-
- [21] Prof. J. S. Mackenzie, _A Manual of Ethics_, 4th ed., p.
- 431. The italics are mine.
-
-
-=68.= In what way can the nature of supersensible reality possibly have
-a bearing upon Ethics?
-
-I have distinguished two kinds of ethical questions, which are far too
-commonly confused with one another. Ethics, as commonly understood, has
-to answer both the question ‘What ought to be?’ and the question ‘What
-ought we to do?’ The second of these questions can only be answered
-by considering what effects our actions will have. A complete answer
-to it would give us that department of Ethics which may be called the
-doctrine of _means_ or practical Ethics. And upon this department of
-ethical enquiry it is plain that the nature of a supersensible reality
-may have a bearing. If, for instance, Metaphysics could tell us not
-only that we are immortal, but also, in any degree, what effects our
-actions in this life will have upon our condition in a future one,
-such information would have an undoubted bearing upon the question
-what we ought to do. The Christian doctrines of heaven and hell are
-in this way highly relevant to practical Ethics. But it is worthy
-of notice that the most characteristic doctrines of Metaphysics are
-such as either have no such bearing upon practical Ethics or have
-a purely negative bearing--involving the conclusion that there is
-nothing which we ought to do at all. They profess to tell us the
-nature not of a future reality, but of one that is eternal and which
-therefore no actions of ours can have power to alter. Such information
-_may_ indeed have relevance to practical Ethics, but it must be of a
-purely negative kind. For, if it holds, not only that such an eternal
-reality exists, but also, as is commonly the case, that nothing else
-is real--that nothing either has been, is now, or will be real in
-time--then truly it will follow that nothing we can do will ever bring
-any good to pass. For it is certain that our actions can only affect
-the future; and if nothing can be real in the future, we can certainly
-not hope ever to make any good thing real. It would follow, then,
-that there can be nothing which we ought to do. We cannot possibly do
-any good; for neither our efforts, nor any result which they may seem
-to effect, have any real existence. But this consequence, though it
-follows strictly from many metaphysical doctrines, is rarely drawn.
-Although a metaphysician may say that nothing is real but that which
-is eternal, he will generally allow that there is some reality also in
-the temporal: and his doctrine of an eternal reality need not interfere
-with practical Ethics, if he allows that, however good the eternal
-reality may be, yet some things will also exist in time, and that the
-existence of some will be better than that of others. It is, however,
-worth while to insist upon this point, because it is rarely fully
-realised.
-
-If it is maintained that there is any validity at all in practical
-Ethics--that any proposition which asserts ‘We ought to do so and
-so’ can have any truth--this contention can only be consistent with
-the Metaphysics of an eternal reality, under two conditions. One of
-these is, (1) that the true eternal reality, which is to be our guide,
-cannot, as is implied by calling it true, be the _only_ true reality.
-For a moral rule, bidding us realise a certain end, can only be
-justified, if it is possible that that end should, at least partially,
-be realised. Unless our efforts can effect the _real_ existence of some
-good, however little, we certainly have no reason for making them.
-And if the eternal reality is the sole reality, then nothing good
-can possibly exist in time: we can only be told to try to bring into
-existence something which we know beforehand cannot possibly exist. If
-it is said that what exists in time can only be a manifestation of the
-true reality, it must at least be allowed that that manifestation is
-another true reality--a good which we really can cause to exist; for
-the production of something quite unreal, even if it were possible,
-cannot be a reasonable end of action. But if the manifestation of that
-which eternally exists is real, then that which eternally exists is not
-the sole reality.
-
-And the second condition which follows from such a metaphysical
-principle of Ethics, is (2) that the eternal reality cannot be
-perfect--cannot be the sole good. For just as a reasonable rule of
-conduct requires that what we are told to realise should be capable of
-being truly real, so it requires that the realisation of this ideal
-shall be truly good. It is just that which _can_ be realised by our
-efforts--the appearance of the eternal in time, or whatsoever else is
-allowed to be attainable--which must be truly good, if it is to be
-worth our efforts. That the eternal reality is good, will by no means
-justify us in aiming at its manifestation, unless that manifestation
-itself be also good. For the manifestation is different from the
-reality: its difference is allowed, when we are told that it can be
-made to exist, whereas the reality itself exists unalterably. And the
-existence of this manifestation is the only thing which we can hope to
-effect: that also is admitted. If, therefore, the moral maxim is to be
-justified, it is the existence of this manifestation, as distinguished
-from the existence of its corresponding reality, which must be truly
-good. The reality may be good too: but to justify the statement that we
-ought to produce anything, it must be maintained, that just that thing
-itself, and not something else which may be like it, is truly good.
-If it is not true that the existence of the manifestation will add
-something to the sum of good in the Universe, then we have no reason to
-aim at making it exist; and if it is true that it will add something to
-the sum of good, then the existence of that which is eternal cannot be
-perfect by itself--it cannot include the whole of possible goods.
-
-Metaphysics, then, will have a bearing upon practical Ethics--upon the
-question what we ought to do--if it can tell us anything about the
-future consequences of our actions beyond what can be established by
-ordinary inductive reasoning. But the most characteristic metaphysical
-doctrines, those which profess to tell us not about the future but
-about the nature of an eternal reality, can either have no bearing upon
-this practical question or else must have a purely destructive bearing.
-For it is plain that what exists eternally cannot be affected by our
-actions; and only what is affected by our actions can have a bearing
-on their value as means. But the nature of an eternal reality either
-admits no inference as to the results of our actions, except in so far
-as it can _also_ give us information about the future (and how it can
-do this is not plain), or else, if, as is usual, it is maintained to
-be the sole reality and the sole good, it shews that no results of our
-actions can have any value whatever.
-
-
-=69.= But this bearing upon practical Ethics, such as it is, is not
-what is commonly meant when it is maintained that Ethics must be based
-on Metaphysics. It is not the assertion of this relation which I have
-taken to be characteristic of Metaphysical Ethics. What metaphysical
-writers commonly maintain is not merely that Metaphysics can help us to
-decide what the effects of our actions will be, but that it can tell us
-which among possible effects will be good and which will be bad. They
-profess that Metaphysics is a necessary basis for an answer to that
-other and primary ethical question: What ought to be? What is good in
-itself? That no truth about what is real can have any logical bearing
-upon the answer to this question has been proved in Chapter I. To
-suppose that it has, implies the naturalistic fallacy. All that remains
-for us to do is, therefore, to expose the main errors which seem to
-have lent plausibility to this fallacy in its metaphysical form. If
-we ask: What bearing can Metaphysics have upon the question, What is
-good? the only possible answer is: Obviously and absolutely none. We
-can only hope to enforce conviction that this answer is the only true
-one by answering the question: Why has it been supposed to have such a
-bearing? We shall find that metaphysical writers seem to have failed to
-distinguish this primary ethical question: What is good? from various
-other questions; and to point out these distinctions will serve to
-confirm the view that their profession to base Ethics on Metaphysics is
-solely due to confusion.
-
-
-=70.= And, first of all, there is an ambiguity in the very question:
-What is good? to which it seems some influence must be attributed.
-The question may mean either: Which among existing things are good?
-or else: What _sort of_ things are good, what are the things which,
-whether they _are_ real or not, ought to be real? And of these two
-questions it is plain that to answer the first, we must know both
-the answer to the second and also the answer to the question: What
-is real? It asks us for a catalogue of all the good things in the
-Universe; and to answer it we must know both what things there are in
-the Universe and also which of them are good. Upon this question then
-our Metaphysics would have a bearing, if it can tell us what is real.
-It would help us to complete the list of things which are both real
-and good. But to make such a list is not the business of Ethics. So
-far as it enquires What is good? its business is finished when it has
-completed the list of things which ought to exist, whether they do
-exist or not. And if our Metaphysics is to have any bearing upon this
-part of the ethical problem, it must be because the fact that something
-is real gives a reason for thinking that it or something else is good,
-whether it be real or not. That any such fact can give any such reason
-is impossible; but it may be suspected that the contrary supposition
-has been encouraged by the failure to distinguish between the assertion
-‘This is good,’ when it means ‘_This sort of thing_ is good,’ or ‘This
-would be good, if it existed,’ and the assertion ‘This existing thing
-is good.’ The latter proposition obviously cannot be true, unless
-the thing exists; and hence the proof of the thing’s existence is a
-necessary step to its proof. Both propositions, however, in spite
-of this immense difference between them, are commonly expressed in
-the same terms. We use the same words, when we assert an ethical
-proposition about a subject that is actually real, and when we assert
-it about a subject considered as merely possible.
-
-In this ambiguity of language we have, then, a possible source of error
-with regard to the bearing of truths that assert reality upon truths
-that assert goodness. And that this ambiguity is actually neglected by
-those metaphysical writers who profess that the Supreme Good consists
-in an eternal reality may be shewn in the following way. We have seen,
-in considering the possible bearing of Metaphysics upon Practical
-Ethics, that, since what exists eternally cannot possibly be affected
-by our actions, no practical maxim can possibly be true, if the sole
-reality is eternal. This fact, as I said, is commonly neglected by
-metaphysical writers: they assert both of the two contradictory
-propositions that the sole reality is eternal and that its realisation
-in the future is a good too. Prof. Mackenzie, we saw, asserts that we
-ought to aim at the realisation of ‘the true self’ or ‘the rational
-universe’: and yet Prof. Mackenzie holds, as the word ‘true’ plainly
-implies, that both ‘the true self’ and ‘the rational universe’ are
-eternally real. Here we have already a contradiction in the supposition
-that what is eternally real can be realised in the future; and it is
-comparatively unimportant whether or not we add to this the further
-contradiction involved in the supposition that the eternal is the sole
-reality. That such a contradiction should be supposed valid can only be
-explained by a neglect of the distinction between a real subject and
-the character which that real subject possesses. _What_ is eternally
-real may, indeed, be realised in the future, if by this be only meant
-the _sort of thing_ which is eternally real. But when we assert that
-a thing is good, what we mean is that its existence or reality is
-good; and the eternal existence of a thing cannot possibly be the
-same good as the existence in time of what, in a necessary sense,
-is nevertheless the _same_ thing. When, therefore, we are told that
-the future realisation of the _true_ self is good, this can at most
-only mean that the future realisation of a self _exactly like_ the
-self, which is true and exists eternally, is good. If this fact were
-clearly stated, instead of consistently ignored, by those who advocate
-the view that the Supreme Good can be defined in these metaphysical
-terms, it seems probable that the view that a knowledge of reality
-is necessary to a knowledge of the Supreme Good would lose part of
-its plausibility. That that at which we ought to aim cannot possibly
-be that which is eternally real, even if it be exactly like it; and
-that the eternal reality cannot possibly be the sole good--these two
-propositions seem sensibly to diminish the probability that Ethics must
-be based on Metaphysics. It is not very plausible to maintain that
-because one thing is real, therefore something like it, which is not
-real, would be good. It seems, therefore, that some of the plausibility
-of Metaphysical Ethics may be reasonably attributed to the failure to
-observe that verbal ambiguity, whereby ‘This is good’ may mean either
-‘This real thing is good’ or ‘The existence of this thing (whether it
-exists or not) would be good.’
-
-
-=71.= By exposing this ambiguity, then, we are enabled to see more
-clearly what must be meant by the question: Can Ethics be based on
-Metaphysics? and we are, therefore, more likely to find the correct
-answer. It is now plain that a metaphysical principle of Ethics
-which says ‘This eternal reality is the Supreme Good’ can only mean
-‘Something like this eternal reality would be the Supreme Good.’ We
-are now to understand such principles as having the only meaning which
-they can consistently have, namely, as describing the kind of thing
-which ought to exist in the future, and which we ought to try to bring
-about. And, when this is clearly recognised, it seems more evident
-that the knowledge that such a kind of thing is also eternally real,
-cannot help us at all towards deciding the properly ethical question:
-Is the existence of that kind of good thing? If we can see that an
-eternal reality is good, we can see, equally easily, once the idea
-of such a thing has been suggested to us, that it _would_ be good.
-The metaphysical construction of Reality would therefore be quite as
-useful, for the purposes of Ethics, if it were a mere construction
-of an imaginary Utopia: provided the kind of thing suggested is the
-same, fiction is as useful as truth, for giving us matter, upon
-which to exercise the judgment of value. Though, therefore, we admit
-that Metaphysics may serve an ethical purpose, in suggesting things,
-which would not otherwise have occurred to us, but which, when they
-are suggested, we see to be good; yet, it is not as Metaphysics--as
-professing to tell us what is real--that it has this use. And, in
-fact, the pursuit of truth must limit the usefulness of Metaphysics
-in this respect. Wild and extravagant as are the assertions which
-metaphysicians have made about reality, it is not to be supposed but
-that they have been partially deterred from making them wilder still,
-by the idea that it was their business to tell nothing but the truth.
-But the wilder they are, and the less useful for Metaphysics, the
-more useful will they be for Ethics; since, in order to be sure that
-we have neglected nothing in the description of our ideal, we should
-have had before us as wide a field as possible of suggested goods. It
-is probable that this utility of Metaphysics, in suggesting possible
-ideals, may sometimes be what is meant by the assertion that Ethics
-should be based on Metaphysics. It is not uncommon to find that which
-suggests a truth confused with that on which it logically depends; and
-I have already pointed out that Metaphysical have, in general, this
-superiority over Naturalistic systems, that they conceive the Supreme
-Good as something differing more widely from what exists here and now.
-But, if it be recognised that, in this sense, Ethics should, far more
-emphatically, be _based on_ fiction, metaphysicians will, I think,
-admit that a connection of this kind between Metaphysics and Ethics
-would by no means justify the importance which they attribute to the
-bearing of the one study on the other.
-
-
-=72.= We may, then, attribute the obstinate prejudice that a knowledge
-of supersensible reality is a necessary step to a knowledge of what
-is good in itself, partly to a failure to perceive that the subject
-of the latter judgment is not anything _real_ as such, and partly to
-a failure to distinguish the cause of our perception of a truth from
-the reason why it is true. But these two causes will carry us only a
-very little way in our explanation of why Metaphysics should have been
-supposed to have a bearing upon Ethics. The first explanation which
-I have given would only account for the supposition that a thing’s
-reality is a _necessary condition_ for its goodness. This supposition
-is, indeed, commonly made; we find it commonly presupposed that unless
-a thing can be shewn to be involved in the constitution of reality, it
-cannot be good. And it is, therefore, worth while to insist that this
-is not the case; that Metaphysics is not even necessary to furnish
-_part_ of the basis of Ethics. But when metaphysicians talk of basing
-Ethics on Metaphysics they commonly mean much more than this. They
-commonly mean that Metaphysics is the _sole_ basis of Ethics--that it
-furnishes not only one necessary condition but _all_ the conditions
-necessary to prove that certain things are good. And this view may,
-at first sight, appear to be held in two different forms. It may be
-asserted that merely to prove a thing supersensibly real is sufficient
-to prove it good: that the truly real must, for that reason alone,
-be truly good. But more commonly it appears to be held that the real
-must be good because it possesses certain characters. And we may, I
-think, reduce the first kind of assertion to no more than this. When
-it is asserted that the real must be good, because it is real, it is
-commonly also held that this is only because, in order to be real, it
-must be of a certain kind. The reasoning by which it is thought that a
-metaphysical enquiry can give an ethical conclusion is of the following
-form. From a consideration of what it is to be real, we can infer that
-what is real must have certain supersensible properties: but to have
-these properties is identical with being good--it is the very meaning
-of the word: it follows therefore that what has these properties is
-good: and from a consideration of what it is to be real, we can again
-infer what it is that has these properties. It is plain that, if such
-reasoning were correct, any answer which could be given to the question
-‘What is good in itself?’ could be arrived at by a purely metaphysical
-discussion and by that alone. Just as, when Mill supposed that ‘to
-be good’ _meant_ ‘to be desired,’ the question ‘What is good?’ could
-be and must be answered solely by an empirical investigation of the
-question what was desired; so here, if to be good means to have some
-supersensible property, the ethical question can and must be answered
-by a metaphysical enquiry into the question, What has this property?
-What, then, remains to be done in order to destroy the plausibility of
-Metaphysical Ethics, is to expose the chief errors which seem to have
-led metaphysicians to suppose that to be good _means_ to possess some
-supersensible property.
-
-
-=73.= What, then, are the chief reasons which have made it seem
-plausible to maintain that to be good must _mean_ to possess some
-supersensible property or to be related to some supersensible reality?
-
-We may, first of all, notice one, which seems to have had some
-influence in causing the view that good must be defined by _some_
-such property, although it does not suggest any _particular_ property
-as the one required. This reason lies in the supposition that the
-proposition ‘This is good’ or ‘This would be good, if it existed’ must,
-in a certain respect, be of the same type as other propositions.
-The fact is that there is one type of proposition so familiar to
-everyone, and therefore having such a strong hold upon the imagination,
-that philosophers have always supposed that all other types must be
-reducible to it. This type is that of the objects of experience--of all
-those truths which occupy our minds for the immensely greater part of
-our waking lives: truths such as that somebody is in the room, that I
-am writing or eating or talking. All these truths, however much they
-may differ, have this in common that in them both the grammatical
-subject and the grammatical predicate stand for something which exists.
-Immensely the commonest type of truth, then, is one which asserts a
-relation between two existing things. Ethical truths are immediately
-felt not to conform to this type, and the naturalistic fallacy arises
-from the attempt to make out that, in some roundabout way, they do
-conform to it. It is immediately obvious that when we see a thing
-to be good, its goodness is not a property which we can take up in
-our hands, or separate from it even by the most delicate scientific
-instruments, and transfer to something else. It is not, in fact, like
-most of the predicates which we ascribe to things, a _part_ of the
-thing to which we ascribe it. But philosophers suppose that the reason
-why we cannot take goodness up and move it about, is not that it is
-a different _kind_ of object from any which can be moved about, but
-only that it _necessarily_ exists together with anything with which
-it does exist. They explain the type of ethical truths by supposing
-it identical with the type of scientific laws. And it is only when
-they have done this that the naturalistic philosophers proper--those
-who are empiricists--and those whom I have called ‘metaphysical’ part
-company. These two classes of philosophers do, indeed, differ with
-regard to the nature of scientific laws. The former class tend to
-suppose that when they say ‘This always accompanies that’ they mean
-only ‘This has accompanied, does now, and will accompany that in these
-particular instances’: they reduce the scientific law quite simply
-and directly to the familiar type of proposition which I have pointed
-out. But this does not satisfy the metaphysicians. They see that when
-you say ‘This would accompany that, _if_ that existed,’ you don’t mean
-only that this and that have existed and will exist together so many
-times. But it is beyond even their powers to believe that what you do
-mean is merely what you say. They still think you must mean, somehow
-or other, that something does exist, since that is what you generally
-mean when you say anything. They are as unable as the empiricists to
-imagine that you can ever mean that 2 + 2 = 4. The empiricists say this
-means that so many couples of couples of things have in each case been
-four things; and hence that 2 and 2 would not make 4, unless precisely
-those things had existed. The metaphysicians feel that this is wrong;
-but they themselves have no better account of its meaning to give
-than either, with Leibniz, that God’s mind is in a certain state, or,
-with Kant, that your mind is in a certain state, or finally, with Mr
-Bradley, that something is in a certain state. Here, then, we have the
-root of the naturalistic fallacy. The metaphysicians have the merit
-of seeing that when you say ‘This would be good, if it existed,’ you
-can’t mean merely ‘This has existed and was desired,’ however many
-times that may have been the case. They will admit that some good
-things have not existed in this world, and even that some may not have
-been desired. But what you can mean, except that _something_ exists,
-they really cannot see. Precisely the same error which leads them to
-suppose that there must _exist_ a supersensible Reality, leads them to
-commit the naturalistic fallacy with regard to the meaning of ‘good.’
-Every truth, they think, must mean somehow that something exists; and
-since, unlike the empiricists, they recognise some truths which do not
-mean that anything exists here and now, these they think must mean
-that something exists _not_ here and now. On the same principle, since
-‘good’ is a predicate which neither does nor can exist, they are bound
-to suppose either that ‘to be good’ means to be related to some other
-particular thing which can exist and does exist ‘in reality’; or else
-that it means merely ‘to belong to the real world’--that goodness is
-transcended or absorbed in reality.
-
-
-=74.= That such a reduction of _all_ propositions to the type of those
-which assert either that something exists or that something which
-exists has a certain attribute (which means, that both exist in a
-certain relation to one another), is erroneous, may easily be seen by
-reference to the particular class of ethical propositions. For whatever
-we may have proved to exist, and whatever two existents we may have
-proved to be necessarily connected with one another, it still remains
-a distinct and different question whether what thus exists is good;
-whether either or both of the two existents is so; and whether it is
-good that they should exist together. To assert the one is plainly and
-obviously _not_ the same thing as to assert the other. We understand
-what we mean by asking: Is this, which exists, or necessarily exists,
-after all, good? and we perceive that we are asking a question which
-has _not_ been answered. In face of this direct perception that the
-two questions are distinct, no proof that they _must_ be identical can
-have the slightest value. That the proposition ‘This is good’ is thus
-distinct from every other proposition was proved in Chapter I.; and I
-may now illustrate this fact by pointing out how it is distinguished
-from two particular propositions with which it has commonly been
-identified. That so and so _ought to be done_ is commonly called a
-moral _law_, and this phrase naturally suggests that this proposition
-is in some way analogous either to a natural law, or to a law in the
-legal sense, or to both. All three are, in fact, really analogous in
-one respect, and in one respect only: that they include a proposition
-which is _universal_. A moral law asserts ‘This is good _in all
-cases_’; a natural law asserts ‘This happens _in all cases_’; and a
-law, in the legal sense, ‘It is commanded that this be done, or be left
-undone, _in all cases_.’ But since it is very natural to suppose that
-the analogy extends further, and that the assertion ‘This is good in
-all cases’ is equivalent to the assertion ‘This happens in all cases’
-or to the assertion ‘It is commanded that this be done in all cases,’
-it may be useful briefly to point out that they are _not_ equivalent.
-
-
-=75.= The fallacy of supposing moral law to be analogous to natural
-law in respect of asserting that some action is one which is always
-necessarily done is contained in one of the most famous doctrines of
-Kant. Kant identifies what ought to be with the law according to which
-a Free or Pure Will _must_ act--with the only kind of action which is
-possible for it. And by this identification he does not mean merely to
-assert that the Free Will is _also_ under the necessity of doing what
-it ought; he means that what it ought to do _means_ nothing but its own
-law--the law according to which it must act. It differs from the human
-will just in that, what _we_ ought to do, is what _it_ necessarily
-does. It is ‘autonomous’; and by this is meant (among other things)
-that there is no separate standard by which it can be judged: that the
-question ‘Is the law by which this Will acts a good one?’ is, in its
-case, meaningless. It follows that what is necessarily willed by this
-Pure Will is good, not _because_ that Will is good, nor for any other
-reason; but merely because it is what is necessarily willed by a Pure
-Will.
-
-Kant’s assertion of the ‘Autonomy of the Practical Reason’ thus has
-the very opposite effect to that which he desired; it makes his
-Ethics ultimately and hopelessly ‘heteronomous.’ His Moral Law is
-‘independent’ of Metaphysics only in the sense that according to him
-we can _know_ it independently; he holds that we can only infer that
-there is Freedom, from the fact that the Moral Law is true. And so far
-as he keeps strictly to this view, he does avoid the error, into which
-most metaphysical writers fall, of allowing his opinions as to what is
-real to influence his judgments of what is good. But he fails to see
-that on his view the Moral Law is dependent upon Freedom in a far more
-important sense than that in which Freedom depends on the Moral Law. He
-admits that Freedom is the _ratio essendi_ of the Moral Law, whereas
-the latter is only _ratio cognoscendi_ of Freedom. And this means that,
-unless Reality be such as he says, no assertion that ‘This is good’ can
-possibly be true: it can indeed have no meaning. He has, therefore,
-furnished his opponents with a conclusive method of attacking the
-validity of the Moral Law. If they can only shew by some other means
-(which he denies to be possible but leaves theoretically open) that the
-nature of Reality is not such as he says, he cannot deny that they will
-have proved his ethical principle to be false. If that ‘This ought to
-be done’ _means_ ‘This is willed by a Free Will,’ then, if it can be
-shewn that there is no Free Will which wills anything, it will follow
-that nothing ought to be done.
-
-
-=76.= And Kant also commits the fallacy of supposing that ‘This ought
-to be’ means ‘This is commanded.’ He conceives the Moral Law to be an
-Imperative. And this is a very common mistake. ‘This ought to be,’ it
-is assumed, must mean ‘This is commanded’; nothing, therefore, would
-be good unless it were commanded; and since commands in this world
-are liable to be erroneous, what ought to be in its ultimate sense
-means ‘what is commanded by some real supersensible authority.’ With
-regard to this authority it is, then, no longer possible to ask ‘Is it
-righteous?’ Its commands cannot fail to be right, because to be right
-means to be what it commands. Here, therefore, law, in the moral sense,
-is supposed analogous to law, in the legal sense, rather than, as in
-the last instance, to law in the natural sense. It is supposed that
-moral obligation is analogous to legal obligation, with this difference
-only that whereas the source of legal obligation is earthly, that of
-moral obligation is heavenly. Yet it is obvious that if by a source of
-obligation is meant only a power which binds you or compels you to do
-a thing, it is not because it does do this that you ought to obey it.
-It is only if it be itself so good, that it commands and enforces only
-what is good, that it can be a source of moral obligation. And in that
-case what it commands and enforces would be good, whether commanded and
-enforced or not. Just that which makes an obligation legal, namely the
-fact that it is commanded by a certain kind of authority, is entirely
-irrelevant to a moral obligation. However an authority be defined, its
-commands will be _morally_ binding only if they are--morally binding;
-only if they tell us what ought to be or what is a means to that which
-ought to be.
-
-
-=77.= In this last error, in the supposition that when I say ‘You
-ought to do this’ I must mean ‘You are commanded to do this,’ we
-have one of the reasons which has led to the supposition that the
-particular supersensible property by reference to which good must
-be defined is Will. And that ethical conclusions may be obtained by
-enquiring into the nature of a fundamentally real Will seems to be by
-far the commonest assumption of Metaphysical Ethics at the present
-day. But this assumption seems to owe its plausibility, not so much
-to the supposition that ‘ought’ expresses a ‘command,’ as to a far
-more fundamental error. This error consists in supposing that to
-ascribe certain predicates to a thing is the same thing as to say
-that that thing is the object of a certain kind of psychical state.
-It is supposed that to say that a thing is real or true is the same
-thing as to say that it is known in a certain way; and that the
-difference between the assertion that it is good and the assertion
-that it is real--between an ethical, therefore, and a metaphysical
-proposition--_consists_ in the fact that whereas the latter asserts its
-relation to Cognition the former asserts its relation to Will.
-
-Now that this is an error has been already shewn in Chapter I. That
-the assertion ‘This is good’ is _not_ identical with the assertion
-‘This is willed,’ either by a supersensible will, or otherwise, nor
-with any other proposition, has been proved; nor can I add anything
-to that proof. But in face of this proof it may be anticipated that
-two lines of defence may be taken up. (1) It may be maintained that,
-nevertheless, they really are identical, and facts may be pointed out
-which seem to prove that identity. Or else (2) it may be said that an
-_absolute_ identity is not maintained: that it is only meant to assert
-that there is some special connection between will and goodness, such
-as makes an enquiry into the real nature of the former an essential
-step in the proof of ethical conclusions. In order to meet these two
-possible objections, I propose first to shew what possible connections
-there are or may be between goodness and will; and that none of these
-can justify us in asserting that ‘This is good’ is identical with ‘This
-is willed.’ On the other hand it will appear that some of them may be
-easily confused with this assertion of identity; and that therefore the
-confusion is likely to have been made. This part of my argument will,
-therefore, already go some way towards meeting the second objection.
-But what must be conclusive against this is to shew that any possible
-connection between will and goodness _except_ the _absolute_ identity
-in question, would not be sufficient to give an enquiry into Will the
-smallest relevance to the proof of any ethical conclusion.
-
-
-=78.= It has been customary, since Kant’s time, to assert that
-Cognition, Volition, and Feeling are three fundamentally distinct
-attitudes of the mind towards reality. They are three distinct ways
-of experiencing, and each of them informs us of a distinct aspect
-under which reality may be considered. The ‘Epistemological’ method of
-approaching Metaphysics rests on the assumption that by considering
-what is ‘implied in’ Cognition--what is its ‘ideal’--we may discover
-what properties the world must have, if it is to be _true_. And
-similarly it is held that by considering what is ‘implied in’ the fact
-of Willing or Feeling--what is the ‘ideal’ which they presuppose--we
-may discover what properties the world must have, if it is to be good
-or beautiful. The orthodox Idealistic Epistemologist differs from the
-Sensationalist or Empiricist in holding that what we directly cognise
-is neither all true nor yet the whole truth: in order to reject the
-false and to discover further truths we must, he says, not take
-cognition merely as it presents itself, but discover what is _implied_
-in it. And similarly the orthodox Metaphysical Ethicist differs from
-the mere Naturalist, in holding that not everything which we actually
-will is good, nor, if good, completely good: what is really good is
-that which is implied in the essential nature of will. Others again
-think that Feeling, and not Will, is the fundamental _datum_ for
-Ethics. But, in either case, it is agreed that Ethics has some relation
-to Will or Feeling which it has not to Cognition, and which other
-objects of study have to Cognition. Will or Feeling, on the one hand,
-and Cognition, on the other, are regarded as in some sense coordinate
-sources of philosophical knowledge--the one of Practical, the other of
-Theoretical philosophy.
-
-What, that is true, can possibly be meant by this view?
-
-
-=79.= First of all, it may be meant that, just as, by reflection on our
-perceptual and sensory experience, we become aware of the distinction
-between truth and falsehood, so it is by reflection on our experiences
-of feeling and willing that we become aware of ethical distinctions.
-We should not know what was meant by thinking one thing better than
-another unless the attitude of our will or feeling towards one thing
-was different from its attitude towards another. All this may be
-admitted. But so far we have only the psychological fact that it is
-only _because_ we will or feel things in a certain way, that we ever
-come to think them good; just as it is only because we have certain
-perceptual experiences, that we ever come to think things true. Here,
-then, is a special connection between willing and goodness; but it is
-only a _causal_ connection--that willing is a necessary condition for
-the cognition of goodness.
-
-But it may be said further that willing and feeling are not only the
-origin of cognitions of goodness; but that to will a thing, or to have
-a certain feeling towards a thing, is the _same thing_ as to think it
-good. And it may be admitted that even this is _generally_ true in a
-sense. It does seem to be true that we hardly ever think a thing good,
-and never very decidedly, without at the same time having a special
-attitude of feeling or will towards it; though it is certainly not the
-case that this is true universally. And the converse may possibly be
-true universally: it may be the case that a perception of goodness is
-included in the complex facts which we mean by willing and by having
-certain kinds of feeling. Let us admit then, that to think a thing good
-and to will it are _the same thing_ in this sense, that, wherever the
-latter occurs, the former also occurs as a _part_ of it; and even that
-they are _generally the same thing_ in the converse sense, that when
-the former occurs it is generally a part of the latter.
-
-
-=80.= These facts may seem to give countenance to the general assertion
-that to think a thing good is to prefer it or approve it, in the
-sense in which preference and approval denote certain kinds of will
-or feeling. It seems to be always true that when we thus prefer or
-approve, there is included in that fact the fact that we think good;
-and it is certainly true, in an immense majority of instances, that
-when we think good, we also prefer or approve. It is natural enough,
-then, to say that to think good is to prefer. And what more natural
-than to add: When I say a thing is good, I _mean_ that I prefer it?
-And yet this natural addition involves a gross confusion. Even if it
-be true that to think good is the same thing as to prefer (which, as
-we have seen, is _never_ true in the sense that they are absolutely
-identical; and not _always_ true, even in the sense that they occur
-together), yet it is not true that _what_ you think, when you think a
-thing good, is _that_ you prefer it. Even if your thinking the thing
-good is the same thing as your preference of it, yet the goodness
-of the thing--that _of_ which you think--is, for that very reason,
-obviously _not_ the same thing as your preference of it. Whether you
-have a certain thought or not is one question; and whether what you
-think is true is quite a different one, upon which the answer to the
-first has not the least bearing. The fact that you prefer a thing does
-not tend to shew that the thing is good; even if it does shew that you
-think it so.
-
-It seems to be owing to this confusion, that the question ‘What
-is good?’ is thought to be identical with the question ‘What is
-preferred?’ It is said, with sufficient truth, that you would never
-know a thing was good unless you preferred it, just as you would never
-know a thing existed unless you perceived it. But it is added, and this
-is false, that you would never know a thing was good unless you _knew_
-that you preferred it, or that it existed unless you _knew_ that you
-perceived it. And it is finally added, and this is utterly false, that
-you cannot distinguish the fact that a thing is good from the fact
-that you prefer it, or the fact that it exists from the fact that you
-perceive it. It is often pointed out that I cannot at any given moment
-distinguish what is true from what I think so: and this is true. But
-though I cannot distinguish _what_ is true from _what_ I think so, I
-always can distinguish what I mean by saying _that_ it is true from
-what I mean by saying _that_ I think so. For I understand the meaning
-of the supposition that what I think true may nevertheless be false.
-When, therefore, I assert that it is true I mean to assert something
-different from the fact that I think so. _What_ I think, namely _that_
-something is true, is always quite distinct from the fact that I think
-it. The assertion that it is true does not even _include_ the assertion
-that I think it so; although, of course, whenever I do think a thing
-true, it is, as a matter of fact, also true that I do think it. This
-tautologous proposition that for a thing to be thought true it is
-necessary that it should be thought, is, however, commonly identified
-with the proposition that for a thing to _be_ true it is necessary
-that it should be thought. A very little reflection should suffice to
-convince anyone that this identification is erroneous; and a very
-little more will shew that, if so, we must mean by ‘true’ something
-which includes no reference to thinking or to any other psychical fact.
-It may be difficult to discover precisely _what_ we mean--to hold the
-object in question before us, so as to compare it with other objects:
-but that we do mean something distinct and unique can no longer be
-matter of doubt. That ‘to be true’ _means_ to be thought in a certain
-way is, therefore, certainly false. Yet this assertion plays the most
-essential part in Kant’s ‘Copernican revolution’ of philosophy, and
-renders worthless the whole mass of modern literature, to which that
-revolution has given rise, and which is called Epistemology. Kant held
-that what was unified in a certain manner by the synthetic activity of
-thought was _ipso facto_ true: that this was the very meaning of the
-word. Whereas it is plain that the only connection which can possibly
-hold between being true and being thought in a certain way, is that
-the latter should be a _criterion_ or test of the former. In order,
-however, to establish that it is so, it would be necessary to establish
-by the methods of induction that what was true was always thought in a
-certain way. Modern Epistemology dispenses with this long and difficult
-investigation at the cost of the self-contradictory assumption that
-‘truth’ and the criterion of truth are one and the same thing.
-
-
-=81.= It is, then, a very natural, though an utterly false supposition
-that for a thing to _be_ true is the same thing as for it to be
-perceived or thought of in a certain way. And since, for the reasons
-given above, the fact of preference seems roughly to stand in the same
-relation to thinking things good, in which the fact of perception
-stands to thinking that they are true or exist, it is very natural that
-for a thing to _be_ good should be supposed identical with its being
-preferred in a certain way. But once this coordination of Volition and
-Cognition has been accepted, it is again very natural that every fact
-which seems to support the conclusion that being true is identical with
-being cognised should confirm the corresponding conclusion that being
-good is identical with being willed. It will, therefore, be in place to
-point out another confusion, which seems to have had great influence
-in causing acceptance of the view that to be true is the same thing as
-to be cognised.
-
-This confusion is due to a failure to observe that when we say we have
-a _sensation_ or _perception_ or that we _know_ a thing, we mean to
-assert not only that our mind is cognitive, but _also_ that that which
-it cognises is true. It is not observed that the usage of these words
-is such that, if a thing be untrue, that fact alone is sufficient to
-justify us in saying that the person who says he perceives or knows it,
-does not _perceive_ or _know_ it, without our either enquiring whether,
-or assuming that, his state of mind differs in any respect from what
-it would have been had he perceived or known. By this denial we do not
-accuse him of an error in introspection, even if there was such an
-error: we do not deny that he was aware of a certain object, nor even
-that his state of mind was exactly such as he took it to be: we merely
-deny that the object, of which he was aware, had a certain property.
-It is, however, commonly supposed that when we assert a thing to be
-perceived or known, we are asserting one fact only; and since of the
-two facts which we really assert, the existence of a psychical state is
-by far the easier to distinguish, it is supposed that this is the only
-one which we do assert. Thus perception and sensation have come to be
-regarded as if they denoted certain states of mind and nothing more; a
-mistake which was the easier to make since the commonest state of mind,
-to which we give a name which does not imply that its object is true,
-namely imagination, may, with some plausibility, be supposed to differ
-from sensation and perception not only in the property possessed by
-its object, but also in its character as a state of mind. It has thus
-come to be supposed that the only difference between perception and
-imagination, by which they can be defined, must be a merely psychical
-difference: and, if this were the case, it would follow at once that
-to _be_ true was identical with being cognised in a certain way; since
-the assertion that a thing is perceived does certainly _include_ the
-assertion that it is true, and if, nevertheless, that it is perceived
-means _only_ that the mind has a certain attitude towards it, then
-its truth must be identical with the fact that it is regarded in this
-way. We may, then, attribute the view that to be true _means_ to
-be cognised in a certain way partly to the failure to perceive that
-certain words, which are commonly supposed to stand for nothing more
-than a certain kind of cognitive state, do, in fact, _also_ include a
-reference to the truth of the object of such states.
-
-
-=82.= I will now sum up my account of the apparent connections between
-will and ethical propositions, which seem to support the vague
-conviction that ‘This is good’ is somehow identical with ‘This is
-willed in a certain way.’ (1) It may be maintained, with sufficient
-show of truth, that it is only because certain things were originally
-willed, that we ever came to have ethical convictions at all. And it
-has been too commonly assumed that to shew what was the cause of a
-thing is the same thing as to shew what the thing itself is. It is,
-however, hardly necessary to point out that this is not the case. (2)
-It may be further maintained, with some plausibility, that to think a
-thing good and to will it in a certain way are _now_ as a matter of
-fact identical. We must, however, distinguish certain possible meanings
-of this assertion. It may be admitted that when we think a thing good,
-we _generally_ have a special attitude of will or feeling towards it;
-and that, perhaps, when we will it in a certain way, we do always think
-it good. But the very fact that we can thus distinguish the question
-whether, though the one is always accompanied by the other, yet this
-other may not always be accompanied by the first, shews that the two
-things are not, in the strict sense, identical. The fact is that,
-whatever we mean by will, or by any form of will, the fact we mean by
-it certainly always includes something else _beside_ the thinking a
-thing good: and hence that, when willing and thinking good are asserted
-to be identical, the most that can be meant is that this other element
-in will always both accompanies and is accompanied by the thinking
-good; and this, as has been said, is of very doubtful truth. Even,
-however, if it were strictly true, the fact that the two things can be
-distinguished is fatal to the assumed coordination between will and
-cognition, in one of the senses in which that assumption is commonly
-made. For it is only in respect of the _other_ element in will, that
-volition differs from cognition; whereas it is only in respect of the
-fact that volition, or some form of volition, _includes_ a _cognition_
-of goodness, that will can have the same relation to ethical, which
-cognition has to metaphysical, propositions. Accordingly the fact of
-volition, _as a whole_, that is, if we include in it the element which
-makes it volition and distinguishes it from cognition, has _not_ the
-same relation to ethical propositions which cognition has to those
-which are metaphysical. Volition and cognition are _not_ coordinate
-ways of experiencing, since it is only in so far as volition denotes
-a _complex_ fact, which includes in it the one identical simple fact,
-which is meant by _cognition_, that volition is a way of experiencing
-at all.
-
-But, (3) if we allow the terms ‘volition’ or ‘will’ to stand for
-‘thinking good,’ although they certainly do not commonly stand for
-this, there still remains the question: What connection would this fact
-establish between volition and Ethics? Could the enquiry into what was
-willed be identical with the ethical enquiry into what was good? It
-is plain enough that they could not be identical; though it is also
-plain why they should be thought so. The question ‘What is good?’ is
-confused with the question ‘What is thought good?’ and the question
-‘What is true?’ with the question ‘What is thought true?’ for two main
-reasons. (1) One of these is the general difficulty that is found
-in distinguishing what is cognised from the cognition of it. It is
-observed that I certainly cannot cognise anything that is true without
-cognising it. Since, therefore, whenever I know a thing that is true,
-the thing is certainly cognised, it is assumed that for a thing to _be_
-true at all is the same thing as for it to be cognised. And (2) it is
-not observed that certain words, which are supposed to denote only
-peculiar species of cognition, do as a matter of fact _also_ denote
-that the object cognised is true. Thus if ‘perception’ be taken to
-denote only a certain kind of mental fact, then, since the object of it
-is always true, it becomes easy to suppose that to be true means only
-to be object to a mental state of that kind. And similarly it is easy
-to suppose that to be truly good differs from being falsely thought
-so, solely in respect of the fact that to be the former is to be the
-object of a volition differing from that of which an apparent good is
-the object, in the same way in which a perception (on this supposition)
-differs from an illusion.
-
-
-=83.= Being good, then, is not identical with being willed or felt
-in any kind of way, any more than being true is identical with being
-thought in any kind of way. But let us suppose this to be admitted: Is
-it still possible that an enquiry into the nature of will or feeling
-should be a necessary step to the proof of ethical conclusions? If
-being good and being willed are _not_ identical, then the most that can
-be maintained with regard to the connection of goodness with will is
-that what is good is always _also_ willed in a certain way, and that
-what is willed in a certain way is always _also_ good. And it may be
-said that this is all that is meant by those metaphysical writers who
-profess to base Ethics upon the Metaphysics of Will. What would follow
-from this supposition?
-
-It is plain that if what is willed in a certain way were always _also_
-good, then the fact that a thing was so willed would be a _criterion_
-of its goodness. But in order to establish that will is a criterion
-of goodness, we must be able to shew first and separately that in a
-great number of the instances in which we find a certain kind of will
-we also find that the objects of that will are good. We might, then,
-perhaps, be entitled to infer that in a few instances, where it was not
-obvious whether a thing was good or not but was obvious that it was
-willed in the way required, the thing was really good, since it had the
-property which in all other instances we had found to be accompanied by
-goodness. A reference to will might thus, just conceivably, become of
-use towards the end of our ethical investigations, when we had already
-been able to shew, independently, of a vast number of different objects
-that they were really good and in what degree they were so. And against
-even this conceivable utility it may be urged (1) That it is impossible
-to see why it should not be as easy (and it would certainly be the more
-secure way) to prove that the thing in question was good, by the same
-methods which we had used in proving that other things were good, as by
-reference to our criterion; and (2) That, if we set ourselves seriously
-to find out what things are good, we shall see reason to think (as
-will appear in Chapter VI.) that they have _no_ other property, both
-common and peculiar to them, beside their goodness--that, in fact,
-there is no criterion of goodness.
-
-
-=84.= But to consider whether any form of will is or is not a
-criterion of goodness is quite unnecessary for our purpose here;
-since none of those writers who profess to base their Ethics on
-an investigation of will have ever recognised the need of proving
-directly and independently that all the things which are willed in
-a certain way are good. They make no attempt to shew that will is a
-_criterion_ of goodness; and no stronger evidence could be given that
-they do not recognise that this, at most, is all it can be. As has
-been just pointed out, if we are to maintain that whatever is willed
-in a certain way is also good, we must in the first place be able to
-shew that certain things have one property ‘goodness,’ and that the
-same things _also_ have the other property that they are willed in a
-certain way. And secondly we must be able to shew this in a very large
-number of instances, if we are to be entitled to claim any assent
-for the proposition that these two properties _always_ accompany one
-another: even when this was shewn it would still be doubtful whether
-the inference from ‘generally’ to ‘always’ would be valid, and almost
-certain that this doubtful principle would be useless. But the very
-question which it is the business of Ethics to answer is this question
-what things are good; and, so long as Hedonism retains its present
-popularity, it must be admitted that it is a question upon which there
-is scarcely any agreement and which therefore requires the most careful
-examination. The greatest and most difficult part of the business
-of Ethics would therefore require to have been already accomplished
-before we could be entitled to claim that anything was a _criterion_
-of goodness. If, on the other hand, to be willed in a certain way
-was _identical_ with being good, then indeed we should be entitled
-to start our ethical investigations by enquiring what was willed in
-the way required. That this is the way in which metaphysical writers
-start their investigations seems to shew conclusively that they are
-influenced by the idea that ‘goodness’ is _identical_ with ‘being
-willed.’ They do not recognise that the question ‘What is good?’ is a
-_different_ one from the question ‘What is willed in a certain way?’
-Thus we find Green explicitly stating that ‘_the_ common characteristic
-of the good is that it satisfies some desire[22].’ If we are to take
-this statement strictly, it obviously asserts that good things have no
-characteristic in common, except that they satisfy some desire--not
-even, therefore, that they are good. And this can only be the case,
-if being good is _identical_ with satisfying desire: if ‘good’ is
-merely another name for ‘desire-satisfying.’ There could be no plainer
-instance of the naturalistic fallacy. And we cannot take the statement
-as a mere verbal slip, which does not affect the validity of Green’s
-main argument. For he nowhere either gives or pretends to give any
-reason for believing anything to be good in any sense, except that
-it is what would satisfy a particular kind of desire--the kind of
-desire which he tries to shew to be that of a moral agent. An unhappy
-alternative is before us. Such reasoning would give valid reasons for
-his conclusions, if, and only if, being good and being desired in a
-particular way were identical: and in this case, as we have seen in
-Chapter I., his conclusions would not be ethical. On the other hand,
-if the two are not identical, his conclusions may be ethical and may
-even be right, but he has not given us a single reason for believing
-them. The thing which a scientific Ethics is required to shew, namely
-that certain things are really good, he has assumed to begin with, in
-assuming that things which are willed in a certain way are always good.
-We may, therefore, have as much respect for Green’s conclusions as for
-those of any other man who details to us his ethical convictions: but
-that any of his arguments are such as to give us any reason for holding
-that Green’s convictions are more likely to be true than those of any
-other man, must be clearly denied. The _Prolegomena to Ethics_ is quite
-as far as Mr Spencer’s _Data of Ethics_, from making the smallest
-contribution to the solution of ethical problems.
-
- [22] _Prolegomena to Ethics_, p. 178.
-
-
-=85.= The main object of this chapter has been to shew that
-Metaphysics, understood as the investigation of a supposed
-supersensible reality, can have no logical bearing whatever upon the
-answer to the fundamental ethical question ‘What is good in itself?’
-That this is so, follows at once from the conclusion of Chapter I.,
-that ‘good’ denotes an ultimate, unanalysable predicate; but this truth
-has been so systematically ignored, that it seemed worth while to
-discuss and distinguish, in detail, the principal relations, which do
-hold, or have been supposed to hold, between Metaphysics and Ethics.
-With this view I pointed out:--(1) That Metaphysics may have a bearing
-on _practical_ Ethics--on the question ‘What ought we to do?’--so far
-as it may be able to tell us what the future effects of our action
-will be: what it can _not_ tell us is whether those effects are good
-or bad in themselves. One particular type of metaphysical doctrine,
-which is very frequently held, undoubtedly has such a bearing on
-_practical_ Ethics: for, if it is true that the sole reality is an
-eternal, immutable Absolute, then it follows that no actions of ours
-can have any real effect, and hence that no _practical_ proposition
-can be true. The same conclusion follows from the ethical proposition,
-commonly combined with this metaphysical one--namely that this eternal
-Reality is also the sole good (68). (2) That metaphysical writers,
-as where they fail to notice the contradiction just noticed between
-any _practical_ proposition and the assertion that an eternal reality
-is the sole good, seem frequently to confuse the proposition that
-one particular existing thing is good, with the proposition that the
-existence of that kind of thing _would_ be good, wherever it might
-occur. To the proof of the former proposition Metaphysics might be
-relevant, by shewing that the thing existed; to the proof of the latter
-it is wholly irrelevant: it can only serve the _psychological_ function
-of suggesting things which may be valuable--a function which would be
-still better performed by pure fiction (69-71).
-
-But the most important source of the supposition that Metaphysics is
-relevant to Ethics, seems to be the assumption that ‘good’ _must_
-denote some _real_ property of things--an assumption which is mainly
-due to two erroneous doctrines, the first _logical_, the second
-_epistemological_. Hence (3) I discussed the _logical_ doctrine that
-all propositions assert a relation between existents; and pointed
-out that the assimilation of ethical propositions either to natural
-laws or to commands are instances of this _logical_ fallacy (72-76).
-And finally (4) I discussed the _epistemological_ doctrine that to be
-good is equivalent to being willed or felt in some particular way; a
-doctrine which derives support from the analogous error, which Kant
-regarded as the cardinal point of his system and which has received
-immensely wide acceptance--the erroneous view that to be ‘true’ or
-‘real’ is equivalent to being thought in a particular way. In this
-discussion the main points to which I desire to direct attention
-are these: (_a_) That Volition and Feeling are _not_ analogous to
-Cognition in the manner assumed; since in so far as these words denote
-an attitude of the mind towards an object, they are themselves merely
-instances of Cognition: they differ only in respect of the kind of
-object of which they take cognisance, and in respect of the other
-mental accompaniments of such cognitions: (_b_) That universally the
-_object_ of a cognition must be distinguished from the cognition of
-which it is the object; and hence that in no case can the question
-whether the object is _true_ be identical with the question how it is
-cognised or whether it is cognised at all: it follows that even if the
-proposition ‘This is good’ were always the object of certain kinds of
-will or feeling, the _truth_ of that proposition could in no case be
-established by proving that it was their object; far less can that
-proposition itself be identical with the proposition that its subject
-is the object of a volition or a feeling (77-84).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-ETHICS IN RELATION TO CONDUCT.
-
-
-=86.= In the present chapter we have again to take a great step in
-ethical method. My discussion hitherto has fallen under two main
-heads. Under the first, I tried to shew what ‘good’--the adjective
-‘good’--_means_. This appeared to be the first point to be settled in
-any treatment of Ethics, that should aim at being systematic. It is
-necessary we should know this, should know what good means, before we
-can go on to consider what is good--what things or qualities are good.
-It is necessary we should know it for two reasons. The first reason
-is that ‘good’ is the notion upon which all Ethics depends. We cannot
-hope to understand what we mean, when we say that this is good or that
-is good, until we understand quite clearly, not only what ‘this’ is or
-‘that’ is (which the natural sciences and philosophy can tell us) but
-also what is meant by calling them good, a matter which is reserved
-for Ethics only. Unless we are quite clear on this point, our ethical
-reasoning will be always apt to be fallacious. We shall think that we
-are proving that a thing is ‘good,’ when we are really only proving
-that it is something else; since unless we know what ‘good’ means,
-unless we know what is meant by that notion in itself, as distinct from
-what is meant by any other notion, we shall not be able to tell when
-we are dealing with it and when we are dealing with something else,
-which is perhaps like it, but yet not the same. And the second reason
-why we should settle first of all this question ‘What good means?’
-is a reason of method. It is this, that we can never know on what
-_evidence_ an ethical proposition rests, until we know the nature of
-the notion which makes the proposition ethical. We cannot tell what
-is possible, by way of proof, in favour of one judgment that ‘This or
-that is good,’ or against another judgment ‘That this or that is bad,’
-until we have recognised what the nature of such propositions must
-always be. In fact, it follows from the meaning of good and bad, that
-such propositions are all of them, in Kant’s phrase, ‘synthetic’: they
-all must rest in the end upon some proposition which must be simply
-accepted or rejected, which cannot be logically deduced from any other
-proposition. This result, which follows from our first investigation,
-may be otherwise expressed by saying that the fundamental principles
-of Ethics must be self-evident. But I am anxious that this expression
-should not be misunderstood. The expression ‘self-evident’ means
-properly that the proposition so called is evident or true, _by itself_
-alone; that it is not an inference from some proposition other than
-_itself_. The expression does _not_ mean that the proposition is
-true, because it is evident to you or me or all mankind, because in
-other words it appears to us to be true. That a proposition appears
-to be true can never be a valid argument that true it really is. By
-saying that a proposition is self-evident, we mean emphatically that
-its appearing so to us, is _not_ the reason why it is true: for we
-mean that it has absolutely no reason. It would not be a self-evident
-proposition, if we could say of it: I cannot think otherwise and
-therefore it is true. For then its evidence or proof would not lie in
-itself, but in something else, namely our conviction of it. That it
-appears true to us may indeed be the _cause_ of our asserting it, or
-the reason why we think and say that it is true: but a reason in this
-sense is something utterly different from a logical reason, or reason
-why something is true. Moreover, it is obviously not a reason of the
-same thing. The _evidence_ of a proposition to us is only a reason
-for _our holding it_ to be true: whereas a logical reason, or reason
-in the sense in which self-evident propositions have no reason, is a
-reason why _the proposition itself_ must be true, not why we hold it
-so to be. Again that a proposition is evident to us may not only be
-the reason why we do think or affirm it, it may even be a _reason_
-why we ought to think it or affirm it. But a reason, in this sense
-too, is not a logical reason for the truth of the proposition, though
-it is a logical reason for the rightness of holding the proposition.
-In our common language, however, these three meanings of ‘reason’ are
-constantly confused, whenever we say ‘I have a reason for thinking that
-true.’ But it is absolutely essential, if we are to get clear notions
-about Ethics or, indeed, about any other, especially any philosophical,
-study, that we should distinguish them. When, therefore, I talk of
-Intuitionistic Hedonism, I must not be understood to imply that my
-denial that ‘Pleasure is the only good’ is _based_ on my Intuition of
-its falsehood. My Intuition of its falsehood is indeed _my_ reason for
-_holding_ and declaring it untrue; it is indeed the only valid reason
-for so doing. But that is just because there is _no_ logical reason
-for it; because there is no proper evidence or reason of its falsehood
-except itself alone. It is untrue, because it is untrue, and there
-is no other reason: but I _declare_ it untrue, because its untruth
-is evident to me, and I hold that that is a sufficient reason for my
-assertion. We must not therefore look on Intuition, as if it were
-an alternative to reasoning. Nothing whatever can take the place of
-_reasons_ for the truth of any proposition: intuition can only furnish
-a reason for _holding_ any proposition to be true: this however it must
-do when any proposition is self-evident, when, in fact, there are no
-reasons which prove its truth.
-
-
-=87.= So much, then, for the first step in our ethical method, the
-step which established that good is good and nothing else whatever,
-and that Naturalism was a fallacy. A second step was taken when we
-began to consider proposed self-evident principles of Ethics. In this
-second division, resting on our result that good means good, we began
-the discussion of propositions asserting that such and such a thing
-or quality or concept was good. Of such a kind was the principle of
-Intuitionistic or Ethical Hedonism--the principle that ‘Pleasure alone
-is good.’ Following the method established by our first discussion,
-I claimed that the untruth of this proposition was self-evident. I
-could do nothing to _prove_ that it was untrue; I could only point
-out as clearly as possible what it means, and how it contradicts other
-propositions which appear to be equally true. My only object in all
-this was, necessarily, to convince. But even if I did convince, that
-does not prove that we are right. It justifies us in _holding_ that
-we are so; but nevertheless we may be wrong. On one thing, however,
-we may justly pride ourselves. It is that we have had a better chance
-of answering our question rightly, than Bentham or Mill or Sidgwick
-or others who have contradicted us. For we have _proved_ that these
-have never even asked themselves the question which they professed to
-answer. They have confused it with another question: small wonder,
-therefore, if their answer is different from ours. We must be quite
-sure that the same question has been put, before we trouble ourselves
-at the different answers that are given to it. For all we know, the
-whole world would agree with us, if they could once clearly understand
-the question upon which we want their votes. Certain it is, that in
-all those cases where we found a difference of opinion, we found also
-that the question had _not_ been clearly understood. Though, therefore,
-we cannot prove that we are right, yet we have reason to believe that
-everybody, unless he is mistaken as to what he thinks, will think the
-same as we. It is as with a sum in mathematics. If we find a gross and
-palpable error in the calculations, we are not surprised or troubled
-that the person who made this mistake has reached a different result
-from ours. We think he will admit that his result is wrong, if his
-mistake is pointed out to him. For instance if a man has to add up 5
-+ 7 + 9, we should not wonder that he made the result to be 34, if he
-started by making 5 + 7 = 25. And so in Ethics, if we find, as we did,
-that ‘desirable’ is confused with ‘desired,’ or that ‘end’ is confused
-with ‘means,’ we need not be disconcerted that those who have committed
-these mistakes do not agree with us. The only difference is that in
-Ethics, owing to the intricacy of its subject-matter, it is far more
-difficult to persuade anyone either that he has made a mistake or that
-that mistake affects his result.
-
-In this second division of my subject--the division which is occupied
-with the question, ‘What is good in itself?’--I have hitherto only
-tried to establish one definite result, and that a negative one: namely
-that pleasure is _not_ the sole good. This result, if true, refutes
-half, or more than half, of the ethical theories which have ever been
-held, and is, therefore, not without importance. It will, however, be
-necessary presently to deal positively with the question: What things
-are good and in what degrees?
-
-
-=88.= But before proceeding to this discussion I propose, first, to
-deal with the _third_ kind of ethical question--the question: What
-ought we to do?
-
-The answering of this question constitutes the third great division
-of ethical enquiry; and its nature was briefly explained in Chap. I.
-(§§ 15-17). It introduces into Ethics, as was there pointed out, an
-entirely new question--the question what things are related as _causes_
-to that which is good in itself; and this question can only be answered
-by an entirely new method--the method of empirical investigation; by
-means of which causes are discovered in the other sciences. To ask what
-kind of actions we ought to perform, or what kind of conduct is right,
-is to ask what kind of effects such action and conduct will produce.
-Not a single question in practical Ethics can be answered except by a
-causal generalisation. All such questions do, indeed, _also_ involve
-an ethical judgment proper--the judgment that certain effects are
-better, in themselves, than others. But they _do_ assert that these
-better things are effects--are causally connected with the actions in
-question. Every judgment in practical Ethics may be reduced to the
-form: This is a cause of that good thing.
-
-
-=89.= That this is the case, that the questions, What is right? what is
-my duty? what ought I to do? belong exclusively to this third branch of
-ethical enquiry, is the first point to which I wish to call attention.
-All moral laws, I wish to shew, are merely statements that certain
-kinds of actions will have good effects. The very opposite of this view
-has been generally prevalent in Ethics. ‘The right’ and ‘the useful’
-have been supposed to be at least _capable_ of conflicting with one
-another, and, at all events, to be essentially distinct. It has been
-characteristic of a certain school of moralists, as of moral common
-sense, to declare that the end will never justify the means. What I
-wish first to point out is that ‘right’ does and can mean nothing but
-‘cause of a good result,’ and is thus identical with ‘useful’; whence
-it follows that the end always will justify the means, and that no
-action which is not justified by its results can be right. That there
-may be a true proposition, meant to be conveyed by the assertion ‘The
-end will not justify the means,’ I fully admit: but that, in another
-sense, and a sense far more fundamental for ethical theory, it is
-utterly false, must first be shewn.
-
-That the assertion ‘I am morally bound to perform this action’ is
-identical with the assertion ‘This action will produce the greatest
-possible amount of good in the Universe’ has already been briefly shewn
-in Chap. I. (§ 17); but it is important to insist that this fundamental
-point is demonstrably certain. This may, perhaps, be best made evident
-in the following way. It is plain that when we assert that a certain
-action is our absolute duty, we are asserting that the performance of
-that action at that time is unique in respect of value. But no dutiful
-action can possibly have unique value in the sense that it is the sole
-thing of value in the world; since, in that case, _every_ such action
-would be the _sole_ good thing, which is a manifest contradiction.
-And for the same reason its value cannot be unique in the sense that
-it has more intrinsic value than anything else in the world; since
-_every_ act of duty would then be the _best_ thing in the world, which
-is also a contradiction. It can, therefore, be unique only in the sense
-that the whole world will be better, if it be performed, than if any
-possible alternative were taken. And the question whether this is so
-cannot possibly depend solely on the question of its own intrinsic
-value. For any action will also have effects different from those of
-any other action; and if any of these have intrinsic value, their value
-is exactly as relevant to the total goodness of the Universe as that of
-their cause. It is, in fact, evident that, however valuable an action
-may be in itself, yet, owing to its existence, the sum of good in the
-Universe may conceivably be made less than if some other action, less
-valuable in itself, had been performed. But to say that this is the
-case is to say that it would have been better that the action should
-not have been done; and this again is obviously equivalent to the
-statement that it ought not to have been done--that it was not what
-duty required. ‘Fiat iustitia, ruat caelum’ can only be justified on
-the ground that by the doing of justice the Universe gains more than it
-loses by the falling of the heavens. It is, of course, possible that
-this is the case: but, at all events, to assert that justice _is_ a
-duty, in spite of such consequences, is to assert that it is the case.
-
-Our ‘duty,’ therefore, can only be defined as that action, which will
-cause more good to exist in the Universe than any possible alternative.
-And what is ‘right’ or ‘morally permissible’ only differs from this, as
-what will _not_ cause _less_ good than any possible alternative. When,
-therefore, Ethics presumes to assert that certain ways of acting are
-‘duties’ it presumes to assert that to act in those ways will always
-produce the greatest possible sum of good. If we are told that to ‘do
-no murder’ is a duty, we are told that the action, whatever it may be,
-which is called murder, will under no circumstances cause so much good
-to exist in the Universe as its avoidance.
-
-
-=90.= But, if this be recognised, several most important consequences
-follow, with regard to the relation of Ethics to conduct.
-
-(1) It is plain that no moral law is self-evident, as has commonly been
-held by the Intuitional school of moralists. The Intuitional view of
-Ethics consists in the supposition that certain rules, stating that
-certain actions are always to be done or to be omitted, may be taken as
-self-evident premisses. I have shewn with regard to judgments of what
-is _good in itself_, that this is the case; no reason can be given for
-them. But it is the essence of Intuitionism to suppose that rules of
-action--statements not of what ought to _be_, but of what we ought to
-do--are in the same sense intuitively certain. Plausibility has been
-lent to this view by the fact that we do undoubtedly make immediate
-judgments that certain actions are obligatory or wrong: we are thus
-often intuitively certain of our duty, _in a psychological sense_. But,
-nevertheless, these judgments are not self-evident and cannot be taken
-as ethical premisses, since, as has now been shewn, they are capable of
-being confirmed or refuted by an investigation of causes and effects.
-It is, indeed, possible that some of our immediate intuitions are true;
-but since _what_ we intuit, _what_ conscience tells us, is that certain
-actions will always produce the greatest sum of good possible under the
-circumstances, it is plain that reasons can be given, which will shew
-the deliverances of conscience to be true or false.
-
-
-=91.= (2) In order to shew that any action is a duty, it is necessary
-to know both what are the other conditions, which will, conjointly with
-it, determine its effects; to know exactly what will be the effects of
-these conditions; and to know all the events which will be in any way
-affected by our action throughout an infinite future. We must have all
-this causal knowledge, and further we must know accurately the degree
-of value both of the action itself and of all these effects; and must
-be able to determine how, in conjunction with the other things in the
-Universe, they will affect its value as an organic whole. And not
-only this: we must also possess all this knowledge with regard to the
-effects of every possible alternative; and must then be able to see by
-comparison that the total value due to the existence of the action in
-question will be greater than that which would be produced by any of
-these alternatives. But it is obvious that our causal knowledge alone
-is far too incomplete for us ever to assure ourselves of this result.
-Accordingly it follows that we never have any reason to suppose that an
-action is our duty: we can never be sure that any action will produce
-the greatest value possible.
-
-Ethics, therefore, is quite unable to give us a list of duties:
-but there still remains a humbler task which may be possible for
-Practical Ethics. Although we cannot hope to discover which, in a given
-situation, is the best of all possible alternative actions, there may
-be some possibility of shewing which among the alternatives, _likely to
-occur to any one_, will produce the greatest sum of good. This second
-task is certainly all that Ethics can ever have accomplished: and it is
-certainly all that it has ever collected materials for proving; since
-no one has ever attempted to exhaust the possible alternative actions
-in any particular case. Ethical philosophers have in fact confined
-their attention to a very limited class of actions, which have been
-selected because they are those which most commonly occur to mankind
-as possible alternatives. With regard to these they may possibly have
-shewn that one alternative is better, _i.e._ produces a greater total
-of value, than others. But it seems desirable to insist, that though
-they have represented this result as a determination of _duties_, it
-can never really have been so. For the term duty is certainly so used
-that, if we are subsequently persuaded that any possible action would
-have produced more good than the one we adopted, we admit that we
-failed to do our duty. It will, however, be a useful task if Ethics can
-determine which among alternatives _likely to occur_ will produce the
-greatest total value. For, though this alternative cannot be proved to
-be the best possible, yet it may be better than any course of action
-which we should otherwise adopt.
-
-
-=92.= A difficulty in distinguishing this task, which Ethics may
-perhaps undertake with some hope of success, from the hopeless task
-of finding duties, arises from an ambiguity in the use of the term
-‘possible.’ An action may, in one perfectly legitimate sense, be said
-to be ‘impossible’ solely because the idea of doing it does not occur
-to us. In this sense, then, the alternatives which do actually occur
-to a man would be the only _possible_ alternatives; and the best of
-these would be the best possible action under the circumstances, and
-hence would conform to our definition of ‘duty.’ But when we talk of
-the best _possible_ action as our duty, we mean by the term any action
-which no _other_ known circumstance would prevent, _provided_ the idea
-of it occurred to us. And this use of the term is in accordance with
-popular usage. For we admit that a man may fail to do his duty, through
-neglecting to think of what he _might_ have done. Since, therefore,
-we say that he _might_ have done, what nevertheless did not occur to
-him, it is plain that we do not limit his _possible_ actions to those
-of which he thinks. It might be urged, with more plausibility, that we
-mean by a man’s duty only the best of those actions of which he _might_
-have thought. And it is true that we do not blame any man very severely
-for omitting an action of which, as we say, ‘he could not be expected
-to think.’ But even here it is plain that we recognise a distinction
-between what he might have done and what he might have thought of
-doing: we regard it as a pity that he did not do otherwise. And ‘duty’
-is certainly used in such a sense, that it would be a contradiction in
-terms to say it was a pity that a man did his duty.
-
-We must, therefore, distinguish a possible action from an action of
-which it is possible to think. By the former we mean an action which
-no known cause would prevent, _provided_ the idea of it occurred to
-us: and that one among such actions, which will produce the greatest
-total good, is what we mean by duty. Ethics certainly cannot hope to
-discover what kind of action is always our duty in this sense. It may,
-however, hope to decide which among one or two such possible actions is
-the best: and those which it has chosen to consider are, as a matter of
-fact, the most important of those with regard to which men deliberate
-whether they shall or shall not do them. A decision with regard to
-these may therefore be easily confounded with a decision with regard
-to which is the best possible action. But it is to be noted that even
-though we limit ourselves to considering which is the better among
-alternatives likely to be thought of, the fact that these alternatives
-might be thought of is not included is what we mean by calling them
-possible alternatives. Even if in any particular case it was impossible
-that the idea of them should have occurred to a man, the question we
-are concerned with is, which, if it had occurred, would have been the
-best alternative? If we say that murder is always a worse alternative,
-we mean to assert that it is so, even where it was impossible for the
-murderer to think of doing anything else.
-
-The utmost, then, that Practical Ethics can hope to discover is which,
-among a few alternatives possible under certain circumstances, will, on
-the whole, produce the best result. It may tell us which is the best,
-in this sense, of certain alternatives about which we are likely to
-deliberate; and since we may also know that, even if we choose none of
-these, what we shall, in that case, do is unlikely to be as good as one
-of them, it may thus tell us which of the alternatives, among which
-we _can_ choose, it is best to choose. If it could do this it would be
-sufficient for practical guidance.
-
-
-=93.= But (3) it is plain that even this is a task of immense
-difficulty. It is difficult to see how we can establish even a
-probability that by doing one thing we shall obtain a better total
-result than by doing another. I shall merely endeavour to point out how
-much is assumed, when we assume that there is such a probability, and
-on what lines it seems possible that this assumption may be justified.
-It will be apparent that it has never yet been justified--that no
-sufficient reason has ever yet been found for considering one action
-more right or more wrong than another.
-
-(_a_) The first difficulty in the way of establishing a probability
-that one course of action will give a better total result than another,
-lies in the fact that we have to take account of the effects of both
-throughout an infinite future. We have no certainty but that, if we
-do one action now, the Universe will, throughout all time, differ in
-some way from what it would have been, if we had done another; and,
-if there is such a permanent difference, it is certainly relevant to
-our calculation. But it is quite certain that our causal knowledge is
-utterly insufficient to tell us what different effects will probably
-result from two different actions, except within a comparatively short
-space of time; we can certainly only pretend to calculate the effects
-of actions within what may be called an ‘immediate’ future. No one,
-when he proceeds upon what he considers a rational consideration of
-effects, would guide his choice by any forecast that went beyond a few
-centuries at most; and, in general, we consider that we have acted
-rationally, if we think we have secured a balance of good within a few
-years or months or days. Yet, if a choice guided by such considerations
-is to be rational, we must certainly have some reason to believe that
-no consequences of our action in a further future will generally be
-such as to reverse the balance of good that is probable in the future
-which we can foresee. This large postulate must be made, if we are
-ever to assert that the results of one action will be even probably
-better than those of another. Our utter ignorance of the far future
-gives us no justification for saying that it is even probably right
-to choose the greater good within the region over which a probable
-forecast may extend. We do, then, assume that it is improbable that
-effects, after a certain time, will, in general, be such as to reverse
-the comparative value of the alternative results within that time. And
-that this assumption is justified must be shewn before we can claim
-to have given any reason whatever for acting in one way rather than
-in another. It may, perhaps, be justified by some such considerations
-as the following. As we proceed further and further from the time at
-which alternative actions are open to us, the events of which either
-action would be part cause become increasingly dependent on those
-other circumstances, which are the same, whichever action we adopt.
-The effects of any individual action seem, after a sufficient space of
-time, to be found only in trifling modifications spread over a very
-wide area, whereas its immediate effects consist in some prominent
-modification of a comparatively narrow area. Since, however, most
-of the things which have any great importance for good or evil are
-things of this prominent kind, there may be a probability that after
-a certain time all the effects of any particular action become so
-nearly indifferent, that any difference between their value and that
-of the effects of another action, is very unlikely to outweigh an
-obvious difference in the value of the immediate effects. It does in
-fact appear to be the case that, in most cases, whatever action we now
-adopt, ‘it will be all the same a hundred years hence,’ so far as the
-existence at that time of anything greatly good or bad is concerned:
-and this might, perhaps, be _shewn_ to be true, by an investigation
-of the manner in which the effects of any particular event become
-neutralised by lapse of time. Failing such a proof, we can certainly
-have no rational ground for asserting that one of two alternatives is
-even probably right and another wrong. If any of our judgments of right
-and wrong are to pretend to probability, we must have reason to think
-that the effects of our actions in the far future will not have value
-sufficient to outweigh any superiority of one set of effects over
-another in the immediate future.
-
-
-=94.= (_b_) We must assume, then, that if the effects of one action are
-generally better than those of another, so far forward in the future as
-we are able to foresee any probable difference in their effects at all,
-then the total effect upon the Universe of the former action is also
-generally better. We certainly cannot hope directly to compare their
-effects except within a limited future; and all the arguments, which
-have ever been used in Ethics, and upon which we commonly act in common
-life, directed to shewing that one course is superior to another, are
-(apart from theological dogmas) confined to pointing out such probable
-immediate advantages. The question remains, then: Can we lay down any
-general rules to the effect that one among a few alternative actions
-will generally produce a greater total of good in the immediate future?
-
-It is important to insist that this question, limited as it is, is the
-utmost, to which, with any knowledge we have at present or are likely
-to have for a long time to come, Practical Ethics can hope to give an
-answer. I have already pointed out that we cannot hope to discover
-which is the _best_ possible alternative in any given circumstances,
-but only which, among a few, is better than the others. And I have also
-pointed out that there is certainly no more than a probability, even
-if we are entitled to assert so much, that what is better in regard to
-its immediate effects will also be better on the whole. It now remains
-to insist that, even with regard to these immediate effects, we can
-only hope to discover which, among a few alternatives, will _generally_
-produce the greatest balance of good in the immediate future. We can
-secure no title to assert that obedience to such commands as ‘Thou
-shalt not lie,’ or even ‘Thou shalt do no murder,’ is _universally_
-better than the alternatives of lying and murder. Reasons why no more
-than a _general_ knowledge is possible have been already given in Chap.
-I. (§ 16); but they may be recapitulated here. In the first place,
-of the effects, which principally concern us in ethical discussions,
-as having intrinsic value, we know the causes so little, that we can
-scarcely claim, with regard to any single one, to have obtained even
-a _hypothetical_ universal law, such as has been obtained in the exact
-sciences. We cannot even say: If this action is performed, under
-exactly these circumstances, and if no others interfere, this important
-effect, at least, will _always_ be produced. But, in the second
-place, an ethical law is not merely hypothetical. If we are to know
-that it will always be better to act in a certain way, under certain
-circumstances, we must know not merely what effects such actions will
-produce, _provided_ no other circumstances interfere, but also that no
-other circumstances will interfere. And this it is obviously impossible
-to know with more than probability. An ethical law has the nature not
-of a scientific law but of a scientific _prediction_: and the latter is
-always merely probable, although the probability may be very great. An
-engineer is entitled to assert that, if a bridge be built in a certain
-way, it will probably bear certain loads for a certain time; but he can
-never be absolutely certain that it has been built in the way required,
-nor that, even if it has, some accident will not intervene to falsify
-his prediction. With any ethical law, the same must be the case; it can
-be no more than a generalisation: and here, owing to the comparative
-absence of accurate hypothetical knowledge, on which the prediction
-should be based, the probability is comparatively small. But finally,
-for an ethical generalisation, we require to know not only what effects
-will be produced, but also what are the comparative values of those
-effects; and on this question too, it must be admitted, considering
-what a prevalent opinion Hedonism has been, that we are very liable to
-be mistaken. It is plain, then, that we are not soon likely to know
-more than that one kind of action will _generally_ produce better
-effects than another; and that more than this has certainly never been
-proved. In no two cases will _all_ the effects of any kind of action be
-precisely the same, because in each case some of the circumstances will
-differ; and although the effects, that are important for good or evil,
-may be generally the same, it is extremely unlikely that they will
-always be so.
-
-
-=95.= (_c_) If, now, we confine ourselves to a search for actions which
-are _generally_ better as means than any probable alternative, it
-seems possible to establish as much as this in defence of most of the
-rules most universally recognised by Common Sense. I do not propose to
-enter upon this defence in detail, but merely to point out what seem to
-be the chief distinct principles by the use of which it can be made.
-
-In the first place, then, we can only shew that one action is
-generally better than another as a means, provided that certain other
-circumstances are given. We do, as a matter of fact, only observe its
-good effects under certain circumstances; and it may be easily seen
-that a sufficient change in these would render doubtful what seem the
-most universally certain of general rules. Thus, the general disutility
-of murder can only be proved, provided the majority of the human race
-will certainly persist in existing. In order to prove that murder, if
-it were so universally adopted as to cause the speedy extermination of
-the race, would not be good as a means, we should have to disprove the
-main contention of pessimism--namely that the existence of human life
-is on the whole an evil. And the view of pessimism, however strongly we
-may be convinced of its truth or falsehood, is one which never has been
-either proved or refuted conclusively. That universal murder would not
-be a good thing at this moment can therefore not be proved. But, as a
-matter of fact, we can and do assume with certainty that, even if a few
-people are willing to murder, most people will not be willing. When,
-therefore, we say that murder is in general to be avoided, we only
-mean that it is so, so long as the majority of mankind will certainly
-not agree to it, but will persist in living. And that, under these
-circumstances, it is generally wrong for any single person to commit
-murder seems capable of proof. For, since there is in any case no hope
-of exterminating the race, the only effects which we have to consider
-are those which the action will have upon the increase of the goods
-and the diminution of the evils of human life. Where the best is not
-attainable (assuming extermination to be the best) one alternative may
-still be better than another. And, apart from the immediate evils which
-murder generally produces, the fact that, if it were a common practice,
-the feeling of insecurity, thus caused, would absorb much time, which
-might be spent to better purpose, is perhaps conclusive against it. So
-long as men desire to live as strongly as they do, and so long as it is
-certain that they will continue to do so, anything which hinders them
-from devoting their energy to the attainment of positive goods, seems
-plainly bad as a means. And the general practice of murder, falling so
-far short of universality as it certainly must in all known conditions
-of society, seems certainly to be a hindrance of this kind.
-
-A similar defence seems possible for most of the rules, most
-universally enforced by legal sanctions, such as respect of property;
-and for some of those most commonly recognised by Common Sense, such
-as industry, temperance and the keeping of promises. In any state of
-society in which men have that intense desire for property of some
-sort, which seems to be universal, the common legal rules for the
-protection of property must serve greatly to facilitate the best
-possible expenditure of energy. And similarly: Industry is a means
-to the attainment of those necessaries, without which the further
-attainment of any great positive goods is impossible; temperance merely
-enjoins the avoidance of those excesses, which, by injuring health,
-would prevent a man from contributing as much as possible to the
-acquirement of these necessaries; and the keeping of promises greatly
-facilitates cooperation in such acquirement.
-
-Now all these rules seem to have two characteristics to which it is
-desirable to call attention. (1) They seem all to be such that, in any
-known state of society, a _general_ observance of them _would_ be good
-as a means. The conditions upon which their utility depends, namely the
-tendency to preserve and propagate life and the desire of property,
-seem to be so universal and so strong, that it would be impossible to
-remove them; and, this being so, we can say that, under any conditions
-which could actually be given, the general observance of these rules
-would be good as a means. For, while there seems no reason to think
-that their observance ever makes a society worse than one in which they
-are not observed, it is certainly necessary as a means for any state of
-things in which the greatest possible goods can be attained. And (2)
-these rules, since they can be recommended as a means to that which is
-itself only a necessary condition for the existence of any great good,
-can be defended independently of correct views upon the primary ethical
-question of what is good in itself. On any view commonly taken, it
-seems certain that the preservation of civilised society, which these
-rules are necessary to effect, is necessary for the existence, in any
-great degree, of anything which may be held to be good in itself.
-
-
-=96.= But not by any means all the rules commonly recognised combine
-these two characteristics. The arguments offered in defence of Common
-Sense morality very often presuppose the existence of conditions,
-which cannot be fairly assumed to be so universally necessary as the
-tendency to continue life and to desire property. Such arguments,
-accordingly, only prove the utility of the rule, so long as certain
-conditions, which may alter, remain the same: it cannot be claimed of
-the rules thus defended, that they would be generally good as means in
-every state of society: in order to establish this _universal_ general
-utility, it would be necessary to arrive at a correct view of what is
-good or evil in itself. This, for instance, seems to be the case with
-most of the rules comprehended under the name of Chastity. These rules
-are commonly defended, by Utilitarian writers or writers who assume as
-their end the conservation of society, with arguments which presuppose
-the necessary existence of such sentiments as conjugal jealousy and
-paternal affection. These sentiments are no doubt sufficiently strong
-and general to make the defence valid for many conditions of society.
-But it is not difficult to imagine a civilised society existing without
-them; and, in such a case, if chastity were still to be defended,
-it would be necessary to establish that its violation produced evil
-effects, other than those due to the assumed tendency of such violation
-to disintegrate society. Such a defence may, no doubt, be made; but it
-would require an examination into the primary ethical question of what
-is good and bad in itself, far more thorough than any ethical writer
-has ever offered to us. Whether this be so in this particular case or
-not, it is certain that a distinction, not commonly recognised, should
-be made between those rules, of which the social utility depends upon
-the existence of circumstances, more or less likely to alter, and those
-of which the utility seems certain under all possible conditions.
-
-
-=97.= It is obvious that all the rules, which were enumerated above as
-likely to be useful in _almost any_ state of society, can _also_ be
-defended owing to results which they produce under conditions which
-exist only in particular states of society. And it should be noticed
-that we are entitled to reckon among these conditions the sanctions of
-legal penalties, of social disapproval, and of private remorse, where
-these exist. These sanctions are, indeed, commonly treated by Ethics
-only as motives for the doing of actions of which the utility can be
-proved independently of the existence of these sanctions. And it may
-be admitted that sanctions _ought_ not to be attached to actions which
-would not be right independently. Nevertheless it is plain that, where
-they do exist, they are not only motives but also justifications for
-the actions in question. One of the chief reasons why an action should
-not be done in any particular state of society is that it will be
-punished; since the punishment is in general itself a greater evil than
-would have been caused by the omission of the action punished. Thus
-the existence of a punishment may be an adequate reason for regarding
-an action as generally wrong, even though it has no other bad effects
-but even slightly good ones. The fact that an action will be punished
-is a condition of exactly the same kind as others of more or less
-permanence, which must be taken into account in discussing the general
-utility or disutility of an action in a particular state of society.
-
-
-=98.= It is plain, then, that the rules commonly recognised by Common
-Sense, in the society in which we live, and commonly advocated as if
-they were all equally and universally right and good, are of very
-different orders. Even those which seem to be most universally good
-as means, can only be shewn to be so, because of the existence of
-conditions, which, though perhaps evils, may be taken to be necessary;
-and even these owe their more obvious utilities to the existence of
-other conditions, which cannot be taken to be necessary except over
-longer or shorter periods of history, and many of which are evils.
-Others seem to be justifiable _solely_ by the existence of such more or
-less temporary conditions, unless we abandon the attempt to shew that
-they are means to that preservation of society, which is itself a mere
-means, and are able to establish that they are directly means to things
-good or evil in themselves, but which are not commonly recognised to be
-such.
-
-If, then, we ask what rules are or would be useful to be observed in
-the society in which we live, it seems possible to prove a definite
-utility in most of those which are in general both recognised and
-practised. But a great part of ordinary moral exhortation and social
-discussion consists in the advocating of rules, which are _not_
-generally practised; and with regard to these it seems very doubtful
-whether a case for their general utility can ever be conclusively made
-out. Such proposed rules commonly suffer from three main defects. In
-the first place, (1) the actions which they advocate are very commonly
-such as it is impossible for most individuals to perform by any
-volition. It is far too usual to find classed together with actions,
-which can be performed, if only they be willed, others, of which the
-possibility depends upon the possession of a peculiar disposition,
-which is given to few and cannot even be acquired. It may, no doubt,
-be useful to point out that those who have the necessary disposition
-should obey these rules; and it would, in many cases, be desirable that
-everybody should have this disposition. But it should be recognised
-that, when we regard a thing as a moral rule or law, we mean that it
-is one which _almost everybody can_ observe by an effort of volition,
-in that state of society to which the rule is supposed to apply. (2)
-Actions are often advocated, of which, though they themselves are
-possible, yet the proposed good effects are not possible, because the
-conditions necessary for their existence are not sufficiently general.
-A rule, of which the observance would produce good effects, if human
-nature were in other respects different from what it is, is advocated
-as if its general observance would produce the same effects now and
-at once. In fact, however, by the time that the conditions necessary
-to make its observance useful have arisen, it is quite as likely that
-other conditions, rendering its observance unnecessary or positively
-harmful, may also have arisen; and yet this state of things may be a
-better one than that in which the rule in question would have been
-useful. (3) There also occurs the case in which the usefulness of a
-rule depends upon conditions likely to change, or of which the change
-would be as easy and more desirable than the observance of the proposed
-rule. It may even happen that the general observance of the proposed
-rule would itself destroy the conditions upon which its utility depends.
-
-One or other of these objections seems generally to apply to proposed
-changes in social custom, advocated as being better rules to follow
-than those now actually followed; and, for this reason, it seems
-doubtful whether Ethics can establish the utility of any rules
-other than those generally practised. But its inability to do so is
-fortunately of little practical moment. The question whether the
-general observance of a rule not generally observed, would or would not
-be desirable, cannot much affect the question how any individual ought
-to act; since, on the one hand, there is a large probability that he
-will not, by any means, be able to bring about its general observance,
-and, on the other hand, the fact that its general observance would
-be useful could, in any case, give him no reason to conclude that he
-himself ought to observe it, in the absence of such general observance.
-
-With regard, then, to the actions commonly classed in Ethics, as
-duties, crimes, or sins, the following points seem deserving of notice.
-(1) By so classing them we mean that they are actions which it is
-possible for an individual to perform or avoid, if he only _wills_ to
-do so; and that they are actions which _everybody_ ought to perform
-or avoid, when occasion arises. (2) We can certainly not prove of
-any such action that it ought to be done or avoided under _all_
-circumstances; we can only prove that its performance or avoidance will
-_generally_ produce better results than the alternative. (3) If further
-we ask of what actions as much as this can be proved, it seems only
-possible to prove it with regard to those which are actually generally
-practised among us. And of these some only are such that their general
-performance would be useful in any state of society that seems
-possible; of others the utility depends upon conditions which exist
-now, but which seem to be more or less alterable.
-
-
-=99.= (_d_) So much, then, for moral rules or laws, in the ordinary
-sense--rules which assert that it is generally useful, under more or
-less common circumstances, for _everybody_ to perform or omit some
-definite kind of action. It remains to say something with regard to the
-principles by which _the individual_ should decide what he ought to
-do, (α) with regard to those actions as to which some general rule is
-certainly true, and (β) with regard to those where such a certain rule
-is wanting.
-
-(α) Since, as I have tried to shew, it is impossible to establish
-that any kind of action will produce a better total result than
-its alternative _in all cases_, it follows that in some cases the
-neglect of an established rule will probably be the best course of
-action possible. The question then arises: Can the individual ever be
-justified in assuming that his is one of these exceptional cases? And
-it seems that this question may be definitely answered in the negative.
-For, if it is certain that in a large majority of cases the observance
-of a certain rule is useful, it follows that there is a large
-probability that it would be wrong to break the rule in any particular
-case; and the uncertainty of our knowledge both of effects and of their
-value, in particular cases, is so great, that it seems doubtful whether
-the individual’s judgment that the effects will probably be good in
-his case can ever be set against the general probability that that
-kind of action is wrong. Added to this general ignorance is the fact
-that, if the question arises at all, our judgment will generally be
-biassed by the fact that we strongly desire one of the results which we
-hope to obtain by breaking the rule. It seems, then, that with regard
-to any rule which is _generally_ useful, we may assert that it ought
-_always_ to be observed, not on the ground that in _every_ particular
-case it will be useful, but on the ground that in _any_ particular
-case the probability of its being so is greater than that of our being
-likely to decide rightly that we have before us an instance of its
-disutility. In short, though we may be sure that there are cases where
-the rule should be broken, we can never know which those cases are,
-and ought, therefore, never to break it. It is this fact which seems
-to justify the stringency with which moral rules are usually enforced
-and sanctioned, and to give a sense in which we may accept as true the
-maxims that ‘The end never justifies the means’ and ‘That we should
-never do evil that good may come.’ The ‘means’ and the ‘evil,’ intended
-by these maxims, are, in fact, the breaking of moral rules generally
-recognised and practised, and which, therefore, we may assume to be
-generally useful. Thus understood, these maxims merely point out that,
-in any particular case, although we cannot clearly perceive any balance
-of good produced by keeping the rule and do seem to see one that would
-follow from breaking it, nevertheless the rule should be observed. It
-is hardly necessary to point out that this is so only because it is
-certain that, in general, the end does justify the means in question,
-and that therefore there is a _probability_ that in this case it will
-do so also, although we cannot see that it will.
-
-But moreover the universal observance of a rule which is generally
-useful has, in many cases, a special utility, which seems deserving of
-notice. This arises from the fact that, even if we can clearly discern
-that our case is one where to break the rule is advantageous, yet, so
-far as our example has any effect at all in encouraging similar action,
-it will certainly tend to encourage breaches of the rule which are not
-advantageous. We may confidently assume that what will impress the
-imagination of others will not be the circumstances in which our case
-differs from ordinary cases and which justify our exceptional action,
-but the points in which it resembles other actions that are really
-criminal. In cases, then, where example has any influence at all, the
-effect of an exceptional right action will generally be to encourage
-wrong ones. And this effect will probably be exercised not only on
-other persons but on the agent himself. For it is impossible for any
-one to keep his intellect and sentiments so clear, but that, if he has
-once approved of a generally wrong action, he will be more likely to
-approve of it also under other circumstances than those which justified
-it in the first instance. This inability to discriminate exceptional
-cases offers, of course, a still stronger reason for the universal
-enforcement, by legal or social sanctions, of actions generally useful.
-It is undoubtedly well to punish a man, who has done an action, right
-in his case but generally wrong, even if his example would not be
-likely to have a dangerous effect. For sanctions have, in general,
-much more influence upon conduct than example; so that the effect
-of relaxing them in an exceptional case will almost certainly be an
-encouragement of similar action in cases which are not exceptional.
-
-The individual can therefore be confidently recommended _always_
-to conform to rules which are both generally useful and generally
-practised. In the case of rules of which the general observance _would_
-be useful but does not exist, or of rules which are generally practised
-but which are not useful, no such universal recommendations can be
-made. In many cases the sanctions attached may be decisive in favour
-of conformity to the existing custom. But it seems worth pointing out
-that, even apart from these, the general utility of an action most
-commonly depends upon the fact that it is generally practised: in a
-society where certain kinds of theft are the common rule, the utility
-of abstinence from such theft on the part of a single individual
-becomes exceedingly doubtful, even though the common rule is a bad one.
-There is, therefore, a strong probability in favour of adherence to an
-existing custom, even if it be a bad one. But we cannot, in this case,
-assert with any confidence that this probability is always greater
-than that of the individual’s power to judge that an exception will be
-useful; since we are here supposing certain one relevant fact--namely,
-that the rule, which he proposes to follow, _would_ be better than
-that which he proposes to break, _if_ it were generally observed.
-Consequently the effect of his example, so far as it tends to break
-down the existing custom, will here be for the good. The cases, where
-another rule would certainly be better than that generally observed,
-are, however, according to what was said above, very rare; and cases of
-doubt, which are those which arise most frequently, carry us into the
-next division of our subject.
-
-
-=100.= (β) This next division consists in the discussion of the
-method by which an individual should decide what to do with regard to
-possible actions of which the general utility cannot be proved. And
-it should be observed, that, according to our previous conclusions,
-this discussion will cover almost all actions, except those which,
-in our present state of society, are generally practised. For it has
-been urged that a proof of general utility is so difficult, that it
-can hardly be conclusive except in a very few cases. It is certainly
-not possible with regard to all actions which _are_ generally
-practised; though here, if the sanctions are sufficiently strong,
-they are sufficient by themselves to prove the general utility of the
-individual’s conformity to custom. And if it is possible to prove a
-general utility in the case of some actions, _not_ generally practised,
-it is certainly not possible to do so by the ordinary method, which
-tries to shew in them a tendency to that preservation of society, which
-is itself a mere means, but only by the method, by which in any case,
-as will be urged, the individual ought to guide his judgment--namely,
-by shewing their direct tendency to produce what is good in itself or
-to prevent what is bad.
-
-The extreme improbability that any general rule with regard to the
-utility of an action will be correct seems, in fact, to be the chief
-principle which should be taken into account in discussing how the
-individual should guide his choice. If we except those rules which are
-both generally practised and strongly sanctioned among us, there seem
-to be hardly any of such a kind that equally good arguments cannot be
-found both for and against them. The most that can be said for the
-contradictory principles which are urged by moralists of different
-schools as universal duties, is, in general, that they point out
-actions which, for persons of a particular character and in particular
-circumstances, would and do lead to a balance of good. It is, no
-doubt, possible that the particular dispositions and circumstances
-which generally render certain kinds of action advisable, might to
-some degree be formulated. But it is certain that this has never
-yet been done; and it is important to notice that, even if it were
-done, it would not give us, what moral laws are usually supposed to
-be--rules which it would be desirable for every one, or even for most
-people, to follow. Moralists commonly assume that, in the matter of
-actions or habits of action, usually recognised as duties or virtues,
-it is desirable that every one should be alike. Whereas it is certain
-that, under actual circumstances, and possible that, even in a much
-more ideal condition of things, the principle of division of labour,
-according to special capacity, which is recognised in respect of
-employments, would also give a better result in respect of virtues.
-
-It seems, therefore, that, in cases of doubt, instead of following
-rules, of which he is unable to see the good effects in his particular
-case, the individual should rather guide his choice by a direct
-consideration of the intrinsic value or vileness of the effects
-which his action may produce. Judgments of intrinsic value have this
-superiority over judgments of means that, if once true, they are always
-true; whereas what is a means to a good effect in one case, will not
-be so in another. For this reason the department of Ethics, which it
-would be most useful to elaborate for practical guidance, is that
-which discusses what things have intrinsic value and in what degrees;
-and this is precisely that department which has been most uniformly
-neglected, in favour of attempts to formulate rules of conduct.
-
-We have, however, not only to consider the relative goodness of
-different effects, but also the relative probability of their being
-attained. A less good, that is more likely to be attained, is to be
-preferred to a greater, that is less probable, if the difference in
-probability is great enough to outweigh the difference in goodness.
-And this fact seems to entitle us to assert the general truth of three
-principles, which ordinary moral rules are apt to neglect. (1) That
-a lesser good, for which any individual has a strong preference (if
-only it be a good, and not an evil), is more likely to be a proper
-object for him to aim at, than a greater one, which he is unable to
-appreciate. For natural inclination renders it immensely more easy to
-attain that for which such inclination is felt. (2) Since almost every
-one has a much stronger preference for things which closely concern
-himself, it will in general be right for a man to aim rather at goods
-affecting himself and those in whom he has a strong personal interest,
-than to attempt a more extended beneficence. Egoism is undoubtedly
-superior to Altruism as a doctrine of means: in the immense majority of
-cases the best thing we can do is to aim at securing some good in which
-we are concerned, since for that very reason we are far more likely to
-secure it. (3) Goods, which can be secured in a future so near as to be
-called ‘the present,’ are in general to be preferred to those which,
-being in a further future, are, for that reason, far less certain of
-attainment. If we regard all that we do from the point of view of
-its rightness, that is to say as a mere means to good, we are apt to
-neglect one fact, at least, which is certain; namely, that a thing that
-is really good in itself, if it exist now, has precisely the same value
-as a thing of the same kind which may be caused to exist in the future.
-Moreover moral rules, as has been said, are, in general, not directly
-means to positive goods but to what is necessary for the existence of
-positive goods; and so much of our labour must in any case be devoted
-to securing the continuance of what is thus a mere means--the claims of
-industry and attention to health determine the employment of so large
-a part of our time, that, in cases where choice is open, the certain
-attainment of a present good will in general have the strongest claims
-upon us. If it were not so, the whole of life would be spent in merely
-assuring its continuance; and, so far as the same rule were continued
-in the future, that for the sake of which it is worth having, would
-never exist at all.
-
-
-=101.= (4) A fourth conclusion, which follows from the fact that what
-is ‘right’ or what is our ‘duty’ must in any case be defined as what is
-a means to good, is, as was pointed out above (§ 89), that the common
-distinction between these and the ‘expedient’ or ‘useful,’ disappears.
-Our ‘duty’ is merely that which will be a means to the best possible,
-and the expedient, if it is really expedient, must be just the same. We
-cannot distinguish them by saying that the former is something which
-we ought to do, whereas of the latter we cannot say we ‘_ought_.’ In
-short the two concepts are not, as is commonly assumed by all except
-Utilitarian moralists, simple concepts ultimately distinct. There is
-no such distinction in Ethics. The only fundamental distinction is
-between what is good in itself and what is good as a means, the latter
-of which implies the former. But it has been shewn that the distinction
-between ‘duty’ and ‘expediency’ does not correspond to this: both
-must be defined as means to good, though both _may also_ be ends in
-themselves. The question remains, then: What is the distinction between
-duty and expediency?
-
-One distinction to which these distinct words refer is plain
-enough. Certain classes of action commonly excite the specifically
-moral sentiments, whereas other classes do not. And the word
-‘duty’ is commonly applied only to the class of actions which
-excite moral approval, or of which the omission excites moral
-disapproval--especially to the latter. Why this moral sentiment should
-have become attached to some kinds of actions and not to others is
-a question which can certainly not yet be answered; but it may be
-observed that we have no reason to think that the actions to which
-it was attached were or are, in all cases, such as aided or aid the
-survival of a race: it was probably originally attached to many
-religious rites and ceremonies which had not the smallest utility in
-this respect. It appears, however, that, among us, the classes of
-action to which it is attached also have two other characteristics in
-enough cases to have influenced the meaning of the words ‘duty’ and
-‘expediency.’ One of these is that ‘duties’ are, in general, actions
-which a considerable number of individuals are strongly tempted to
-omit. The second is that the omission of a ‘duty’ generally entails
-consequences markedly disagreeable to _some one else_. The first of
-these is a more universal characteristic than the second: since the
-disagreeable effects on other people of the ‘self-regarding duties,’
-prudence and temperance, are not so marked as those on the future
-of the agent himself; whereas the temptations to imprudence and
-intemperance are very strong. Still, on the whole, the class of actions
-called duties exhibit both characteristics: they are not only actions,
-against the performance of which there are strong natural inclinations,
-but also actions of which the most obvious effects, commonly considered
-goods, are effects on other people. Expedient actions, on the other
-hand, are actions to which strong natural inclinations prompt us
-almost universally, and of which all the most obvious effects, commonly
-considered good, are effects upon the agent. We may then roughly
-distinguish ‘duties’ from expedient actions, as actions with regard to
-which there is a moral sentiment, which we are often tempted to omit,
-and of which the most obvious effects are effects upon others than the
-agent.
-
-But it is to be noticed that none of these characteristics, by which
-a ‘duty’ is distinguished from an expedient action, gives us any
-reason to infer that the former class of actions are more useful than
-the latter--that they tend to produce a greater balance of good.
-Nor, when we ask the question, ‘Is this my duty?’ do we mean to ask
-whether the action in question has these characteristics: we are asking
-simply whether it will produce the best possible result on the whole.
-And if we asked this question with regard to expedient actions, we
-should quite as often have to answer it in the affirmative as when we
-ask it with regard to actions which have the three characteristics
-of ‘duties.’ It is true that when we ask the question, ‘Is this
-expedient?’ we are asking a different question--namely, whether it will
-have certain kinds of effect, with regard to which we do not enquire
-whether they are good or not. Nevertheless, if it should be doubted
-in any particular case whether these effects were good, this doubt is
-understood as throwing doubt upon the action’s expediency: if we are
-required to _prove_ an action’s expediency, we can only do so by asking
-precisely the same question by which we should prove it a duty--namely,
-‘Has it the best possible effects on the whole?’
-
-Accordingly the question whether an action is a duty or merely
-expedient, is one which has no bearing on the ethical question whether
-we ought to do it. In the sense in which either duty or expediency
-are taken as ultimate _reasons_ for doing an action, they are taken
-in exactly the same sense: if I ask whether an action is _really_ my
-duty or _really_ expedient, the predicate of which I question the
-applicability to the action in question is precisely the same. In both
-cases I am asking, ‘Is this event the best on the whole that I can
-effect?’; and whether the event in question be some effect upon what
-is _mine_ (as it usually is, where we talk of expediency) or some other
-event (as is usual, where we talk of duty), this distinction has no
-more relevance to my answer than the distinction between two different
-effects on me or two different effects on others. The true distinction
-between duties and expedient actions is not that the former are actions
-which it is in any sense more useful or obligatory or better to
-perform, but that they are actions which it is more useful to praise
-and to enforce by sanctions, since they are actions which there is a
-temptation to omit.
-
-
-=102.= With regard to ‘interested’ actions, the case is somewhat
-different. When we ask the question, ‘Is this really to my interest?’
-we appear to be asking exclusively whether its _effects upon me_ are
-the best possible; and it may well happen that what will effect me in
-the manner, which is really the best possible, will not produce the
-best possible results on the whole. Accordingly _my true interest_ may
-be different from the course which is really expedient and dutiful. To
-assert that an action is ‘to my interest,’ is, indeed, as was pointed
-out in Chap. III. (§§ 59-61), to assert that its effects are really
-good. ‘My own good’ only denotes some event affecting me, which is good
-absolutely and objectively; it is the thing, and not its goodness,
-which is _mine_; everything must be either ‘a part of universal good’
-or else not good at all; there is no third alternative conception
-‘good for me.’ But ‘my interest,’ though it must be something truly
-good, is only one among possible good effects; and hence, by effecting
-it, though we shall be doing _some_ good, we may be doing less good
-on the whole, than if we had acted otherwise. Self-sacrifice may be a
-real duty; just as the sacrifice of any single good, whether affecting
-ourselves or others, may be necessary in order to obtain a better
-total result. Hence the fact that an action is really to my interest,
-can never be a sufficient reason for doing it: by shewing that it is
-not a means to the best possible, we do not shew that it is not to my
-interest, as we do shew that it is not expedient. Nevertheless there is
-no necessary conflict between duty and interest: what is to my interest
-may also be a means to the best possible. And the chief distinction
-conveyed by the distinct words ‘duty’ and ‘interest’ seems to be not
-this source of possible conflict, but the same which is conveyed by
-the contrast between ‘duty’ and ‘expediency.’ By ‘interested’ actions
-are _mainly_ meant those which, whether a means to the best possible
-or not, are such as have their most obvious effects on the agent;
-which he generally has no temptation to omit; and with regard to which
-we feel no moral sentiment. That is to say, the distinction is not
-primarily ethical. Here too ‘duties’ are not, in general, more useful
-or obligatory than interested actions; they are only actions which it
-is more useful to praise.
-
-
-=103.= (5) A fifth conclusion, of some importance, in relation to
-Practical Ethics concerns the manner in which ‘virtues’ are to be
-judged. What is meant by calling a thing a ‘virtue’?
-
-There can be no doubt that Aristotle’s definition is right, in the
-main, so far as he says that it is an ‘habitual disposition’ to
-perform certain actions: this is one of the marks by which we should
-distinguish a virtue from other things. But ‘virtue’ and ‘vice’ are
-also ethical terms: that is to say, when we use them seriously, we mean
-to convey praise by the one and dispraise by the other. And to praise
-a thing is to assert either that it is good in itself or else that it
-is a means to good. Are we then to include in our definition of virtue
-that it must be a thing good in itself?
-
-Now it is certain that virtues are commonly regarded as good in
-themselves. The feeling of moral approbation with which we generally
-regard them partly consists in an attribution to them of intrinsic
-value. Even a Hedonist, when he feels a moral sentiment towards
-them, is regarding them as good-in-themselves; and Virtue has been
-the chief competitor with Pleasure for the position of _sole_ good.
-Nevertheless I do not think we can regard it as part of the definition
-of virtue that it should be good in itself. For the name has so far
-an independent meaning, that if in any particular case a disposition
-commonly considered virtuous were proved not to be good in itself, we
-should not think that a sufficient reason for saying that it _was_ not
-a virtue but was only _thought_ to be so. The test for the ethical
-connotation of virtue is the same as that for duty: What should we
-require to be proved about a particular instance, in order to say
-that the name was wrongly applied to it? And the test which is thus
-applied both to virtues and duties, and considered to be final, is the
-question: Is it a means to good? If it could be shewn of any particular
-disposition, commonly considered virtuous, that it was generally
-harmful, we should at once say: Then it is not really virtuous.
-Accordingly a virtue may be defined as an habitual disposition to
-perform certain actions, which generally produce the best possible
-results. Nor is there any doubt as to the kind of actions which it is
-‘virtuous’ habitually to perform. They are, in general, those which
-are duties, with this modification that we also include those which
-_would_ be duties, if only it were possible for people in general to
-perform them. Accordingly with regard to virtues, the same conclusion
-holds as with regard to duties. If they are really virtues they must be
-generally good as means; nor do I wish to dispute that most virtues,
-commonly considered as such, as well as most duties, really are means
-to good. But it does not follow that they are a bit more useful than
-those dispositions and inclinations which lead us to perform interested
-actions. As duties from expedient actions, so virtues are distinguished
-from other useful dispositions, not by any superior utility, but by the
-fact that they are dispositions, which it is particularly useful to
-praise and to sanction, because there are strong and common temptations
-to neglect the actions to which they lead.
-
-Virtues, therefore, are habitual dispositions to perform actions which
-are duties, or which would be duties if a volition were sufficient on
-the part of most men to ensure their performance. And duties are a
-particular class of those actions, of which the performance has, at
-least generally, better total results than the omission. They are, that
-is to say, actions generally good as means: but not all such actions
-are duties; the name is confined to that particular class which it is
-often difficult to perform, because there are strong temptations to the
-contrary. It follows that in order to decide whether any particular
-disposition or action is a virtue or a duty, we must face all the
-difficulties enumerated in section (3) of this chapter. We shall
-not be entitled to assert that any disposition or action is a virtue
-or duty except as a result of an investigation, such as was there
-described. We must be able to prove that the disposition or action in
-question is generally better as a means than any alternatives possible
-and likely to occur; and this we shall only be able to prove for
-particular states of society: what is a virtue or a duty in one state
-of society may not be so in another.
-
-
-=104.= But there is another question with regard to virtues and duties
-which must be settled by intuition alone--by the properly guarded
-method which was explained in discussing Hedonism. This is the question
-whether the dispositions and actions, commonly regarded (rightly or
-not) as virtues or duties, are good in themselves; whether they have
-intrinsic value. Virtue or the exercise of virtue has very commonly
-been asserted by moralists to be either the sole good, or, at least,
-the best of goods. Indeed, so far as moralists have discussed the
-question what is good in itself at all, they have generally assumed
-that it must be either virtue or pleasure. It would hardly have been
-possible that such a gross difference of opinion should exist, or that
-it should have been assumed the discussion _must_ be limited to two
-such alternatives, if the meaning of the question had been clearly
-apprehended. And we have already seen that the meaning of the question
-has hardly ever been clearly apprehended. Almost all ethical writers
-have committed the naturalistic fallacy--they have failed to perceive
-that the notion of intrinsic value is simple and unique; and almost all
-have failed, in consequence, to distinguish clearly between means and
-end--they have discussed, as if it were simple and unambiguous, the
-question, ‘What ought we to do?’ or ‘What ought to exist now?’ without
-distinguishing whether the reason why a thing ought to be done or to
-exist now, is that it is itself possessed of intrinsic value, or that
-it is a means to what has intrinsic value. We shall, therefore, be
-prepared to find that virtue has as little claim to be considered the
-sole or chief good as pleasure; more especially after seeing that, so
-far as definition goes, to call a thing a virtue is merely to declare
-that it is a means to good. The advocates of virtue have, we shall see,
-this superiority over the Hedonists, that inasmuch as virtues are very
-complex mental facts, there are included in them many things which are
-good in themselves and good in a much higher degree than pleasure.
-The advocates of Hedonism, on the other hand, have the superiority
-that their method emphasizes the distinction between means and ends;
-although they have not apprehended the distinction clearly enough to
-perceive that the special ethical predicate, which they assign to
-pleasure as _not_ being a mere means, must also apply to many other
-things.
-
-
-=105.= With regard, then, to the intrinsic value of virtue, it may be
-stated broadly: (1) that the majority of dispositions, which we call
-by that name, and which really do conform to the definition, so far as
-that they are dispositions generally valuable as means, at least in our
-society, have no intrinsic value whatever; and (2) that no one element
-which is contained in the minority, nor even all the different elements
-put together, can without gross absurdity be regarded as the sole good.
-As to the second point it may be observed that even those who hold the
-view that the sole good is to be found in virtue, almost invariably
-hold other views contradictory of this, owing chiefly to a failure to
-analyse the meaning of ethical concepts. The most marked instance of
-this inconsistency is to be found in the common Christian conception
-that virtue, though the sole good, can yet be rewarded by something
-other than virtue. Heaven is commonly considered as the reward of
-virtue; and yet it is also commonly considered, that, in order to be
-such a reward, it must contain some element, called happiness, which
-is certainly not completely identical with the mere exercise of those
-virtues which it rewards. But if so, then something which is not virtue
-must be either good in itself or an element in what has most intrinsic
-value. It is not commonly observed that if a thing is really to be a
-reward, it must be something good in itself: it is absurd to talk of
-rewarding a person by giving him something, which is less valuable than
-what he already has or which has no value at all. Thus Kant’s view that
-virtue renders us _worthy_ of happiness is in flagrant contradiction
-with the view, which he implies and which is associated with his name,
-that a Good Will is the only thing having intrinsic value. It does
-not, indeed, entitle us to make the charge sometimes made, that Kant
-is, inconsistently, an Eudaemonist or Hedonist: for it does not imply
-that happiness is the sole good. But it does imply that the Good Will
-is _not_ the sole good: that a state of things in which we are both
-virtuous and happy is better in itself than one in which the happiness
-is absent.
-
-
-=106.= In order, however, justly to consider the claims of virtue to
-intrinsic value, it is necessary to distinguish several very different
-mental states, all of which fall under the general definition that they
-are habitual dispositions to perform duties. We may thus distinguish
-three very different states, all of which are liable to be confused
-with one another, upon each of which different moral systems have laid
-great stress, and for each of which the claim has been made that it
-alone constitutes virtue, and, by implication, that it is the sole
-good. We may first of all distinguish between (_a_) that permanent
-characteristic of mind, which consists in the fact that the performance
-of duty has become in the strict sense a habit, like many of the
-operations performed in the putting on of clothes, and (_b_) that
-permanent characteristic, which consists in the fact that what may be
-called good motives habitually help to cause the performance of duties.
-And in the second division we may distinguish between the habitual
-tendency to be actuated by one motive, namely, the desire to do duty
-for duty’s sake, and all other motives, such as love, benevolence, etc.
-We thus get the three kinds of virtue, of which we are now to consider
-the intrinsic value.
-
-(_a_) There is no doubt that a man’s character may be such that he
-habitually performs certain duties, without the thought ever occurring
-to him, when he wills them, either that they are duties or that any
-good will result from them. Of such a man we cannot and do not refuse
-to say that he possesses the virtue consisting in the disposition to
-perform those duties. I, for instance, am honest in the sense that
-I habitually abstain from any of the actions legally qualified as
-thieving, even where some other persons would be strongly tempted to
-commit them. It would be grossly contrary to common usage to deny
-that, for this reason, I really have the virtue of honesty: it is
-quite certain that I have an habitual disposition to perform a duty.
-And that as many people as possible should have a like disposition
-is, no doubt, of great utility: it is good as a means. Yet I may
-safely assert that neither my various performances of this duty, nor
-my disposition to perform them, have the smallest intrinsic value.
-It is because the majority of instances of virtue seem to be of this
-nature, that we may venture to assert that virtues have, in general,
-no intrinsic value whatsoever. And there seems good reason to think
-that the more generally they are of this nature the more useful they
-are; since a great economy of labour is effected when a useful action
-becomes habitual or instinctive. But to maintain that a virtue, which
-includes no more than this, is good in itself is a gross absurdity. And
-of this gross absurdity, it may be observed, the Ethics of Aristotle is
-guilty. For his definition of virtue does not exclude a disposition to
-perform actions in this way, whereas his descriptions of the particular
-virtues plainly _include_ such actions: that an action, in order to
-exhibit virtue, must be done τοῦ καλοῦ ἕνεκα is a qualification which
-he allows often to drop out of sight. And, on the other hand, he seems
-certainly to regard the exercise of _all_ virtues as an end in itself.
-His treatment of Ethics is indeed, in the most important points, highly
-unsystematic and confused, owing to his attempt to base it on the
-naturalistic fallacy; for strictly we should be obliged by his words
-to regard θεωρία as the _only_ thing good in itself, in which case
-the goodness which he attributes to the practical virtues cannot be
-intrinsic value; while on the other hand he does not seem to regard
-it merely as utility, since he makes no attempt to shew that they are
-means to θεωρία. But there seems no doubt that on the whole he regards
-the exercise of the practical virtues as a good of the same kind as
-(_i.e._ having intrinsic value), only in a less degree than, θεωρία; so
-that he cannot avoid the charge that he recommends as having intrinsic
-value, such instances of the exercise of virtue as we are at present
-discussing--instances of a disposition to perform actions which, in
-the modern phrase, have merely an ‘external rightness.’ That he is
-right in applying the word ‘virtue’ to such a disposition cannot be
-doubted. But the protest against the view that ‘external rightness’ is
-sufficient to constitute either ‘duty’ or ‘virtue’--a protest which is
-commonly, and with some justice, attributed as a merit to Christian
-morals--seems, in the main, to be a mistaken way of pointing out an
-important truth: namely, that where there is only ‘external rightness’
-there is certainly no intrinsic value. It is commonly assumed (though
-wrongly) that to call a thing a virtue means that it has intrinsic
-value: and on this assumption the view that virtue does not consist
-in a mere disposition to do externally right actions does really
-constitute an advance in ethical truth beyond the Ethics of Aristotle.
-The inference that, if virtue includes in its meaning ‘good in itself,’
-then Aristotle’s definition of virtue is not adequate and expresses a
-false ethical judgment, is perfectly correct: only the premiss that
-virtue does include this in its meaning is mistaken.
-
-
-=107.= (_b_) A man’s character may be such that, when he habitually
-performs a particular duty, there is, in each case of his performance,
-present in his mind, a love of some intrinsically good consequence
-which he expects to produce by his action or a hatred of some
-intrinsically evil consequence which he hopes to prevent by it. In
-such a case this love or hatred will generally be part cause of his
-action, and we may then call it one of his _motives_. Where such a
-feeling as this is present habitually in the performance of duties, it
-cannot be denied that the state of the man’s mind, in performing it,
-contains something intrinsically good. Nor can it be denied that, where
-a disposition to perform duties consists in the disposition to be moved
-to them by such feelings, we call that disposition a virtue. Here,
-therefore, we have instances of virtue, the exercise of which really
-contains something that is good in itself. And, in general, we may say
-that wherever a virtue does consist in a disposition to have certain
-motives, the exercise of that virtue _may_ be intrinsically good;
-although the degree of its goodness may vary indefinitely according to
-the precise nature of the motives and their objects. In so far, then,
-as Christianity tends to emphasize the importance of motives, of the
-‘inward’ disposition with which a right action is done, we may say that
-it has done a service to Ethics. But it should be noticed that, when
-Christian Ethics, as represented by the New Testament, are praised for
-this, two distinctions of the utmost importance, which they entirely
-neglect, are very commonly overlooked. In the first place the New
-Testament is largely occupied with continuing the tradition of the
-Hebrew prophets, by recommending such virtues as ‘justice’ and ‘mercy’
-as against mere ritual observances; and, in so far as it does this, it
-is recommending virtues which may be _merely_ good as means, exactly
-like the Aristotelian virtues. This characteristic of its teaching must
-therefore be rigorously distinguished from that which consists in its
-enforcement of such a view as that to be angry without a cause is as
-bad as actually to commit murder. And, in the second place, though the
-New Testament does praise some things which are only good as means, and
-others which are good in themselves, it entirely fails to recognise
-this distinction. Though the state of the man who is angry may be
-really as bad in itself as that of the murderer, and so far Christ
-may be right, His language would lead us to suppose that it is _also_
-as bad in every way, that it _also causes_ as much evil: and this is
-utterly false. In short, when Christian Ethics approves, it does not
-distinguish whether its approval asserts ‘This is a means to good’ or
-‘This is good in itself’; and hence it both praises things merely good
-as means, as if they were good in themselves, and things merely good in
-themselves as if they were also good as means. Moreover it should be
-noticed, that if Christian Ethics does draw attention to those elements
-in virtues which are good in themselves, it is by no means alone in
-this. The Ethics of Plato are distinguished by upholding, far more
-clearly and consistently than any other system, the view that intrinsic
-value belongs exclusively to those states of mind which consist in love
-of what is good or hatred of what is evil.
-
-
-=108.= But (_c_) the Ethics of Christianity are distinguished from
-those of Plato by emphasizing the value of one particular motive--that
-which consists in the emotion excited by the idea, not of any
-intrinsically good consequences of the action in question, nor even
-of the action itself, but by that of its rightness. This idea of
-abstract ‘rightness’ and the various degrees of the specific emotion
-excited by it are what constitute the specifically ‘moral sentiment’ or
-‘conscience.’ An action seems to be most properly termed ‘internally
-right[23],’ solely in virtue of the fact that the agent has previously
-regarded it as right: the idea of ‘rightness’ must have been present
-to his mind, but need not necessarily have been among his motives. And
-we mean by a ‘conscientious’ man, one who, when he deliberates, always
-has this idea in his mind, and does not act until he believes that his
-action is right.
-
- [23] This sense of the term must be carefully distinguished from
- that in which the agent’s intention may be said to be ‘right,’ if
- only the results he intended would have been the best possible.
-
-The presence of this idea and its action as a motive certainly seem
-to have become more common objects of notice and commendation owing
-to the influence of Christianity; but it is important to observe
-that there is no ground for the view, which Kant implies, that it is
-the _only_ motive which the New Testament regards as intrinsically
-valuable. There seems little doubt that when Christ tells us to ‘Love
-our neighbours as ourselves,’ He did not mean merely what Kant calls
-‘practical love‘--beneficence of which the _sole_ motive is the idea of
-its rightness, or the emotion caused by that idea. Among the ‘inward
-dispositions’ of which the New Testament inculcates the value, there
-are certainly included what Kant terms mere ‘natural inclinations,’
-such as pity, etc.
-
-But what are we to say of virtue, when it consists in a disposition to
-be moved to the performance of duties by this idea? It seems difficult
-to deny that the emotion excited by rightness as such has some
-intrinsic value; and still more difficult to deny that its presence
-may heighten the value of some wholes into which it enters. But, on
-the other hand, it certainly has not more value than many of the
-motives treated in our last section--emotions of love towards things
-really good in themselves. And as for Kant’s implication that it is
-the sole good[24], this is inconsistent with other of his own views.
-For he certainly regards it as _better_ to perform the actions, to
-which he maintains that it prompts us--namely, ‘material’ duties--than
-to omit them. But, if better at all, then, these actions must be
-better either in themselves or as a means. The former hypothesis would
-directly contradict the statement that this motive was _sole_ good,
-and the latter is excluded by Kant himself since he maintains that
-no actions can _cause_ the existence of this motive. And it may also
-be observed that the other claim which he makes for it, namely, that
-it is _always_ good as a means, can also not be maintained. It is as
-certain as anything can be that very harmful actions may be done from
-conscientious motives; and that Conscience does not always tell us the
-truth about what actions are right. Nor can it be maintained even that
-it is _more_ useful than many other motives. All that can be admitted
-is that it is one of the things which are generally useful.
-
- [24] Kant, so far as I know, never expressly states this view,
- but it is implied _e.g._ in his argument against Heteronomy.
-
-What more I have to say with regard to those elements in some virtues
-which are good in themselves, and with regard to their relative degrees
-of excellence, as well as the proof that all of them together cannot be
-the sole good, may be deferred to the next chapter.
-
-
-=109.= The main points in this chapter, to which I desire to direct
-attention, may be summarised as follows:--(1) I first pointed out how
-the subject-matter with which it deals, namely, ethical judgments
-on conduct, involves a question, utterly different in kind from the
-two previously discussed, namely: (_a_) What is the nature of the
-predicate peculiar to Ethics? and (_b_) What kinds of things themselves
-possess this predicate? Practical Ethics asks, not ‘What ought to be?’
-but ‘What ought we to do?’; it asks what actions are _duties_, what
-actions are _right_, and what _wrong_: and all these questions can
-only be answered by shewing the relation of the actions in question,
-as _causes_ or _necessary conditions_, to what is good in itself. The
-enquiries of Practical Ethics thus fall entirely under the _third_
-division of ethical questions--questions which ask, ‘What is good as
-a means?’ which is equivalent to ‘What is a means to good--what is
-cause or necessary condition of things good in themselves?’ (86-88).
-But (2) it asks this question, almost exclusively, with regard to
-actions which it is possible for most men to perform, if only they
-_will_ them; and with regard to these, it does not ask merely, which
-among them will have _some_ good or bad result, but which, among all
-the actions possible to volition at any moment, will produce the best
-_total_ result. To assert that an action is a duty, is to assert that
-it is such a possible action, which will _always_, in certain known
-circumstances, produce better results than any other. It follows that
-universal propositions of which duty is predicate, so far from being
-self-evident, always require a proof, which it is beyond our present
-means of knowledge ever to give (89-92). But (3) all that Ethics has
-attempted or can attempt, is to shew that certain actions, possible by
-volition, _generally_ produce better or worse total results than any
-probable alternative: and it must obviously be very difficult to shew
-this with regard to the total results even in a comparatively near
-future; whereas that what has the best results in such a near future,
-also has the best on the whole, is a point requiring an investigation
-which it has not received. If it is true, and if, accordingly, we give
-the name of ‘duty’ to actions which _generally_ produce better total
-results in the near future than any possible alternative, it may be
-possible to prove that a few of the commonest rules of duty are true,
-but _only_ in certain conditions of society, which may be more or less
-universally presented in history; and such a proof is only possible
-_in some cases_ without a correct judgment of what things are good
-or bad in themselves--a judgment which has never yet been offered by
-ethical writers. With regard to actions of which the _general_ utility
-is thus proved, the individual should _always_ perform them; but in
-other cases, where rules are commonly offered, he should rather judge
-of the probable results in his particular case, guided by a correct
-conception of what things are intrinsically good or bad (93-100).
-(4) In order that any action may be shewn to be a duty, it must be
-shewn to fulfil the above conditions; but the actions commonly called
-‘duties’ do not fulfil them to any greater extent than ‘expedient’
-or ‘interested’ actions: by calling them ‘duties’ we only mean that
-they have, _in addition_, certain non-ethical predicates. Similarly by
-‘virtue’ is mainly meant a permanent disposition to perform ‘duties’
-in this restricted sense: and accordingly a virtue, if it is really
-a virtue, must be good _as a means_, in the sense that it fulfils the
-above conditions; but it is not _better_ as a means than non-virtuous
-dispositions; it generally has no value in itself; and, where it has,
-it is far from being the sole good or the best of goods. Accordingly
-‘virtue’ is not, as is commonly implied, an unique _ethical_ predicate
-(101-109).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE IDEAL.
-
-
-=110.= The title of this chapter is ambiguous. When we call a state of
-things ‘ideal’ we may mean three distinct things, which have only this
-in common: that we always do mean to assert, of the state of things in
-question, not only that it is good in itself, but that it is good in
-itself in a much higher degree than many other things. The first of
-these meanings of ‘ideal’ is (1) that to which the phrase ‘_The_ Ideal’
-is most properly confined. By this is meant the _best_ state of things
-_conceivable_, the Summum Bonum or Absolute Good. It is in this sense
-that a right conception of Heaven would be a right conception of the
-Ideal: we mean by the Ideal a state of things which would be absolutely
-perfect. But this conception may be quite clearly distinguished from a
-second, namely, (2) that of the best _possible_ state of things in this
-world. This second conception may be identified with that which has
-frequently figured in philosophy as the ‘Human Good,’ or the _ultimate_
-end towards which our action should be directed. It is in this sense
-that Utopias are said to be Ideals. The constructor of an Utopia may
-suppose many things to be possible, which are in fact impossible; but
-he always assumes that some things, at least, are rendered impossible
-by natural laws, and hence his construction differs essentially
-from one which may disregard _all_ natural laws, however certainly
-established. At all events the question ‘What is the best state of
-things which we could _possibly_ bring about?’ is quite distinct from
-the question ‘What would be the best state of things conceivable?’
-But, thirdly, we may mean by calling a state of things ‘ideal’ merely
-(3) that it is good in itself in a high degree. And it is obvious that
-the question what things are ‘ideal’ in this sense is one which must
-be answered before we can pretend to settle what is the Absolute or
-the Human Good. It is with the Ideal, in this third sense, that this
-chapter will be principally concerned. Its main object is to arrive
-at some positive answer to the fundamental question of Ethics--the
-question: ‘What things are goods or ends in themselves?’ To this
-question we have hitherto obtained only a negative answer: the answer
-that pleasure is certainly not the _sole_ good.
-
-
-=111.= I have just said that it is upon a correct answer to this
-question that correct answers to the two other questions, What is the
-Absolute Good? and What is the Human Good? must depend; and, before
-proceeding to discuss it, it may be well to point out the relation
-which it has to these two questions.
-
-(1) It is just possible that the Absolute Good may be entirely
-composed of qualities which we cannot even imagine. This is possible,
-because, though we certainly do know a great many things that are
-good-in-themselves, and good in a high degree, yet what is best does
-not necessarily contain all the good things there are. That this is so
-follows from the principle explained in Chap. I. (§§ 18-22), to which
-it was there proposed that the name ‘principle of organic unities’
-should be confined. This principle is that the intrinsic value of a
-whole is neither identical with nor proportional to the sum of the
-values of its parts. It follows from this that, though in order to
-obtain the greatest possible sum of values in its parts, the Ideal
-would necessarily contain all the things which have intrinsic value in
-any degree, yet the whole which contained all these parts might not be
-so valuable as some other whole, from which certain positive goods were
-omitted. But if a whole, which does not contain all positive goods, may
-yet be better than a whole which does, it follows that the best whole
-_may_ be one, which contains _none_ of the positive goods with which we
-are acquainted.
-
-It is, therefore, _possible_ that we cannot discover what the Ideal
-is. But it is plain that, though this possibility cannot be denied,
-no one can have any right to assert that it is realised--that the
-Ideal _is_ something unimaginable. We cannot judge of the comparative
-values of things, unless the things we judge are before our minds. We
-cannot, therefore, be entitled to assert that anything, which we cannot
-imagine, would be better than some of the things which we can; although
-we are also not entitled to deny the possibility that this may be the
-case. Consequently our search for the Ideal must be limited to a search
-for that one, among all the wholes composed of elements known to us,
-which seems to be better than all the rest. We shall never be entitled
-to assert that this whole is Perfection, but we shall be entitled to
-assert that it is _better_ than any other which may be presented as a
-rival.
-
-But, since anything which we can have any _reason_ to think ideal
-must be composed of things that are known to us, it is plain that
-a comparative valuation of these must be our chief instrument
-for deciding what is ideal. The best ideal we can construct will
-be that state of things which contains the greatest number of
-things having positive value, and which contains nothing evil or
-indifferent--_provided_ that the presence of none of these goods,
-or the absence of things evil or indifferent, seems to diminish the
-value of the whole. And, in fact, the chief defect of such attempts as
-have been made by philosophers to construct an Ideal--to describe the
-Kingdom of Heaven--seems to consist in the fact that they omit many
-things of very great positive value, although it is plain that this
-omission does _not_ enhance the value of the whole. Where this is the
-case, it may be confidently asserted that the ideal proposed is not
-ideal. And the review of positive goods, which I am about to undertake,
-will, I hope, shew that no ideals yet proposed are satisfactory. Great
-positive goods, it will appear, are so numerous, that any whole,
-which shall contain them all, must be of vast complexity. And though
-this fact renders it difficult, or, humanly speaking, impossible, to
-decide what is The Ideal, what is the absolutely best state of things
-imaginable, it is sufficient to condemn those Ideals, which are formed
-by omission, without any visible gain in consequence of such omission.
-Philosophers seem usually to have sought only for the _best_ of single
-things; neglecting the fact that a whole composed of two great goods,
-even though one of these be obviously inferior to the other, may yet be
-often seen to be decidedly superior to either by itself.
-
-(2) On the other hand, Utopias--attempted descriptions of a Heaven
-upon Earth--commonly suffer not only from this, but also from the
-opposite defect. They are commonly constructed on the principle of
-merely omitting the great positive evils, which exist at present, with
-utterly inadequate regard to the goodness of what they retain: the
-so-called goods, to which they have regard, are, for the most part,
-things which are, at best, mere means to good--things, such as freedom,
-_without_ which, possibly, nothing very good can exist in this world,
-but which are of no value in themselves and are by no means certain
-even to produce anything of value. It is, of course, necessary to the
-purpose of their authors, whose object is merely to construct the
-best that may be possible in this world, that they should include,
-in the state of things which they describe, many things, which are
-themselves indifferent, but which, according to natural laws, seem
-to be absolutely necessary for the existence of anything which is
-good. But, in fact, they are apt to include many things, of which
-the necessity is by no means apparent, under the mistaken idea that
-these things are goods-in-themselves, and not merely, here and now,
-a means to good: while, on the other hand, they also omit from their
-description great positive goods, of which the attainment seems to be
-quite as possible as many of the changes which they recommend. That
-is to say, conceptions of the Human Good commonly err, not only, like
-those of the Absolute Good, in omitting some great goods, but also by
-including things indifferent; and they both omit and include in cases
-where the limitations of natural necessity, by the consideration of
-which they are legitimately differentiated from conceptions of the
-Absolute Good, will not justify the omission and inclusion. It is, in
-fact, obvious that in order to decide correctly at what state of things
-we ought to aim, we must not only consider what results it is possible
-for us to obtain, but also which, among equally possible results, will
-have the greatest value. And upon this second enquiry the comparative
-valuation of known goods has a no less important bearing than upon the
-investigation of the Absolute Good.
-
-
-=112.= The method which must be employed in order to decide the
-question ‘What things have intrinsic value, and in what degrees?’
-has already been explained in Chap. III. (§§ 55, 57). In order to
-arrive at a correct decision on the first part of this question, it is
-necessary to consider what things are such that, if they existed _by
-themselves_, in absolute isolation, we should yet judge their existence
-to be good; and, in order to decide upon the relative _degrees_ of
-value of different things, we must similarly consider what comparative
-value seems to attach to the isolated existence of each. By employing
-this method, we shall guard against two errors, which seem to have
-been the chief causes which have vitiated previous conclusions on the
-subject. The first of these is (1) that which consists in supposing
-that what seems absolutely necessary here and now, for the existence of
-anything good--what we cannot do without--is therefore good in itself.
-If we isolate such things, which are mere means to good, and suppose
-a world in which they alone, and nothing but they, existed, their
-intrinsic worthlessness becomes apparent. And, secondly, there is the
-more subtle error (2) which consists in neglecting the principle of
-organic unities. This error is committed, when it is supposed, that,
-if one part of a whole has no intrinsic value, the value of the whole
-must reside entirely in the other parts. It has, in this way, been
-commonly supposed, that, if all valuable wholes could be seen to have
-one and only one common property, the wholes must be valuable solely
-_because_ they possess this property; and the illusion is greatly
-strengthened, if the common property in question seems, considered
-by itself, to have more value than the other parts of such wholes,
-considered by themselves. But, if we consider the property in question,
-_in isolation_, and then compare it with the whole, of which it forms
-a part, it may become easily apparent that, existing by itself, the
-property in question has not nearly so much value, as has the whole to
-which it belongs. Thus, if we compare the value of a certain amount of
-pleasure, _existing absolutely by itself_, with the value of certain
-‘enjoyments,’ containing an equal amount of pleasure, it may become
-apparent that the ‘enjoyment’ is much better than the pleasure, and
-also, in some cases, much worse. In such a case it is plain that the
-‘enjoyment’ does _not_ owe its value _solely_ to the pleasure it
-contains, although it might easily have appeared to do so, when we
-only considered the other constituents of the enjoyment, and seemed
-to see that, without the pleasure, they would have had no value. It
-is now apparent, on the contrary, that the whole ‘enjoyment’ owes its
-value quite equally to the presence of the other constituents, _even
-though_ it may be true that the pleasure is the only constituent having
-any value by itself. And similarly, if we are told that all things
-owe their value solely to the fact that they are ‘realisations of the
-true self,’ we may easily refute this statement, by asking whether the
-predicate that is meant by ‘realising the true self,’ supposing that it
-could exist alone, would have any value whatsoever. Either the _thing_,
-which does ‘realise the true self,’ has intrinsic value or it has not;
-and if it has, then it certainly does not owe its value solely to the
-fact that it realises the true self.
-
-
-=113.= If, now, we use this method of absolute isolation, and guard
-against these errors, it appears that the question we have to answer
-is far less difficult than the controversies of Ethics might have led
-us to expect. Indeed, once the meaning of the question is clearly
-understood, the answer to it, in its main outlines, appears to be so
-obvious, that it runs the risk of seeming to be a platitude. By far the
-most valuable things, which we know or can imagine, are certain states
-of consciousness, which may be roughly described as the pleasures of
-human intercourse and the enjoyment of beautiful objects. No one,
-probably, who has asked himself the question, has ever doubted that
-personal affection and the appreciation of what is beautiful in Art
-or Nature, are good in themselves; nor, if we consider strictly what
-things are worth having _purely for their own sakes_, does it appear
-probable that any one will think that anything else has _nearly_ so
-great a value as the things which are included under these two heads.
-I have myself urged in Chap. III. (§ 50) that the mere existence of
-what is beautiful does appear to have _some_ intrinsic value; but I
-regard it as indubitable that Prof. Sidgwick was so far right, in the
-view there discussed, that such mere existence of what is beautiful
-has value, so small as to be negligible, in comparison with that which
-attaches to the _consciousness_ of beauty. This simple truth may,
-indeed, be said to be universally recognised. What has _not_ been
-recognised is that it is the ultimate and fundamental truth of Moral
-Philosophy. That it is only for the sake of these things--in order that
-as much of them as possible may at some time exist--that any one can
-be justified in performing any public or private duty; that they are
-the _raison d’être_ of virtue; that it is they--these complex wholes
-_themselves_, and not any constituent or characteristic of them--that
-form the rational ultimate end of human action and the sole criterion
-of social progress: these appear to be truths which have been generally
-overlooked.
-
-That they are truths--that personal affections and aesthetic enjoyments
-include _all_ the greatest, and _by far_ the greatest, goods we can
-imagine, will, I hope, appear more plainly in the course of that
-analysis of them, to which I shall now proceed. All the things, which I
-have meant to include under the above descriptions, are highly complex
-_organic unities_; and in discussing the consequences, which follow
-from this fact, and the elements of which they are composed, I may hope
-at the same time both to confirm and to define my position.
-
-
-=114.= I. I propose to begin by examining what I have called aesthetic
-enjoyments, since the case of personal affections presents some
-additional complications. It is, I think, universally admitted that the
-proper appreciation of a beautiful object is a good thing in itself;
-and my question is: What are the main elements included in such an
-appreciation?
-
-(1) It is plain that in those instances of aesthetic appreciation,
-which we think most valuable, there is included, not merely a bare
-cognition of what is beautiful in the object, but also some kind of
-feeling or emotion. It is not sufficient that a man should merely see
-the beautiful qualities in a picture and know that they are beautiful,
-in order that we may give his state of mind the highest praise. We
-require that he should also _appreciate_ the beauty of that which he
-sees and which he knows to be beautiful--that he should feel and see
-_its beauty_. And by these expressions we certainly mean that he should
-have an appropriate emotion towards the beautiful qualities which he
-cognises. It is perhaps the case that all aesthetic emotions have some
-common quality; but it is certain that differences in the emotion seem
-to be appropriate to differences in the kind of beauty perceived: and
-by saying that different emotions are _appropriate_ to different kinds
-of beauty, we mean that the whole which is formed by the consciousness
-of that kind of beauty _together with_ the emotion appropriate to it,
-is better than if any other emotion had been felt in contemplating that
-particular beautiful object. Accordingly we have a large variety of
-different emotions, each of which is a necessary constituent in some
-state of consciousness which we judge to be good. All of these emotions
-are essential elements in great positive goods; they are _parts_ of
-organic wholes, which have great intrinsic value. But it is important
-to observe that these wholes are organic, and that, hence, it does not
-follow that the emotion, _by itself_, would have any value whatsoever,
-nor yet that, if it were directed to a different object, the whole thus
-formed might not be positively bad. And, in fact, it seems to be the
-case that if we distinguish the emotional element, in any aesthetic
-appreciation, from the cognitive element, which accompanies it and
-is, in fact, commonly thought of as a part of the emotion; and if
-we consider what value this emotional element would have, _existing
-by itself_, we can hardly think that it has any great value, even
-if it has any at all. Whereas, if the same emotion be directed to a
-different object, if, for instance, it is felt towards an object that
-is positively ugly, the whole state of consciousness is certainly often
-positively bad in a high degree.
-
-
-=115.= (2) In the last paragraph I have pointed out the two facts,
-that the presence of some emotion is necessary to give any very high
-value to a state of aesthetic appreciation, and that, on the other
-hand, this same emotion, in itself, may have little or no value: it
-follows that these emotions give to the wholes of which they form a
-part a value far greater than that which they themselves possess.
-The same is obviously true of the cognitive element which must be
-combined with these emotions in order to form these highly valuable
-wholes; and the present paragraph will attempt to define what is meant
-by this cognitive element, so far as to guard against a possible
-misunderstanding. When we talk of seeing a beautiful object, or, more
-generally, of the cognition or consciousness of a beautiful object,
-we may mean by these expressions something which forms no part of
-any valuable whole. There is an ambiguity in the use of the term
-‘object,’ which has probably been responsible for as many enormous
-errors in philosophy and psychology as any other single cause. This
-ambiguity may easily be detected by considering the proposition, which,
-though a contradiction in terms, is obviously true: That when a man
-sees a beautiful picture, he may see nothing beautiful whatever. The
-ambiguity consists in the fact that, by the ‘object’ of vision (or
-cognition), may be meant _either_ the qualities actually seen _or_ all
-the qualities possessed by the thing seen. Thus in our case: when it
-is said that the picture is beautiful, it is meant that it contains
-qualities which are beautiful; when it is said that the man sees the
-picture, it is meant that he sees a great number of the qualities
-contained in the picture; and when it is said that, nevertheless,
-he sees nothing beautiful, it is meant that he does _not_ see those
-qualities of the picture which are beautiful. When, therefore, I speak
-of the cognition of a beautiful object, as an essential element in a
-valuable aesthetic appreciation, I must be understood to mean only the
-cognition of _the beautiful qualities_ possessed by that object, and
-_not_ the cognition of other qualities of the object possessing them.
-And this distinction must itself be carefully distinguished from the
-other distinction expressed above by the distinct terms ‘seeing the
-beauty of a thing’ and ‘seeing its beautiful qualities.’ By ‘seeing
-the beauty of a thing’ we commonly mean the having an emotion towards
-its beautiful qualities; whereas in the ‘seeing of its beautiful
-qualities’ we do not include any emotion. By the cognitive element,
-which is equally necessary with emotion to the existence of a valuable
-appreciation, I mean merely the actual cognition or consciousness of
-any or all of an object’s _beautiful qualities_--that is to say any or
-all of those elements in the object which possess any positive beauty.
-That such a cognitive element is essential to a valuable whole may be
-easily seen, by asking: What value should we attribute to the proper
-emotion excited by hearing Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, if that emotion
-were entirely unaccompanied by any consciousness, either of the notes,
-or of the melodic and harmonic relations between them? And that the
-mere _hearing_ of the Symphony, even accompanied by the appropriate
-emotion, is not sufficient, may be easily seen, if we consider what
-would be the state of a man, who should hear all the notes, but should
-_not_ be aware of any of those melodic and harmonic relations, which
-are necessary to constitute the smallest beautiful elements in the
-Symphony.
-
-
-=116.= (3) Connected with the distinction just made between ‘object’
-in the sense of the qualities actually before the mind, and ‘object’
-in the sense of the whole thing which possesses the qualities actually
-before the mind, is another distinction of the utmost importance for
-a correct analysis of the constituents necessary to a valuable whole.
-It is commonly and rightly thought that to see beauty in a thing which
-has no beauty is in some way inferior to seeing beauty in that which
-really has it. But under this single description of ‘seeing beauty
-in that which has no beauty,’ two very different facts, and facts
-of very different value, may be included. We may mean _either_ the
-attribution to an object of really beautiful qualities which it does
-not possess _or_ the feeling towards qualities, which the object does
-possess but which are in reality not beautiful, an emotion which is
-appropriate only to qualities really beautiful. Both these facts are
-of very frequent occurrence; and in most instances of emotion both
-no doubt occur together: but they are obviously quite distinct, and
-the distinction is of the utmost importance for a correct estimate of
-values. The former may be called an error of judgment, and the latter
-an error of taste; but it is important to observe that the ‘error
-of taste’ commonly involves a false judgment _of value_; whereas the
-‘error of judgment’ is merely a false judgment _of fact_.
-
-Now the case which I have called an error of taste, namely, where the
-actual qualities we admire (whether possessed by the ‘object’ or not)
-are ugly, can in any case have no value, except such as may belong
-to the emotion _by itself_; and in most, if not in all, cases it is
-a considerable positive evil. In this sense, then, it is undoubtedly
-right to think that seeing beauty in a thing which has no beauty is
-inferior in value to seeing beauty where beauty really is. But the
-other case is much more difficult. In this case there is present all
-that I have hitherto mentioned as necessary to constitute a great
-positive good: there is a cognition of qualities really beautiful,
-together with an appropriate emotion towards these qualities. There
-can, therefore, be no doubt that we have here a great positive good.
-But there is present also something else; namely, a belief that these
-beautiful qualities exist, and that they exist in a certain relation
-to other things--namely, to some properties of the object to which
-we attribute these qualities: and further the object of this belief
-is false. And we may ask, with regard to the whole thus constituted,
-whether the presence of the belief, and the fact that what is believed
-is false, make any difference to its value? We thus get three different
-cases of which it is very important to determine the relative values.
-Where both the cognition of beautiful qualities and the appropriate
-emotion are present we may _also_ have either, (1) a belief in the
-existence of these qualities, of which the object, _i.e._ that they
-exist, is true: or (2) a mere cognition, without belief, when it is
-(_a_) true, (_b_) false, that the object of the cognition, _i.e._ the
-beautiful qualities, exists: or (3) a belief in the existence of the
-beautiful qualities, when they do not exist. The importance of these
-cases arises from the fact that the second defines the pleasures of
-imagination, including a great part of the appreciation of those
-works of art which are _representative_; whereas the first contrasts
-with these the appreciation of what is beautiful in Nature, and the
-human affections. The third, on the other hand, is contrasted with
-both, in that it is chiefly exemplified in what is called misdirected
-affection; and it is possible also that the love of God, in the case of
-a believer, should fall under this head.
-
-
-=117.= Now all these three cases, as I have said, have something in
-common, namely, that, in them all, we have a cognition of really
-beautiful qualities together with an appropriate emotion towards
-those qualities. I think, therefore, it cannot be doubted (nor is it
-commonly doubted) that all three include great positive goods; they
-are all things of which we feel convinced that they are worth having
-for their own sakes. And I think that the value of the second, in
-either of its two subdivisions, is precisely the same as the value
-of the element common to all three. In other words, in the case of
-purely imaginative appreciations we have merely the cognition of really
-beautiful qualities together with the appropriate emotion; and the
-question, whether the object cognised exists or not, seems here, where
-there is no belief either in its existence or in its non-existence, to
-make absolutely no difference to the value of the total state. But it
-seems to me that the two other cases do differ in intrinsic value both
-from this one and from one another, even though the object cognised and
-the appropriate emotion should be identical in all three cases. I think
-that the additional presence of a belief in the reality of the object
-makes the total state much better, if the belief is true; and worse,
-if the belief is false. In short, where there is belief, in the sense
-in which we _do_ believe in the existence of Nature and horses, and do
-_not_ believe in the existence of an ideal landscape and unicorns, the
-_truth_ of what is believed does make a great difference to the value
-of the organic whole. If this be the case, we shall have vindicated
-the belief that _knowledge_, in the ordinary sense, as distinguished
-on the one hand from belief in what is false and on the other from
-the mere awareness of what is true, does contribute towards intrinsic
-value--that, at least in some cases, its presence as a part makes a
-whole more valuable than it could have been without.
-
-Now I think there can be no doubt that we do judge that there is
-a difference of value, such as I have indicated, between the three
-cases in question. We do think that the emotional contemplation of a
-natural scene, supposing its qualities equally beautiful, is in some
-way a better state of things than that of a painted landscape: we
-think that the world would be improved if we could substitute for the
-best works of representative art _real_ objects equally beautiful. And
-similarly we regard a misdirected affection or admiration, even where
-the error involved is a mere error of judgment and not an error of
-taste, as in some way unfortunate. And further, those, at least, who
-have a strong respect for truth, are inclined to think that a merely
-poetical contemplation of the Kingdom of Heaven _would_ be superior
-to that of the religious believer, _if_ it were the case that the
-Kingdom of Heaven does not and will not really exist. Most persons,
-on a sober, reflective judgment, would feel some hesitation even in
-preferring the felicity of a madman, convinced that the world was
-ideal, to the condition either of a poet imagining an ideal world, or
-of themselves enjoying and appreciating the lesser goods which do and
-will exist: But, in order to assure ourselves that these judgments are
-really judgments of intrinsic value upon the question before us, and
-to satisfy ourselves that they are correct, it is necessary clearly to
-distinguish our question from two others which have a very important
-bearing upon our total judgment of the cases in question.
-
-
-=118.= In the first place (_a_) it is plain that, where we believe, the
-question whether what we believe is true or false, will generally have
-a most important bearing upon the value of our belief _as a means_.
-Where we believe, we are apt to act upon our belief, in a way in which
-we do not act upon our cognition of the events in a novel. The truth
-of what we believe is, therefore, very important as preventing the
-pains of disappointment and still more serious consequences. And it
-might be thought that a misdirected attachment was unfortunate solely
-for this reason: that it leads us to count upon results, which the
-real nature of its object is not of a kind to ensure. So too the Love
-of God, where, as usual, it includes the belief that he will annex to
-certain actions consequences, either in this life or the next, which
-the course of nature gives no reason to expect, may lead the believer
-to perform actions of which the actual consequences, supposing no
-such God to exist, may be much worse than he might otherwise have
-effected: and it might be thought that this was the sole reason (as it
-is a sufficient one) why we should hesitate to encourage the Love of
-God, in the absence of any proof that he exists. And similarly it may
-be thought that the only reason why beauty in Nature should be held
-superior to an equally beautiful landscape or imagination, is that
-its existence would ensure greater permanence and frequency in our
-emotional contemplation of that beauty. It is, indeed, certain that
-the chief importance of most _knowledge_--of the truth of most of the
-things which we believe--does, in this world, consist in its extrinsic
-advantages: it is immensely valuable _as a means_.
-
-And secondly, (_b_) it may be the case that the existence of that which
-we contemplate is itself a great positive good, so that, for this
-reason alone, the state of things described by saying, that the object
-of our emotion really exists, would be intrinsically superior to that
-in which it did not. This reason for superiority is undoubtedly of
-great importance in the case of human affections, where the object of
-our admiration is the mental qualities of an admirable person; for that
-_two_ such admirable persons should exist is greatly better than that
-there should be only one: and it would also discriminate the admiration
-of inanimate nature from that of its representations in art, in so far
-as we may allow a small intrinsic value to the existence of a beautiful
-object, apart from any contemplation of it. But it is to be noticed
-that this reason would not account for any difference in value between
-the cases where the truth was believed and that in which it was merely
-cognised, without either belief or disbelief. In other words, so far
-as this reason goes, the difference between the two subdivisions of
-our second class (that of imaginative contemplation) would be as great
-as between our first class and the second subdivision of our second.
-The superiority of the mere _cognition_ of a beautiful object, when
-that object also happened to exist, over the same cognition when the
-object did not exist, would, on this count, be as great as that of the
-_knowledge_ of a beautiful object over the mere imagination of it.
-
-
-=119.= These two reasons for discriminating between the value of the
-three cases we are considering, must, I say, be carefully distinguished
-from that, of which I am now questioning the validity, if we are to
-obtain a correct answer concerning this latter. The question I am
-putting is this: Whether the _whole_ constituted by the fact that
-there is an emotional contemplation of a beautiful object, which
-both is believed to be and is _real_, does not derive some of its
-value from the fact that the object _is_ real? I am asking whether
-the value of this whole, _as a whole_, is not greater than that of
-those which differ from it, _either_ by the absence of belief, with
-or without truth, _or_, belief being present, by the mere absence of
-truth? I am not asking _either_ whether it is not superior to them as
-a means (which it certainly is), _nor_ whether it may not contain a
-more valuable _part_, namely, the existence of the object in question.
-My question is solely whether the existence of its object does not
-constitute an addition to the value of the whole, quite distinct from
-the addition constituted by the fact that this whole does contain a
-valuable part.
-
-If, now, we put this question, I cannot avoid thinking that it should
-receive an affirmative answer. We can put it clearly by the method of
-isolation; and the sole decision must rest with our reflective judgment
-upon it, as thus clearly put. We can guard against the bias produced
-by a consideration of value _as a means_ by supposing the case of an
-illusion as complete and permanent as illusions in this world never can
-be. We can imagine the case of a single person, enjoying throughout
-eternity the contemplation of scenery as beautiful, and intercourse
-with persons as admirable, as can be imagined; while yet the whole of
-the objects of his cognition are absolutely unreal. I think we should
-definitely pronounce the existence of a universe, which consisted
-solely of such a person, to be _greatly_ inferior in value to one in
-which the objects, in the existence of which he believes, did really
-exist just as he believes them to do; and that it would be thus
-inferior _not only_ because it would lack the goods which consist in
-the existence of the objects in question, but _also_ merely because
-his belief would be false. That it would be inferior _for this reason
-alone_ follows if we admit, what also appears to me certain, that the
-case of a person, merely imagining, without believing, the beautiful
-objects in question, would, _although these objects really existed_,
-be yet inferior to that of the person who also believed in their
-existence. For here all the additional good, which consists in the
-existence of the objects, is present, and yet there still seems to be
-a great difference in value between this case and that in which their
-existence is believed. But I think that my conclusion may perhaps be
-exhibited in a more convincing light by the following considerations.
-(1) It does not seem to me that the small degree of value which we may
-allow to the existence of beautiful inanimate objects is nearly equal
-in amount to the difference which I feel that there is between the
-appreciation (accompanied by belief) of such objects, when they really
-exist, and the purely imaginative appreciation of them when they do not
-exist. This inequality is more difficult to verify where the object
-is an admirable person, since a _great_ value must be allowed to his
-existence. But yet I think it is not paradoxical to maintain that the
-superiority of reciprocal affection, where both objects are worthy and
-both exist, over an unreciprocated affection, where both are worthy
-but one does not exist, does not lie solely in the fact that, in the
-former case, we have two good things instead of one, but also in the
-fact that each is such as the other believes him to be. (2) It seems to
-me that the important contribution to value made by true belief may be
-very plainly seen in the following case. Suppose that a worthy object
-of affection does really exist and is believed to do so, but that there
-enters into the case this error of fact, that the qualities loved,
-though exactly like, are yet not the _same_ which really do exist.
-This state of things is easily imagined, and I think we cannot avoid
-pronouncing that, _although_ both persons here exist, it is yet not so
-satisfactory as where the very person loved and believed to exist is
-also the one which actually does exist.
-
-
-=120.= If all this be so, we have, in this third section, added to our
-two former results the third result that a true belief in the reality
-of an object greatly increases the value of many valuable wholes.
-Just as in sections (1) and (2) it was maintained that aesthetic and
-affectionate emotions had little or no value apart from the cognition
-of appropriate objects, and that the cognition of these objects had
-little or no value apart from the appropriate emotion, so that the
-whole, in which both were combined, had a value greatly in excess of
-the sum of the values of its parts; so, according to this section, if
-there be added to these wholes a true belief in the reality of the
-object, the new whole thus formed has a value greatly in excess of the
-sum obtained by adding the value of the true belief, considered in
-itself, to that of our original wholes. This new case only differs from
-the former in this, that, whereas the true belief, by itself, has quite
-as little value as either of the two other constituents taken singly,
-yet they, taken together, seem to form a whole of very great value,
-whereas this is not the case with the two wholes which might be formed
-by adding the true belief to either of the others.
-
-The importance of the result of this section seems to lie mainly in two
-of its consequences. (1) That it affords some justification for the
-immense intrinsic value, which seems to be commonly attributed to the
-mere _knowledge_ of some truths, and which was expressly attributed
-to some kinds of knowledge by Plato and Aristotle. Perfect knowledge
-has indeed competed with perfect love for the position of Ideal. If
-the results of this section are correct, it appears that knowledge,
-though having little or no value by itself, is an absolutely essential
-constituent in the highest goods, and contributes immensely to their
-value. And it appears that this function may be performed not only
-by that case of knowledge, which we have chiefly considered, namely,
-knowledge of the reality of the beautiful object cognised, but also
-by knowledge of the numerical identity of this object with that which
-really exists, and by the knowledge that the existence of that object
-is truly good. Indeed all knowledge, which is directly concerned with
-the nature of the constituents of a beautiful object, would seem
-capable of adding greatly to the value of the contemplation of that
-object, although, by itself, such knowledge would have no value at
-all.--And (2) The second important consequence, which follows from
-this section, is that the presence of true belief may, in spite of a
-great inferiority in the value of the emotion and the beauty of its
-object, constitute with them a whole equal or superior in value to
-wholes, in which the emotion and beauty are superior, but in which a
-true belief is wanting or a false belief present. In this way we may
-justify the attribution of equal or superior value to an appreciation
-of an inferior real object, as compared with the appreciation of a
-greatly superior object which is a mere creature of the imagination.
-Thus a just appreciation of nature and of real persons may maintain its
-equality with an equally just appreciation of the products of artistic
-imagination, in spite of much greater beauty in the latter. And
-similarly though God may be admitted to be a more perfect object than
-any actual human being, the love of God may yet be inferior to human
-love, _if_ God does not exist.
-
-
-=121.= (4) In order to complete the discussion of this first class
-of goods--goods which have an essential reference to _beautiful_
-objects--it would be necessary to attempt a classification and
-comparative valuation of all the different forms of beauty, a task
-which properly belongs to the study called Aesthetics. I do not,
-however, propose to attempt any part of this task. It must only be
-understood that I intend to include among the essential constituents of
-the goods I have been discussing, every form and variety of beautiful
-object, if only it be truly beautiful; and, _if_ this be understood,
-I think it may be seen that the consensus of opinion with regard to
-what is positively beautiful and what is positively ugly, and even with
-regard to great differences in degree of beauty, is quite sufficient to
-allow us a hope that we need not greatly err in our judgments of good
-and evil. In anything which is thought beautiful by any considerable
-number of persons, there is probably _some_ beautiful quality; and
-differences of opinion seem to be far more often due to exclusive
-attention, on the part of different persons, to different qualities
-in the same object, than to the positive error of supposing a quality
-that is ugly to be really beautiful. When an object, which some think
-beautiful, is denied to be so by others, the truth is _usually_ that it
-lacks some beautiful quality or is deformed by some ugly one, which
-engage the exclusive attention of the critics.
-
-I may, however, state two general principles, closely connected with
-the results of this chapter, the recognition of which would seem to
-be of great importance for the investigation of what things are truly
-beautiful. The first of these is (1) a definition of beauty, of what
-is meant by saying that a thing is truly beautiful. The naturalistic
-fallacy has been quite as commonly committed with regard to beauty
-as with regard to good: its use has introduced as many errors into
-Aesthetics as into Ethics. It has been even more commonly supposed that
-the beautiful may be _defined_ as that which produces certain effects
-upon our feelings; and the conclusion which follows from this--namely,
-that judgments of taste are merely _subjective_--that precisely the
-same thing may, according to circumstances, be _both_ beautiful _and_
-not beautiful--has very frequently been drawn. The conclusions of this
-chapter suggest a definition of beauty, which may partially explain
-and entirely remove the difficulties which have led to this error. It
-appears probable that the beautiful should be _defined_ as that of
-which the admiring contemplation is good in itself. That is to say: To
-assert that a thing is beautiful is to assert that the cognition of it
-is an essential element in one of the intrinsically valuable wholes
-we have been discussing; so that the question, whether it is _truly_
-beautiful or not, depends upon the _objective_ question whether the
-whole in question is or is not truly good, and does not depend upon
-the question whether it would or would not excite particular feelings
-in particular persons. This definition has the double recommendation
-that it accounts both for the apparent connection between goodness
-and beauty and for the no less apparent difference between these two
-conceptions. It appears, at first sight, to be a strange coincidence,
-that there should be two _different_ objective predicates of value,
-‘good’ and ‘beautiful,’ which are nevertheless so related to one
-another that whatever is beautiful is also good. But, if our definition
-be correct, the strangeness disappears; since it leaves only one
-_unanalysable_ predicate of value, namely ‘good,’ while ‘beautiful,’
-though not identical with, is to be defined by reference to this,
-being thus, at the same time, different from and necessarily connected
-with it. In short, on this view, to say that a thing is beautiful
-is to say, not indeed that it is _itself_ good, but that it is a
-necessary element in something which is: to prove that a thing is truly
-beautiful is to prove that a whole, to which it bears a particular
-relation as a part, is truly good. And in this way we should explain
-the immense predominance, among objects commonly considered beautiful,
-of _material_ objects--objects of the external senses; since these
-objects, though themselves having, as has been said, little or no
-intrinsic value, are yet essential constituents in the largest group of
-wholes which have intrinsic value. These wholes themselves may be, and
-are, also beautiful; but the comparative rarity, with which we regard
-them as themselves _objects_ of contemplation, seems sufficient to
-explain the association of beauty with external objects.
-
-And secondly (2) it is to be observed that beautiful objects are
-themselves, for the most part, organic unities, in this sense, that
-they are wholes of great complexity, such that the contemplation of
-any part, by itself, may have no value, and yet that, unless the
-contemplation of the whole includes the contemplation of that part, it
-will lose in value. From this it follows that there can be no single
-criterion of beauty. It will never be true to say: This object owes its
-beauty _solely_ to the presence of this characteristic; nor yet that:
-Wherever this characteristic is present, the object must be beautiful.
-All that can be true is that certain objects are beautiful, _because_
-they have certain characteristics, in the sense that they would not
-be beautiful _unless_ they had them. And it may be possible to find
-that certain characteristics are more or less universally present in
-all beautiful objects, and are, in this sense, more or less important
-conditions of beauty. But it is important to observe that the very
-qualities, which differentiate one beautiful object from all others,
-are, if the object be truly beautiful, as _essential_ to its beauty,
-as those which it has in common with ever so many others. The object
-would no more have the beauty it has, without its specific qualities,
-than without those that are generic; and the generic qualities, _by
-themselves_, would fail, as completely, to give beauty, as those which
-are specific.
-
-
-=122.= II. It will be remembered that I began this survey of great
-unmixed goods, by dividing all the greatest goods we know into the two
-classes of aesthetic enjoyments, on the one hand, and the pleasures of
-human intercourse or of personal affection, on the other. I postponed
-the consideration of the latter on the ground that they presented
-additional complications. In what this additional complication
-consists, will now be evident; and I have already been obliged to
-take account of it, in discussing the contribution to value made by
-true belief. It consists in the fact that in the case of personal
-affection, the object itself is not _merely_ beautiful, while possessed
-of little or no intrinsic value, but is itself, in part at least,
-of great intrinsic value. All the constituents which we have found
-to be necessary to the most valuable aesthetic enjoyments, namely,
-appropriate emotion, cognition of truly beautiful qualities, and true
-belief, are equally necessary here; but here we have the additional
-fact that the object must be not only truly beautiful, but also truly
-good in a high degree.
-
-It is evident that this additional complication only occurs in so far
-as there is included in the object of personal affection some of the
-_mental_ qualities of the person towards whom the affection is felt.
-And I think it may be admitted that, wherever the affection is most
-valuable, the appreciation of mental qualities must form a large part
-of it, and that the presence of this part makes the whole far more
-valuable than it could have been without it. But it seems very doubtful
-whether this appreciation, by itself, can possess as much value as the
-whole in which it is combined with an appreciation of the appropriate
-_corporeal_ expression of the mental qualities in question. It is
-certain that in all actual cases of valuable affection, the bodily
-expressions of character, whether by looks, by words, or by actions, do
-form a part of the object towards which the affection is felt, and that
-the fact of their inclusion appears to heighten the value of the whole
-state. It is, indeed, very difficult to imagine what the cognition of
-mental qualities _alone_, unaccompanied by _any_ corporeal expression,
-would be like; and, in so far as we succeed in making this abstraction,
-the whole considered certainly appears to have less value. I therefore
-conclude that the importance of an admiration of admirable mental
-qualities lies chiefly in the immense superiority of a whole, in which
-it forms a part, to one in which it is absent, and not in any high
-degree of intrinsic value which it possesses by itself. It even appears
-to be doubtful, whether, in itself, it possesses so much value as the
-appreciation of mere corporeal beauty undoubtedly does possess; that is
-to say, whether the appreciation of what has great intrinsic value is
-so valuable as the appreciation of what is merely beautiful.
-
-But further if we consider the nature of admirable mental qualities,
-by themselves, it appears that a proper appreciation of them involves
-a reference to purely material beauty in yet another way. Admirable
-mental qualities do, if our previous conclusions are correct, consist
-very largely in an emotional contemplation of beautiful objects;
-and hence the appreciation of them will consist essentially in the
-contemplation of such contemplation. It is true that the most valuable
-appreciation of persons appears to be that which consists in the
-appreciation of their appreciation of other persons: but even here a
-reference to material beauty appears to be involved, _both_ in respect
-of the fact that what is appreciated in the last instance may be the
-contemplation of what is merely beautiful, _and_ in respect of the fact
-that the most valuable appreciation of a person appears to _include_
-an appreciation of his corporeal expression. Though, therefore, we
-may admit that the appreciation of a person’s attitude towards other
-persons, or, to take one instance, the love of love, is far the most
-valuable good we know, and far more valuable than the mere love of
-beauty, yet we can only admit this if the first be understood to
-_include_ the latter, in various degrees of directness.
-
-With regard to the question what _are_ the mental qualities of which
-the cognition is essential to the value of human intercourse, it is
-plain that they include, in the first place, all those varieties of
-aesthetic appreciation, which formed our first class of goods. They
-include, therefore, a great variety of different emotions, each of
-which is appropriate to some different kind of beauty. But we must now
-add to these the whole range of emotions, which are appropriate to
-persons, and which are different from those which are appropriate to
-mere corporeal beauty. It must also be remembered that just as these
-emotions have little value in themselves, and as the state of mind in
-which they exist may have its value greatly heightened, or may entirely
-lose it and become positively evil in a great degree, according as the
-cognitions accompanying the emotions are appropriate or inappropriate;
-so too the appreciation of these emotions, though it may have some
-value in itself, may yet form part of a whole which has far greater
-value or no value at all, according as it is or is not accompanied by
-a perception of the appropriateness of the emotions to their objects.
-It is obvious, therefore, that the study of what is valuable in human
-intercourse is a study of immense complexity; and that there may be
-much human intercourse which has little or no value, or is positively
-bad. Yet here too, as with the question what is beautiful, there seems
-no reason to doubt that a reflective judgment will in the main decide
-correctly both as to what are positive goods and even as to any _great_
-differences in value between these goods. In particular, it may be
-remarked that the emotions, of which the contemplation is essential
-to the greatest values, and which are also themselves appropriately
-excited by such contemplation, appear to be those which are commonly
-most highly prized under the name of affection.
-
-
-=123.= I have now completed my examination into the nature of those
-great positive goods, which do not appear to include among their
-constituents anything positively evil or ugly, though they include
-much which is in itself indifferent. And I wish to point out certain
-conclusions which appear to follow, with regard to the nature of the
-Summum Bonum, or that state of things which would be the most perfect
-we can conceive. Those idealistic philosophers, whose views agree
-most closely with those here advocated, in that they deny pleasure to
-be the sole good and regard what is completely good as having some
-complexity, have usually represented a purely spiritual state of
-existence as the Ideal. Regarding matter as essentially imperfect, if
-not positively evil, they have concluded that the total absence of
-all material properties is necessary to a state of perfection. Now,
-according to what has been said, this view would be correct so far
-as it asserts that any great good must be _mental_, and so far as it
-asserts that a purely material existence, _by itself_, can have little
-or no value. The superiority of the spiritual over the material has,
-in a sense, been amply vindicated. But it does not follow, from this
-superiority, that a perfect state of things must be one, from which
-all material properties are rigidly excluded: on the contrary, if our
-conclusions are correct, it would seem to be the case that a state of
-things, in which they are included, must be vastly better than any
-conceivable state in which they were absent. In order to see that this
-is so, the chief thing necessary to be considered is _exactly what it
-is_ which we declare to be good when we declare that the appreciation
-of beauty in Art and Nature is so. That this appreciation _is_ good,
-the philosophers in question do not for the most part deny. But, if we
-admit it, then we should remember Butler’s maxim that: Everything is
-what it is, and not another thing. I have tried to shew, and I think
-it is too evident to be disputed, that such appreciation is an organic
-unity, a complex whole; and that, in its most undoubted instances,
-part of what is included in this whole is _a cognition of material
-qualities_, and particularly of a vast variety of what are called
-_secondary_ qualities. If, then, it is _this_ whole, which we know to
-be good, and not another thing, then we know that material qualities,
-even though they be perfectly worthless in themselves, are yet
-essential constituents of what is far from worthless. What we know to
-be valuable is the apprehension of just these qualities, and not of any
-others; and, if we propose to subtract them from it, then what we have
-left is _not_ that which we know to have value, but something else. And
-it must be noticed that this conclusion holds, even if my contention,
-that a true belief in the existence of these qualities adds to the
-value of the whole in which it is included, be disputed. We should
-then, indeed, be entitled to assert that the _existence_ of a material
-world was wholly immaterial to perfection; but the fact that what we
-knew to be good was a cognition of _material qualities_ (though purely
-imaginary), would still remain. It must, then, be admitted on pain of
-self-contradiction--on pain of holding that things are not what they
-are, but something else--that a world, from which material qualities
-were wholly banished, would be a world which lacked many, if not all,
-of those things, which we know most certainly to be great goods. That
-it _might_ nevertheless be a far better world than one which retained
-these goods, I have already admitted (§ 111 (1)). But in order to shew
-that any such world _would_ be thus better, it would be necessary to
-shew that the retention of these things, though good in themselves,
-impaired, in a more than equal degree, the value of some whole, to
-which they might belong; and the task of shewing this has certainly
-never been attempted. Until it be performed, we are entitled to assert
-that material qualities are a necessary constituent of the Ideal;
-that, though something utterly unknown _might_ be better than any
-world containing either them or any other good we know, yet we have no
-reason to suppose that anything whatever would be better than a state
-of things in which they were included. To deny and exclude matter,
-is to deny and exclude the best we know. That a thing may retain its
-value, while losing some of its qualities, is utterly untrue. All that
-is true is that the changed thing may have more value than, or as much
-value as, that of which the qualities have been lost. What I contend is
-that nothing, which we _know_ to be good and which contains no material
-qualities, has such great value that we can declare it, _by itself_, to
-be superior to the whole which would be formed by the addition to it of
-an appreciation of material qualities. That a _purely_ spiritual good
-may be the _best_ of single things, I am not much concerned to dispute,
-although, in what has been said with regard to the nature of personal
-affection, I have given reasons for doubting it. But that by adding
-to it some appreciation of material qualities, which, though perhaps
-inferior by itself, is certainly a great positive good, we should
-obtain a greater sum of value, which no corresponding decrease in the
-value of the whole, as a whole, could counterbalance--this, I maintain,
-we have certainly no reason to doubt.
-
-
-=124.= In order to complete this discussion of the main principles
-involved in the determination of intrinsic values, the chief remaining
-topics, necessary to be treated, appear to be two. The first of these
-is the nature of great intrinsic _evils_, including what I may call
-_mixed_ evils; that is to say, those evil wholes, which nevertheless
-contain, as essential elements, something positively good or beautiful.
-And the second is the nature of what I may similarly call _mixed_
-goods; that is to say, those wholes, which, though intrinsically good
-_as wholes_, nevertheless contain, as essential elements, something
-positively evil or ugly. It will greatly facilitate this discussion,
-if I may be understood throughout to use the terms ‘beautiful’ and
-‘ugly,’ not necessarily with reference to things of the kind which
-most naturally occur to us as instances of what is beautiful and ugly,
-but in accordance with my own proposed definition of beauty. Thus I
-shall use the word ‘beautiful’ to denote that of which the admiring
-contemplation is good in itself; and ‘ugly’ to denote that of which the
-admiring contemplation is evil in itself.
-
-I. With regard, then, to great positive evils, I think it is evident
-that, if we take all due precautions to discover _precisely what_ those
-things are, of which, _if they existed absolutely by themselves_, we
-should judge the existence to be a great evil, we shall find most of
-them to be organic unities of exactly the same nature as those which
-are the greatest positive goods. That is to say, they are cognitions of
-some object, accompanied by some emotion. Just as neither a cognition
-nor an emotion, _by itself_, appeared capable of being greatly good,
-so (with one exception), neither a cognition nor an emotion, _by
-itself_, appears capable of being greatly evil. And just as a whole
-formed of both, even without the addition of any other element,
-appeared undoubtedly capable of being a great good, so such a whole,
-_by itself_, appears capable of being a great evil. With regard to the
-_third_ element, which was discussed as capable of adding greatly to
-the value of a good, namely, _true belief_, it will appear that it has
-different relations towards different kinds of evils. In some cases the
-addition of true belief to a positive evil seems to constitute a far
-worse evil; but in other cases it is not apparent that it makes any
-difference.
-
-The greatest positive evils may be divided into the following three
-classes.
-
-
-=125.= (1) The first class consists of those evils, which seem always
-to include an enjoyment or admiring contemplation of things which
-are themselves either evil or ugly. That is to say these evils are
-characterised by the fact that they include precisely the same emotion,
-which is also essential to the greatest unmixed goods, from which they
-are differentiated by the fact that this emotion is directed towards an
-inappropriate object. In so far as this emotion is either a slight good
-in itself or a slightly beautiful object, these evils would therefore
-be cases of what I have called ‘mixed’ evils; but, as I have already
-said, it seems very doubtful whether an emotion, completely isolated
-from its object, has either value or beauty: it certainly has not much
-of either. It is, however, important to observe that the very same
-emotions, which are often loosely talked of as the greatest or the only
-goods, may be essential constituents of the very worst wholes: that,
-according to the nature of the cognition which accompanies them, they
-may be conditions either of the greatest good, or of the greatest evil.
-
-In order to illustrate the nature of evils of this class, I may take
-two instances--cruelty and lasciviousness. That these are great
-intrinsic evils, we may, I think, easily assure ourselves, by imagining
-the state of a man, whose mind is solely occupied by either of these
-passions, in their worst form. If we then consider what judgment we
-should pass upon a universe which consisted _solely_ of minds thus
-occupied, without the smallest hope that there would ever exist in it
-the smallest consciousness of any object other than those proper to
-these passions, or any feeling directed to any such object, I think
-we cannot avoid the conclusion that the existence of such a universe
-would be a far worse evil than the existence of none at all. But, if
-this be so, it follows that these two vicious states are not only, as
-is commonly admitted, bad as means, but also bad in themselves.--And
-that they involve in their nature that complication of elements,
-which I have called a love of what is evil or ugly, is, I think, no
-less plain. With regard to the pleasures of lust, the nature of the
-cognition, by the presence of which they are to be defined, is somewhat
-difficult to analyse. But it appears to include both cognitions of
-organic sensations and perceptions of states of the body, of which
-the enjoyment is certainly an evil in itself. So far as these are
-concerned, lasciviousness would, then, include in its essence an
-admiring contemplation of what is ugly. But certainly one of its
-commonest ingredients, in its worst forms, is an enjoyment of the same
-state of mind in other people: and in this case it would therefore also
-include a love of what is evil. With regard to cruelty, it is easy
-to see that an enjoyment of pain in other people is essential to it;
-and, as we shall see, when we come to consider pain, this is certainly
-a love of evil: while, in so far as it also includes a delight in
-the bodily signs of agony, it would also comprehend a love of what
-is ugly. In both cases, it should be observed, the evil of the state
-is heightened not only by an increase in the evil or ugliness of the
-object, but also by an increase in the enjoyment.
-
-It might be objected, in the case of cruelty, that our disapproval of
-it, even in the isolated case supposed, where no considerations of
-its badness as a means could influence us, may yet be really directed
-to the pain of the persons, which it takes delight in contemplating.
-This objection may be met, in the first place, by the remark that it
-entirely fails to explain the judgment, which yet, I think, no one, on
-reflection, will be able to avoid making, that even though the amount
-of pain contemplated be the same, yet the greater the delight in its
-contemplation, the worse the state of things. But it may also, I think,
-be met by notice of a fact, which we were unable to urge in considering
-the similar possibility with regard to goods--namely the possibility
-that the reason why we attribute greater value to a worthy affection
-for a _real_ person, is that we take into account the additional good
-consisting in the existence of that person. We may I think urge, in
-the case of cruelty, that its intrinsic odiousness is equally great,
-whether the pain contemplated really exists or is purely imaginary. I,
-at least, am unable to distinguish that, in this case, the presence
-of _true belief_ makes any difference to the intrinsic value of the
-whole considered, although it undoubtedly may make a great difference
-to its value _as a means_. And so also with regard to other evils of
-this class: I am unable to see that a true belief in the _existence_
-of their objects makes any difference in the degree of their positive
-demerits. On the other hand, the presence of another class of beliefs
-seems to make a considerable difference. When we enjoy what is evil
-or ugly, in spite of our knowledge that it is so, the state of things
-seems considerably worse than if we made no judgment at all as to the
-object’s value. And the same seems also, strangely enough, to be the
-case when we make a false judgment of value. When we admire what is
-ugly or evil, believing that it is beautiful and good, this belief
-seems also to enhance the intrinsic vileness of our condition. It must,
-of course, be understood that, in both these cases, the judgment in
-question is merely what I have called a judgment of taste; that is to
-say, it is concerned with the worth of the qualities actually cognised
-and not with the worth of the object, to which those qualities may be
-rightly or wrongly attributed.
-
-Finally it should be mentioned that evils of this class, _beside_ that
-emotional element (namely enjoyment and admiration) which they share
-with great unmixed goods, appear always also to include some specific
-emotion, which does not enter in the same way into the constitution
-of any good. The presence of this specific emotion seems certainly
-to enhance the badness of the whole, though it is not plain that, by
-itself, it would be either evil or ugly.
-
-
-=126.= (2) The second class of great evils are undoubtedly mixed
-evils; but I treat them next, because, in a certain respect, they
-appear to be the _converse_ of the class last considered. Just as it
-is essential to this last class that they should include an emotion,
-appropriate to the cognition of what is good or beautiful, but directed
-to an inappropriate object; so to this second class it is essential
-that they should include a cognition of what is good or beautiful, but
-accompanied by an inappropriate emotion. In short, just as the last
-class may be described as cases of the love of what is evil or ugly, so
-this class may be described as cases of the hatred of what is good or
-beautiful.
-
-With regard to these evils it should be remarked: First, that the vices
-of hatred, envy and contempt, where these vices are evil in themselves,
-appear to be instances of them; and that they are frequently
-accompanied by evils of the first class, for example, where a delight
-is felt in the pain of a good person. Where they are thus accompanied,
-the whole thus formed is undoubtedly worse than if either existed
-singly.
-
-And secondly: That in their case a true belief in the existence of the
-good or beautiful object, which is hated, does appear to enhance the
-badness of the whole, in which it is present. Undoubtedly also, as in
-our first class, the presence of a true belief as to the _value_ of the
-objects contemplated, increases the evil. But, contrary to what was the
-case in our first class, a _false_ judgment of value appears to lessen
-it.
-
-
-=127.= (3) The third class of great positive evils appears to be the
-class of _pains_.
-
-With regard to these it should first be remarked that, as in the case
-of pleasure, it is not pain itself, but only the consciousness of pain,
-towards which our judgments of value are directed. Just as in Chap.
-III., it was said that pleasure, however intense, which no one felt,
-would be no good at all; so it appears that pain, however intense, of
-which there was no consciousness, would be no evil at all.
-
-It is, therefore, only the consciousness of intense pain, which can
-be maintained to be a great evil. But that this, _by itself_, may be
-a great evil, I cannot avoid thinking. The case of pain thus seems to
-differ from that of pleasure: for the mere consciousness of pleasure,
-however intense, does not, _by itself_, appear to be a _great_ good,
-even if it has some slight intrinsic value. In short, pain (if we
-understand by this expression, the consciousness of pain) appears to
-be a far worse evil than pleasure is a good. But, if this be so, then
-_pain_ must be admitted to be an exception from the rule which seems to
-hold both of all _other_ great evils and of _all_ great goods: namely
-that they are all organic unities to which _both_ a cognition of an
-object _and_ an emotion directed towards that object are essential. In
-the case of pain and of pain alone, it seems to be true that a mere
-cognition, by itself, may be a great evil. It is, indeed, _an_ organic
-unity, since it involves both the cognition and the object, neither of
-which, by themselves, has either merit or demerit. But it is a less
-complex organic unity than any other great evil and than any great
-good, _both_ in respect of the fact that it does not involve, _beside_
-the cognition, an emotion directed towards its object, _and also_ in
-respect of the fact that the _object_ may here be absolutely simple,
-whereas in most, if not all, other cases, the object itself is highly
-complex.
-
-This want of analogy between the relation of pain to intrinsic evil and
-of pleasure to intrinsic good, seems also to be exhibited in a second
-respect. Not only is it the case that consciousness of intense pain
-is, by itself, a great evil, whereas consciousness of intense pleasure
-is, by itself, no great good; but also the _converse_ difference
-appears to hold of the contribution which they make to the value of
-the whole, when they are combined respectively with another great evil
-or with a great good. That is to say, the presence of pleasure (though
-not in proportion to its intensity) does appear to enhance the value
-of a whole, in which it is combined with any of the great unmixed
-goods which we have considered: it might even be maintained that it
-is _only_ wholes, in which _some_ pleasure is included, that possess
-any great value: it is certain, at all events, that the presence of
-pleasure makes a contribution to the value of good wholes greatly in
-excess of its own intrinsic value. On the contrary, if a feeling of
-pain be combined with any of the evil states of mind which we have been
-considering, the difference which its presence makes to the value of
-the whole, _as a whole_, seems to be rather for the better than the
-worse: in any case, the only additional evil which it introduces, is
-that which it, by itself, intrinsically constitutes. Thus, whereas pain
-is _in itself_ a great evil, but makes no addition to the badness of a
-whole, in which it is combined with some other bad thing, except that
-which consists in its own intrinsic badness; pleasure, conversely, is
-not _in itself_ a great good, but does make a great addition to the
-goodness of a whole in which it is combined with a good thing, quite
-apart from its own intrinsic value.
-
-
-=128.= But finally, it must be insisted that pleasure and pain are
-completely analogous in this: that we cannot assume either that the
-presence of pleasure always makes a state of things better _on the
-whole_, or that the presence of pain always makes it worse. This is the
-truth which is most liable to be overlooked with regard to them; and
-it is because this is true, that the common theory, that pleasure is
-the only good and pain the only evil, has its grossest consequences in
-misjudgments of value. Not only is the pleasantness of a state _not_
-in proportion to its intrinsic worth; it may even add positively to
-its vileness. We do not think the successful hatred of a villain the
-less vile and odious, because he takes the keenest delight in it; nor
-is there the least need, in logic, why we should think so, apart from
-an unintelligent prejudice in favour of pleasure. In fact it seems to
-be the case that wherever pleasure is added to an evil state of either
-of our first two classes, the whole thus formed is _always_ worse than
-if no pleasure had been there. And similarly with regard to pain. If
-pain be added to an evil state of either of our first two classes, the
-whole thus formed is _always_ better, _as a whole_, than if no pain
-had been there; though here, if the pain be too intense, since that
-is a great evil, the state may not be better _on the whole_. It is in
-this way that the theory of vindictive punishment may be vindicated.
-The infliction of pain on a person whose state of mind is bad may, if
-the pain be not too intense, create a state of things that is better
-_on the whole_ than if the evil state of mind had existed unpunished.
-Whether such a state of things can ever constitute a _positive_ good,
-is another question.
-
-
-=129.= II. The consideration of this other question belongs properly to
-the second topic, which was reserved above for discussion namely the
-topic of ‘mixed’ goods. ‘Mixed’ goods were defined above as things,
-which, though positively good _as wholes_, nevertheless contain, as
-essential elements, something intrinsically evil or ugly. And there
-certainly seem to be such goods. But for the proper consideration
-of them, it is necessary to take into account a new distinction the
-distinction just expressed as being between the value which a thing
-possesses ‘_as a whole_,’ and that which it possesses ‘_on the whole_.’
-
-When ‘mixed’ goods were defined as things positively good _as wholes_,
-the expression was ambiguous. It was meant that they were positively
-good _on the whole_; but it must now be observed that the value which
-a thing possesses _on the whole_ may be said to be equivalent to the
-sum of the value which it possesses _as a whole_, _together with_ the
-intrinsic values which may belong to any of its parts. In fact, by the
-‘value which a thing possesses as a whole,’ there may be meant two
-quite distinct things. There may be meant either (1) That value which
-arises solely _from the combination_ of two or more things; or else (2)
-The total value formed by the addition to (1) of any intrinsic values
-which may belong to the things combined. The meaning of the distinction
-may perhaps be most easily seen by considering the supposed case of
-vindictive punishment. If it is true that the combined existence of two
-evils may yet constitute a less evil than would be constituted by the
-existence of either singly, it is plain that this can only be because
-there arises from the combination a positive good which is greater than
-the _difference_ between the sum of the two evils and the demerit of
-either singly: this positive good would then be the value of the whole,
-_as a whole_, in sense (1). Yet if this value be not so great a good
-as the sum of the two evils is an evil, it is plain that the value of
-the whole state of things will be a positive evil; and this value is
-the value of the whole, _as a whole_, in sense (2). Whatever view may
-be taken with regard to the particular case of vindictive punishment,
-it is plain that we have here _two distinct things_, with regard to
-_either_ of which a separate question may be asked in the case of every
-organic unity. The first of these two things may be expressed as _the
-difference_ between the value _of the whole thing_ and the sum of the
-value of its parts. And it is plain that where the parts have little or
-no intrinsic value (as in our first class of goods, §§ 114, 115), this
-difference will be nearly or absolutely identical with the value of
-the whole thing. The distinction, therefore, only becomes important in
-the case of wholes, of which one or more parts have a great intrinsic
-value, positive or negative. The first of these cases, that of a
-whole, in which one part has a great _positive_ value, is exemplified
-in our 2nd and 3rd classes of great unmixed goods (§§ 120, 122); and
-similarly the Summum Bonum is a whole of which _many_ parts have a
-great _positive_ value. Such cases, it may be observed, are also very
-frequent and very important objects of Aesthetic judgment; since the
-essential distinction between the ‘classical’ and the ‘romantic’ styles
-consists in the fact that the former aims at obtaining the greatest
-possible value for the whole, _as a whole_, in sense (1), whereas
-the latter sacrifices this in order to obtain the greatest possible
-value for some _part_, which is itself an organic unity. It follows
-that we cannot declare either style to be necessarily superior, since
-an equally good result _on the whole_, or ‘as a whole’ in sense (2),
-may be obtained by either method; but the distinctively _aesthetic_
-temperament seems to be characterised by a tendency to prefer a good
-result obtained by the classical, to an equally good result obtained by
-the romantic method.
-
-
-=130.= But what we have now to consider are cases of wholes, in which
-one or more parts have a great _negative_ value--are great positive
-evils. And first of all, we may take the _strongest_ cases, like that
-of retributive punishment, in which we have a whole, exclusively
-composed of two great positive evils--wickedness and pain. Can such a
-whole ever be positively good _on the whole_?
-
-(1) I can see no reason to think that such wholes ever are positively
-good _on the whole_. But from the fact that they may, nevertheless, be
-less evils, than either of their parts taken singly, it follows that
-they have a characteristic which is most important for the correct
-decision of practical questions. It follows that, quite apart from
-_consequences_ or any value which an evil may have as a mere means,
-it may, _supposing_ one evil already exists, be worth while to create
-another, since, by the mere creation of this second, there may be
-constituted a whole less bad than if the original evil had been left
-to exist by itself. And similarly, with regard to all the wholes which
-I am about to consider, it must be remembered, that, even if they are
-not goods _on the whole_, yet, where an evil already exists, as in this
-world evils do exist, the existence of the other part of these wholes
-will constitute a thing desirable _for its own sake_--that is to say,
-not merely a means to future goods, but one of the _ends_ which must
-be taken into account in estimating what that best possible state of
-things is, to which every right action must be a means.
-
-
-=131.= (2) But, as a matter of fact, I cannot avoid thinking that there
-are wholes, containing something positively evil and ugly, which are,
-nevertheless, great positive goods on the whole. Indeed, it appears
-to be to this class that those instances of virtue, which contain
-anything intrinsically good, chiefly belong. It need not, of course,
-be denied that there is sometimes included in a virtuous disposition
-more or less of those unmixed goods which were first discussed--that
-is to say, a real love of what is good or beautiful. But the typical
-and characteristic virtuous dispositions, so far as they are not
-mere means, seem rather to be examples of mixed goods. We may take
-as instances (_a_) Courage and Compassion, which seem to belong to
-the second of the three classes of virtues distinguished in our last
-chapter (§ 107); and (_b_) the specifically ‘moral’ sentiment, by
-reference to which the third of those three classes was defined (§ 108).
-
-Courage and compassion, in so far as they contain an intrinsically
-desirable state of mind, seem to involve essentially a cognition of
-something evil or ugly. In the case of courage the object of the
-cognition may be an evil of any of our three classes; in the case of
-compassion, the proper object is pain. Both these virtues, accordingly,
-must contain precisely the same cognitive element, which is also
-essential to evils of class (1); and they are differentiated from these
-by the fact that the emotion directed to these objects is, in their
-case, an emotion of the same kind which was essential to evils of class
-(2). In short, just as evils of class (2) seemed to consist in a hatred
-of what was good or beautiful, and evils of class (1) in a love of what
-was evil or ugly; so these virtues involve a _hatred_ of what is evil
-or ugly. Both these virtues do, no doubt, also contain other elements,
-and, among these, each contains its specific emotion; but that their
-value does not depend solely upon these other elements, we may easily
-assure ourselves, by considering what we should think of an attitude of
-endurance or of defiant contempt toward an object intrinsically good
-or beautiful, or of the state of a man whose mind was filled with pity
-for the happiness of a worthy admiration. Yet pity for the undeserved
-sufferings of others, endurance of pain to ourselves, and a defiant
-hatred of evil dispositions in ourselves or in others, seem to be
-undoubtedly admirable in themselves; and if so, there are admirable
-things, which must be lost, if there were no cognition of evil.
-
-Similarly the specifically ‘moral’ sentiment, in all cases where it has
-any considerable intrinsic value, appears to include a hatred of evils
-of the first and second classes. It is true that the emotion is here
-excited by the idea that an action is right or wrong; and hence the
-object of the idea which excites it is generally not an intrinsic evil.
-But, as far as I can discover, the emotion with which a conscientious
-man views a real or imaginary right action, contains, as an essential
-element, the same emotion with which he views a wrong one: it seems,
-indeed, that this element is necessary to make his emotion specifically
-_moral_. And the specifically moral emotion excited by the idea of a
-wrong action, seems to me to contain essentially a more or less vague
-cognition of the kind of intrinsic evils, which are usually caused
-by wrong actions, whether they would or would not be caused by the
-particular action in question. I am, in fact, unable to distinguish, in
-its main features, the moral sentiment excited by the idea of rightness
-and wrongness, wherever it is intense, from the total state constituted
-by a cognition of something intrinsically evil together with the
-emotion of hatred directed towards it. Nor need we be surprised that
-this mental state should be the one chiefly associated with the idea
-of rightness, if we reflect on the nature of those actions which are
-most commonly recognised as duties. For by far the greater part of the
-actions, of which we commonly think as duties, are _negative_: what we
-feel to be our duty is to _abstain_ from some action to which a strong
-natural impulse tempts us. And these wrong actions, in the avoidance
-of which duty consists, are usually such as produce, very immediately,
-some bad consequence in pain to others; while, in many prominent
-instances, the inclination, which prompts us to them, is itself an
-intrinsic evil, containing, as where the impulse is lust or cruelty,
-an anticipatory enjoyment of something evil or ugly. That right action
-does thus so frequently entail the suppression of some evil impulse,
-is necessary to explain the plausibility of the view that virtue
-_consists_ in the control of passion by reason. Accordingly, the truth
-seems to be that, whenever a strong moral emotion is excited by the
-idea of rightness, this emotion is accompanied by a vague cognition of
-the kind of evils usually suppressed or avoided by the actions which
-most frequently occur to us as instances of duty; and that the emotion
-is directed towards this evil quality. We may, then, conclude that the
-specific moral emotion owes almost all its intrinsic value to the fact
-that it includes a cognition of evils accompanied by a hatred of them:
-mere rightness, whether truly or untruly attributed to an action, seems
-incapable of forming the object of an emotional contemplation, which
-shall be any great good.
-
-
-=132.= If this be so, then we have, in many prominent instances of
-virtue, cases of a whole, greatly good in itself, which yet contains
-the cognition of something, whereof the existence would be a great
-evil: a great good is absolutely dependent for its value, upon its
-inclusion of something evil or ugly, although it does not owe its
-value _solely_ to this element in it. And, in the case of virtues,
-this evil object does, in general, actually exist. But there seems no
-reason to think that, when it does exist, the whole state of things
-thus constituted is therefore the better _on the whole_. What seems
-indubitable, is only that the feeling contemplation of an object, whose
-existence _would_ be a great evil, or which is ugly, may be essential
-to a valuable whole. We have another undoubted instance of this in the
-appreciation of tragedy. But, in tragedy, the sufferings of Lear, and
-the vice of Iago may be purely imaginary. And it seems certain that,
-if they really existed, the evil thus existing, while it must detract
-from the good consisting in a proper feeling towards them, will add
-no positive value to that good great enough to counterbalance such a
-loss. It does, indeed, seem that the existence of a true belief in the
-object of these mixed goods does add _some_ value to the whole in which
-it is combined with them: a conscious compassion for real suffering
-seems to be better, _as a whole_, than a compassion for sufferings
-merely imaginary; and this may well be the case, even though the evil
-involved in the actual suffering makes the total state of things bad
-_on the whole_. And it certainly seems to be true that a _false_ belief
-in the actual existence of its object makes a worse mixed good than
-if our state of mind were that with which we normally regard pure
-fiction. Accordingly we may conclude that the only mixed goods, which
-are positively good _on the whole_, are those in which the object is
-something which _would_ be a great evil, if it existed, or which _is_
-ugly.
-
-
-=133.= With regard, then, to those mixed goods, which consist in an
-appropriate attitude of the mind towards things evil or ugly, and which
-include among their number the greater part of such virtues as have any
-intrinsic value whatever, the following three conclusions seem to be
-those chiefly requiring to be emphasized:--
-
-(1) There seems no reason to think that where the object is a thing
-evil in itself, which _actually exists_, the total state of things is
-ever positively _good on the whole_. The appropriate mental attitude
-towards a really existing evil contains, of course, an element which
-is absolutely identical with the same attitude towards the same evil,
-where it is purely imaginary. And this element, which is common to
-the two cases, may be a great positive good, on the whole. But there
-seems no reason to doubt that, where the evil is _real_, the amount of
-this real evil is always sufficient to reduce the total sum of value
-to a negative quantity. Accordingly we have no reason to maintain the
-paradox that an ideal world would be one in which vice and suffering
-must exist in order that it may contain the goods consisting in the
-appropriate emotion towards them. It is not a positive good that
-suffering should exist, in order that we may compassionate it; or
-wickedness, that we may hate it. There is no reason to think that any
-actual evil whatsoever would be contained in the Ideal. It follows that
-we cannot admit the actual validity of any of the arguments commonly
-used in Theodicies; no such argument succeeds in justifying the fact
-that there does exist even the smallest of the many evils which this
-world contains. The most that can be said for such arguments is that,
-when they make appeal to the principle of organic unity, their appeal
-is valid _in principle_. It _might_ be the case that the existence of
-evil was necessary, not merely as a means, but analytically, to the
-existence of the greatest good. But we have no reason to think that
-this _is_ the case in any instance whatsoever.
-
-But (2) there _is_ reason to think that the cognition of things evil
-or ugly, which are purely imaginary, is essential to the Ideal. In this
-case the burden of proof lies the other way. It cannot be doubted that
-the appreciation of tragedy is a great positive good; and it seems
-almost equally certain that the virtues of compassion, courage, and
-self-control contain such goods. And to all these the cognition of
-things which would be evil, if they existed, is analytically necessary.
-Here then we have things of which the existence must add value to
-any whole in which they are contained; nor is it possible to assure
-ourselves that any whole, from which they were omitted, would thereby
-gain more in its value _as a whole_, than it would lose by their
-omission. We have no reason to think that any whole, which did not
-contain them, would be so good _on the whole_ as some whole in which
-they were obtained. The case for their inclusion in the Ideal is as
-strong as that for the inclusion of material qualities (§ 123, above).
-_Against_ the inclusion of these goods nothing can be urged except a
-bare possibility.
-
-Finally (3) it is important to insist that, as was said above, these
-mixed virtues have a great practical value, in addition to that which
-they possess either in themselves or as mere means. Where evils do
-exist, as in this world they do, the fact that they are known and
-properly appreciated, constitutes a state of things having greater
-value _as a whole_ even than the same appreciation of purely imaginary
-evils. This state of things, it has been said, is never positively
-good _on the whole_; but where the evil, which reduces its total value
-to a negative quantity, already unavoidably exists, to obtain the
-intrinsic value which belongs to it _as a whole_ will obviously produce
-a better state of things than if the evil had existed by itself,
-quite apart from the good element in it which is identical with the
-appreciation of imaginary evils, and from any ulterior consequences
-which its existence may bring about. The case is here the same as with
-retributive punishment. Where an evil already exists, it is well that
-it should be pitied or hated or endured, according to its nature; just
-as it may be well that some evils should be punished. Of course, as in
-all practical cases, it often happens that the attainment of this good
-is incompatible with the attainment of another and a greater one. But
-it is important to insist that we have here a real intrinsic value,
-which must be taken into account in calculating that greatest possible
-balance of intrinsic value, which it is always our duty to produce.
-
-
-=134.= I have now completed such remarks as seemed most necessary to
-be made concerning intrinsic values. It is obvious that for the proper
-answering of this, the fundamental question of Ethics, there remains
-a field of investigation as wide and as difficult, as was assigned
-to Practical Ethics in my last chapter. There is as much to be said
-concerning what results are intrinsically good, and in what degrees,
-as concerning what results it is possible for us to bring about: both
-questions demand, and will repay, an equally patient enquiry. Many of
-the judgments, which I have made in this chapter, will, no doubt, seem
-unduly arbitrary: it must be confessed that some of the attributions
-of intrinsic value, which have seemed to me to be true, do not display
-that symmetry and system which is wont to be required of philosophers.
-But if this be urged as an objection, I may respectfully point out
-that it is none. We have no title whatever to assume that the truth on
-any subject-matter will display such symmetry as we desire to see--or
-(to use the common vague phrase) that it will possess any particular
-form of ‘unity.’ To search for ‘unity’ and ‘system,’ at the expense
-of truth, is not, I take it, the proper business of philosophy,
-however universally it may have been the practice of philosophers.
-And that all truths about the Universe possess to one another all
-the various relations, which may be meant by ‘unity,’ can only be
-legitimately asserted, when we have carefully distinguished those
-various relations and discovered what those truths are. In particular,
-we can have no title to assert that ethical truths are ‘unified’ in
-any particular manner, except in virtue of an enquiry conducted by
-the method which I have endeavoured to follow and to illustrate. The
-study of Ethics would, no doubt, be far more simple, and its results
-far more ‘systematic,’ if, for instance, pain were an evil of exactly
-the same magnitude as pleasure is a good; but we have no reason
-whatever to assume that the Universe is such that ethical truths must
-display this kind of symmetry: no argument against my conclusion,
-that pleasure and pain do _not_ thus correspond, can have any weight
-whatever, failing a careful examination of the instances which have
-led me to form it. Nevertheless I am content that the results of this
-chapter should be taken rather as illustrating the method which must
-be pursued in answering the fundamental question of Ethics, and the
-principles which must be observed, than as giving the correct answer
-to that question. That things intrinsically good or bad are many and
-various; that most of them are ‘organic unities,’ in the peculiar and
-definite sense to which I have confined the term; and that our only
-means of deciding upon their intrinsic value and its degree, is by
-carefully distinguishing exactly what the thing is, about which we ask
-the question, and then looking to see whether it has or has not the
-unique predicate ‘good’ in any of its various degrees: these are the
-conclusions, upon the truth of which I desire to insist. Similarly, in
-my last chapter, with regard to the question ‘What ought we to do?’
-I have endeavoured rather to shew exactly what is the meaning of the
-question, and what difficulties must consequently be faced in answering
-it, than to prove that any particular answers are true. And that these
-two questions, having precisely the nature which I have assigned to
-them, are _the_ questions which it is the object of Ethics to answer,
-may be regarded as the main result of the preceding chapters. These
-are the questions which ethical philosophers have always been mainly
-concerned to answer, although they have not recognised what their
-question was--what predicate they were asserting to attach to things.
-The practice of asking what things are virtues or duties, without
-distinguishing what these terms mean; the practice of asking what ought
-to be here and now, without distinguishing whether as means or end--for
-its own sake or for that of its results; the search for one single
-_criterion_ of right or wrong, without the recognition that in order
-to discover a criterion we must first know what things _are_ right or
-wrong; and the neglect of the principle of ‘organic unities’--these
-sources of error have hitherto been almost universally prevalent in
-Ethics. The conscious endeavour to avoid them all, and to apply to
-all the ordinary objects of ethical judgment these two questions and
-these only: Has it intrinsic value? and Is it a means to the best
-possible?--this attempt, so far as I know, is entirely new; and its
-results, when compared with those habitual to moral philosophers, are
-certainly sufficiently surprising: that to Common Sense they will not
-appear so strange, I venture to hope and believe. It is, I think,
-much to be desired that the labour commonly devoted to answering such
-questions as whether certain ‘ends’ are more or less ‘comprehensive’
-or more or less ‘consistent’ with one another--questions, which, even
-if a precise meaning were given to them, are wholly irrelevant to the
-proof of any ethical conclusion--should be diverted to the separate
-investigation of these two clear problems.
-
-
-=135.= The main object of this chapter has been to define roughly
-the class of things, among which we may expect to find either great
-intrinsic goods or great intrinsic evils; and particularly to point
-out that there is a vast variety of such things, and that the simplest
-of them are, with one exception, highly complex wholes, composed of
-parts which have little or no value in themselves. All of them involve
-consciousness of an object, which is itself usually highly complex,
-and almost all involve also an emotional attitude towards this object;
-but, though they thus have certain characteristics in common, the vast
-variety of qualities in respect of which they differ from one another
-are equally essential to their value: neither the generic character
-of all, nor the specific character of each, is either greatly good
-or greatly evil by itself; they owe their value or demerit, in each
-case, to the presence of both. My discussion falls into three main
-divisions, dealing respectively (1) with unmixed goods, (2) with evils,
-and (3) with mixed goods. (1) Unmixed goods may all be said to consist
-in the love of beautiful things or of good persons: but the number of
-different goods of this kind is as great as that of beautiful objects,
-and they are also differentiated from one another by the different
-emotions appropriate to different objects. These goods are undoubtedly
-good, even where the things or persons loved are imaginary; but it
-was urged that, where the thing or person is real and is believed to
-be so, these two facts together, when combined with the mere love of
-the qualities in question, constitute a whole which is greatly better
-than that mere love, having an additional value quite distinct from
-that which belongs to the existence of the object, where that object
-is a good person. Finally it was pointed out that the love of mental
-qualities, by themselves, does not seem to be so great a good as that
-of mental and material qualities together; and that, in any case, an
-immense number of the best things are, or include, a love of material
-qualities (113-123). (2) Great evils may be said to consist either
-(_a_) in the love of what is evil or ugly, or (_b_) in the hatred of
-what is good or beautiful, or (_c_) in the consciousness of pain.
-Thus the consciousness of pain, if it be a great evil, is the only
-exception to the rule that all great goods and great evils involve both
-a cognition and an emotion directed towards its object (124-128). (3)
-Mixed goods are those which include some element which is evil or ugly.
-They may be said to consist either in hatred of what is ugly or of
-evils of classes (_a_) and (_b_), or in compassion for pain. But where
-they include an evil, which actually exists, its demerit seems to be
-always great enough to outweigh the positive value which they possess
-(129-133).
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Aesthetic
- enjoyments 189-202, 203
- judgment 215
- temperament 216
-
- Aesthetics 200
-
- Affection
- beauty of 204-5
- misdirected 195, 198
- reciprocal 198
- value of 188-9, 203-5
-
- Altruism 96-7, 167
-
- Analytic judgments 7, 29, 33-4, 35, 220-1
-
- Appreciation 189-90, 200, 204-5, 221
-
- Approval 131
-
- Approve 60
-
- Approbation 171
-
- Appropriate, inappropriate 192, 199, 204-5, 209, 211, 220
- defined 190
-
- Aristotle 4
- definition of virtue 171
- valuation of virtues 176-7
- valuation of knowledge 199
-
- Art
- value of 188
- _representative_, value of 193, 195, 196, 200
-
- Autonomy 127
-
-
- Bad 5, 27, 28, 95, 140, 143, 157, 178, 181, 188, 209, 210, 213, 214,
- 216, 218
-
- ‘Based on’ 38, 49, 54, 114, 115, 118, 120, 122, 144
-
- Beauty
- corporeal 203-4
- no criterion of 202
- definition of 201-2, 208
- mental 203-5
- ‘seeing’ of 190-1
- value of 28, 81-2, 83-5, 86, 94, 188-9, 201-2, 209, 211, 224
-
- Being, dist. from existence 110-11
-
- Belief, value of 193-200, 208, 210-11, 212, 219, 224-5
-
- Benevolence, Sidgwick’s ‘principle of Rational’ 102-3
-
- Bentham 145
- naturalistic fallacy 17-19
- quantity of pleasure 77-8
-
- Bradley, F. H.
- pleasure and desire 70
- theory of judgment 125
-
- Butler, Bishop 86, 206
-
-
- Casuistry 4-5
-
- Causal judgments
- relation to Ethics 21-7, 36, 146-8, 149, 180
-
- Causal relations 31-3, 34-6
-
- Chastity 158
-
- Classical style 215-16
-
- Christ
- on value of motives 178
- on love 179
-
- Christian Ethics 178
- on ‘external’ rightness 177
- on ‘internal’ rightness 178-9
- on value of motives 177-9
- on value of virtue 174
-
- Clifford, W. K. 40
-
- Cognition
- of evil 217-19
- dist. from knowledge 194
- relation to will and feeling 129-30, 133, 135-6, 141
- value of 85, 189-92, 194, 199, 208, 212, 224, 225
-
- Commands, confused with moral laws 128-9, 141
-
- Common sense 224
- on value of pleasure 86, 91-2, 94-5
- on duties 156-9
-
- Compassion 217, 219, 220, 225
-
- Conduct, relation of to Ethics 2-3, 146, 180
-
- Conscience
- defined 178
- not infallible 149, 180
-
- Conscientiousness 218
- defined 179
- utility of 180
-
- Contempt 211, 217
-
- Corporeal beauty 203-4
-
- Courage 217
-
- Crimes 161
-
- Criterion
- of beauty 202
- evolution as 46, 50, 55-6
- of goodness 137-8
- pleasure as 91-2, 94-5, 108
- of right and wrong 223
- will as 137-8
- of truth 133
-
- Cruelty 209-11, 218
-
-
- Darwin 47
-
- Definition, nature of 6-9, 18-20
-
- Desirable, meaning of 65-7, 73
-
- Desire, cause and object of 68-70, 73-4
-
- Duty
- = cause of or means to good 24-5, 105, 146-8, 167, 180, 223
- fuller definitions of 148, 161, 180-1, 222
- incapable of being known 149-50, 181
- mainly negative 218
- object of _psychological_ intuition 148
- relations to expediency 167-70, 181
- interest 170-1, 181
- possibility 150-2
- rightness 148
- utility 146-7, 167-70
- virtue 172
- will 160, 161
- not self-evident 148, 181
- self-regarding 168
-
-
- Egoistic Hedonism 18
-
- Egoism, as doctrine of end 18, 96-105, 109
- contradiction of 99, 101-5, 109
- relation to Hedonism 97-8
- relation to Naturalistic Hedonism 104-5
- Sidgwick’s ‘Rational’ 98-9, 102-4
-
- Egoism, as doctrine of means 96-7, 105, 167
-
- Emotion
- aesthetic 190
- value of 189-92, 199, 203, 204-5, 208, 209, 211, 212, 217, 224, 225
-
- Empirical 39, 111, 123
-
- Empiricism 103, 124-5, 130
-
- End = effect 32
-
- End = good in itself 18, 24, 64-6, 72, 73, 79-81, 83, 85, 94-5, 184,
- 216
- dist. from ‘good as means’ 24, 72, 74, 79-81, 89, 90, 94-5, 106-7,
- 173-4, 178, 216, 223
- ‘ultimate’ 51, 83, 85, 96-7, 99-102, 183, 189
- ‘never justifies means’ 147, 163
-
- End = object of desire 68, 70, 71, 72
-
- Enjoyment 77, 96, 188, 208
- aesthetic 188-9, 203
- of evil and ugly 208-11, 218
- sexual 95
-
- Envy 211
-
- Epistemology 133, 140-1
-
- Ethics
- Evolutionistic 46, 50, 54, 58
- Metaphysical 39, 58, 113-15
- Naturalistic 39-41, 58, 59
- Practical 115-18, 140, 146, 149, 151, 154, 180, 222
- province of 1-6, 21, 24, 26-7, 36, 37, 77, 115, 118, 142-6, 184,
- 222-4
-
- Eudaemonist 175
-
- Evil 153, 156, 158, 160, 186, 193, 205, 207-14, 224, 225
- mixed 208, 209, 211
- positive value of 216-22, 225
-
- Evolution 46-8, 54-8
-
- Evolutionistic 46, 50, 52, 54, 58
-
- Existence
- dist. from being 110-12
- judgments about 123-5
- relation to value 115-18, 118-22, 125-6, 194, 196, 197-9, 206, 210,
- 216, 219, 220, 221, 225
-
- Expediency 167-70, 181
-
-
- Feeling
- supposed analogy to cognition 129-31, 141
- supposed bearing on Ethics 129-31, 141
-
- Fiction 121-2
-
- Freedom, value of 86, 186
-
- Freedom (of Will) 127
-
-
- God 82, 102-4
- love of 113, 194, 195-6, 200
-
- Good
- indefinable 6-16, 41, 79, 110-11, 142-4
- = means to good 21, 24
- the Absolute 183, 184, 186
- the Human 183, 184, 186
- mixed and unmixed 208, 209, 214, 215, 217, 219-20, 224
- my own 97-9, 101, 170
- ‘private’ 99
- _the_ 8-9, 18
- ‘Universal’ 99-102
- Will 174-5, 179 _n._ 2, 180
-
- Green, T. H. 139
-
- Guyau, M. 46
-
-
- Habit 171, 175-6, 177
-
- Hatred 211, 214
- of beautiful and good 211, 217, 225
- of evil and ugly 178, 217, 218, 220, 221, 225
-
- Health 42-3, 65, 157, 167
-
- Heaven 115, 174, 183, 185, 195
- upon Earth 186
-
- Hedonism 39, 52, 59-63, 90-1, 96, 108-9, 174
- Egoistic 18
- Ethical 70, 144
- Intuitionistic 59, 74-6, 144
- Naturalistic 46, 50, 53, 54, 68, 104, 105
- Psychological 18, 68, 69, 70, 73
- Universalistic 103
-
- Hegel 30, 34, 110
-
- Heteronomous 127
-
- Higher 48-9, 78
-
- Hobbes 97
-
- Honesty 175-6
-
- Hypothetical laws 22, 155
-
-
- Ideal
- three meanings of 183-4
- _the_ 183, 185, 205-7, 220-1
-
- Idealistic 130, 205
-
- Imagination, value of 193, 194, 196, 197, 210, 219, 220, 221, 224
-
- Imperative 128
-
- Industry 157, 167
-
- Intention 179 _n._ 1
-
- Interest 102
- meaning of 97-8, 106, 170-1
- dist. from ‘duty’ 170-1, 181
-
- Intrinsic
- evil 207, 213, 218, 224
- value 17, 21, 25-30, 36, 147, 173-7, 187, 189, 207, 214-16, 222-4
-
- Intuition
- = proposition incapable of proof 59, 77, 108
- in psychological sense 75, 79, 85, 92, 108, 144, 148-9, 173
-
- Intuitionism
- in Sidgwick’s sense 59, 76, 144
- in proper sense 106, 148
-
-
- Judgment
- error of 192-3
- two types of ethical 21, 23-7, 115, 146, 148, 222, 224
-
- Justice 178
-
- Justify 97, 101, 147, 163
-
-
- Kant 110, 129
- ‘Copernican revolution’ 133
- value of Good Will 174-5, 179 _n._ 2, 180
- value of Happiness 174-5
- theory of judgment 125
- ‘Kingdom of Ends’ 113
- ‘practical love’ 179
- connection of ‘goodness’ with ‘will’ 126-8
-
- Knowledge
- involves truth of object 132, 134
- involves belief 194
- value of 82, 86, 194, 195, 196, 197, 199, 211, 221
-
-
- Lasciviousness 209-10
-
- Law
- ethical 155
- hypothetical 22, 155
- legal 126, 128
- moral 126-8, 146, 148, 160, 162, 165
- natural 26, 29, 57, 126, 183, 186
- scientific 22-3, 124, 155
-
- Legal 126, 128
-
- Leibniz 125
-
- Life 15, 46, 50, 52, 156
-
- Logical
- dependence 61, 110, 118, 122, 139, 143-4
- fallacy 140-1
-
- Love
- Christ and Kant on 179
- of beautiful and good 177-9, 199, 204, 217, 224
- of evil and ugly 209, 210, 211, 217, 225
-
- Lucian 45
-
- Lust 209-10, 218
-
- Lying 154
-
-
- Mackenzie, Prof. J. S. 114, 120
-
- Material qualities, value of 204, 205-7, 221, 225
-
- Matter, value of 205-7
-
- Meaning, ‘to have no’ 31, 34-5
-
- Means = cause or necessary condition 18, 21-3, 89, 180
- dist. from ‘part of organic whole’ 27, 29-30, 32, 220
- goodness as, dist. from intrinsic value 21, 24, 26, 27, 37, 72, 74,
- 79-81, 89, 90, 94-5, 106-7, 115, 118, 173-4, 178, 187, 195-6,
- 197-8, 216, 223
- ‘not justified by end’ 147, 163
-
- Mental
- beauty of 203-5, 225
- value of 205-7
-
- Mercy 178
-
- Metaphysical 39, 58, 110-15, 139-40
-
- Method
- of discovering intrinsic value 20, 36, 59-60, 64, 89, 91, 92, 93, 95,
- 142-5, 173, 185-6, 187-8, 195, 197-8, 206-7, 209, 223
- of discovering value as means 22-3, 146, 148-54, 172-3
-
- Mill, J. S. 145
- Hedonism 63-81, 108
- naturalistic fallacy 40, 66-7, 69, 72-3, 74, 104, 108
- Psychological Hedonism 68, 72, 73-4
- quality of pleasure 77-81, 108
- Utilitarianism 104-5
-
- Moral
- approbation 171
- law 126-8, 146, 148, 160, 162, 165
- obligation 128
- sentiment 168, 178, 217-19
-
- Motive 67, 70, 177, 178-80
-
- Murder 148, 151, 154, 156-7, 178
-
-
- Natural
- laws 26, 29, 57, 126, 183, 186
- objects and properties 13-14, 39-41, 58, 110-11
- selection 47
-
- Natural = normal 42-4, 58
-
- Natural = necessary 44-5, 58
-
- Naturalism 20, 40, 58, 144
-
- Naturalistic
- Ethics 39-41, 58, 59
- fallacy 10, 13-14, 18-20, 38-9, 48, 57, 58, 61, 64, 66-7, 69, 72-3,
- 74, 104, 108, 114, 118, 124, 125, 139, 173, 176, 201
- Hedonism 46, 50, 53, 54, 68, 104, 105
-
- Nature 40-1, 110, 111, 112
-
- Nature, life according to 41-2, 113
-
- Nature, value of 188, 193, 195, 200, 206
-
- Necessity
- analytic 22, 33-4, 35, 220, 221
- causal or natural 29, 31-2, 34, 186, 187
-
- New Testament 177, 178, 179
-
-
- Object
- of cognition 141, 191, 192, 193, 211
- of desire 68-70
- natural 13-14, 39-41, 58, 110-11
-
- Objective 82, 201
-
- Obligation
- moral 103, 128, 147
-
- Obligatory 25, 148, 170
-
- Organic relation, unity, whole
- common usage 30-6
- my own usage 27-31, 32-3, 36, 93, 96, 149, 184, 187, 189, 190, 202,
- 206, 208, 212, 215, 220, 223
-
- Ought
- to aim at 24-6, 100
- to do 26, 105, 115, 116, 117, 127, 128, 140, 146, 148, 173, 180, 223
- to be or exist 17, 115, 118, 127, 128, 148, 173, 180, 223
-
-
- Pain 64, 65, 210, 212-4, 217, 222-3, 225
-
- Particular 3-4
-
- Perception 111, 112, 134, 136
-
- Pessimism 51, 53, 156
-
- Plato
- on Egoism 98
- on goods 178
- on Hedonism 88
- on value of Knowledge 199
- on universal truths 111
-
- Pleasure 12-13, 16
- consciousness of 87-91, 109, 212
- as criterion 91-2, 108
- and desire 68-71, 73-4
- and ‘pleasures’ 79
- ‘quality of’ 77-81
- value of 39, 46, 50-4, 59-66, 71-2, 74-5, 79-81, 83, 85-96, 144,
- 146, 171, 173, 174, 188, 205, 212-14, 222-3
-
- Pity 217, 221
-
- Positive science 39
-
- Possible action 150-1
-
- Practical 216, 221
- Ethics 115-18, 140, 146, 149, 151, 154, 180, 222
- Philosophy 2
-
- Practice 2, 20
-
- Praise 171
-
- Preference 77-9, 131
-
- Promises 157
-
- Property, respect of 157
-
- Propositions, types of 123-6
-
- Prove 11, 65, 66, 74, 75-7, 99, 112, 137, 141, 143, 145, 169, 181
-
- Prudence 168
- ‘Maxim of’ 102-4
-
- Psychological 11, 130, 140, 148
- Hedonism 18, 68, 69, 70, 73
-
- Punishment 164
- retributive or vindictive 214, 215, 216, 221
-
-
- Reason 143-4
-
- Representative art 193
-
- Reward 174
-
- Right 18, 24-5, 105, 146, 180, 216, 218, 223
- dist. from ‘duty’ 148
- relation to expediency 167
- externally 176-7
- internally 179 _n._ 1
-
- Romantic style 215-16
-
- Rousseau 42
-
-
- Sanctions 159, 164
-
- Secondary qualities 206
-
- Self-evidence 143, 144, 148, 181
-
- Self-realisation 113, 114, 120, 188
-
- Self-sacrifice 170
-
- Sensation 134
-
- Sensationalist 130
-
- Sidgwick, Henry 145
- value of beauty 81-4, 85-7
- on Bentham 17-19
- rationality of Egoism 99-103
- ‘good’ unanalysable 17
- Hedonism 59, 63, 64, 81-7, 91-6, 108-9
- ‘method’ of Intuitionism 59, 92-4
- value of knowledge 82, 86
- neglects principle of organic wholes 93
- pleasure as criterion 91-2, 94-5
- quality of pleasure 77, 81
- value of unconscious 81-4
-
- Sins 161
-
- Spencer, Herbert 46, 48-58
-
- Spinoza 110, 113
-
- Spiritual, value of 205-6
-
- Summum Bonum 183, 205
-
- Stoics 41, 110
-
- Synthetic 7, 58, 143
-
-
- Taste, error of 192-3, 211
-
- Taylor, A. E. 60
-
- Temperance 157, 168
-
- Theodicies 220
-
- Tragedy 219, 221
-
- Truth
- relation to existence 111, 124-5
- cognition 130, 132-4, 136, 141, 196
- knowledge 134, 194
- types of 111-12, 124-5
- value of 85-6, 193-200, 208, 210, 211, 212
-
- Tyndall 40
-
-
- Ugly 208, 209-11, 214, 216-19, 221
-
- Ultimate end 51, 83, 85, 96-7, 99-102, 183, 189
-
- Unity 222
- organic, see ‘Organic’
-
- Universal
- Good 99-102
- truths 21-3, 27, 57, 111, 126, 154-5, 181
-
- Universalistic Hedonism 103
-
- Useful 106, 146, 167
-
- Utilitarianism 63, 96, 99, 104-7, 109
-
- Utopias 183, 186
-
-
- Value
- intrinsic 17, 21, 25-30, 36, 147, 173-7, 187, 189, 207, 214-16, 222-4
- as means 21, 174, 195-6
- negative 215, 216
-
- Vice 171, 209, 211
-
- Virtue
- definition of 171-3, 181, 223
- three kinds of 175
- mixed 221
- relation to ‘duty’ 172
- value of 83, 85, 86, 87, 173-80, 181-2, 217-19, 221-2
-
- Volition
- supposed coordination with cognition 129-30, 133, 135-6, 141
- supposed bearing on Ethics 130, 136, 141
-
-
- Whole
- good as a 208, 214-16, 219, 221
- good on the 214-16, 219, 220, 221
- organic, see ‘Organic’
-
- Wickedness 220
-
- Will
- as criterion of value 137-8
- relation to duty 160, 161, 180
- the Good 174-5, 179 _n._ 2, 180
- supposed analogy to cognition 129-30, 135-6
- supposed bearing on Ethics 126-7, 128-31, 135-9, 141
-
- Wrong 180, 218, 223
-
-
-
-
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-Title: Principia Ethica
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="front">
- <hr class="full" />
- <p class="mt3"><a href="#tnote">Transcriber's note</a></p>
- <p><a href="#ToC">Table of Contents</a></p>
- <p><a href="#Index">Index</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="screenonly">
- <hr class="chap" />
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg"
- alt="Book cover" />
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="aftit pt3">
- <hr class="chap" />
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_i">[p. i]</span></p>
- <h1>PRINCIPIA ETHICA</h1>
- <hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="aftit pt3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ii">[p. ii]</span></p>
- <p class="small">CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS<br />
- C. F. CLAY, <span class="smcap">Manager</span><br />
- LONDON: FETTER LANE, E.C. 4</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter mt1">
- <img src="images/logo.jpg"
- alt="Publisher's logo" />
- </div>
-
- <table class="pub mt1" summary="Publisher's locations">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3"><span class="g1">NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN CO.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>BOMBAY</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="key">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="3">MACMILLAN AND CO., <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CALCUTTA</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>MADRAS</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">
- <p class="g1">TORONTO: THE MACMILLAN CO. OF</p>
- <p class="centra"><span class="g1">CANADA</span>, <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span></p>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">TOKYO: MARUZEN-KABUSHIKI-KAISHA</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
- <p class="xs mt2">ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="tit pt3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[p. iii]</span></p>
- <p class="xxl">PRINCIPIA ETHICA</p>
- <p class="xs mt3">BY</p>
- <p class="large">GEORGE EDWARD MOORE</p>
-
- <p class="xs">LITT.D. CAMBRIDGE, HON. LL.D. ST ANDREWS,<br />
- FELLOW OF THE BRITISH ACADEMY,<br />
- LECTURER IN MORAL SCIENCE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE</p>
-
- <div class="cita">
- <p>“Everything is what it is,<br />
- and not another thing”</p>
- <p class="pl4 smcap">Bishop Butler</p>
- </div>
-
- <p class="large mt3">CAMBRIDGE<br />
- <span class="medium">AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS<br />
- 1922</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="aftit pt3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[p. iv]</span></p>
-
- <p class="small"><i>First Edition</i> 1903</p>
- <p class="small"><i>Reprinted</i> 1922</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="aftit pt3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[p. v]</span></p>
-
- <p>DOCTORIBUS AMICISQUE CANTABRIGIENSIBUS</p>
- <p>DISCIPULUS AMICUS CANTABRIGIENSIS</p>
- <p>PRIMITIAS</p>
- <p>D. D. D.</p>
- <p>AUCTOR</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[p. vii]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ti0"><span class="capitular">I</span><span
-class="smcap">t</span> appears to me that in Ethics, as in all other
-philosophical studies, the difficulties and disagreements, of which
-its history is full, are mainly due to a very simple cause: namely to
-the attempt to answer questions, without first discovering precisely
-<i>what</i> question it is which you desire to answer. I do not know how
-far this source of error would be done away, if philosophers would
-<i>try</i> to discover what question they were asking, before they set
-about to answer it; for the work of analysis and distinction is often
-very difficult: we may often fail to make the necessary discovery,
-even though we make a definite attempt to do so. But I am inclined
-to think that in many cases a resolute attempt would be sufficient
-to ensure success; so that, if only this attempt were made, many of
-the most glaring difficulties and disagreements in philosophy would
-disappear. At all events, philosophers seem, in general, not to make
-the attempt; and, whether in consequence of this omission or not, they
-are constantly endeavouring to prove that ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ will answer
-questions, to which <i>neither</i> answer is correct, owing to the fact that
-what they have before their minds is not one question, but several, to
-some of which the true answer is ‘No,’ to others ‘Yes.’</p>
-
-<p>I have tried in this book to distinguish clearly two kinds of
-question, which moral philosophers have always professed to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[p. viii]</span> answer, but which, as
-I have tried to shew, they have almost always confused both with one
-another and with other questions. These two questions may be expressed,
-the first in the form: What kind of things ought to exist for their
-own sakes? the second in the form: What kind of actions ought we to
-perform? I have tried to shew exactly what it is that we ask about a
-thing, when we ask whether it ought to exist for its own sake, is good
-in itself or has intrinsic value; and exactly what it is that we ask
-about an action, when we ask whether we ought to do it, whether it is a
-right action or a duty.</p>
-
-<p>But from a clear insight into the nature of these two questions,
-there appears to me to follow a second most important result: namely,
-what is the nature of the evidence, by which alone any ethical
-proposition can be proved or disproved, confirmed or rendered doubtful.
-Once we recognise the exact meaning of the two questions, I think
-it also becomes plain exactly what kind of reasons are relevant as
-arguments for or against any particular answer to them. It becomes
-plain that, for answers to the <i>first</i> question, no relevant evidence
-whatever can be adduced: from no other truth, except themselves alone,
-can it be inferred that they are either true or false. We can guard
-against error only by taking care, that, when we try to answer a
-question of this kind, we have before our minds that question only,
-and not some other or others; but that there is great danger of such
-errors of confusion I have tried to shew, and also what are the chief
-precautions by the use of which we may guard against them. As for
-the <i>second</i> question, it becomes equally plain, that any answer to
-it <i>is</i> capable of proof or disproof&mdash;that, indeed, so many
-different considerations are relevant to its truth or falsehood, as to
-make the attainment of probability very difficult, and the attainment
-of certainty impossible. Nevertheless the <i>kind</i> of evidence, which
-is both necessary and alone relevant to such proof and disproof, is
-capable of exact<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[p. ix]</span>
-definition. Such evidence must contain propositions of two kinds and
-of two kinds only: it must consist, in the first place, of truths with
-regard to the results of the action in question&mdash;of <i>causal</i>
-truths&mdash;but it must <i>also</i> contain ethical truths of our first
-or self-evident class. Many truths of both kinds are necessary to the
-proof that any action ought to be done; and any other kind of evidence
-is wholly irrelevant. It follows that, if any ethical philosopher
-offers for propositions of the first kind any evidence whatever, or
-if, for propositions of the second kind, he either fails to adduce
-both causal and ethical truths, or adduces truths that are neither,
-his reasoning has not the least tendency to establish his conclusions.
-But not only are his conclusions totally devoid of weight: we have,
-moreover, reason to suspect him of the error of confusion; since
-the offering of irrelevant evidence generally indicates that the
-philosopher who offers it has had before his mind, not the question
-which he professes to answer, but some other entirely different
-one. Ethical discussion, hitherto, has perhaps consisted chiefly in
-reasoning of this totally irrelevant kind.</p>
-
-<p>One main object of this book may, then, be expressed by slightly
-changing one of Kant’s famous titles. I have endeavoured to write
-‘Prolegomena to any future Ethics that can possibly pretend to be
-scientific.’ In other words, I have endeavoured to discover what are
-the fundamental principles of ethical reasoning; and the establishment
-of these principles, rather than of any conclusions which may be
-attained by their use, may be regarded as my main object. I have,
-however, also attempted, in Chapter VI, to present some conclusions,
-with regard to the proper answer of the question ‘What is good in
-itself?’ which are very different from any which have commonly been
-advocated by philosophers. I have tried to define the classes within
-which all great goods and evils fall; and I have maintained that
-very many different things are good and evil<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_x">[p. x]</span> in themselves, and that neither class of
-things possesses any other property which is both common to all its
-members and peculiar to them.</p>
-
-<p>In order to express the fact that ethical propositions of my
-<i>first</i> class are incapable of proof or disproof, I have sometimes
-followed Sidgwick’s usage in calling them ‘Intuitions.’ But I beg it
-may be noticed that I am not an ‘Intuitionist,’ in the ordinary sense
-of the term. Sidgwick himself seems never to have been clearly aware
-of the immense importance of the difference which distinguishes his
-Intuitionism from the common doctrine, which has generally been called
-by that name. The Intuitionist proper is distinguished by maintaining
-that propositions of my <i>second</i> class&mdash;propositions which assert
-that a certain action is <i>right</i> or a <i>duty</i>&mdash;are incapable of
-proof or disproof by any enquiry into the results of such actions. I,
-on the contrary, am no less anxious to maintain that propositions of
-<i>this</i> kind are <i>not</i> ‘Intuitions,’ than to maintain that propositions
-of my <i>first</i> class <i>are</i> Intuitions.</p>
-
-<p>Again, I would wish it observed that, when I call such propositions
-‘Intuitions,’ I mean <i>merely</i> to assert that they are incapable of
-proof; I imply nothing whatever as to the manner or origin of our
-cognition of them. Still less do I imply (as most Intuitionists have
-done) that any proposition whatever is true, <i>because</i> we cognise it in
-a particular way or by the exercise of any particular faculty: I hold,
-on the contrary, that in every way in which it is possible to cognise a
-true proposition, it is also possible to cognise a false one.</p>
-
-<p>When this book had been already completed, I found, in Brentano’s
-‘Origin of the Knowledge of Right and Wrong<a id="FNanchor_1"
-href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_xi">[p. xi]</span>’ opinions far more closely resembling my
-own, than those of any other ethical writer with whom I am acquainted.
-Brentano appears to agree with me completely (1) in regarding all
-ethical propositions as defined by the fact that they predicate a
-single unique objective concept; (2) in dividing such propositions
-sharply into the same two kinds; (3) in holding that the first kind
-are incapable of proof; and (4) with regard to the kind of evidence
-which is necessary and relevant to the proof of the second kind. But
-he regards the fundamental ethical concept as being, not the simple
-one which I denote by ‘good,’ but the complex one which I have taken
-to define ‘beautiful’; and he does not recognise, but even denies
-by implication, the principle which I have called <i>the principle
-of organic unities</i>. In consequence of these two differences, his
-conclusions as to what things are good in themselves, also differ very
-materially from mine. He agrees, however, that there are many different
-goods, and that the love of good and beautiful objects constitutes an
-important class among them.</p>
-
-<p>I wish to refer to one oversight, of which I became aware only
-when it was too late to correct it, and which may, I am afraid, cause
-unnecessary trouble to some readers. I have omitted to discuss directly
-the mutual relations of the several different notions, which are
-all expressed by the word ‘end.’ The consequences of this omission
-may perhaps be partially avoided by a reference to my article on
-‘Teleology’ in Baldwin’s <i>Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology</i>.</p>
-
-<p>If I were to rewrite my work now, I should make a very different,
-and I believe that I could make a much better book. But it may be
-doubted whether, in attempting to satisfy myself, I might not merely
-render more obscure the ideas which I am most anxious to convey,
-without a corresponding gain in completeness and accuracy. However
-that may be, my belief that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[p.
-xii]</span> to publish the book as it stands was probably the best
-thing I could do, does not prevent me from being painfully aware that
-it is full of defects.</p>
-
-<p class="small mt2"><span class="smcap">Trinity College, Cambridge.</span></p>
-<p class="small pl4"><i>August</i>, 1903.</p>
-
-
-<p class="mt3">[This book is now reprinted without any alteration
-whatever, except that a few misprints and grammatical mistakes have
-been corrected. It is reprinted, because I am still in agreement
-with its main tendency and conclusions; and it is reprinted without
-alteration, because I found that, if I were to begin correcting what in
-it seemed to me to need correction, I could not stop short of rewriting
-the whole book.</p>
-
-<p class="firma">G. E. M.]</p>
-
-<p class="small mt2"><span class="smcap">Cambridge</span>, 1922.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ToC">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">[p. xiii]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">TABLE OF CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="Table of contents">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><big>CHAPTER I.</big></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF ETHICS.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">A.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2">SECTION.</th>
- <th>PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_1"><b>1.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">In order to define Ethics, we must discover what is both
- common and peculiar to all undoubted ethical judgments;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_2"><b>2.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but this is not that they are concerned with human conduct,
- but that they are concerned with a certain predicate ‘good,’ and its
- converse ‘bad,’ which may be applied both to conduct and to other
- things.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_3"><b>3.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The subjects of the judgments of a scientific Ethics are not,
- like those of some studies, ‘particular things’;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_4"><b>4.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but it includes all <i>universal</i> judgments which assert the
- relation of ‘goodness’ to any subject, and hence includes Casuistry.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">B.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_5"><b>5.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">It must, however, enquire not only what things are
- universally related to goodness, but also, what this predicate, to
- which they are related, is:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_6"><b>6.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and the answer to this question is that it is indefinable</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_6">6</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_7"><b>7.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">or simple: for if by definition be meant the analysis of an
- object of thought, only complex objects can be defined;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_8"><b>8.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and of the three senses in which ‘definition’ can be used,
- this is the most important.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_9"><b>9.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">What is thus indefinable is not ‘the good,’ or the whole of
- that which always possesses the predicate ‘good,’ but this predicate
- itself.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_10"><b>10.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">‘Good,’ then, denotes one unique simple object of thought
- among innumerable others; but this object has very commonly been
- identified with some other&mdash;a fallacy which may be called ‘the
- naturalistic fallacy’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">[p. xiv]</span><a href="#Sec_11"><b>11.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and which reduces what is used as a fundamental principle of
- Ethics either to a tautology or to a statement about the meaning of a
- word.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_12"><b>12.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The nature of this fallacy is easily recognised;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_12">12</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_13"><b>13.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and if it were avoided, it would be plain that the only
- alternatives to the admission that ‘good’ is indefinable, are either
- that it is complex or that there is no notion at all peculiar to
- Ethics&mdash;alternatives which can only be refuted by an appeal to
- inspection, but which can be so refuted.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_14"><b>14.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The ‘naturalistic fallacy’ illustrated by Bentham; and the
- importance of avoiding it pointed out.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_15"><b>15.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">The relations which ethical judgments assert to hold
- universally between ‘goodness’ and other things are of two kinds: a
- thing may be asserted either to <i>be</i> good itself or to be causally
- related to something else which is itself good&mdash;to be ‘good as a
- means.’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_16"><b>16.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Our investigations of the latter kind of relation cannot
- hope to establish more than that a certain kind of action will
- <i>generally</i> be followed by the best possible results;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_17"><b>17.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but a relation of the former kind, if true at all, will
- be true of all cases. All ordinary ethical judgments assert <i>causal</i>
- relations, but they are commonly treated as if they did not, because
- the two kinds of relation are not distinguished.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">D.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_18"><b>18.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">The investigation of intrinsic values is complicated by the
- fact that the value of a whole may be different from the sum of the
- values of its parts,</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_19"><b>19.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">in which case the part has to the whole a relation, which
- exhibits an equally important difference from and resemblance to that
- of means to end.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_20"><b>20.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The term ‘organic whole’ might well be used to denote that a
- whole has this property, since, of the two other properties which it is
- commonly used to imply,</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_21"><b>21.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">one that of reciprocal causal dependence between parts, has
- no necessary relation to this one,</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_22"><b>22.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and the other, upon which most stress has been laid, can be
- true of no whole whatsoever, being a self-contradictory conception due
- to confusion.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_23"><b>23.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Summary of chapter.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">[p. xv]</span><big>CHAPTER II.</big></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">NATURALISTIC ETHICS.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_24"><b>24.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">This and the two following chapters will consider certain
- proposed answers to the second of ethical questions: What is <i>good in
- itself</i>? These proposed answers are characterised by the facts (1) that
- they declare some <i>one</i> kind of thing to be alone good in itself; and
- (2) that they do so, because they suppose this <i>one</i> thing to define
- the meaning of ‘good.’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_25"><b>25.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Such theories may be divided into two groups (1)
- Metaphysical, (2) Naturalistic: and the second group may be subdivided
- into two others, (<i>a</i>) theories which declare some natural object,
- other than pleasure, to be sole good, (<i>b</i>) Hedonism. The present
- chapter will deal with (<i>a</i>).</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_26"><b>26.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Definition of what is meant by ‘Naturalism.’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_27"><b>27.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The common argument that things are good, because they
- are ‘natural,’ may involve either (1) the false proposition that the
- ‘normal,’ as such, is good;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_28"><b>28.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">or (2) the false proposition that the ‘necessary,’ as such,
- is good.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_29"><b>29.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">But a <i>systematised</i> appeal to Nature is now most prevalent
- in connection with the term ‘Evolution.’ An examination of Mr Herbert
- Spencer’s Ethics will illustrate this form of Naturalism.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_30"><b>30.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Darwin’s scientific theory of ‘natural selection,’ which
- has mainly caused the modern vogue of the term ‘Evolution,’ must
- be carefully distinguished from certain ideas which are commonly
- associated with the latter term.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_31"><b>31.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr Spencer’s connection of Evolution with Ethics seems to
- shew the influence of the naturalistic fallacy;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_32"><b>32.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but Mr Spencer is vague as to the ethical relations
- of ‘pleasure’ and ‘evolution,’ and his Naturalism may be mainly
- Naturalistic Hedonism.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_33"><b>33.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">A discussion of the third chapter of the <i>Data of Ethics</i>
- serves to illustrate these two points and to shew that Mr Spencer is in
- utter confusion with regard to the fundamental principles of Ethics.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_34"><b>34.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Three possible views as to the relation of Evolution to
- Ethics are distinguished from the naturalistic view to which it is
- proposed to confine the name ‘Evolutionistic Ethics.’ On any of these
- three views the relation would be unimportant, and the ‘Evolutionistic’
- view, which makes it important, involves a double fallacy.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_35"><b>35.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Summary of chapter.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvi">[p. xvi]</span><big>CHAPTER III.</big></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">HEDONISM.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_36"><b>36.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">The prevalence of Hedonism is mainly due to the naturalistic
- fallacy.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_37"><b>37.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Hedonism may be defined as the doctrine that ‘Pleasure
- is the sole good’: this doctrine has always been held by Hedonists
- and used by them as a fundamental ethical principle, although it has
- commonly been confused with others.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_38"><b>38.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The method pursued in this chapter will consist in exposing
- the reasons commonly offered for the truth of Hedonism and in bringing
- out the reasons, which suffice to shew it untrue, by a criticism of J.
- S. Mill &amp; H. Sidgwick.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">A.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_39"><b>39.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Mill declares that ‘Happiness is the only thing desirable as
- an end,’ and insists that ‘Questions of ultimate ends are not amenable
- to direct proof’;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_40"><b>40.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">yet he gives a proof of the first proposition, which
- consists in (1) the fallacious confusion of ‘desirable’ with ‘desired,’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_41"><b>41.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(2) an attempt to shew that nothing but pleasure is desired.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_42"><b>42.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The theory that nothing but pleasure is desired seems
- largely due to a confusion between the <i>cause</i> and the <i>object</i> of
- desire: pleasure is certainly not the sole <i>object</i> of desire, and,
- even if it is always among the <i>causes</i> of desire, that fact would not
- tempt anyone to think it a good.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_43"><b>43.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Mill attempts to reconcile his doctrine that pleasure is the
- sole object of desire with his admission that other things are desired,
- by the absurd declaration that what is a means to happiness is ‘part’
- of happiness.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_44"><b>44.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Summary of Mill’s argument and of my criticism.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">B.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_45"><b>45.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">We must now proceed to consider the principle of Hedonism
- as an ‘Intuition,’ as which it has been clearly recognised by Prof.
- Sidgwick alone. That it should be thus incapable of <i>proof</i> is not, in
- itself, any reason for dissatisfaction.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_46"><b>46.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">In thus beginning to consider what things are good in
- themselves, we leave the refutation of Naturalism behind, and enter on
- the second division of ethical questions.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvii">[p. xvii]</span><a href="#Sec_47"><b>47.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Mill’s doctrine that some pleasures are superior ‘in
- quality’ to others implies both (1) that judgments of ends must be
- ‘intuitions’;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_48"><b>48.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (2) that pleasure is <i>not</i> the sole good.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_49"><b>49.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Prof. Sidgwick has avoided these confusions made by Mill:
- in considering his arguments we shall, therefore, merely consider the
- question ‘Is pleasure the sole good?’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_50"><b>50.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Prof. Sidgwick first tries to shew that nothing outside of
- Human Existence can be good. Reasons are given for doubting this.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_51"><b>51.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">He then goes on to the far more important proposition that
- no part of Human Existence, except pleasure, is desirable.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_52"><b>52.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">But <i>pleasure</i> must be distinguished from <i>consciousness of
- pleasure</i>, and (1) it is plain that, when so distinguished, <i>pleasure</i>
- is not the sole good;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_53"><b>53.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (2) it may be made equally plain that <i>consciousness
- of pleasure</i> is not the sole good, if we are equally careful to
- distinguish it from its usual accompaniments.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_90">90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_54"><b>54.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Of Prof. Sidgwick’s two arguments for the contrary view, the
- second is equally compatible with the supposition that pleasure is a
- mere <i>criterion</i> of what is <i>right</i>;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_55"><b>55.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and in his first, the appeal to reflective intuition, he
- fails to put the question clearly (1) in that he does not recognise the
- principle of <i>organic unities</i>;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_56"><b>56.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (2) in that he fails to emphasize that the agreement,
- which he has tried to shew, between hedonistic judgments and those of
- Common Sense, only holds of <i>judgments of means</i>: hedonistic judgments
- of <i>ends</i> are flagrantly paradoxical.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_57"><b>57.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">I conclude, then, that a reflective intuition, if proper
- precautions are taken, will agree with Common Sense that it is absurd
- to regard mere consciousness of pleasure as the sole good.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_58"><b>58.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">It remains to consider Egoism and Utilitarianism. It is
- important to distinguish the former, as the doctrine that ‘my own
- pleasure is sole good,’ from the doctrine, opposed to Altruism, that to
- pursue my own pleasure exclusively is right <i>as a means</i>.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_59"><b>59.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Egoism proper is utterly untenable, being
- self-contradictory: it fails to perceive that when I declare a thing to
- be my own good, I must be declaring it to be <i>good absolutely</i> or else
- not good at all.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xviii">[p. xviii]</span><a href="#Sec_60"><b>60.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">This confusion is further brought out by an examination of
- Prof. Sidgwick’s contrary view;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_61"><b>61.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and it is shewn that, in consequence of this confusion,
- his representation of ‘the relation of Rational Egoism to Rational
- Benevolence’ as ‘the profoundest problem of Ethics,’ and his view that
- a certain hypothesis is required to ‘make Ethics rational,’ are grossly
- erroneous.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_62"><b>62.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The same confusion is involved in the attempt to infer
- Utilitarianism from Psychological Hedonism, as commonly held, <i>e.g.</i> by
- Mill.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_63"><b>63.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Egoism proper seems also to owe its plausibility to its
- confusion with Egoism, as a doctrine of means.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_64"><b>64.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Certain ambiguities in the conception of Utilitarianism are
- noticed; and it is pointed out (1) that, as a doctrine of the end to be
- pursued, it is finally refuted by the refutation of Hedonism, and (2)
- that, while the arguments most commonly urged in its favour could, at
- most, only shew it to offer a correct <i>criterion</i> of right action, they
- are quite insufficient even for this purpose.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_65"><b>65.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Summary of chapter.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2"><big>CHAPTER IV.</big></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">METAPHYSICAL ETHICS.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">A.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_66"><b>66.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">The term ‘metaphysical’ is defined as having reference
- primarily to any object of knowledge which is not a part of
- Nature&mdash;does not exist in time, as an object of perception; but since
- metaphysicians, not content with pointing out the truth about such
- entities, have always supposed that what does not exist in Nature,
- must, at least, <i>exist</i>, the term also has reference to a supposed
- ‘supersensible reality’:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_67"><b>67.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and by ‘metaphysical Ethics’ I mean those systems which
- maintain or imply that the answer to the question ‘What is good?’
- <i>logically depends</i> upon the answer to the question ‘What is the nature
- of supersensible reality?.’ All such systems obviously involve the same
- fallacy&mdash;the ‘naturalistic fallacy’&mdash;by the use of which Naturalism was
- also defined.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_68"><b>68.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Metaphysics, as dealing with a ‘supersensible reality,’
- may have a bearing upon <i>practical</i> Ethics (1) if its supersensible
- reality is conceived as something future, which our actions<span
- class="pagenum" id="Page_xix">[p. xix]</span> can affect; and (2) since
- it will prove that <i>every</i> proposition of practical Ethics is false, if
- it can shew that an eternal reality is either the only real thing or
- the only good thing. Most metaphysical writers, believing in a reality
- of the latter kind, do thus imply the complete falsehood of every
- practical proposition, although they fail to see that their Metaphysics
- thus contradicts their Ethics.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">B.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_69"><b>69.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">But the theory, by which I have defined Metaphysical Ethics,
- is <i>not</i> that Metaphysics has a logical bearing upon the question
- involved in <i>practical</i> Ethics ‘What effects will my action produce?,’
- but that it has such a bearing upon the fundamental ethical question
- ‘What is good in itself?.’ This theory has been refuted by the proof,
- in Chap. I, that the naturalistic fallacy is a fallacy: it only remains
- to discuss certain confusions which seem to have lent it plausibility.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_70"><b>70.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">One such source of confusion seems to lie in the failure to
- distinguish between the proposition ‘This is good,’ when it means ‘This
- <i>existing</i> thing is good,’ and the same proposition, when it means ‘The
- existence of this <i>kind</i> of thing would be good’;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_71"><b>71.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and another seems to lie in the failure to distinguish
- between that which <i>suggests</i> a truth, or is a <i>cause</i> of our knowing
- it, and that upon which it <i>logically</i> depends, or which is a <i>reason</i>
- for believing it: in the former sense fiction has a more important
- bearing upon Ethics than Metaphysics can have.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">C.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_72"><b>72.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">But a more important source of confusion seems to lie in the
- supposition that ‘to be good’ is <i>identical</i> with the possession of
- some supersensible property, which is also involved in the definition
- of ‘reality.’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_73"><b>73.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">One cause of this supposition seems to be the logical
- prejudice that all propositions are of the most familiar type&mdash;that in
- which subject and predicate are both existents.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_74"><b>74.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">But ethical propositions cannot be reduced to this type: in
- particular, they are obviously to be distinguished</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_75"><b>75.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(1) from Natural Laws; with which one of Kant’s most famous
- doctrines confuses them,</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_126">126</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_76"><b>76.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (2) from Commands; with which they are confused both by
- Kant and by others.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xx">[p. xx]</span>D.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_77"><b>77.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">This latter confusion is one of the sources of the prevalent
- modern doctrine that ‘being good’ is <i>identical</i> with ‘being willed’;
- but the prevalence of this doctrine seems to be chiefly due to other
- causes. I shall try to shew with regard to it (1) what are the chief
- errors which seem to have led to its adoption; and (2) that, apart from
- it, the Metaphysics of Volition can hardly have the smallest logical
- bearing upon Ethics.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_78"><b>78.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(1) It has been commonly held, since Kant, that ‘goodness’
- has the same relation to Will or Feeling, which ‘truth’ or ‘reality’
- has to Cognition: that the proper method for Ethics is to discover what
- is <i>implied</i> in Will or Feeling, just as, according to Kant, the proper
- method for Metaphysics was to discover what is <i>implied</i> in Cognition.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_79"><b>79.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The actual relations between ‘goodness’ and Will or Feeling,
- from which this false doctrine is inferred, seem to be mainly (<i>a</i>) the
- <i>causal</i> relation consisting in the fact that it is only by reflection
- upon the experiences of Will and Feeling that we become aware of
- ethical distinctions; (<i>b</i>) the facts that a cognition of goodness is
- perhaps <i>always</i> included in certain kinds of Willing and Feeling, and
- is <i>generally</i> accompanied by them:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_80"><b>80.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but from neither of these <i>psychological</i> facts does it
- follow that ‘to be good’ is identical with being willed or felt in a
- certain way: the supposition that it does follow is an instance of the
- fundamental contradiction of modern Epistemology&mdash;the contradiction
- involved in both distinguishing and identifying the <i>object</i> and the
- <i>act</i> of Thought, ‘truth’ itself and its supposed <i>criterion</i>:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_81"><b>81.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and, once this analogy between Volition and Cognition
- is accepted, the view that ethical propositions have an essential
- reference to Will or Feeling, is strengthened by another error
- with regard to the nature of Cognition&mdash;the error of supposing that
- ‘perception’ denotes <i>merely</i> a certain way of cognising an object,
- whereas it actually includes the assertion that the object is also
- <i>true</i>.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_133">133</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_82"><b>82.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The argument of the last three §§ is recapitulated; and it
- is pointed out (1) that Volition and Feeling are <i>not</i> analogous to
- Cognition, (2) that, even if they were, still ‘to be good’ could not
- <i>mean</i> ‘to be willed or felt in a certain way.’</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_83"><b>83.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(2) If ‘being good’ and ‘being willed’ are not <i>identical</i>,
- then the latter could only be a <i>criterion</i> of the former; and,
- in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxi">[p. xxi]</span> order to shew that it was so, we should have to establish
- <i>independently</i> that many things were good&mdash;that is to say, we
- should have to establish most of our ethical conclusions, before the
- Metaphysics of Volition could possibly give us the smallest assistance.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_84"><b>84.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The fact that the metaphysical writers who, like Green,
- attempt to <i>base</i> Ethics on Volition, do not even attempt this
- independent investigation, shews that they start from the false
- assumption that goodness is <i>identical</i> with being willed, and hence
- that their ethical reasonings have no value whatsoever.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_85"><b>85.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Summary of chapter.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2"><big>CHAPTER V.</big></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">ETHICS IN RELATION TO CONDUCT.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_86"><b>86.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">The question to be discussed in this chapter must be clearly
- distinguished from the two questions hitherto discussed, namely (1)
- What is the nature of the proposition: ‘This is good in itself’?</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_87"><b>87.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (2) What things are good in themselves? to which we gave
- one answer in deciding that pleasure was not the only thing good in
- itself.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_88"><b>88.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">In this chapter we shall deal with the <i>third</i> object of
- ethical enquiry: namely answers to the question ‘What conduct is
- a <i>means</i> to good results?’ or ‘What ought we to do?’ This is the
- question of <i>Practical</i> Ethics, and its answer involves an assertion of
- <i>causal</i> connection.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_89"><b>89.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">It is shewn that the assertions ‘This action is right’ or
- ‘is my duty’ are equivalent to the assertion that the total results of
- the action in question will be the best possible;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_90"><b>90.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and the rest of the chapter will deal with certain
- conclusions, upon which light is thrown by this fact. Of which the
- first is (1) that Intuitionism is mistaken; since no proposition with
- regard to duty can be self-evident.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_148">148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_91"><b>91.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(2) It is plain that we cannot hope to prove which among all
- the actions, which it is possible for us to perform on every occasion,
- will produce the best total results: to discover what is our ‘duty,’
- in this strict sense, is impossible. It may, however, be possible to
- shew which among the actions, which we are <i>likely</i> to perform, will
- produce the best results.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxii">[p. xxii]</span><a href="#Sec_92"><b>92.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The distinction made in the last § is further explained;
- and it is insisted that all that Ethics has done or can do, is, <i>not</i>
- to determine absolute duties, but to point out which, among a <i>few</i> of
- the alternatives, possible under <i>certain</i> circumstances, will have the
- better results.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_93"><b>93.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(3) Even this latter task is immensely difficult, and no
- adequate proof that the total results of one action are superior to
- those of another, has ever been given. For (<i>a</i>) we can only calculate
- actual results within a comparatively near future: we must, therefore,
- assume that no results of the same action in the infinite future
- beyond, will reverse the balance&mdash;an assumption which perhaps <i>can</i> be,
- but certainly has not been, justified;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_94"><b>94.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (<i>b</i>) even to decide that, of any two actions, one has a
- better total result than the other <i>in the immediate future</i>, is very
- difficult; and it is very improbable, and quite impossible to prove,
- that any single action is <i>in all cases</i> better as means than its
- probable alternative. Rules of duty, even in this restricted sense, can
- only, at most, be <i>general</i> truths.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_154">154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_95"><b>95.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">But (<i>c</i>) most of the actions, most universally approved by
- Common Sense, may perhaps be shewn to be <i>generally</i> better as means
- than any probable alternative, on the following principles. (1) With
- regard to some rules it may be shewn that their general observance
- would be useful in any state of society, where the instincts to
- preserve and propagate life and to possess property were as strong as
- they seem always to be; and this utility may be shewn, independently of
- a right view as to what is good in itself, since the observance is a
- means to things which are a necessary condition for the attainment of
- <i>any</i> great goods in considerable quantities.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_96"><b>96.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(2) Other rules are such that their general observance can
- only be shewn to be useful, as means to the preservation of society,
- under more or less temporary conditions: if any of these are to be
- proved useful in <i>all</i> societies, this can only be done by shewing
- their causal relation to things good or evil in themselves, which are
- not generally recognised to be such.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_97"><b>97.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">It is plain that rules of class (1) may <i>also</i> be justified
- by the existence of such temporary conditions as justify those of class
- (2); and among such temporary conditions must be reckoned the so-called
- <i>sanctions</i>.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_98"><b>98.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">In this way, then, it may be possible to prove the
- <i>general</i> utility, for the present, of those actions, which in our
- society<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxiii">[p. xxiii]</span> are
- <i>both</i> generally recognised as duties <i>and</i> generally practised; but
- it seems very doubtful whether a conclusive case can be established
- for any proposed change in social custom, without an independent
- investigation of what things are good or bad in themselves.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_99"><b>99.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">And (<i>d</i>) if we consider the distinct question of how a
- single individual should decide to act (α) in cases where the <i>general</i>
- utility of the action in question is certain, (β) in other cases: there
- seems reason for thinking that, with regard to (α), where the generally
- useful rule is also generally observed, he should <i>always</i> conform
- to it; but these reasons are not conclusive, if <i>either</i> the general
- observance <i>or</i> the general utility is wanting:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_100"><b>100.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and that (β) in all other cases, <i>rules of action</i> should
- not be followed at all, but the individual should consider what
- positive goods, <i>he</i>, in his particular circumstances, seems likely to
- be able to effect, and what evils to avoid.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_101"><b>101.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(4) It follows further that the distinction denoted by the
- terms ‘duty’ and ‘expediency’ is not primarily ethical: when we ask
- ‘Is this really expedient?’ we are asking precisely the same question
- as when we ask ‘Is this my duty?,’ viz. ‘Is this a means to the best
- possible?.’ ‘Duties’ are mainly distinguished by the non-ethical marks
- (1) that many people are often tempted to avoid them, (2) that their
- most prominent effects are on others than the agent, (3) that they
- excite the moral sentiments: so far as they <i>are</i> distinguished by an
- ethical peculiarity, this is not that they are peculiarly useful to
- perform, but that they are peculiarly useful to sanction.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_102"><b>102.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The distinction between ‘duty’ and ‘interest’ is also, in
- the main, the same non-ethical distinction: but the term ‘interested’
- does also refer to a distinct ethical predicate&mdash;that an action is to
- ‘my interest’ asserts only that it will have the best possible effects
- of one particular kind, not that its total effects will be the best
- possible.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_103"><b>103.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(5) We may further see that ‘virtues’ are not to be
- defined as dispositions that are good in themselves: they are
- not necessarily more than dispositions to perform actions
- generally good as means, and of these, for the most part,
- only those classed as ‘duties’ in accordance with section
- (4). It follows that to decide whether a disposition is or is
- not ‘virtuous’ involves the difficult causal investigation
- discussed in section (3); and that what is a virtue in one
- state of society may not be so in another.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxiv">[p. xxiv]</span><a href="#Sec_104"><b>104.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">It follows also that we have no reason to presume, as has
- commonly been done, that the exercise of virtue in the performance of
- ‘duties’ is ever good in itself&mdash;far less, that it is the sole good:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_105"><b>105.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and, if we consider the intrinsic value of such exercise,
- it will appear (1) that, in most cases, it has no value, and (2) that
- even the cases, where it has some value, are far from constituting
- the sole good. The truth of the latter proposition is generally
- inconsistently implied, even by those who deny it;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_106"><b>106.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but in order fairly to decide upon the intrinsic value
- of virtue, we must distinguish three different kinds of disposition,
- each of which is commonly so called and has been maintained to be the
- only kind deserving the name. Thus (<i>a</i>) the mere unconscious ‘habit’
- of performing duties, which is the commonest type, has no intrinsic
- value whatsoever; Christian moralists are right in implying that mere
- ‘external rightness’ has no intrinsic value, though they are wrong in
- saying that it is therefore not ‘virtuous,’ since this implies that it
- has no value even as a means:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_175">175</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_107"><b>107.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>b</i>) where virtue consists in a disposition to have, and
- be moved by, a sentiment of love towards really good consequences of an
- action and of hatred towards really evil ones, it has some intrinsic
- value, but its value may vary greatly in degree:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_108"><b>108.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">finally (<i>c</i>) where virtue consists in ‘conscientiousness,’
- <i>i.e.</i> the disposition not to act, in certain cases, until we believe
- and feel that our action is right, it seems to have some intrinsic
- value: the value of this feeling has been peculiarly emphasized by
- Christian Ethics, but it certainly is not, as Kant would lead us to
- think, either the sole thing of value, or always good even as a means.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_109"><b>109.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Summary of chapter.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_180">180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2"><big>CHAPTER VI.</big></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">THE IDEAL.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs pt1"><a href="#Sec_110"><b>110.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1">By an ‘ideal’ state of things may be meant either (1) the
- Summum Bonum or absolutely best, or (2) the best which the laws of
- nature allow to exist in this world, or (3) anything greatly good in
- itself: this chapter will be principally occupied with what is ideal in
- sense (3)&mdash;with answering the fundamental question of Ethics;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxv">[p. xxv]</span><a href="#Sec_111"><b>111.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but a correct answer to this question is an essential step
- towards a correct view as to what is ‘ideal’ in senses (1) and (2).</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_112"><b>112.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">In order to obtain a correct answer to the question ‘What
- is good in itself?’ we must consider what value things would have if
- they existed absolutely by themselves;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_113"><b>113.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and, if we use this method, it is obvious that personal
- affection and aesthetic enjoyments include by far the greatest goods
- with which we are acquainted.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_114"><b>114.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">If we begin by considering I. <i>Aesthetic Enjoyments</i>, it is
- plain (1) that there is always <i>essential</i> to these some one of a great
- variety of different emotions, though these emotions may have little
- value <i>by themselves</i>:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_115"><b>115.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (2) that a cognition of really beautiful qualities is
- equally essential, and has equally little value by itself.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_116"><b>116.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">But (3) granted that the appropriate combination of these
- two elements is always a considerable good and may be a very great one,
- we may ask whether, where there is <i>added</i> to this <i>a true belief in
- the existence of the object of the cognition</i>, the whole thus formed is
- not much more valuable still.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_117"><b>117.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">I think that this question should be answered in the
- affirmative; but in order to ensure that this judgment is correct, we
- must carefully distinguish it</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_118"><b>118.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">from the two judgments (<i>a</i>) that knowledge is valuable
- <i>as a means</i>, (<i>b</i>) that, where the object of the cognition is itself
- a good thing, its existence, of course, adds to the value of the whole
- state of things:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_119"><b>119.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">if, however, we attempt to avoid being biassed by these
- two facts, it still seems that mere true belief may be a condition
- essential to great value.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_120"><b>120.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">We thus get a <i>third</i> essential constituent of many great
- goods; and in this way we are able to justify (1) the attribution
- of value to <i>knowledge</i>, over and above its value as a means, and
- (2) the intrinsic superiority of the proper appreciation of a <i>real</i>
- object over the appreciation of an equally valuable object of mere
- imagination: emotions directed towards real objects may thus, even if
- the object be inferior, claim equality with the highest imaginative
- pleasures.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_121"><b>121.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Finally (4) with regard to the <i>objects</i> of the cognition
- which is essential to these good wholes, it is the business of
- Aesthetics to analyse their nature: it need only be here remarked
- (1) that, by calling them ‘beautiful,’ we mean that they have this
- relation to a <i>good</i> whole; and (2) that they are, for the most part,
- themselves complex wholes, such that the ad<span class="pagenum"
- id="Page_xxvi">[p. xxvi]</span>miring contemplation of the whole
- greatly exceeds in value the sum of the values of the admiring
- contemplation of the parts.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_122"><b>122.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">With regard to II. <i>Personal Affection</i>, the object is here
- not merely beautiful but also good in itself; it appears, however,
- that the appreciation of what is thus good in itself, viz. the mental
- qualities of a person, is certainly, by itself, not so great a good
- as the whole formed by the combination with it of an appreciation of
- corporeal beauty; it is doubtful whether it is even so great a good as
- the mere appreciation of corporeal beauty; but it is certain that the
- combination of both is a far greater good than either singly.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_123"><b>123.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">It follows from what has been said that we have every
- reason to suppose that a cognition of <i>material qualities</i>, and even
- their existence, is an essential constituent of the Ideal or Summum
- Bonum: there is only a bare possibility that they are not included in
- it.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_124"><b>124.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">It remains to consider <i>positive evils</i> and <i>mixed goods</i>.
- I. <i>Evils</i> may be divided into three classes, namely</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_125"><b>125.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(1) evils which consist in the love, or admiration, or
- enjoyment of what is evil or ugly</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_126"><b>126.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(2) evils which consist in the hatred or contempt of what
- is good or beautiful</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_127"><b>127.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">and (3) the consciousness of intense pain: this appears
- to be the only thing, either greatly good or greatly evil, which does
- not involve <i>both</i> a cognition <i>and</i> an emotion directed towards its
- object; and hence it is not analogous to pleasure in respect of its
- intrinsic value, while it also seems not to add to the vileness of a
- whole, <i>as a whole</i>, in which it is combined with another bad thing,
- whereas pleasure does add to the goodness of a whole, in which it is
- combined with another good thing;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_128"><b>128.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but pleasure and pain are completely analogous in this,
- that pleasure by no means always increases, and pain by no means always
- decreases, the total value of a whole in which it is included: the
- converse is often true.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_129"><b>129.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">In order to consider II. <i>Mixed Goods</i>, we must first
- distinguish between (1) the value of a whole <i>as a whole</i>, and (2) its
- value <i>on the whole</i> or total value: (1) = the difference between (2)
- and the sum of the values of the parts. In view of this distinction, it
- then appears:</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_130"><b>130.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">(1) That the mere combination of two or more evils is never
- positively good <i>on the whole</i>, although it may certainly have great
- intrinsic value <i>as a whole</i>;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxvii">[p. xxvii]</span><a href="#Sec_131"><b>131.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but (2) That a whole which includes a cognition of
- something evil or ugly may yet be a great positive good <i>on the whole</i>:
- most virtues, which have any intrinsic value whatever, seem to be
- of this kind, <i>e.g.</i> (<i>a</i>) courage and compassion, and (<i>b</i>) moral
- goodness; all these are instances of the hatred or contempt of what is
- evil or ugly;</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_132"><b>132.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">but there seems no reason to think that, where the evil
- object <i>exists</i>, the total state of things is ever positively good <i>on
- the whole</i>, although the existence of the evil may add to its value <i>as
- a whole</i>.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_133"><b>133.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Hence (1) no actually existing evil is necessary to the
- Ideal, (2) the contemplation of imaginary evils is necessary to it,
- and (3) where evils already exist, the existence of mixed virtues has
- a value independent both of its consequences and of the value which it
- has in common with the proper appreciation of imaginary evils.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_134"><b>134.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Concluding remarks.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Sec_135"><b>135.</b></a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Summary of chapter.</td>
- <td class="tdrp"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[p. 1]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak" title="CHAPTER I. THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF ETHICS.">CHAPTER I.</h2>
- <p class="subh2">THE SUBJECT-MATTER OF ETHICS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p id="Sec_1"><b>1.&emsp;</b><span class="smcap">It</span> is very easy to
-point out some among our every-day judgments, with the truth of which
-Ethics is undoubtedly concerned. Whenever we say, ‘So and so is a good
-man,’ or ‘That fellow is a villain’; whenever we ask, ‘What ought I to
-do?’ or ‘Is it wrong for me to do like this?’; whenever we hazard such
-remarks as ‘Temperance is a virtue and drunkenness a vice’&mdash;it is
-undoubtedly the business of Ethics to discuss such questions and such
-statements; to argue what is the true answer when we ask what it is
-right to do, and to give reasons for thinking that our statements about
-the character of persons or the morality of actions are true or false.
-In the vast majority of cases, where we make statements involving any
-of the terms ‘virtue,’ ‘vice,’ ‘duty,’ ‘right,’ ‘ought,’ ‘good,’ ‘bad,’
-we are making ethical judgments; and if we wish to discuss their truth,
-we shall be discussing a point of Ethics.</p>
-
-<p>So much as this is not disputed; but it falls very far short of
-defining the province of Ethics. That province may indeed be defined as
-the whole truth about that which is at the same time common to all such
-judgments and peculiar to them. But we have still to ask the question:
-What is it that is thus common and peculiar? And this is a question to
-which very different answers have been given by ethical philosophers
-of acknowledged reputation, and none of them, perhaps, completely
-satisfactory.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_2"><b>2.&emsp;</b>If we take such examples as those given
-above, we shall not be far wrong in saying that they are all of them
-concerned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[p. 2]</span> with the
-question of ‘conduct’&mdash;with the question, what, in the conduct of
-us, human beings, is good, and what is bad, what is right, and what is
-wrong. For when we say that a man is good, we commonly mean that he
-acts rightly; when we say that drunkenness is a vice, we commonly mean
-that to get drunk is a wrong or wicked action. And this discussion of
-human conduct is, in fact, that with which the name ‘Ethics’ is most
-intimately associated. It is so associated by derivation; and conduct
-is undoubtedly by far the commonest and most generally interesting
-object of ethical judgments.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, we find that many ethical philosophers are disposed
-to accept as an adequate definition of ‘Ethics’ the statement that it
-deals with the question what is good or bad in human conduct. They hold
-that its enquiries are properly confined to ‘conduct’ or to ‘practice’;
-they hold that the name ‘practical philosophy’ covers all the matter
-with which it has to do. Now, without discussing the proper meaning
-of the word (for verbal questions are properly left to the writers of
-dictionaries and other persons interested in literature; philosophy,
-as we shall see, has no concern with them), I may say that I intend to
-use ‘Ethics’ to cover more than this&mdash;a usage, for which there is,
-I think, quite sufficient authority. I am using it to cover an enquiry
-for which, at all events, there is no other word: the general enquiry
-into what is good.</p>
-
-<p>Ethics is undoubtedly concerned with the question what good conduct
-is; but, being concerned with this, it obviously does not start at the
-beginning, unless it is prepared to tell us what is good as well as
-what is conduct. For ‘good conduct’ is a complex notion: all conduct
-is not good; for some is certainly bad and some may be indifferent.
-And on the other hand, other things, beside conduct, may be good; and
-if they are so, then, ‘good’ denotes some property, that is common to
-them and conduct; and if we examine good conduct alone of all good
-things, then we shall be in danger of mistaking for this property, some
-property which is not shared by those other things: and thus we shall
-have made a mistake about Ethics even in this limited sense; for we
-shall not know what good conduct really is. This is a mistake which
-many writers have actually made,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[p.
-3]</span> from limiting their enquiry to conduct. And hence I shall try
-to avoid it by considering first what is good in general; hoping, that
-if we can arrive at any certainty about this, it will be much easier to
-settle the question of good conduct: for we all know pretty well what
-‘conduct’ is. This, then, is our first question: What is good? and What
-is bad? and to the discussion of this question (of these questions)
-I give the name of Ethics, since that science must, at all events,
-include it.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_3"><b>3.&emsp;</b>But this is a question which may have many
-meanings. If, for example, each of us were to say ‘I am doing good
-now’ or ‘I had a good dinner yesterday,’ these statements would each
-of them be some sort of answer to our question, although perhaps a
-false one. So, too, when A asks B what school he ought to send his son
-to, B’s answer will certainly be an ethical judgment. And similarly
-all distribution of praise or blame to any personage or thing that
-has existed, now exists, or will exist, does give some answer to the
-question ‘What is good?’ In all such cases some particular thing
-is judged to be good or bad: the question ‘What?’ is answered by
-‘This.’ But this is not the sense in which a scientific Ethics asks
-the question. Not one, of all the many million answers of this kind,
-which must be true, can form a part of an ethical system; although that
-science must contain reasons and principles sufficient for deciding
-on the truth of all of them. There are far too many persons, things
-and events in the world, past, present, or to come, for a discussion
-of their individual merits to be embraced in any science. Ethics,
-therefore, does not deal at all with facts of this nature, facts that
-are unique, individual, absolutely particular; facts with which such
-studies as history, geography, astronomy, are compelled, in part at
-least, to deal. And, for this reason, it is not the business of the
-ethical philosopher to give personal advice or exhortation.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_4"><b>4.&emsp;</b>But there is another meaning which may be
-given to the question ‘What is good?’ ‘Books are good’ would be an
-answer to it, though an answer obviously false; for some books are
-very bad indeed. And ethical judgments of this kind do indeed belong
-to Ethics; though I shall not deal with many of them. Such is the
-judgment ‘Pleasure is good’&mdash;a judgment,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_4">[p. 4]</span> of which Ethics should discuss the truth,
-although it is not nearly as important as that other judgment, with
-which we shall be much occupied presently&mdash;‘Pleasure <i>alone</i> is
-good.’ It is judgments of this sort, which are made in such books on
-Ethics as contain a list of ‘virtues’&mdash;in Aristotle’s ‘Ethics’ for
-example. But it is judgments of precisely the same kind, which form the
-substance of what is commonly supposed to be a study different from
-Ethics, and one much less respectable&mdash;the study of Casuistry.
-We may be told that Casuistry differs from Ethics, in that it is much
-more detailed and particular, Ethics much more general. But it is most
-important to notice that Casuistry does not deal with anything that
-is absolutely particular&mdash;particular in the only sense in which
-a perfectly precise line can be drawn between it and what is general.
-It is not particular in the sense just noticed, the sense in which
-this book is a particular book, and A’s friend’s advice particular
-advice. Casuistry may indeed be <i>more</i> particular and Ethics <i>more</i>
-general; but that means that they differ only in degree and not in
-kind. And this is universally true of ‘particular’ and ‘general,’ when
-used in this common, but inaccurate, sense. So far as Ethics allows
-itself to give lists of virtues or even to name constituents of the
-Ideal, it is indistinguishable from Casuistry. Both alike deal with
-what is general, in the sense in which physics and chemistry deal with
-what is general. Just as chemistry aims at discovering what are the
-properties of oxygen, <i>wherever it occurs</i>, and not only of this or
-that particular specimen of oxygen; so Casuistry aims at discovering
-what actions are good, <i>whenever they occur</i>. In this respect Ethics
-and Casuistry alike are to be classed with such sciences as physics,
-chemistry and physiology, in their absolute distinction from those of
-which history and geography are instances. And it is to be noted that,
-owing to their detailed nature, casuistical investigations are actually
-nearer to physics and to chemistry than are the investigations usually
-assigned to Ethics. For just as physics cannot rest content with the
-discovery that light is propagated by waves of ether, but must go on to
-discover the particular nature of the ether-waves corresponding to each
-several colour; so Casuistry, not content with the general law<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[p. 5]</span> that charity is a virtue,
-must attempt to discover the relative merits of every different form
-of charity. Casuistry forms, therefore, part of the ideal of ethical
-science: Ethics cannot be complete without it. The defects of Casuistry
-are not defects of principle; no objection can be taken to its aim and
-object. It has failed only because it is far too difficult a subject to
-be treated adequately in our present state of knowledge. The casuist
-has been unable to distinguish, in the cases which he treats, those
-elements upon which their value depends. Hence he often thinks two
-cases to be alike in respect of value, when in reality they are alike
-only in some other respect. It is to mistakes of this kind that the
-pernicious influence of such investigations has been due. For Casuistry
-is the goal of ethical investigation. It cannot be safely attempted at
-the beginning of our studies, but only at the end.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_5"><b>5.&emsp;</b>But our question ‘What is good?’ may have still
-another meaning. We may, in the third place, mean to ask, not what
-thing or things are good, but how ‘good’ is to be defined. This is an
-enquiry which belongs only to Ethics, not to Casuistry; and this is the
-enquiry which will occupy us first.</p>
-
-<p>It is an enquiry to which most special attention should be
-directed; since this question, how ‘good’ is to be defined, is the
-most fundamental question in all Ethics. That which is meant by ‘good’
-is, in fact, except its converse ‘bad,’ the <i>only</i> simple object of
-thought which is peculiar to Ethics. Its definition is, therefore,
-the most essential point in the definition of Ethics; and moreover a
-mistake with regard to it entails a far larger number of erroneous
-ethical judgments than any other. Unless this first question be fully
-understood, and its true answer clearly recognised, the rest of Ethics
-is as good as useless from the point of view of systematic knowledge.
-True ethical judgments, of the two kinds last dealt with, may indeed be
-made by those who do not know the answer to this question as well as by
-those who do; and it goes without saying that the two classes of people
-may lead equally good lives. But it is extremely unlikely that the
-<i>most general</i> ethical judgments will be equally valid, in the absence
-of a true answer to this question: I shall presently try to shew that
-the gravest errors have been largely due to<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_6">[p. 6]</span> beliefs in a false answer. And, in any case,
-it is impossible that, till the answer to this question be known,
-any one should know <i>what is the evidence</i> for any ethical judgment
-whatsoever. But the main object of Ethics, as a systematic science,
-is to give correct <i>reasons</i> for thinking that this or that is good;
-and, unless this question be answered, such reasons cannot be given.
-Even, therefore, apart from the fact that a false answer leads to false
-conclusions, the present enquiry is a most necessary and important part
-of the science of Ethics.</p>
-
-<p id="Sec_6"><b>6.&emsp;</b>What, then, is good? How is good to be defined?
-Now, it may be thought that this is a verbal question. A definition
-does indeed often mean the expressing of one word’s meaning in other
-words. But this is not the sort of definition I am asking for. Such
-a definition can never be of ultimate importance in any study except
-lexicography. If I wanted that kind of definition I should have to
-consider in the first place how people generally used the word ‘good’;
-but my business is not with its proper usage, as established by custom.
-I should, indeed, be foolish, if I tried to use it for something which
-it did not usually denote: if, for instance, I were to announce that,
-whenever I used the word ‘good,’ I must be understood to be thinking
-of that object which is usually denoted by the word ‘table.’ I shall,
-therefore, use the word in the sense in which I think it is ordinarily
-used; but at the same time I am not anxious to discuss whether I am
-right in thinking that it is so used. My business is solely with that
-object or idea, which I hold, rightly or wrongly, that the word is
-generally used to stand for. What I want to discover is the nature of
-that object or idea, and about this I am extremely anxious to arrive at
-an agreement.</p>
-
-<p>But, if we understand the question in this sense, my answer to it
-may seem a very disappointing one. If I am asked ‘What is good?’ my
-answer is that good is good, and that is the end of the matter. Or if
-I am asked ‘How is good to be defined?’ my answer is that it cannot
-be defined, and that is all I have to say about it. But disappointing
-as these answers may appear, they are of the very last importance. To
-readers who are familiar with philosophic terminology, I can express
-their im<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[p. 7]</span>portance by
-saying that they amount to this: That propositions about the good
-are all of them synthetic and never analytic; and that is plainly no
-trivial matter. And the same thing may be expressed more popularly, by
-saying that, if I am right, then nobody can foist upon us such an axiom
-as that ‘Pleasure is the only good’ or that ‘The good is the desired’
-on the pretence that this is ‘the very meaning of the word.’</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_7"><b>7.&emsp;</b>Let us, then, consider this position. My
-point is that ‘good’ is a simple notion, just as ‘yellow’ is a simple
-notion; that, just as you cannot, by any manner of means, explain to
-any one who does not already know it, what yellow is, so you cannot
-explain what good is. Definitions of the kind that I was asking for,
-definitions which describe the real nature of the object or notion
-denoted by a word, and which do not merely tell us what the word is
-used to mean, are only possible when the object or notion in question
-is something complex. You can give a definition of a horse, because a
-horse has many different properties and qualities, all of which you
-can enumerate. But when you have enumerated them all, when you have
-reduced a horse to his simplest terms, then you can no longer define
-those terms. They are simply something which you think of or perceive,
-and to any one who cannot think of or perceive them, you can never, by
-any definition, make their nature known. It may perhaps be objected to
-this that we are able to describe to others, objects which they have
-never seen or thought of. We can, for instance, make a man understand
-what a chimaera is, although he has never heard of one or seen one. You
-can tell him that it is an animal with a lioness’s head and body, with
-a goat’s head growing from the middle of its back, and with a snake
-in place of a tail. But here the object which you are describing is a
-complex object; it is entirely composed of parts, with which we are
-all perfectly familiar&mdash;a snake, a goat, a lioness; and we know,
-too, the manner in which those parts are to be put together, because
-we know what is meant by the middle of a lioness’s back, and where her
-tail is wont to grow. And so it is with all objects, not previously
-known, which we are able to define: they are all complex; all
-composed of parts, which may themselves, in the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_8">[p. 8]</span> first instance, be capable of similar
-definition, but which must in the end be reducible to simplest parts,
-which can no longer be defined. But yellow and good, we say, are not
-complex: they are notions of that simple kind, out of which definitions
-are composed and with which the power of further defining ceases.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_8"><b>8.&emsp;</b>When we say, as Webster says, ‘The definition
-of horse is “A hoofed quadruped of the genus Equus,”’ we may, in
-fact, mean three different things. (1) We may mean merely: ‘When I
-say “horse,” you are to understand that I am talking about a hoofed
-quadruped of the genus Equus.’ This might be called the arbitrary
-verbal definition: and I do not mean that good is indefinable in that
-sense. (2) We may mean, as Webster ought to mean: ‘When most English
-people say “horse,” they mean a hoofed quadruped of the genus Equus.’
-This may be called the verbal definition proper, and I do not say that
-good is indefinable in this sense either; for it is certainly possible
-to discover how people use a word: otherwise, we could never have
-known that ‘good’ may be translated by ‘gut’ in German and by ‘bon’
-in French. But (3) we may, when we define horse, mean something much
-more important. We may mean that a certain object, which we all of us
-know, is composed in a certain manner: that it has four legs, a head, a
-heart, a liver, etc., etc., all of them arranged in definite relations
-to one another. It is in this sense that I deny good to be definable.
-I say that it is not composed of any parts, which we can substitute
-for it in our minds when we are thinking of it. We might think just as
-clearly and correctly about a horse, if we thought of all its parts and
-their arrangement instead of thinking of the whole: we could, I say,
-think how a horse differed from a donkey just as well, just as truly,
-in this way, as now we do, only not so easily; but there is nothing
-whatsoever which we could so substitute for good; and that is what I
-mean, when I say that good is indefinable.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_9"><b>9.&emsp;</b>But I am afraid I have still not removed the
-chief difficulty which may prevent acceptance of the proposition that
-good is indefinable. I do not mean to say that <i>the</i> good, that which
-is good, is thus indefinable; if I did think so, I should not<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[p. 9]</span> be writing on Ethics, for
-my main object is to help towards discovering that definition. It is
-just because I think there will be less risk of error in our search
-for a definition of ‘the good,’ that I am now insisting that <i>good</i> is
-indefinable. I must try to explain the difference between these two. I
-suppose it may be granted that ‘good’ is an adjective. Well ‘the good,’
-‘that which is good,’ must therefore be the substantive to which the
-adjective ‘good’ will apply: it must be the whole of that to which the
-adjective will apply, and the adjective must <i>always</i> truly apply to
-it. But if it is that to which the adjective will apply, it must be
-something different from that adjective itself; and the whole of that
-something different, whatever it is, will be our definition of <i>the</i>
-good. Now it may be that this something will have other adjectives,
-beside ‘good,’ that will apply to it. It may be full of pleasure, for
-example; it may be intelligent: and if these two adjectives are really
-part of its definition, then it will certainly be true, that pleasure
-and intelligence are good. And many people appear to think that, if we
-say ‘Pleasure and intelligence are good,’ or if we say ‘Only pleasure
-and intelligence are good,’ we are defining ‘good.’ Well, I cannot deny
-that propositions of this nature may sometimes be called definitions;
-I do not know well enough how the word is generally used to decide
-upon this point. I only wish it to be understood that that is not
-what I mean when I say there is no possible definition of good, and
-that I shall not mean this if I use the word again. I do most fully
-believe that some true proposition of the form ‘Intelligence is good
-and intelligence alone is good’ can be found; if none could be found,
-our definition of <i>the</i> good would be impossible. As it is, I believe
-<i>the</i> good to be definable; and yet I still say that good itself is
-indefinable.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_10"><b>10.&emsp;</b>‘Good,’ then, if we mean by it that quality
-which we assert to belong to a thing, when we say that the thing is
-good, is incapable of any definition, in the most important sense of
-that word. The most important sense of ‘definition’ is that in which a
-definition states what are the parts which invariably compose a certain
-whole; and in this sense ‘good’ has no definition because it is simple
-and has no parts. It is one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[p.
-10]</span> those innumerable objects of thought which are themselves
-incapable of definition, because they are the ultimate terms by
-reference to which whatever <i>is</i> capable of definition must be defined.
-That there must be an indefinite number of such terms is obvious, on
-reflection; since we cannot define anything except by an analysis,
-which, when carried as far as it will go, refers us to something, which
-is simply different from anything else, and which by that ultimate
-difference explains the peculiarity of the whole which we are defining:
-for every whole contains some parts which are common to other wholes
-also. There is, therefore, no intrinsic difficulty in the contention
-that ‘good’ denotes a simple and indefinable quality. There are many
-other instances of such qualities.</p>
-
-<p>Consider yellow, for example. We may try to define it, by describing
-its physical equivalent; we may state what kind of light-vibrations
-must stimulate the normal eye, in order that we may perceive it. But a
-moment’s reflection is sufficient to shew that those light-vibrations
-are not themselves what we mean by yellow. <i>They</i> are not what we
-perceive. Indeed we should never have been able to discover their
-existence, unless we had first been struck by the patent difference of
-quality between the different colours. The most we can be entitled to
-say of those vibrations is that they are what corresponds in space to
-the yellow which we actually perceive.</p>
-
-<p>Yet a mistake of this simple kind has commonly been made about
-‘good.’ It may be true that all things which are good are <i>also</i>
-something else, just as it is true that all things which are yellow
-produce a certain kind of vibration in the light. And it is a fact,
-that Ethics aims at discovering what are those other properties
-belonging to all things which are good. But far too many philosophers
-have thought that when they named those other properties they were
-actually defining good; that these properties, in fact, were simply
-not ‘other,’ but absolutely and entirely the same with goodness. This
-view I propose to call the ‘naturalistic fallacy’ and of it I shall now
-endeavour to dispose.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_11"><b>11.&emsp;</b>Let us consider what it is such philosophers
-say. And first it is to be noticed that they do not agree among
-themselves.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[p. 11]</span> They not
-only say that they are right as to what good is, but they endeavour to
-prove that other people who say that it is something else, are wrong.
-One, for instance, will affirm that good is pleasure, another, perhaps,
-that good is that which is desired; and each of these will argue
-eagerly to prove that the other is wrong. But how is that possible? One
-of them says that good is nothing but the object of desire, and at the
-same time tries to prove that it is not pleasure. But from his first
-assertion, that good just means the object of desire, one of two things
-must follow as regards his proof:</p>
-
-<p>(1) He may be trying to prove that the object of desire is not
-pleasure. But, if this be all, where is his Ethics? The position he is
-maintaining is merely a psychological one. Desire is something which
-occurs in our minds, and pleasure is something else which so occurs;
-and our would-be ethical philosopher is merely holding that the latter
-is not the object of the former. But what has that to do with the
-question in dispute? His opponent held the ethical proposition that
-pleasure was the good, and although he should prove a million times
-over the psychological proposition that pleasure is not the object of
-desire, he is no nearer proving his opponent to be wrong. The position
-is like this. One man says a triangle is a circle: another replies
-‘A triangle is a straight line, and I will prove to you that I am
-right: <i>for</i>’ (this is the only argument) ‘a straight line is not a
-circle.’ ‘That is quite true,’ the other may reply; ‘but nevertheless
-a triangle is a circle, and you have said nothing whatever to prove
-the contrary. What is proved is that one of us is wrong, for we agree
-that a triangle cannot be both a straight line and a circle: but which
-is wrong, there can be no earthly means of proving, since you define
-triangle as straight line and I define it as circle.’&mdash;Well, that
-is one alternative which any naturalistic Ethics has to face; if good
-is <i>defined</i> as something else, it is then impossible either to prove
-that any other definition is wrong or even to deny such definition.</p>
-
-<p>(2) The other alternative will scarcely be more welcome. It is
-that the discussion is after all a verbal one. When A says ‘Good
-means pleasant’ and B says ‘Good means desired,’ they may merely wish
-to assert that most people have used the word<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_12">[p. 12]</span> for what is pleasant and for what is
-desired respectively. And this is quite an interesting subject for
-discussion: only it is not a whit more an ethical discussion than the
-last was. Nor do I think that any exponent of naturalistic Ethics would
-be willing to allow that this was all he meant. They are all so anxious
-to persuade us that what they call the good is what we really ought
-to do. ‘Do, pray, act so, because the word “good” is generally used
-to denote actions of this nature’: such, on this view, would be the
-substance of their teaching. And in so far as they tell us how we ought
-to act, their teaching is truly ethical, as they mean it to be. But
-how perfectly absurd is the reason they would give for it! ‘You are to
-do this, because most people use a certain word to denote conduct such
-as this.’ ‘You are to say the thing which is not, because most people
-call it lying.’ That is an argument just as good!&mdash;My dear sirs,
-what we want to know from you as ethical teachers, is not how people
-use a word; it is not even, what kind of actions they approve, which
-the use of this word ‘good’ may certainly imply: what we want to know
-is simply what <i>is</i> good. We may indeed agree that what most people
-do think good, is actually so; we shall at all events be glad to know
-their opinions: but when we say their opinions about what <i>is</i> good, we
-do mean what we say; we do not care whether they call that thing which
-they mean ‘horse’ or ‘table’ or ‘chair,’ ‘gut’ or ‘bon’ or ‘ἀγαθός’; we
-want to know what it is that they so call. When they say ‘Pleasure is
-good,’ we cannot believe that they merely mean ‘Pleasure is pleasure’
-and nothing more than that.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_12"><b>12.&emsp;</b>Suppose a man says ‘I am pleased’; and
-suppose that is not a lie or a mistake but the truth. Well, if it is
-true, what does that mean? It means that his mind, a certain definite
-mind, distinguished by certain definite marks from all others, has
-at this moment a certain definite feeling called pleasure. ‘Pleased’
-<i>means</i> nothing but having pleasure, and though we may be more pleased
-or less pleased, and even, we may admit for the present, have one or
-another kind of pleasure; yet in so far as it is pleasure we have,
-whether there be more or less of it, and whether it be of one kind
-or another, what we have is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[p.
-13]</span> one definite thing, absolutely indefinable, some one thing
-that is the same in all the various degrees and in all the various
-kinds of it that there may be. We may be able to say how it is related
-to other things: that, for example, it is in the mind, that it causes
-desire, that we are conscious of it, etc., etc. We can, I say, describe
-its relations to other things, but define it we can <i>not</i>. And if
-anybody tried to define pleasure for us as being any other natural
-object; if anybody were to say, for instance, that pleasure <i>means</i> the
-sensation of red, and were to proceed to deduce from that that pleasure
-is a colour, we should be entitled to laugh at him and to distrust his
-future statements about pleasure. Well, that would be the same fallacy
-which I have called the naturalistic fallacy. That ‘pleased’ does not
-mean ‘having the sensation of red,’ or anything else whatever, does not
-prevent us from understanding what it does mean. It is enough for us to
-know that ‘pleased’ does mean ‘having the sensation of pleasure,’ and
-though pleasure is absolutely indefinable, though pleasure is pleasure
-and nothing else whatever, yet we feel no difficulty in saying that we
-are pleased. The reason is, of course, that when I say ‘I am pleased,’
-I do <i>not</i> mean that ‘I’ am the same thing as ‘having pleasure.’ And
-similarly no difficulty need be found in my saying that ‘pleasure
-is good’ and yet not meaning that ‘pleasure’ is the same thing as
-‘good,’ that pleasure <i>means</i> good, and that good <i>means</i> pleasure.
-If I were to imagine that when I said ‘I am pleased,’ I meant that
-I was exactly the same thing as ‘pleased,’ I should not indeed call
-that a naturalistic fallacy, although it would be the same fallacy
-as I have called naturalistic with reference to Ethics. The reason
-of this is obvious enough. When a man confuses two natural objects
-with one another, defining the one, by the other, if for instance,
-he confuses himself, who is one natural object, with ‘pleased’ or
-with ‘pleasure’ which are others, then there is no reason to call the
-fallacy naturalistic. But if he confuses ‘good,’ which is not in the
-same sense a natural object, with any natural object whatever, then
-there is a reason for calling that a naturalistic fallacy; its being
-made with regard to ‘good’ marks it as something quite specific, and
-this specific mistake deserves a name because it is so common.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[p. 14]</span> As for the reasons why good
-is not to be considered a natural object, they may be reserved for
-discussion in another place. But, for the present, it is sufficient to
-notice this: Even if it were a natural object, that would not alter
-the nature of the fallacy nor diminish its importance one whit. All
-that I have said about it would remain quite equally true: only the
-name which I have called it would not be so appropriate as I think
-it is. And I do not care about the name: what I do care about is the
-fallacy. It does not matter what we call it, provided we recognise it
-when we meet with it. It is to be met with in almost every book on
-Ethics; and yet it is not recognised: and that is why it is necessary
-to multiply illustrations of it, and convenient to give it a name.
-It is a very simple fallacy indeed. When we say that an orange is
-yellow, we do not think our statement binds us to hold that ‘orange’
-means nothing else than ‘yellow,’ or that nothing can be yellow but
-an orange. Supposing the orange is also sweet! Does that bind us to
-say that ‘sweet’ is exactly the same thing as ‘yellow,’ that ‘sweet’
-must be defined as ‘yellow’? And supposing it be recognised that
-‘yellow’ just means ‘yellow’ and nothing else whatever, does that make
-it any more difficult to hold that oranges are yellow? Most certainly
-it does not: on the contrary, it would be absolutely meaningless to
-say that oranges were yellow, unless yellow did in the end mean just
-‘yellow’ and nothing else whatever&mdash;unless it was absolutely
-indefinable. We should not get any very clear notion about things,
-which are yellow&mdash;we should not get very far with our science,
-if we were bound to hold that everything which was yellow, <i>meant</i>
-exactly the same thing as yellow. We should find we had to hold that
-an orange was exactly the same thing as a stool, a piece of paper, a
-lemon, anything you like. We could prove any number of absurdities; but
-should we be the nearer to the truth? Why, then, should it be different
-with ‘good’? Why, if good is good and indefinable, should I be held to
-deny that pleasure is good? Is there any difficulty in holding both to
-be true at once? On the contrary, there is no meaning in saying that
-pleasure is good, unless good is something different from pleasure. It
-is absolutely useless, so far as Ethics is concerned, to prove, as Mr
-Spencer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[p. 15]</span> tries to do,
-that increase of pleasure coincides with increase of life, unless good
-<i>means</i> something different from either life or pleasure. He might just
-as well try to prove that an orange is yellow by shewing that it always
-is wrapped up in paper.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_13"><b>13.&emsp;</b>In fact, if it is not the case that
-‘good’ denotes something simple and indefinable, only two alternatives
-are possible: either it is a complex, a given whole, about the
-correct analysis of which there may be disagreement; or else it
-means nothing at all, and there is no such subject as Ethics. In
-general, however, ethical philosophers have attempted to define good,
-without recognising what such an attempt must mean. They actually use
-arguments which involve one or both of the absurdities considered
-in <a href="#Sec_11">§&nbsp;11</a>. We are, therefore, justified in
-concluding that the attempt to define good is chiefly due to want of
-clearness as to the possible nature of definition. There are, in fact,
-only two serious alternatives to be considered, in order to establish
-the conclusion that ‘good’ does denote a simple and indefinable notion.
-It might possibly denote a complex, as ‘horse’ does; or it might have
-no meaning at all. Neither of these possibilities has, however, been
-clearly conceived and seriously maintained, as such, by those who
-presume to define good; and both may be dismissed by a simple appeal to
-facts.</p>
-
-<p>(1) The hypothesis that disagreement about the meaning of good is
-disagreement with regard to the correct analysis of a given whole,
-may be most plainly seen to be incorrect by consideration of the fact
-that, whatever definition be offered, it may be always asked, with
-significance, of the complex so defined, whether it is itself good.
-To take, for instance, one of the more plausible, because one of the
-more complicated, of such proposed definitions, it may easily be
-thought, at first sight, that to be good may mean to be that which we
-desire to desire. Thus if we apply this definition to a particular
-instance and say ‘When we think that A is good, we are thinking that
-A is one of the things which we desire to desire,’ our proposition
-may seem quite plausible. But, if we carry the investigation further,
-and ask ourselves ‘Is it good to desire to desire A?’ it is apparent,
-on a little reflection, that this question is itself as intelligible,
-as the original question ‘Is A good?’&mdash;that we are,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[p. 16]</span> in fact, now asking for
-exactly the same information about the desire to desire A, for which
-we formerly asked with regard to A itself. But it is also apparent
-that the meaning of this second question cannot be correctly analysed
-into ‘Is the desire to desire A one of the things which we desire to
-desire?’: we have not before our minds anything so complicated as the
-question ‘Do we desire to desire to desire to desire A?’ Moreover any
-one can easily convince himself by inspection that the predicate of
-this proposition&mdash;‘good’&mdash;is positively different from the
-notion of ‘desiring to desire’ which enters into its subject: ‘That we
-should desire to desire A is good’ is <i>not</i> merely equivalent to ‘That
-A should be good is good.’ It may indeed be true that what we desire to
-desire is always also good; perhaps, even the converse may be true: but
-it is very doubtful whether this is the case, and the mere fact that we
-understand very well what is meant by doubting it, shews clearly that
-we have two different notions before our minds.</p>
-
-<p>(2) And the same consideration is sufficient to dismiss the
-hypothesis that ‘good’ has no meaning whatsoever. It is very natural to
-make the mistake of supposing that what is universally true is of such
-a nature that its negation would be self-contradictory: the importance
-which has been assigned to analytic propositions in the history of
-philosophy shews how easy such a mistake is. And thus it is very easy
-to conclude that what seems to be a universal ethical principle is
-in fact an identical proposition; that, if, for example, whatever is
-called ‘good’ seems to be pleasant, the proposition ‘Pleasure is the
-good’ does not assert a connection between two different notions, but
-involves only one, that of pleasure, which is easily recognised as a
-distinct entity. But whoever will attentively consider with himself
-what is actually before his mind when he asks the question ‘Is pleasure
-(or whatever it may be) after all good?’ can easily satisfy himself
-that he is not merely wondering whether pleasure is pleasant. And if he
-will try this experiment with each suggested definition in succession,
-he may become expert enough to recognise that in every case he has
-before his mind a unique object, with regard to the connection of which
-with any other object, a distinct question may be asked. Every<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[p. 17]</span> one does in fact understand
-the question ‘Is this good?’ When he thinks of it, his state of mind
-is different from what it would be, were he asked ‘Is this pleasant,
-or desired, or approved?’ It has a distinct meaning for him, even
-though he may not recognise in what respect it is distinct. Whenever he
-thinks of ‘intrinsic value,’ or ‘intrinsic worth,’ or says that a thing
-‘ought to exist,’ he has before his mind the unique object&mdash;the
-unique property of things&mdash;which I mean by ‘good.’ Everybody is
-constantly aware of this notion, although he may never become aware at
-all that it is different from other notions of which he is also aware.
-But, for correct ethical reasoning, it is extremely important that he
-should become aware of this fact; and, as soon as the nature of the
-problem is clearly understood, there should be little difficulty in
-advancing so far in analysis.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_14"><b>14.&emsp;</b>‘Good,’ then, is indefinable; and yet, so far
-as I know, there is only one ethical writer, Prof. Henry Sidgwick, who
-has clearly recognised and stated this fact. We shall see, indeed, how
-far many of the most reputed ethical systems fall short of drawing the
-conclusions which follow from such a recognition. At present I will
-only quote one instance, which will serve to illustrate the meaning
-and importance of this principle that ‘good’ is indefinable, or, as
-Prof. Sidgwick says, an ‘unanalysable notion.’ It is an instance
-to which Prof. Sidgwick himself refers in a note on the passage,
-in which he argues that ‘ought’ is unanalysable<a id="FNanchor_2"
-href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bentham,’ says Sidgwick, ‘explains that his fundamental principle
-“states the greatest happiness of all those whose interest is in
-question as being the right and proper end of human action”’; and yet
-‘his language in other passages of the same chapter would seem to
-imply’ that he <i>means</i> by the word “right” “conducive to the general
-happiness.” Prof. Sidgwick sees that, if you take these two statements
-together, you get the absurd result that ‘greatest happiness is the end
-of human action, which is conducive to the general happiness’; and so
-absurd does it seem to him to call this result, as Bentham calls it,
-‘the fundamental principle of a moral system,’ that he suggests that
-Bentham cannot have meant it. Yet Prof. Sidgwick<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_18">[p. 18]</span> himself states elsewhere<a id="FNanchor_3"
-href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> that Psychological Hedonism
-is ‘not seldom confounded with Egoistic Hedonism’; and that confusion,
-as we shall see, rests chiefly on that same fallacy, the naturalistic
-fallacy, which is implied in Bentham’s statements. Prof. Sidgwick
-admits therefore that this fallacy is sometimes committed, absurd as it
-is; and I am inclined to think that Bentham may really have been one
-of those who committed it. Mill, as we shall see, certainly did commit
-it. In any case, whether Bentham committed it or not, his doctrine,
-as above quoted, will serve as a very good illustration of this
-fallacy, and of the importance of the contrary proposition that good is
-indefinable.</p>
-
-<p>Let us consider this doctrine. Bentham seems to imply, so Prof.
-Sidgwick says, that the word ‘right’ <i>means</i> ‘conducive to general
-happiness.’ Now this, by itself, need not necessarily involve
-the naturalistic fallacy. For the word ‘right’ is very commonly
-appropriated to actions which lead to the attainment of what
-is good; which are regarded as <i>means</i> to the ideal and not as
-ends-in-themselves. This use of ‘right,’ as denoting what is good as
-a means, whether or not it be also good as an end, is indeed the use
-to which I shall confine the word. Had Bentham been using ‘right’ in
-this sense, it might be perfectly consistent for him to <i>define</i> right
-as ‘conducive to the general happiness,’ <i>provided only</i> (and notice
-this proviso) he had already proved, or laid down as an axiom, that
-general happiness was <i>the</i> good, or (what is equivalent to this)
-that general happiness alone was good. For in that case he would have
-already defined <i>the</i> good as general happiness (a position perfectly
-consistent, as we have seen, with the contention that ‘good’ is
-indefinable), and, since right was to be defined as ‘conducive to <i>the</i>
-good,’ it would actually <i>mean</i> ‘conducive to general happiness.’
-But this method of escape from the charge of having committed the
-naturalistic fallacy has been closed by Bentham himself. For his
-fundamental principle is, we see, that the greatest happiness of all
-concerned is the <i>right</i> and proper <i>end</i> of human action. He applies
-the word ‘right,’ therefore, to the end, as such, not only to the
-means which are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[p. 19]</span>
-conducive to it; and, that being so, right can no longer be defined as
-‘conducive to the general happiness,’ without involving the fallacy
-in question. For now it is obvious that the definition of right as
-conducive to general happiness can be used by him in support of the
-fundamental principle that general happiness is the right end; instead
-of being itself derived from that principle. If right, by definition,
-means conducive to general happiness, then it is obvious that general
-happiness is the right end. It is not necessary now first to prove
-or assert that general happiness is the right end, before right is
-defined as conducive to general happiness&mdash;a perfectly valid
-procedure; but on the contrary the definition of right as conducive to
-general happiness proves general happiness to be the right end&mdash;a
-perfectly invalid procedure, since in this case the statement that
-‘general happiness is the right end of human action’ is not an ethical
-principle at all, but either, as we have seen, a proposition about the
-meaning of words, or else a proposition about the <i>nature</i> of general
-happiness, not about its rightness or goodness.</p>
-
-<p>Now, I do not wish the importance I assign to this fallacy to be
-misunderstood. The discovery of it does not at all refute Bentham’s
-contention that greatest happiness is the proper end of human action,
-if that be understood as an ethical proposition, as he undoubtedly
-intended it. That principle may be true all the same; we shall consider
-whether it is so in succeeding chapters. Bentham might have maintained
-it, as Professor Sidgwick does, even if the fallacy had been pointed
-out to him. What I am maintaining is that the <i>reasons</i> which he
-actually gives for his ethical proposition are fallacious ones so
-far as they consist in a definition of right. What I suggest is that
-he did not perceive them to be fallacious; that, if he had done so,
-he would have been led to seek for other reasons in support of his
-Utilitarianism; and that, had he sought for other reasons, he <i>might</i>
-have found none which he thought to be sufficient. In that case he
-would have changed his whole system&mdash;a most important consequence.
-It is undoubtedly also possible that he would have thought other
-reasons to be sufficient, and in that case his ethical system,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[p. 20]</span> in its main results, would
-still have stood. But, even in this latter case, his use of the fallacy
-would be a serious objection to him as an ethical philosopher. For
-it is the business of Ethics, I must insist, not only to obtain true
-results, but also to find valid reasons for them. The direct object
-of Ethics is knowledge and not practice; and any one who uses the
-naturalistic fallacy has certainly not fulfilled this first object,
-however correct his practical principles may be.</p>
-
-<p>My objections to Naturalism are then, in the first place, that it
-offers no reason at all, far less any valid reason, for any ethical
-principle whatever; and in this it already fails to satisfy the
-requirements of Ethics, as a scientific study. But in the second place
-I contend that, though it gives a reason for no ethical principle, it
-is a <i>cause</i> of the acceptance of false principles&mdash;it deludes
-the mind into accepting ethical principles, which are false; and in
-this it is contrary to every aim of Ethics. It is easy to see that if
-we start with a definition of right conduct as conduct conducive to
-general happiness; then, knowing that right conduct is universally
-conduct conducive to the good, we very easily arrive at the result
-that the good is general happiness. If, on the other hand, we once
-recognise that we must start our Ethics without a definition, we
-shall be much more apt to look about us, before we adopt any ethical
-principle whatever; and the more we look about us, the less likely
-are we to adopt a false one. It may be replied to this: Yes, but we
-shall look about us just as much, before we settle on our definition,
-and are therefore just as likely to be right. But I will try to shew
-that this is not the case. If we start with the conviction that a
-definition of good can be found, we start with the conviction that
-good <i>can mean</i> nothing else than some one property of things; and
-our only business will then be to discover what that property is. But
-if we recognise that, so far as the meaning of good goes, anything
-whatever may be good, we start with a much more open mind. Moreover,
-apart from the fact that, when we think we have a definition, we cannot
-logically defend our ethical principles in any way whatever, we shall
-also be much less apt to defend them well, even if illogically. For
-we shall start with the conviction that good<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_21">[p. 21]</span> must mean so and so, and shall therefore
-be inclined either to misunderstand our opponent’s arguments or to cut
-them short with the reply, ‘This is not an open question: the very
-meaning of the word decides it; no one can think otherwise except
-through confusion.’</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_15"><b>15.&emsp;</b>Our first conclusion as to the
-subject-matter of Ethics is, then, that there is a simple, indefinable,
-unanalysable object of thought by reference to which it must be
-defined. By what name we call this unique object is a matter of
-indifference, so long as we clearly recognise what it is and that it
-does differ from other objects. The words which are commonly taken
-as the signs of ethical judgments all do refer to it; and they are
-expressions of ethical judgments solely because they do so refer.
-But they may refer to it in two different ways, which it is very
-important to distinguish, if we are to have a complete definition of
-the range of ethical judgments. Before I proceeded to argue that there
-was such an indefinable notion involved in ethical notions, I stated
-(<a href="#Sec_4">§&nbsp;4</a>) that it was necessary for Ethics
-to enumerate all true universal judgments, asserting that such and
-such a thing was good, whenever it occurred. But, although all such
-judgments do refer to that unique notion which I have called ‘good,’
-they do not all refer to it in the same way. They may either assert
-that this unique property does always attach to the thing in question,
-or else they may assert only that the thing in question is <i>a cause
-or necessary condition</i> for the existence of other things to which
-this unique property does attach. The nature of these two species of
-universal ethical judgments is extremely different; and a great part of
-the difficulties, which are met with in ordinary ethical speculation,
-are due to the failure to distinguish them clearly. Their difference
-has, indeed, received expression in ordinary language by the contrast
-between the terms ‘good as means’ and ‘good in itself,’ ‘value as a
-means’ and ‘intrinsic value.’ But these terms are apt to be applied
-correctly only in the more obvious instances; and this seems to be
-due to the fact that the distinction between the conceptions which
-they denote has not been made a separate object of investigation. This
-distinction may be briefly pointed out as follows.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[p. 22]</span></p>
-<p id="Sec_16"><b>16.&emsp;</b>Whenever we judge that a thing is ‘good
-as a means,’ we are making a judgment with regard to its causal
-relations: we judge <i>both</i> that it will have a particular kind of
-effect, <i>and</i> that that effect will be good in itself. But to find
-causal judgments that are universally true is notoriously a matter
-of extreme difficulty. The late date at which most of the physical
-sciences became exact, and the comparative fewness of the laws which
-they have succeeded in establishing even now, are sufficient proofs
-of this difficulty. With regard, then, to what are the most frequent
-objects of ethical judgments, namely actions, it is obvious that we
-cannot be satisfied that any of our universal causal judgments are
-true, even in the sense in which scientific laws are so. We cannot
-even discover hypothetical laws of the form ‘Exactly this action will
-always, under these conditions, produce exactly that effect.’ But
-for a correct ethical judgment with regard to the effects of certain
-actions we require more than this in two respects. (1) We require
-to know that a given action will produce a certain effect, <i>under
-whatever circumstances it occurs</i>. But this is certainly impossible.
-It is certain that in different circumstances the same action may
-produce effects which are utterly different in all respects upon which
-the value of the effects depends. Hence we can never be entitled
-to more than a <i>generalisation</i>&mdash;to a proposition of the form
-‘This result <i>generally</i> follows this kind of action’; and even this
-generalisation will only be true, if the circumstances under which the
-action occurs are generally the same. This is in fact the case, to a
-great extent, within any one particular age and state of society. But,
-when we take other ages into account, in many most important cases the
-normal circumstances of a given kind of action will be so different,
-that the generalisation which is true for one will not be true for
-another. With regard then to ethical judgments which assert that a
-certain kind of action is good as a means to a certain kind of effect,
-none will be <i>universally</i> true; and many, though <i>generally</i> true
-at one period, will be generally false at others. But (2) we require
-to know not only that <i>one</i> good effect will be produced, but that,
-among all subsequent events affected by the action in question, the
-balance of good will be greater<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[p.
-23]</span> than if any other possible action had been performed. In
-other words, to judge that an action is generally a means to good is
-to judge not only that it generally does <i>some</i> good, but that it
-generally does the greatest good of which the circumstances admit. In
-this respect ethical judgments about the effects of action involve a
-difficulty and a complication far greater than that involved in the
-establishment of scientific laws. For the latter we need only consider
-a single effect; for the former it is essential to consider not only
-this, but the effects of that effect, and so on as far as our view
-into the future can reach. It is, indeed, obvious that our view can
-never reach far enough for us to be certain that any action will
-produce the best possible effects. We must be content, if the greatest
-possible balance of good seems to be produced within a limited period.
-But it is important to notice that the whole series of effects within
-a period of considerable length is actually taken account of in our
-common judgments that an action is good as a means; and that hence
-this additional complication, which makes ethical generalisations so
-far more difficult to establish than scientific laws, is one which is
-involved in actual ethical discussions, and is of practical importance.
-The commonest rules of conduct involve such considerations as the
-balancing of future bad health against immediate gains; and even if we
-can never settle with any certainty how we shall secure the greatest
-possible total of good, we try at least to assure ourselves that
-probable future evils will not be greater than the immediate good.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_17"><b>17.&emsp;</b>There are, then, judgments which state that
-certain kinds of things have good effects; and such judgments, for
-the reasons just given, have the important characteristics (1) that
-they are unlikely to be true, if they state that the kind of thing in
-question <i>always</i> has good effects, and (2) that, even if they only
-state that it <i>generally</i> has good effects, many of them will only be
-true of certain periods in the world’s history. On the other hand there
-are judgments which state that certain kinds of things are themselves
-good; and these differ from the last in that, if true at all, they are
-all of them universally true. It is, therefore, extremely important
-to distinguish these two kinds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[p.
-24]</span> of possible judgments. Both may be expressed in the same
-language: in both cases we commonly say ‘Such and such a thing is
-good.’ But in the one case ‘good’ will mean ‘good as means,’ <i>i.e.</i>
-merely that the thing is a means to good&mdash;will have good effects:
-in the other case it will mean ‘good as end’&mdash;we shall be judging
-that the thing itself has the property which, in the first case, we
-asserted only to belong to its effects. It is plain that these are
-very different assertions to make about a thing; it is plain that
-either or both of them may be made, both truly and falsely, about all
-manner of things; and it is certain that unless we are clear as to
-which of the two we mean to assert, we shall have a very poor chance
-of deciding rightly whether our assertion is true or false. It is
-precisely this clearness as to the meaning of the question asked which
-has hitherto been almost entirely lacking in ethical speculation.
-Ethics has always been predominantly concerned with the investigation
-of a limited class of actions. With regard to these we may ask <i>both</i>
-how far they are good in themselves <i>and</i> how far they have a general
-tendency to produce good results. And the arguments brought forward
-in ethical discussion have always been of both classes&mdash;both
-such as would prove the conduct in question to be good in itself and
-such as would prove it to be good as a means. But that these are
-the only questions which any ethical discussion can have to settle,
-and that to settle the one is <i>not</i> the same thing as to settle the
-other&mdash;these two fundamental facts have in general escaped the
-notice of ethical philosophers. Ethical questions are commonly asked
-in an ambiguous form. It is asked ‘What is a man’s duty under these
-circumstances?’ or ‘Is it right to act in this way?’ or ‘What ought we
-to aim at securing?’ But all these questions are capable of further
-analysis; a correct answer to any of them involves both judgments of
-what is good in itself and causal judgments. This is implied even
-by those who maintain that we have a direct and immediate judgment
-of absolute rights and duties. Such a judgment can only mean that
-the course of action in question is <i>the</i> best thing to do; that, by
-acting so, every good that <i>can</i> be secured will have been secured.
-Now we are not concerned with the question whether such a judgment
-will ever be true.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[p. 25]</span>
-The question is: What does it imply, if it is true? And the only
-possible answer is that, whether true or false, it implies both a
-proposition as to the degree of goodness of the action in question,
-as compared with other things, and a number of causal propositions.
-For it cannot be denied that the action will have consequences: and
-to deny that the consequences matter is to make a judgment of their
-intrinsic value, as compared with the action itself. In asserting
-that the action is <i>the</i> best thing to do, we assert that it together
-with its consequences presents a greater sum of intrinsic value than
-any possible alternative. And this condition may be realised by any
-of the three cases:&mdash;(<i>a</i>) If the action itself has greater
-intrinsic value than any alternative, whereas both its consequences and
-those of the alternatives are absolutely devoid either of intrinsic
-merit or intrinsic demerit; or (<i>b</i>) if, though its consequences are
-intrinsically bad, the balance of intrinsic value is greater than
-would be produced by any alternative; or (<i>c</i>) if, its consequences
-being intrinsically good, the degree of value belonging to them and it
-conjointly is greater than that of any alternative series. In short, to
-assert that a certain line of conduct is, at a given time, absolutely
-right or obligatory, is obviously to assert that more good or less evil
-will exist in the world, if it be adopted, than if anything else be
-done instead. But this implies a judgment as to the value both of its
-own consequences and of those of any possible alternative. And that an
-action will have such and such consequences involves a number of causal
-judgments.</p>
-
-<p>Similarly, in answering the question ‘What ought we to aim at
-securing?’ causal judgments are again involved, but in a somewhat
-different way. We are liable to forget, because it is so obvious,
-that this question can never be answered correctly except by naming
-something which <i>can</i> be secured. Not everything can be secured; and,
-even if we judge that nothing which cannot be obtained would be of
-equal value with that which can, the possibility of the latter, as
-well as its value, is essential to its being a proper end of action.
-Accordingly neither our judgments as to what actions we ought to
-perform, nor even our judgments as to the ends which they ought
-to produce, are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[p. 26]</span>
-pure judgments of intrinsic value. With regard to the former, an
-action which is absolutely obligatory <i>may</i> have no intrinsic value
-whatsoever; that it is perfectly virtuous may mean merely that it
-causes the best possible effects. And with regard to the latter,
-these best possible results which justify our action can, in any
-case, have only so much of intrinsic value as the laws of nature
-allow us to secure; and they in their turn <i>may</i> have no intrinsic
-value whatsoever, but may merely be a means to the attainment (in a
-still further future) of something that has such value. Whenever,
-therefore, we ask ‘What ought we to do?’ or ‘What ought we to try to
-get?’ we are asking questions which involve a correct answer to two
-others, completely different in kind from one another. We must know
-<i>both</i> what degree of intrinsic value different things have, <i>and</i>
-how these different things may be obtained. But the vast majority of
-questions which have actually been discussed in Ethics&mdash;<i>all</i>
-practical questions, indeed&mdash;involve this double knowledge; and
-they have been discussed without any clear separation of the two
-distinct questions involved. A great part of the vast disagreements
-prevalent in Ethics is to be attributed to this failure in analysis.
-By the use of conceptions which involve both that of intrinsic value
-and that of causal relation, as if they involved intrinsic value only,
-two different errors have been rendered almost universal. Either it
-is assumed that nothing has intrinsic value which is not possible, or
-else it is assumed that what is necessary must have intrinsic value.
-Hence the primary and peculiar business of Ethics, the determination
-what things have intrinsic value and in what degrees, has received
-no adequate treatment at all. And on the other hand a <i>thorough</i>
-discussion of means has been also largely neglected, owing to an
-obscure perception of the truth that it is perfectly irrelevant to the
-question of intrinsic values. But however this may be, and however
-strongly any particular reader may be convinced that some one of the
-mutually contradictory systems which hold the field has given a correct
-answer either to the question what has intrinsic value, or to the
-question what we ought to do, or to both, it must at least be admitted
-that the questions what is best in itself and what will bring about the
-best possible, are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[p. 27]</span>
-utterly distinct; that both belong to the actual subject-matter of
-Ethics; and that the more clearly distinct questions are distinguished,
-the better is our chance of answering both correctly.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_18"><b>18.&emsp;</b>There remains one point which must not be
-omitted in a complete description of the kind of questions which Ethics
-has to answer. The main division of those questions is, as I have said,
-into two; the question what things are good in themselves, and the
-question to what other things these are related as effects. The first
-of these, which is the primary ethical question and is presupposed by
-the other, includes a correct comparison of the various things which
-have intrinsic value (if there are many such) in respect of the degree
-of value which they have; and such comparison involves a difficulty of
-principle which has greatly aided the confusion of intrinsic value with
-mere ‘goodness as a means.’ It has been pointed out that one difference
-between a judgment which asserts that a thing is good in itself, and a
-judgment which asserts that it is a means to good, consists in the fact
-that the first, if true of one instance of the thing in question, is
-necessarily true of all; whereas a thing which has good effects under
-some circumstances may have bad ones under others. Now it is certainly
-true that all judgments of intrinsic value are in this sense universal;
-but the principle which I have now to enunciate may easily make it
-appear as if they were not so but resembled the judgment of means in
-being merely general. There is, as will presently be maintained, a
-vast number of different things, each of which has intrinsic value;
-there are also very many which are positively bad; and there is a still
-larger class of things, which appear to be indifferent. But a thing
-belonging to any of these three classes may occur as part of a whole,
-which includes among its other parts other things belonging both to
-the same and to the other two classes; and these wholes, as such, may
-also have intrinsic value. The paradox, to which it is necessary to
-call attention, is that <i>the value of such a whole bears no regular
-proportion to the sum of the values of its parts</i>. It is certain
-that a good thing may exist in such a relation to another good thing
-that the value of the whole thus formed is immensely greater<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[p. 28]</span> than the sum of the values
-of the two good things. It is certain that a whole formed of a good
-thing and an indifferent thing may have immensely greater value than
-that good thing itself possesses. It is certain that two bad things
-or a bad thing and an indifferent thing may form a whole much worse
-than the sum of badness of its parts. And it seems as if indifferent
-things may also be the sole constituents of a whole which has great
-value, either positive or negative. Whether the addition of a bad thing
-to a good whole may increase the positive value of the whole, or the
-addition of a bad thing to a bad may produce a whole having positive
-value, may seem more doubtful; but it is, at least, possible, and this
-possibility must be taken into account in our ethical investigations.
-However we may decide particular questions, the principle is clear.
-<i>The value of a whole must not be assumed to be the same as the sum of
-the values of its parts.</i></p>
-
-<p>A single instance will suffice to illustrate the kind of relation
-in question. It seems to be true that to be conscious of a beautiful
-object is a thing of great intrinsic value; whereas the same object, if
-no one be conscious of it, has certainly comparatively little value,
-and is commonly held to have none at all. But the consciousness of a
-beautiful object is certainly a whole of some sort in which we can
-distinguish as parts the object on the one hand and the being conscious
-on the other. Now this latter factor occurs as part of a different
-whole, whenever we are conscious of anything; and it would seem that
-some of these wholes have at all events very little value, and may
-even be indifferent or positively bad. Yet we cannot always attribute
-the slightness of their value to any positive demerit in the object
-which differentiates them from the consciousness of beauty; the object
-itself may approach as near as possible to absolute neutrality. Since,
-therefore, mere consciousness does not always confer great value upon
-the whole of which it forms a part, even though its object may have
-no great demerit, we cannot attribute the great superiority of the
-consciousness of a beautiful thing over the beautiful thing itself
-to the mere addition of the value of consciousness to that of the
-beautiful thing. Whatever the intrinsic value of consciousness may be,
-it does not give to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[p. 29]</span>
-the whole of which it forms a part a value proportioned to the sum
-of its value and that of its object. If this be so, we have here an
-instance of a whole possessing a different intrinsic value from the sum
-of that of its parts; and whether it be so or not, what is meant by
-such a difference is illustrated by this case.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_19"><b>19.&emsp;</b>There are, then, wholes which possess the
-property that their value is different from the sum of the values of
-their parts; and the relations which subsist between such parts and
-the whole of which they form a part have not hitherto been distinctly
-recognised or received a separate name. Two points are especially
-worthy of notice. (1) It is plain that the existence of any such
-part is a necessary condition for the existence of that good which
-is constituted by the whole. And exactly the same language will also
-express the relation between a means and the good thing which is its
-effect. But yet there is a most important difference between the two
-cases, constituted by the fact that the part is, whereas the means is
-not, a part of the good thing for the existence of which its existence
-is a necessary condition. The necessity by which, if the good in
-question is to exist, the means to it must exist is merely a natural
-or causal necessity. If the laws of nature were different, exactly
-the same good might exist, although what is now a necessary condition
-of its existence did not exist. The existence of the means has no
-intrinsic value; and its utter annihilation would leave the value of
-that which it is now necessary to secure entirely unchanged. But in
-the case of a part of such a whole as we are now considering, it is
-otherwise. In this case the good in question cannot conceivably exist,
-unless the part exist also. The necessity which connects the two is
-quite independent of natural law. What is asserted to have intrinsic
-value is the existence of the whole; and the existence of the whole
-includes the existence of its part. Suppose the part removed, and what
-remains is <i>not</i> what was asserted to have intrinsic value; but if
-we suppose a means removed, what remains is just what <i>was</i> asserted
-to have intrinsic value. And yet (2) the existence of the part may
-<i>itself</i> have no more intrinsic value than that of the means. It is
-this fact which constitutes the paradox of the relation which we are
-discussing.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[p. 30]</span> It has
-just been said that what has intrinsic value is the existence of the
-whole, and that this includes the existence of the part; and from this
-it would seem a natural inference that the existence of the part has
-intrinsic value. But the inference would be as false as if we were to
-conclude that, because the number of two stones was two, each of the
-stones was also two. The part of a valuable whole retains exactly the
-same value when it is, as when it is not, a part of that whole. If it
-had value under other circumstances, its value is not any greater,
-when it is part of a far more valuable whole; and if it had no value
-by itself, it has none still, however great be that of the whole of
-which it now forms a part. We are not then justified in asserting that
-one and the same thing is under some circumstances intrinsically good,
-and under others not so; as we are justified in asserting of a means
-that it sometimes does and sometimes does not produce good results. And
-yet we are justified in asserting that it is far more desirable that a
-certain thing should exist under some circumstances than under others;
-namely when other things will exist in such relations to it as to form
-a more valuable whole. <i>It</i> will not have more intrinsic value under
-these circumstances than under others; <i>it</i> will not necessarily even
-be a means to the existence of things having more intrinsic value: but
-it will, like a means, be a necessary condition for the existence of
-that which <i>has</i> greater intrinsic value, although, unlike a means, it
-will itself form a part of this more valuable existent.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-<p id="Sec_20"><b>20.&emsp;</b>I have said that the peculiar relation
-between part and whole which I have just been trying to define is one
-which has received no separate name. It would, however, be useful
-that it should have one; and there is a name, which might well be
-appropriated to it, if only it could be divorced from its present
-unfortunate usage. Philosophers, especially those who profess to have
-derived great benefit from the writings of Hegel, have latterly made
-much use of the terms ‘organic whole,’ ‘organic unity,’ ‘organic
-relation.’ The reason why these terms might well be appropriated to the
-use suggested is that the peculiar relation of parts to whole, just
-defined, is one of the properties which distinguishes the wholes to
-which they are actually applied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[p.
-31]</span> with the greatest frequency. And the reason why it is
-desirable that they should be divorced from their present usage is
-that, as at present used, they have no distinct sense and, on the
-contrary, both imply and propagate errors of confusion.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>To say that a thing is an ‘organic whole’ is generally understood
-to imply that its parts are related to one another and to itself
-as means to end; it is also understood to imply that they have a
-property described in some such phrase as that they have ‘no meaning
-or significance apart from the whole’; and finally such a whole is
-also treated as if it had the property to which I am proposing that
-the name should be confined. But those who use the term give us, in
-general, no hint as to how they suppose these three properties to be
-related to one another. It seems generally to be assumed that they are
-identical; and always, at least, that they are necessarily connected
-with one another. That they are not identical I have already tried to
-shew; to suppose them so is to neglect the very distinctions pointed
-out in the last paragraph; and the usage might well be discontinued
-merely because it encourages such neglect. But a still more cogent
-reason for its discontinuance is that, so far from being necessarily
-connected, the second is a property which can attach to nothing, being
-a self-contradictory conception; whereas the first, if we insist on its
-most important sense, applies to many cases, to which we have no reason
-to think that the third applies also, and the third certainly applies
-to many to which the first does not apply.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_21"><b>21.&emsp;</b>These relations between the three properties
-just distinguished may be illustrated by reference to a whole of the
-kind from which the name ‘organic’ was derived&mdash;a whole which is
-an organism in the scientific sense&mdash;namely the human body.</p>
-
-<p>(1) There exists between many parts of our body (though not between
-all) a relation which has been familiarised by the fable, attributed
-to Menenius Agrippa, concerning the belly and its members. We can
-find in it parts such that the continued existence of the one is a
-necessary condition for the continued existence of the other; while
-the continued existence of this latter is also a necessary condition
-for the continued existence of the former. This amounts to no more
-than saying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[p. 32]</span> that
-in the body we have instances of two things, both enduring for some
-time, which have a relation of mutual causal dependence on one
-another&mdash;a relation of ‘reciprocity.’ Frequently no more than
-this is meant by saying that the parts of the body form an ‘organic
-unity,’ or that they are mutually means and ends to one another. And
-we certainly have here a striking characteristic of living things.
-But it would be extremely rash to assert that this relation of mutual
-causal dependence was only exhibited by living things and hence was
-sufficient to define their peculiarity. And it is obvious that of two
-things which have this relation of mutual dependence, neither may have
-intrinsic value, or one may have it and the other lack it. They are not
-necessarily ‘ends’ to one another in any sense except that in which
-‘end’ means ‘effect.’ And moreover it is plain that in this sense the
-whole cannot be an end to any of its parts. We are apt to talk of ‘the
-whole’ in contrast to one of its parts, when in fact we mean only <i>the
-rest</i> of the parts. But strictly the whole must include all its parts
-and no part can be a cause of the whole, because it cannot be a cause
-of itself. It is plain, therefore, that this relation of mutual causal
-dependence implies nothing with regard to the value of either of the
-objects which have it; and that, even if both of them happen also to
-have value, this relation between them is one which cannot hold between
-part and whole.</p>
-
-<p>But (2) it may also be the case that our body as a whole has a value
-greater than the sum of values of its parts; and this may be what is
-meant when it is said that the parts are means to the whole. It is
-obvious that if we ask the question ‘Why <i>should</i> the parts be such
-as they are?’ a proper answer may be ‘Because the whole they form has
-so much value.’ But it is equally obvious that the relation which we
-thus assert to exist between part and whole is quite different from
-that which we assert to exist between part and part when we say ‘This
-part exists, because that one could not exist without it.’ In the
-latter case we assert the two parts to be causally connected; but,
-in the former, part and whole cannot be causally connected, and the
-relation which we assert to exist between them may exist even though
-the parts are not causally connected either.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_33">[p. 33]</span> All the parts of a picture do not have
-that relation of mutual causal dependence, which certain parts of the
-body have, and yet the existence of those which do not have it may be
-absolutely essential to the value of the whole. The two relations are
-quite distinct in kind, and we cannot infer the existence of the one
-from that of the other. It can, therefore, serve no useful purpose
-to include them both under the same name; and if we are to say that
-a whole is organic because its parts are (in this sense) ‘means’ to
-the whole, we must <i>not</i> say that it is organic because its parts are
-causally dependent on one another.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_22"><b>22.&emsp;</b>But finally (3) the sense which has been
-most prominent in recent uses of the term ‘organic whole’ is one
-whereby it asserts the parts of such a whole to have a property which
-the parts of no whole can possibly have. It is supposed that just as
-the whole would not be what it is but for the existence of the parts,
-so the parts would not be what they are but for the existence of the
-whole; and this is understood to mean not merely that any particular
-part could not exist unless the others existed too (which is the case
-where relation (1) exists between the parts), but actually that the
-part is no distinct object of thought&mdash;that the whole, of which
-it is a part, is in its turn a part of it. That this supposition is
-self-contradictory a very little reflection should be sufficient to
-shew. We may admit, indeed, that when a particular thing is a part
-of a whole, it does possess a predicate which it would not otherwise
-possess&mdash;namely that it is a part of that whole. But what cannot
-be admitted is that this predicate alters the nature or enters into
-the definition of the thing which has it. When we think of the part
-<i>itself</i>, we mean just <i>that which</i> we assert, in this case, to <i>have</i>
-the predicate that it is part of the whole; and the mere assertion that
-<i>it</i> is a part of the whole involves that it should itself be distinct
-from that which we assert of it. Otherwise we contradict ourselves
-since we assert that, not <i>it</i>, but something else&mdash;namely it
-together with that which we assert of it&mdash;has the predicate
-which we assert of it. In short, it is obvious that no part contains
-analytically the whole to which it belongs, or any other parts of that
-whole. The relation of part to whole is <i>not</i> the same as that of whole
-to part; and the very definition<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[p.
-34]</span> of the latter is that it does contain analytically that
-which is said to be its part. And yet this very self-contradictory
-doctrine is the chief mark which shews the influence of Hegel upon
-modern philosophy&mdash;an influence which pervades almost the whole
-of orthodox philosophy. This is what is generally implied by the cry
-against falsification by abstraction: that a whole is always a part of
-its part! ‘If you want to know the truth about a part,’ we are told,
-‘you must consider <i>not</i> that part, but something else&mdash;namely
-the whole: <i>nothing</i> is true of the part, but only of the whole.’ Yet
-plainly it must be true of the part at least that it is a part of the
-whole; and it is obvious that when we say it is, we do <i>not</i> mean
-merely that the whole is a part of itself. This doctrine, therefore,
-that a part can have ‘no meaning or significance apart from its whole’
-must be utterly rejected. It implies itself that the statement ‘This is
-a part of that whole’ has a meaning; and in order that this may have
-one, both subject and predicate must have a distinct meaning. And it is
-easy to see how this false doctrine has arisen by confusion with the
-two relations (1) and (2) which may really be properties of wholes.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) The <i>existence</i> of a part may be connected by a natural or
-causal necessity with the existence of the other parts of its whole;
-and further what is a part of a whole and what has ceased to be such
-a part, although differing intrinsically from one another, may be
-called by one and the same name. Thus, to take a typical example, if
-an arm be cut off from the human body, we still call it an arm. Yet an
-arm, when it is a part of the body, undoubtedly differs from a dead
-arm: and hence we may easily be led to say ‘The arm which is a part
-of the body would not be what it is, if it were not such a part,’
-and to think that the contradiction thus expressed is in reality a
-characteristic of things. But, in fact, the dead arm never was a part
-of the body; it is only <i>partially</i> identical with the living arm.
-Those parts of it which are identical with parts of the living arm
-are exactly the same, whether they belong to the body or not; and in
-them we have an undeniable instance of one and the same thing at one
-time forming a part, and at another not forming a part of the presumed
-‘organic whole.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[p. 35]</span>’ On
-the other hand those properties which <i>are</i> possessed by the living,
-and <i>not</i> by the dead, arm, do not exist in a changed form in the
-latter: they simply do not exist there <i>at all</i>. By a causal necessity
-their existence depends on their having that relation to the other
-parts of the body which we express by saying that they form part of
-it. Yet, most certainly, <i>if</i> they ever did not form part of the body,
-they <i>would</i> be exactly what they are when they do. That they differ
-intrinsically from the properties of the dead arm and that they form
-part of the body are propositions not analytically related to one
-another. There is no contradiction in supposing them to retain such
-intrinsic differences and yet not to form part of the body.</p>
-
-<p>But (<i>b</i>) when we are told that a living arm has no <i>meaning</i> or
-<i>significance</i> apart from the body to which it belongs, a different
-fallacy is also suggested. ‘To have meaning or significance’ is
-commonly used in the sense of ‘to have importance’; and this again
-means ‘to have value either as a means or as an end.’ Now it is quite
-possible that even a living arm, apart from its body, would have no
-intrinsic value whatever; although the whole of which it is a part
-has great intrinsic value owing to its presence. Thus we may easily
-come to say that, <i>as</i> a part of the body, it has great value, whereas
-<i>by itself</i> it would have none; and thus that its whole ‘meaning’
-lies in its relation to the body. But in fact the value in question
-obviously does not belong to <i>it</i> at all. To have value merely as a
-part is equivalent to having no value at all, but merely being a part
-of that which has it. Owing, however, to neglect of this distinction,
-the assertion that a part has value, <i>as a part</i>, which it would
-not otherwise have, easily leads to the assumption that it is also
-different, as a part, from what it would otherwise be; for it is, in
-fact, true that two things which have a different value must also
-differ in other respects. Hence the assumption that one and the same
-thing, because it is a part of a more valuable whole at one time than
-at another, therefore has more intrinsic value at one time than at
-another, has encouraged the self-contradictory belief that one and the
-same thing may be two different things, and that only in one of its
-forms is it truly what it is.</p>
-
-<p>For these reasons, I shall, where it seems convenient, take<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[p. 36]</span> the liberty to use the term
-‘organic’ with a special sense. I shall use it to denote the fact that
-a whole has an intrinsic value different in amount from the sum of the
-values of its parts. I shall use it to denote this and only this. The
-term will not imply any causal relation whatever between the parts of
-the whole in question. And it will not imply either, that the parts are
-inconceivable except as parts of that whole, or that, when they form
-parts of such a whole, they have a value different from that which they
-would have if they did not. Understood in this special and perfectly
-definite sense the relation of an organic whole to its parts is one of
-the most important which Ethics has to recognise. A chief part of that
-science should be occupied in comparing the relative values of various
-goods; and the grossest errors will be committed in such comparison if
-it be assumed that wherever two things form a whole, the value of that
-whole is merely the sum of the values of those two things. With this
-question of ‘organic wholes,’ then, we complete the enumeration of the
-kind of problems, with which it is the business of Ethics to deal.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_23"><b>23.&emsp;</b>In this chapter I have endeavoured to enforce
-the following conclusions. (1) The peculiarity of Ethics is not that it
-investigates assertions about human conduct, but that it investigates
-assertions about that property of things which is denoted by the
-term ‘good,’ and the converse property denoted by the term ‘bad.’ It
-must, in order to establish its conclusions, investigate the truth of
-<i>all</i> such assertions, <i>except</i> those which assert the relation of
-this property only to a single existent (1-4). (2) This property, by
-reference to which the subject-matter of Ethics must be defined, is
-itself simple and indefinable (5-14). And (3) all assertions about its
-relation to other things are of two, and only two, kinds: they either
-assert in what degree things themselves possess this property, or else
-they assert causal relations between other things and those which
-possess it (15-17). Finally, (4) in considering the different degrees
-in which things themselves possess this property, we have to take
-account of the fact that a whole may possess it in a degree different
-from that which is obtained by summing the degrees in which its parts
-possess it (18-22).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[p. 37]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak" title="CHAPTER II. NATURALISTIC ETHICS.">CHAPTER II.</h2>
- <p class="subh2">NATURALISTIC ETHICS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p id="Sec_24"><b>24.&emsp;</b><span class="smcap">It</span> results
-from the conclusions of Chapter I, that all ethical questions fall
-under one or other of three classes. The first class contains but
-one question&mdash;the question What is the nature of that peculiar
-predicate, the relation of which to other things constitutes the
-object of all other ethical investigations? or, in other words, What
-is <i>meant</i> by good? This first question I have already attempted to
-answer. The peculiar predicate, by reference to which the sphere of
-Ethics must be defined, is simple, unanalysable, indefinable. There
-remain two classes of questions with regard to the relation of this
-predicate to other things. We may ask either (1) To what things and
-in what degree does this predicate directly attach? What things are
-good in themselves? or (2) By what means shall we be able to make what
-exists in the world as good as possible? What causal relations hold
-between what is best in itself and other things?</p>
-
-<p>In this and the two following chapters, I propose to discuss certain
-theories, which offer us an answer to the question What is good in
-itself? I say advisedly&mdash;<i>an</i> answer: for these theories are all
-characterised by the fact that, if true, they would simplify the study
-of Ethics very much. They all hold that there is only <i>one</i> kind of
-fact, of which the existence has any value at all. But they all also
-possess another characteristic, which is my reason for grouping them
-together and treating them first: namely that the main reason why the
-single kind of fact they name has been held to define the sole good,
-is that it has been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[p. 38]</span>
-held to define what is meant by ‘good’ itself. In other words they
-are all theories of the end or ideal, the adoption of which has been
-chiefly caused by the commission of what I have called the naturalistic
-fallacy: they all confuse the first and second of the three possible
-questions which Ethics can ask. It is, indeed, this fact which explains
-their contention that only a single kind of thing is good. That a
-thing should be good, it has been thought, <i>means</i> that it possesses
-this single property: and hence (it is thought) only what possesses
-this property is good. The inference seems very natural; and yet what
-is meant by it is self-contradictory. For those who make it fail to
-perceive that their conclusion ‘what possesses this property is good’
-is a significant proposition: that it does not mean either ‘what
-possesses this property, possesses this property’ or ‘the word “good”
-denotes that a thing possesses this property.’ And yet, if it does
-<i>not</i> mean one or other of these two things, the inference contradicts
-its own premise.</p>
-
-<p>I propose, therefore, to discuss certain theories of what is good
-in itself, which are <i>based</i> on the naturalistic fallacy, in the sense
-that the commission of this fallacy has been the main cause of their
-wide acceptance. The discussion will be designed both (1) further to
-illustrate the fact that the naturalistic fallacy is a fallacy, or, in
-other words, that we are all aware of a certain simple quality, which
-(and not anything else) is what we mainly mean by the term ‘good’;
-and (2) to shew that not one, but many different things, possess this
-property. For I cannot hope to recommend the doctrine that things which
-are good do not owe their goodness to their common possession of any
-other property, without a criticism of the main doctrines, opposed
-to this, whose power to recommend themselves is proved by their wide
-prevalence.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_25"><b>25.&emsp;</b>The theories I propose to discuss may be
-conveniently divided into two groups. The naturalistic fallacy always
-implies that when we think ‘This is good,’ what we are thinking is
-that the thing in question bears a definite relation to some one other
-thing. But this one thing, by reference to which good is defined, may
-be either what I may call a natural object&mdash;something of which
-the existence is admittedly an object of experience&mdash;or<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[p. 39]</span> else it may be an object
-which is only inferred to exist in a supersensible real world. These
-two types of ethical theory I propose to treat separately. Theories
-of the second type may conveniently be called ‘metaphysical,’ and I
-shall postpone consideration of them till Chapter IV. In this and
-the following chapter, on the other hand, I shall deal with theories
-which owe their prevalence to the supposition that good can be defined
-by reference to a <i>natural object</i>; and these are what I mean by the
-name, which gives the title to this chapter, ‘Naturalistic Ethics.’ It
-should be observed that the fallacy, by reference to which I define
-‘Metaphysical Ethics,’ is the same in kind; and I give it but one name,
-the naturalistic fallacy. But when we regard the ethical theories
-recommended by this fallacy, it seems convenient to distinguish those
-which consider goodness to consist in a relation to something which
-exists here and now, from those which do not. According to the former,
-Ethics is an empirical or positive science: its conclusions could be
-all established by means of empirical observation and induction. But
-this is not the case with Metaphysical Ethics. There is, therefore,
-a marked distinction between these two groups of ethical theories
-based on the same fallacy. And within Naturalistic theories, too, a
-convenient division may also be made. There is one natural object,
-namely pleasure, which has perhaps been as frequently held to be the
-sole good as all the rest put together. And there is, moreover, a
-further reason for treating Hedonism separately. That doctrine has, I
-think, as plainly as any other, owed its prevalence to the naturalistic
-fallacy; but it has had a singular fate in that the writer, who first
-clearly exposed the fallacy of the naturalistic arguments by which
-it had been attempted to <i>prove</i> that pleasure was the sole good,
-has maintained that nevertheless it <i>is</i> the sole good. I propose,
-therefore, to divide my discussion of Hedonism from that of other
-Naturalistic theories; treating of Naturalistic Ethics in general in
-this chapter, and of Hedonism, in particular, in the next.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_26"><b>26.&emsp;</b>The subject of the present chapter is, then,
-ethical theories which declare that no intrinsic value is to be found
-except in the possession of some one <i>natural</i> property, other than
-pleasure; and which declare this because it is supposed that to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[p. 40]</span> be ‘good’ <i>means</i> to
-possess the property in question. Such theories I call ‘Naturalistic.’
-I have thus appropriated the name Naturalism to a particular method
-of approaching Ethics&mdash;a method which, strictly understood, is
-inconsistent with the possibility of any Ethics whatsoever. This
-method consists in substituting for ‘good’ some one property of a
-natural object or of a collection of natural objects; and in thus
-replacing Ethics by some one of the natural sciences. In general, the
-science thus substituted is one of the sciences specially concerned
-with man, owing to the general mistake (for such I hold it to be)
-of regarding the matter of Ethics as confined to human conduct. In
-general, Psychology has been the science substituted, as by J. S. Mill;
-or Sociology, as by Professor Clifford, and other modern writers.
-But any other science might equally well be substituted. It is the
-same fallacy which is implied, when Professor Tyndall recommends us
-to ‘conform to the laws of matter’: and here the science which it is
-proposed to substitute for Ethics is simply Physics. The name then is
-perfectly general; for, no matter what the something is that good is
-held to mean, the theory is still Naturalism. Whether good be defined
-as yellow or green or blue, as loud or soft, as round or square, as
-sweet or bitter, as productive of life or productive of pleasure, as
-willed or desired or felt: whichever of these or of any other object in
-the world, good may be held to <i>mean</i>, the theory, which holds it to
-<i>mean</i> them, will be a naturalistic theory. I have called such theories
-naturalistic because all of these terms denote properties, simple
-or complex, of some simple or complex natural object; and, before I
-proceed to consider them, it will be well to define what is meant by
-‘nature’ and by ‘natural objects.’</p>
-
-<p>By ‘nature,’ then, I do mean and have meant that which is the
-subject-matter of the natural sciences and also of psychology. It may
-be said to include all that has existed, does exist, or will exist in
-time. If we consider whether any object is of such a nature that it may
-be said to exist now, to have existed, or to be about to exist, then
-we may know that that object is a natural object, and that nothing, of
-which this is not true, is a natural object. Thus for instance, of our
-minds we should say that they did exist yesterday, that they do exist
-to-day, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[p. 41]</span> probably
-will exist in a minute or two. We shall say that we had thoughts
-yesterday, which have ceased to exist now, although their effects may
-remain: and in so far as those thoughts did exist, they too are natural
-objects.</p>
-
-<p>There is, indeed, no difficulty about the ‘objects’ themselves, in
-the sense in which I have just used the term. It is easy to say which
-of them are natural, and which (if any) are not natural. But when we
-begin to consider the properties of objects, then I fear the problem
-is more difficult. Which among the properties of natural objects are
-natural properties and which are not? For I do not deny that good is a
-property of certain natural objects: certain of them, I think, <i>are</i>
-good; and yet I have said that ‘good’ itself is not a natural property.
-Well, my test for these too also concerns their existence in time. Can
-we imagine ‘good’ as existing <i>by itself</i> in time, and not merely as a
-property of some natural object? For myself, I cannot so imagine it,
-whereas with the greater number of properties of objects&mdash;those
-which I call the natural properties&mdash;their existence does seem to
-me to be independent of the existence of those objects. They are, in
-fact, rather parts of which the object is made up than mere predicates
-which attach to it. If they were all taken away, no object would be
-left, not even a bare substance: for they are in themselves substantial
-and give to the object all the substance that it has. But this is not
-so with good. If indeed good were a feeling, as some would have us
-believe, then it would exist in time. But that is why to call it so is
-to commit the naturalistic fallacy. It will always remain pertinent to
-ask, whether the feeling itself is good; and if so, then good cannot
-itself be identical with any feeling.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_27"><b>27.&emsp;</b>Those theories of Ethics, then, are
-‘naturalistic’ which declare the sole good to consist in some one
-property of things, which exists in time; and which do so because
-they suppose that ‘good’ itself can be defined by reference to such a
-property. And we may now proceed to consider such theories.</p>
-
-<p>And, first of all, one of the most famous of ethical maxims is that
-which recommends a ‘life according to nature.’ That was the principle
-of the Stoic Ethics; but, since their Ethics<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_42">[p. 42]</span> has some claim to be called metaphysical, I
-shall not attempt to deal with it here. But the same phrase reappears
-in Rousseau; and it is not unfrequently maintained even now that what
-we ought to do is to live naturally. Now let us examine this contention
-in its general form. It is obvious, in the first place, that we cannot
-say that everything natural is good, except perhaps in virtue of some
-metaphysical theory, such as I shall deal with later. If everything
-natural is equally good, then certainly Ethics, as it is ordinarily
-understood, disappears: for nothing is more certain, from an ethical
-point of view, than that some things are bad and others good; the
-object of Ethics is, indeed, in chief part, to give you general rules
-whereby you may avoid the one and secure the other. What, then, does
-‘natural’ mean, in this advice to live naturally, since it obviously
-cannot apply to everything that is natural?</p>
-
-<p>The phrase seems to point to a vague notion that there is some such
-thing as natural good; to a belief that Nature may be said to fix and
-decide what shall be good, just as she fixes and decides what shall
-exist. For instance, it may be supposed that ‘health’ is susceptible
-of a natural definition, that Nature has fixed what health shall be:
-and health, it may be said, is obviously good; hence in this case
-Nature has decided the matter; we have only to go to her and ask her
-what health is, and we shall know what is good: we shall have based an
-ethics upon science. But what is this natural definition of health? I
-can only conceive that health should be defined in natural terms as
-the <i>normal</i> state of an organism for undoubtedly disease is also a
-natural product. To say that health is what is preserved by evolution,
-and what itself tends to preserve, in the struggle for existence, the
-organism which possesses it, comes to the same thing: for the point
-of evolution is that it pretends to give a causal explanation of why
-some forms of life are normal and others are abnormal; it explains the
-origin of species. When therefore we are told that health is natural,
-we may presume that what is meant is that it is normal; and that
-when we are told to pursue health as a natural end, what is implied
-is that the normal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[p. 43]</span>
-must be good. But is it so obvious that the normal must be good? Is it
-really obvious that health, for instance, is good? Was the excellence
-of Socrates or of Shakespeare normal? Was it not rather abnormal,
-extraordinary? It is, I think, obvious in the first place, that not
-all that is good is normal; that, on the contrary, the abnormal is
-often better than the normal: peculiar excellence, as well as peculiar
-viciousness, must obviously be not normal but abnormal. Yet it may
-be said that nevertheless the normal is good; and I myself am not
-prepared to dispute that health is good. What I contend is that this
-must not be taken to be obvious; that it must be regarded as an open
-question. To declare it to be obvious is to suggest the naturalistic
-fallacy: just as, in some recent books, a proof that genius is
-diseased, abnormal, has been used in order to suggest that genius ought
-not to be encouraged. Such reasoning is fallacious, and dangerously
-fallacious. The fact is that in the very words ‘health’ and ‘disease’
-we do commonly include the notion that the one is good and the other
-bad. But, when a so-called scientific definition of them is attempted,
-a definition in natural terms, the only one possible is that by way
-of ‘normal’ and ‘abnormal.’ Now, it is easy to prove that some things
-commonly thought excellent are abnormal; and it follows that they are
-diseased. But it does not follow, except by virtue of the naturalistic
-fallacy, that those things, commonly thought good, are therefore
-bad. All that has really been shewn is that in some cases there is
-a conflict between the common judgment that genius is good, and the
-common judgment that health is good. It is not sufficiently recognised
-that the latter judgment has not a whit more warrant for its truth than
-the former; that both are perfectly open questions. It may be true,
-indeed, that by ‘healthy’ we do commonly imply ‘good’; but that only
-shews that when we so use the word, we do not mean the same thing by
-it as the thing which is meant in medical science. That health, <i>when</i>
-the word is used to denote something good, is good, goes no way at all
-to shew that health, when the word is used to denote something normal,
-is also good. We might as well say that, because ‘bull’ denotes an
-Irish joke and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[p. 44]</span> also a
-certain animal, the joke and the animal must be the same thing. We must
-not, therefore, be frightened by the assertion that a thing is natural
-into the admission that it is good; good does not, by definition, mean
-anything that is natural; and it is therefore always an open question
-whether anything that is natural is good.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_28"><b>28.&emsp;</b>But there is another slightly different
-sense in which the word ‘natural’ is used with an implication that it
-denotes something good. This is when we speak of natural affections,
-or unnatural crimes and vices. Here the meaning seems to be, not so
-much that the action or feeling in question is normal or abnormal, as
-that it is necessary. It is in this connection that we are advised
-to imitate savages and beasts. Curious advice certainly; but, of
-course, there may be something in it. I am not here concerned to
-enquire under what circumstances some of us might with advantage take
-a lesson from the cow. I have really no doubt that such exist. What
-I am concerned with is a certain kind of reason, which I think is
-sometimes used to support this doctrine&mdash;a naturalistic reason.
-The notion sometimes lying at the bottom of the minds of preachers
-of this gospel is that we cannot improve on nature. This notion is
-certainly true, in the sense that anything we can do, that may be
-better than the present state of things, will be a natural product.
-But that is not what is meant by this phrase; nature is again used to
-mean a mere part of nature; only this time the part meant is not so
-much the normal as an arbitrary minimum of what is necessary for life.
-And when this minimum is recommended as ‘natural’&mdash;as the way of
-life to which Nature points her finger&mdash;then the naturalistic
-fallacy is used. Against this position I wish only to point out that
-though the performance of certain acts, not in themselves desirable,
-may be <i>excused</i> as necessary means to the preservation of life, that
-is no reason for <i>praising</i> them, or advising us to limit ourselves
-to those simple actions which are necessary, if it is possible for us
-to improve our condition even at the expense of doing what is in this
-sense unnecessary. Nature does indeed set limits to what is possible;
-she does control the means we have at our disposal for obtaining what
-is good;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[p. 45]</span> and of
-this fact, practical Ethics, as we shall see later, must certainly
-take account: but when she is supposed to have a preference for what
-is necessary, what is necessary means only what is necessary to
-obtain a certain end, presupposed as the highest good; and what the
-highest good is Nature cannot determine. Why should we suppose that
-what is merely necessary to life is <i>ipso facto</i> better than what
-is necessary to the study of metaphysics, useless as that study may
-appear? It may be that life is only worth living, because it enables us
-to study metaphysics&mdash;is a necessary means thereto. The fallacy
-of this argument from nature has been discovered as long ago as
-Lucian. ‘I was almost inclined to laugh,’ says Callicratidas, in one
-of the dialogues imputed to him<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4"
-class="fnanchor">[4]</a>, ‘just now, when Charicles was praising
-irrational brutes and the savagery of the Scythians: in the heat of his
-argument he was almost repenting that he was born a Greek. What wonder
-if lions and bears and pigs do not act as I was proposing? That which
-reasoning would fairly lead a man to choose, cannot be had by creatures
-that do not reason, simply because they are so stupid. If Prometheus
-or some other god had given each of them the intelligence of a man,
-then they would not have lived in deserts and mountains nor fed on one
-another. They would have built temples just as we do, each would have
-lived in the centre of his family, and they would have formed a nation
-bound by mutual laws. Is it anything surprising that brutes, who have
-had the misfortune to be unable to obtain by forethought any of the
-goods, with which reasoning provides us, should have missed love too?
-Lions do not love; but neither do they philosophise; bears do not love;
-but the reason is they do not know the sweets of friendship. It is only
-men, who, by their wisdom and their knowledge, after many trials, have
-chosen what is best.’</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_29"><b>29.&emsp;</b>To argue that a thing is good <i>because</i> it is
-‘natural,’ or bad <i>because</i> it is ‘unnatural,’ in these common senses
-of the term, is therefore certainly fallacious: and yet such arguments
-are very frequently used. But they do not commonly pretend to give a
-systematic theory of Ethics. Among attempts to<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_46">[p. 46]</span> <i>systematise</i> an appeal to nature,
-that which is now most prevalent is to be found in the application
-to ethical questions of the term ‘Evolution’&mdash;in the ethical
-doctrines which have been called ‘Evolutionistic.’ These doctrines are
-those which maintain that the course of ‘evolution,’ while it shews
-us the direction in which we <i>are</i> developing, thereby and for that
-reason shews us the direction in which we <i>ought</i> to develop. Writers,
-who maintain such a doctrine, are at present very numerous and very
-popular; and I propose to take as my example the writer, who is perhaps
-the best known of them all&mdash;Mr Herbert Spencer. Mr Spencer’s
-doctrine, it must be owned, does not offer the <i>clearest</i> example
-of the naturalistic fallacy as used in support of Evolutionistic
-Ethics. A clearer example might be found in the doctrine of Guyau<a
-id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>, a writer
-who has lately had considerable vogue in France, but who is not so well
-known as Spencer. Guyau might almost be called a disciple of Spencer;
-he is frankly evolutionistic, and frankly naturalistic; and I may
-mention that he does not seem to think that he differs from Spencer by
-reason of his naturalism. The point in which he has criticised Spencer
-concerns the question how far the ends of ‘pleasure’ and of ‘increased
-life’ coincide as motives and means to the attainment of the ideal: he
-does not seem to think that he differs from Spencer in the fundamental
-principle that the ideal is ‘Quantity of life, measured in breadth
-as well as in length,’ or, as Guyau says, ‘Expansion and intensity
-of life’; nor in the naturalistic reason which he gives for this
-principle. And I am not sure that he does differ from Spencer in these
-points. Spencer does, as I shall shew, use the naturalistic fallacy in
-details; but with regard to his fundamental principles, the following
-doubts occur: Is he fundamentally a Hedonist? And, if so, is he a
-naturalistic Hedonist? In that case he would better have been treated
-in my next chapter. Does he hold that a tendency to increase quantity
-of life is merely a <i>criterion</i> of good conduct? Or does he hold that
-such increase of life is marked out by nature as an end at which we
-ought to aim?</p>
-
-<p>I think his language in various places would give colour to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[p. 47]</span> all these hypotheses;
-though some of them are mutually inconsistent. I will try to discuss
-the main points.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_30"><b>30.&emsp;</b>The modern vogue of ‘Evolution’ is chiefly
-owing to Darwin’s investigations as to the origin of species. Darwin
-formed a strictly biological hypothesis as to the manner in which
-certain forms of animal life became established, while others died
-out and disappeared. His theory was that this might be accounted
-for, partly at least, in the following way. When certain varieties
-occurred (the cause of their occurrence is still, in the main,
-unknown), it might be that some of the points, in which they varied
-from their parent species or from other species then existing, made
-them better able to persist in the environment in which they found
-themselves&mdash;less liable to be killed off. They might, for
-instance, be better able to endure the cold or heat or changes of
-the climate; better able to find nourishment from what surrounded
-them; better able to escape from or resist other species which fed
-upon them; better fitted to attract or to master the other sex.
-Being thus less liable to die, their numbers relatively to other
-species would increase; and that very increase in their numbers might
-tend towards the extinction of those other species. This theory, to
-which Darwin gave the name ‘Natural Selection,’ was also called the
-theory of survival of the fittest. The natural process which it thus
-described was called evolution. It was very natural to suppose that
-evolution meant evolution from what was lower into what was higher;
-in fact it was observed that at least one species, commonly called
-higher&mdash;the species man&mdash;had so survived, and among men again
-it was supposed that the higher races, ourselves for example, had shewn
-a tendency to survive the lower, such as the North American Indians.
-We can kill them more easily than they can kill us. The doctrine of
-evolution was then represented as an explanation of how the higher
-species survives the lower. Spencer, for example, constantly uses ‘more
-evolved’ as equivalent to ‘higher.’ But it is to be noted that this
-forms no part of Darwin’s scientific theory. That theory will explain,
-equally well, how by an alteration in the environment (the gradual
-cooling of the earth, for example) quite a different species from
-man, a species which we think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[p.
-48]</span> infinitely lower, might survive us. The survival of the
-fittest does <i>not</i> mean, as one might suppose, the survival of what is
-fittest to fulfil a good purpose best adapted to a good end: at the
-last, it means merely the survival of the fittest to survive; and the
-value of the scientific theory, and it is a theory of great value,
-just consists in shewing what are the causes which produce certain
-biological effects. Whether these effects are good or bad, it cannot
-pretend to judge.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_31"><b>31.&emsp;</b>But now let us hear what Mr Spencer says
-about the application of Evolution to Ethics.</p>
-
-<p>‘I recur,’ he says<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6"
-class="fnanchor">[6]</a>, ‘to the main proposition set forth in these
-two chapters, which has, I think, been fully justified. Guided by
-the truth that as the conduct with which Ethics deals is part of
-conduct at large, conduct at large must be generally understood before
-this part can be specially understood; and guided by the further
-truth that to understand conduct at large we must understand the
-evolution of conduct; we have been led to see that Ethics has for
-its subject-matter, that form which universal conduct assumes during
-the last stages of its evolution. We have also concluded that these
-last stages in the evolution of conduct are those displayed by the
-<i>highest</i><a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
-type of being when he is forced, by increase of numbers, to live more
-and more in presence of his fellows. And there has followed <i>the
-corollary that conduct gains ethical sanction</i><a href="#Footnote_7"
-class="fnanchor">[7]</a> in proportion as the activities, becoming
-less and less militant and more and more industrial, are such as do
-not necessitate mutual injury or hindrance, but consist with, and are
-furthered by, co-operation and mutual aid.</p>
-
-<p>‘These implications of the Evolution-Hypothesis, we shall now see
-harmonize with the leading moral ideas men have otherwise reached.’</p>
-
-<p>Now, if we are to take the last sentence strictly&mdash;if the
-propositions which precede it are really thought by Mr Spencer to be
-<i>implications</i> of the Evolution-Hypothesis&mdash;there can be no doubt
-that Mr Spencer has committed the naturalistic fallacy. All that the
-Evolution-Hypothesis tells us is that certain kinds of conduct are
-more evolved than others; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[p.
-49]</span> this is, in fact, all that Mr Spencer has attempted to prove
-in the two chapters concerned. Yet he tells us that one of the things
-it has proved is that <i>conduct gains ethical sanction</i> in proportion as
-it displays certain characteristics. What he has tried to prove is only
-that, in proportion as it displays those characteristics, it is <i>more
-evolved</i>. It is plain, then, that Mr Spencer <i>identifies</i> the gaining
-of ethical sanction with the being more evolved: this follows strictly
-from his words. But Mr Spencer’s language is extremely loose; and we
-shall presently see that he seems to regard the view it here implies
-as false. We cannot, therefore, take it as Mr Spencer’s definite view
-that ‘better’ means nothing but ‘more evolved’; or even that what is
-‘more evolved’ is <i>therefore</i> ‘better.’ But we are entitled to urge
-that he is influenced by these views, and therefore by the naturalistic
-fallacy. It is only by the assumption of such influence that we can
-explain his confusion as to what he has really proved, and the absence
-of any attempt to prove, what he says he has proved, that conduct
-which is more evolved is better. We shall look in vain for any attempt
-to shew that ‘ethical sanction’ is in proportion to ‘evolution,’ or
-that it is the ‘highest’ type of being which displays the most evolved
-conduct; yet Mr Spencer concludes that this is the case. It is only
-fair to assume that he is not sufficiently conscious how much these
-propositions stand in need of proof&mdash;what a very different thing
-is being ‘more evolved’ from being ‘higher’ or ‘better.’ It may, of
-course, be true that what is more evolved is also higher and better.
-But Mr Spencer does not seem aware that to assert the one is in any
-case not the same thing as to assert the other. He argues at length
-that certain kinds of conduct are ‘more evolved,’ and then informs
-us that he has proved them to gain ethical sanction in proportion,
-without any warning that he has omitted the most essential step in such
-a proof. Surely this is sufficient evidence that he does not see how
-essential that step is.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_32"><b>32.&emsp;</b>Whatever be the degree of Mr Spencer’s own
-guilt, what has just been said will serve to illustrate the kind of
-fallacy which is constantly committed by those who profess to ‘base’
-Ethics on Evolution. But we must hasten to add<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_50">[p. 50]</span> that the view which Mr Spencer elsewhere
-most emphatically recommends is an utterly different one. It will be
-useful briefly to deal with this, in order that no injustice may be
-done to Mr Spencer. The discussion will be instructive partly from
-the lack of clearness, which Mr Spencer displays, as to the relation
-of this view to the ‘evolutionistic’ one just described; and partly
-because there is reason to suspect that in this view also he is
-influenced by the naturalistic fallacy.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that, at the end of his second chapter, Mr Spencer
-seems to announce that he has already proved certain characteristics of
-conduct to be a measure of its ethical value. He seems to think that
-he has proved this merely by considering the evolution of conduct; and
-he has certainly not given any such proof, unless we are to understand
-that ‘more evolved’ is a mere synonym for ‘ethically better.’ He
-now promises merely to <i>confirm</i> this certain conclusion by shewing
-that it ‘harmonizes with the leading moral ideas men have otherwise
-reached.’ But, when we turn to his third chapter, we find that what he
-actually does is something quite different. He here asserts that to
-establish the conclusion ‘Conduct is better in proportion as it is more
-evolved’ an entirely new proof is necessary. That conclusion will be
-<i>false</i>, unless a certain proposition, of which we have heard nothing
-so far, is true&mdash;unless it be true that life is <i>pleasant</i> on the
-whole. And the ethical proposition, for which he claims the support
-of the ‘leading moral ideas’ of mankind, turns out to be that ‘life
-is good or bad, according as it does, or does not, bring a surplus
-of agreeable feeling’ (§&nbsp;10). Here, then, Mr Spencer appears, not as
-an Evolutionist, but as a Hedonist, in Ethics. No conduct is better,
-<i>because</i> it is more evolved. Degree of evolution can at most be a
-<i>criterion</i> of ethical value; and it will only be that, if we can prove
-the extremely difficult generalisation that the more evolved is always,
-on the whole, the pleasanter. It is plain that Mr Spencer here rejects
-the naturalistic identification of ‘better’ with ‘more evolved’;
-but it is possible that he is influenced by another naturalistic
-identification&mdash;that of ‘good’ with ‘pleasant.’ It is possible that Mr
-Spencer is a naturalistic Hedonist.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_33"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[p.
-51]</span><b>33.&emsp;</b> Let us examine Mr Spencer’s own words. He begins
-this third chapter by an attempt to shew that <i>we call</i> ‘good the acts
-conducive to life, in self or others, and bad those which directly
-or indirectly tend towards death, special or general’ (§&nbsp;9).
-And then he asks: ‘Is there any assumption made’ in so calling them?
-‘Yes’; he answers, ‘an assumption of extreme significance has been
-made&mdash;an assumption underlying all moral estimates. The question
-to be definitely raised and answered before entering on any ethical
-discussion, is the question of late much agitated&mdash;Is life
-worth living? Shall we take the pessimist view? or shall we take
-the optimist view?... On the answer to this question depends every
-decision concerning the goodness or badness of conduct.’ But Mr Spencer
-does not immediately proceed to give the answer. Instead of this, he
-asks another question: ‘But now, have these irreconcilable opinions
-[pessimist and optimist] anything in common?’ And this question he
-immediately answers by the statement: ‘Yes, there is one postulate in
-which pessimists and optimists agree. Both their arguments assume it to
-be self-evident that life is good or bad, according as it does, or does
-not, bring a surplus of agreeable feeling’ (§&nbsp;10). It is to the
-defence of this statement that the rest of the chapter is devoted; and
-at the end Mr Spencer formulates his conclusion in the following words:
-‘No school can avoid taking for the ultimate moral aim a desirable
-state of feeling called by whatever name&mdash;gratification, enjoyment,
-happiness. Pleasure somewhere, at some time, to some being or beings,
-is an inexpugnable element of the conception’ (§&nbsp;16 <i>ad fin.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Now in all this, there are two points to which I wish to call
-attention. The first is that Mr Spencer does not, after all, tell us
-clearly what he takes to be the relation of Pleasure and Evolution in
-ethical theory. Obviously he should mean that pleasure is the <i>only</i>
-intrinsically desirable thing; that other good things are ‘good’ only
-in the sense that they are means to its existence. Nothing but this can
-properly be meant by asserting it to be ‘<i>the</i> ultimate moral aim,’
-or, as he subsequently says (§&nbsp;62 <i>ad fin.</i>), ‘<i>the</i> ultimately
-supreme end.’ And, if this were so, it would follow that the more
-evolved conduct was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[p. 52]</span>
-better than the less evolved, only because, and in proportion as,
-it gave more pleasure. But Mr Spencer tells us that two conditions
-are, taken together, <i>sufficient</i> to prove the more evolved conduct
-better: (1) That it should tend to produce more life; (2) That life
-should be worth living or contain a balance of pleasure. And the point
-I wish to emphasise is that if these conditions are sufficient, then
-pleasure cannot be the sole good. For though to produce more life is,
-if the second of Mr Spencer’s propositions be correct, <i>one way</i> of
-producing more pleasure, it is not the only way. It is quite possible
-that a small quantity of life, which was more intensely and uniformly
-present, should give a greater quantity of pleasure than the greatest
-possible quantity of life that was only just ‘worth living.’ And in
-that case, on the hedonistic supposition that pleasure is the only
-thing worth having, we should have to prefer the smaller quantity of
-life and therefore, according to Mr Spencer, the less evolved conduct.
-Accordingly, if Mr Spencer is a true Hedonist, the fact that life gives
-a balance of pleasure is <i>not</i>, as he seems to think, sufficient to
-prove that the more evolved conduct is the better. If Mr Spencer means
-us to understand that it <i>is</i> sufficient, then his view about pleasure
-can only be, not that it is the sole good or ‘ultimately supreme end,’
-but that a balance of it is a necessary constituent of the supreme end.
-In short, Mr Spencer seems to maintain that more life is decidedly
-better than less, <i>if only</i> it give a balance of pleasure: and that
-contention is inconsistent with the position that pleasure is ‘<i>the</i>
-ultimate moral aim.’ Mr Spencer implies that of two quantities of life,
-which gave an equal amount of pleasure, the larger would nevertheless
-be preferable to the less. And if this be so, then he must maintain
-that quantity of life or degree of evolution is itself an ultimate
-condition of value. He leaves us, therefore, in doubt whether he is
-not still retaining the Evolutionistic proposition, that the more
-evolved is better, simply because it is more evolved, alongside of
-the Hedonistic proposition, that the more pleasant is better, simply
-because it is more pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>But the second question which we have to ask is: What<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[p. 53]</span> reasons has Mr Spencer for
-assigning to pleasure the position which he does assign to it? He tells
-us, we saw, that the ‘arguments’ both of pessimists and of optimists
-‘assume it to be self-evident that life is good or bad, according
-as it does, or does not, bring a surplus of agreeable feeling’; and
-he betters this later by telling us that ‘since avowed or implied
-pessimists, and optimists of one or other shade, taken together
-constitute all men, it results that this postulate is universally
-accepted’ (§&nbsp;16). That these statements are absolutely false is,
-of course, quite obvious: but why does Mr Spencer think them true?
-and, what is more important (a question which Mr Spencer does not
-distinguish too clearly from the last), why does he think the postulate
-itself to be true? Mr Spencer himself tells us his ‘proof is’ that
-‘reversing the application of the words’ good and bad&mdash;applying
-the word ‘good’ to conduct, the ‘aggregate results’ of which are
-painful, and the word ‘bad’ to conduct, of which the ‘aggregate
-results’ are pleasurable&mdash;‘creates absurdities’ (§&nbsp;16). He
-does not say whether this is because it is absurd to think that the
-quality, which we <i>mean by the word</i> ‘good,’ really applies to what is
-painful. Even, however, if we assume him to mean this, and if we assume
-that absurdities are thus created, it is plain he would only prove that
-what is painful is properly thought to be <i>so far</i> bad, and what is
-pleasant to be <i>so far</i> good: it would not prove at all that pleasure
-is ‘<i>the</i> supreme end.’ There is, however, reason to think that part
-of what Mr Spencer means is the naturalistic fallacy: that he imagines
-‘pleasant’ or ‘productive of pleasure’ is the very meaning of the word
-‘good,’ and that ‘the absurdity’ is due to this. It is at all events
-certain that he does not distinguish this possible meaning from that
-which would admit that ‘good’ denotes an unique indefinable quality.
-The doctrine of naturalistic Hedonism is, indeed, quite strictly
-implied in his statement that ‘virtue’ cannot ‘<i>be defined</i> otherwise
-than in terms of happiness’ (§&nbsp;13); and, though, as I remarked
-above, we cannot insist upon Mr Spencer’s words as a certain clue to
-any definite meaning, that is only because he generally expresses by
-them several inconsistent alternatives&mdash;the naturalistic fallacy
-being, in this case, one such alternative. It is certainly<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[p. 54]</span> impossible to find any
-further reasons given by Mr Spencer for his conviction that pleasure
-both is the supreme end, and is universally admitted to be so. He
-seems to assume throughout that we <i>must</i> mean by good conduct what
-is productive of pleasure, and by bad what is productive of pain. So
-far, then, as he is a Hedonist, he would seem to be a naturalistic
-Hedonist.</p>
-
-<p>So much for Mr Spencer. It is, of course, quite possible that his
-treatment of Ethics contains many interesting and instructive remarks.
-It would seem, indeed, that Mr Spencer’s main view, that of which he
-is most clearly and most often conscious, is that pleasure is the
-sole good, and that to consider the direction of evolution is by far
-the best <i>criterion</i> of the way in which we shall get most of it:
-and this theory, <i>if</i> he could establish that amount of pleasure is
-always in direct proportion to amount of evolution <i>and also</i> that it
-was plain what conduct was more evolved, <i>would</i> be a very valuable
-contribution to the science of Sociology; it would even, if pleasure
-were the sole good, be a valuable contribution to Ethics. But the above
-discussion should have made it plain that, if what we want from an
-ethical philosopher is a scientific and systematic Ethics, not merely
-an Ethics professedly ‘based on science’; if what we want is a clear
-discussion of the fundamental principles of Ethics, and a statement of
-the ultimate reasons why one way of acting should be considered better
-than another&mdash;then Mr Spencer’s ‘Data of Ethics’ is immeasurably
-far from satisfying these demands.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_34"><b>34.&emsp;</b>It remains only to state clearly what
-is definitely fallacious in prevalent views as to the relation of
-Evolution to Ethics&mdash;in those views with regard to which it seems
-so uncertain how far Mr Spencer intends to encourage them. I proposed
-to confine the term ‘Evolutionistic Ethics’ to the view that we need
-only to consider the tendency of ‘evolution’ in order to discover
-the direction in which we <i>ought</i> to go. This view must be carefully
-distinguished from certain others, which may be commonly confused
-with it. (1) It might, for instance, be held that the direction in
-which living things have hitherto developed is, as a matter of fact,
-the direction of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[p. 55]</span>
-progress. It might be held that the ‘more evolved’ is, as a matter of
-fact, also better. And in such a view no fallacy is involved. But, if
-it is to give us any guidance as to how we ought to act in the future,
-it does involve a long and painful investigation of the exact points in
-which the superiority of the more evolved consists. We cannot assume
-that, because evolution is progress <i>on the whole</i>, therefore every
-point in which the more evolved differs from the less is a point in
-which it is better than the less. A simple consideration of the course
-of evolution will therefore, on this view, by no means suffice to
-inform us of the course we ought to pursue. We shall have to employ
-all the resources of a strictly ethical discussion in order to arrive
-at a correct valuation of the different results of evolution&mdash;to
-distinguish the more valuable from the less valuable, and both from
-those which are no better than their causes, or perhaps even worse.
-In fact it is difficult to see how, on this view&mdash;if all that be
-meant is that evolution has <i>on the whole</i> been a progress&mdash;the
-theory of evolution can give any assistance to Ethics at all. The
-judgment that evolution has been a progress is itself an independent
-ethical judgment; and even if we take it to be more certain and obvious
-than any of the detailed judgments upon which it must logically depend
-for confirmation, we certainly cannot use it as a datum from which to
-infer details. It is, at all events, certain that, if this had been the
-<i>only</i> relation held to exist between Evolution and Ethics, no such
-importance would have been attached to the bearing of Evolution on
-Ethics as we actually find claimed for it. (2) The view, which, as I
-have said, seems to be Mr Spencer’s main view, may also be held without
-fallacy. It may be held that the more evolved, though not itself the
-better, is a <i>criterion</i>, because a concomitant, of the better. But
-this view also obviously involves an exhaustive preliminary discussion
-of the fundamental ethical question what, after all, is better. That
-Mr Spencer entirely dispenses with such a discussion in support of
-his contention that pleasure is the sole good, I have pointed out;
-and that, if we attempt such a discussion, we shall arrive at no such
-simple result, I shall presently try to shew. If however the good
-is not simple, it is by no means likely that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_56">[p. 56]</span> we shall be able to discover Evolution to
-be a criterion of it. We shall have to establish a relation between
-two highly complicated sets of data; and, moreover, if we had once
-settled what were goods, and what their comparative values, it is
-extremely unlikely that we should need to call in the aid of Evolution
-as a criterion of how to get the most. It is plain, then, again, that
-if this were the only relation imagined to exist between Evolution and
-Ethics, it could hardly have been thought to justify the assignment
-of any importance in Ethics to the theory of Evolution. Finally, (3)
-it may be held that, though Evolution gives us no help in discovering
-what results of our efforts will be best, it does give some help in
-discovering what it is <i>possible</i> to attain and what are the means to
-its attainment. That the theory really may be of service to Ethics in
-this way cannot be denied. But it is certainly not common to find this
-humble, ancillary bearing clearly and exclusively assigned to it. In
-the mere fact, then, that these non-fallacious views of the relation
-of Evolution to Ethics would give so very little importance to that
-relation, we have evidence that what is typical in the coupling of the
-two names is the fallacious view to which I propose to restrict the
-name ‘Evolutionistic Ethics.’ This is the view that we ought to move
-in the direction of evolution simply <i>because</i> it is the direction
-of evolution. That the forces of Nature are working on that side is
-taken as a presumption that it is the right side. That such a view,
-apart from metaphysical presuppositions, with which I shall presently
-deal, is simply fallacious, I have tried to shew. It can only rest on
-a confused belief that somehow the good simply <i>means</i> the side on
-which Nature is working. And it thus involves another confused belief
-which is very marked in Mr Spencer’s whole treatment of Evolution.
-For, after all, is Evolution the side on which Nature is working? In
-the sense, which Mr Spencer gives to the term, and in any sense in
-which it can be regarded as a fact that the more evolved is higher,
-Evolution denotes only a <i>temporary</i> historical process. That things
-will permanently continue to evolve in the future, or that they have
-always evolved in the past, we have not the smallest reason to believe.
-For Evolution does not, in this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[p.
-57]</span> sense, denote a natural <i>law</i>, like the law of gravity.
-Darwin’s theory of natural selection does indeed state a natural law:
-it states that, given certain conditions, certain results will always
-happen. But Evolution, as Mr Spencer understands it and as it is
-commonly understood, denotes something very different. It denotes only
-a process which has actually occurred at a given time, because the
-conditions at the beginning of that time happened to be of a certain
-nature. That such conditions will always be given, or have always been
-given, cannot be assumed; and it is only the process which, according
-to natural law, must follow from <i>these</i> conditions and no others,
-that appears to be also on the whole a progress. Precisely the same
-natural laws&mdash;Darwin’s, for instance&mdash;would under other
-conditions render inevitable not Evolution&mdash;not a development from
-lower to higher&mdash;but the converse process, which has been called
-Involution. Yet Mr Spencer constantly speaks of the process which is
-exemplified in the development of man as if it had all the augustness
-of a universal Law of Nature: whereas we have no reason to believe it
-other than a temporary accident, requiring not only certain universal
-natural laws, but also the existence of a certain state of things at
-a certain time. The only <i>laws</i> concerned in the matter are certainly
-such as, under other circumstances, would allow us to infer, not the
-development, but the extinction of man. And that circumstances will
-always be favourable to further development, that Nature will always
-work on the side of Evolution, we have no reason whatever to believe.
-Thus the idea that Evolution throws important light on Ethics seems to
-be due to a double confusion. Our respect for the process is enlisted
-by the representation of it as the Law of Nature. But, on the other
-hand, our respect for Laws of Nature would be speedily diminished, did
-we not imagine that this desirable process was one of them. To suppose
-that a Law of Nature is <i>therefore</i> respectable, is to commit the
-naturalistic fallacy; but no one, probably, would be tempted to commit
-it, unless something which <i>is</i> respectable, were represented as a Law
-of Nature. If it were clearly recognised that there is no evidence
-for supposing Nature to be on the side of the Good, there would
-probably be less tendency to hold the opinion, which on other grounds
-is demonstrably false, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[p.
-58]</span> no such evidence is required. And if both false opinions
-were clearly seen to be false, it would be plain that Evolution has
-very little indeed to say to Ethics.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_35"><b>35.&emsp;</b>In this chapter I have begun the criticism of
-certain ethical views, which seem to owe their influence mainly to the
-naturalistic fallacy&mdash;the fallacy which consists in identifying
-the simple notion which we mean by ‘good’ with some other notion.
-They are views which profess to tell us what is good in itself; and
-my criticism of them is mainly directed (1) to bring out the negative
-result, that we have no reason to suppose that which they declare
-to be the sole good, really to be so, (2) to illustrate further the
-positive result, already established in Chapter I, that the fundamental
-principles of Ethics must be <i>synthetic</i> propositions, declaring what
-things, and in what degree, possess a simple and unanalysable property
-which may be called ‘intrinsic value’ or ‘goodness.’ The chapter began
-(1) by dividing the views to be criticised into (<i>a</i>) those which,
-supposing ‘good’ to be defined by reference to some supersensible
-reality, conclude that the sole good is to be found in such a reality,
-and may therefore be called ‘Metaphysical,’ (<i>b</i>) those which assign a
-similar position to some natural object, and may therefore be called
-‘Naturalistic.’ Of naturalistic views, that which regards ‘pleasure’ as
-the sole good has received far the fullest and most serious treatment
-and was therefore reserved for Chapter III: all other forms of
-Naturalism may be first dismissed, by taking typical examples (24-26).
-(2) As typical of naturalistic views, other than Hedonism, there was
-first taken the popular commendation of what is ‘natural’: it was
-pointed out that by ‘natural’ there might here be meant either ‘normal’
-or ‘necessary,’ and that neither the ‘normal’ nor the ‘necessary’
-could be seriously supposed to be either always good or the only good
-things (27-28). (3) But a more important type, because one which claims
-to be capable of system, is to be found in ‘Evolutionistic Ethics.’
-The influence of the fallacious opinion that to be ‘better’ <i>means</i>
-to be ‘more evolved’ was illustrated by an examination of Mr Herbert
-Spencer’s Ethics; and it was pointed out that, but for the influence
-of this opinion, Evolution could hardly have been supposed to have any
-important bearing upon Ethics (29-34).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[p. 59]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak" title="CHAPTER III. HEDONISM.">CHAPTER III.</h2>
- <p class="subh2">HEDONISM.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p id="Sec_36"><b>36.&emsp;</b><span class="smcap">In</span> this chapter
-we have to deal with what is perhaps the most famous and the most
-widely held of all ethical principles&mdash;the principle that nothing
-is good but pleasure. My chief reason for treating of this principle
-in this place is, as I said, that Hedonism appears in the main to be
-a form of Naturalistic Ethics: in other words, that pleasure has been
-so generally held to be the sole good, is almost entirely due to the
-fact that it has seemed to be somehow involved in the <i>definition</i> of
-‘good’&mdash;to be pointed out by the very meaning of the word. If this
-is so, then the prevalence of Hedonism has been mainly due to what I
-have called the naturalistic fallacy&mdash;the failure to distinguish
-clearly that unique and indefinable quality which we mean by good. And
-that it is so, we have very strong evidence in the fact that, of all
-hedonistic writers, Prof. Sidgwick alone has clearly recognised that
-by ‘good’ we do mean something unanalysable, and has alone been led
-thereby to emphasise the fact that, if Hedonism be true, its claims to
-be so must be rested solely on its self-evidence&mdash;that we must
-maintain ‘Pleasure is the sole good’ to be a mere <i>intuition</i>. It
-appeared to Prof. Sidgwick as a new discovery that what he calls the
-‘method’ of Intuitionism must be retained as valid alongside of, and
-indeed as the foundation of, what he calls the alternative ‘methods’ of
-Utilitarianism and Egoism. And that it was a new discovery can hardly
-be doubted. In previous Hedonists we find no clear and consistent
-recognition of the fact that their fundamental proposition involves the
-assumption that a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[p. 60]</span>
-certain unique predicate can be directly seen to belong to pleasure
-alone among existents: they do not emphasise, as they could hardly have
-failed to have done had they perceived it, how utterly independent of
-all other truths this truth must be.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover it is easy to see how this unique position should have
-been assigned to pleasure without any clear consciousness of the
-assumption involved. Hedonism is, for a sufficiently obvious reason,
-the first conclusion at which any one who begins to reflect upon
-Ethics naturally arrives. It is very easy to notice the fact that we
-are pleased with things. The things we enjoy and the things we do not,
-form two unmistakable classes, to which our attention is constantly
-directed. But it is comparatively difficult to distinguish the fact
-that we <i>approve</i> a thing from the fact that we are pleased with it.
-Although, if we look at the two states of mind, we must see that they
-are different, even though they generally go together, it is very
-difficult to see in <i>what respect</i> they are different, or that the
-difference can in any connection be of more importance than the many
-other differences, which are so patent and yet so difficult to analyse,
-between one <i>kind</i> of enjoyment and another. It is very difficult
-to see that by ‘approving’ of a thing we mean <i>feeling that it has
-a certain predicate</i>&mdash;the predicate, namely, which defines the
-peculiar sphere of Ethics; whereas in the enjoyment of a thing no
-such unique object of thought is involved. Nothing is more natural
-than the vulgar mistake, which we find expressed in a recent book on
-Ethics<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>:
-‘The primary ethical fact is, we have said, that something is approved
-or disapproved: that is, in other words, the ideal representation
-of certain events in the way of sensation, perception, or idea, is
-attended with a feeling of pleasure or of pain.’ In ordinary speech,
-‘I want this,’ ‘I like this,’ ‘I care about this’ are constantly
-used as equivalents for ‘I think this good.’ And in this way it is
-very natural to be led to suppose that there is no distinct class of
-ethical judgments, but only the class ‘things enjoyed’; in spite of the
-fact, which is very clear, if not very common, that we do not always
-approve what we enjoy. It is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[p.
-61]</span> of course, very obvious that from the supposition that
-‘I think this good’ is identical with ‘I am pleased with this,’ it
-cannot be <i>logically</i> inferred that pleasure alone is good. But, on
-the other hand, it is very difficult to see what could be logically
-inferred from such a supposition; and it seems <i>natural</i> enough that
-such an inference should suggest itself. A very little examination
-of what is commonly written on the subject will suffice to shew that
-a logical confusion of this nature is very common. Moreover the very
-commission of the naturalistic fallacy involves that those who commit
-it should not recognise clearly the meaning of the proposition ‘This
-is good’&mdash;that they should not be able to distinguish this from
-other propositions which seem to resemble it; and, where this is so, it
-is, of course, impossible that its logical relations should be clearly
-perceived.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_37"><b>37.&emsp;</b>There is, therefore, ample reason to suppose
-that Hedonism is in general a form of Naturalism&mdash;that its
-acceptance is generally due to the naturalistic fallacy. It is, indeed,
-only when we have detected this fallacy, when we have become clearly
-aware of the unique object which is meant by ‘good,’ that we are able
-to give to Hedonism the precise definition used above, ‘Nothing is good
-but pleasure’: and it may, therefore, be objected that, in attacking
-this doctrine under the name of Hedonism, I am attacking a doctrine
-which has never really been held. But it is very common to hold a
-doctrine, without being clearly aware what it is you hold; and though,
-when Hedonists argue in favour of what they call Hedonism, I admit
-that, in order to suppose their arguments valid, they must have before
-their minds something <i>other</i> than the doctrine I have defined, yet,
-in order to draw the conclusions that they draw, it is necessary that
-they should <i>also</i> have before their minds this doctrine. In fact, my
-justification for supposing that I shall have refuted <i>historical</i>
-Hedonism, if I refute the proposition ‘Nothing is good but pleasure,’
-is, that although Hedonists have rarely stated their principle in this
-form and though its truth, in this form, will certainly not follow
-from their arguments, yet their ethical <i>method</i> will follow logically
-from nothing else. Any pretence of the hedonistic method, to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[p. 62]</span> discover to us practical
-truths which we should not otherwise have known, is founded on the
-principle that the course of action which will bring the greatest
-balance of pleasure is certainly the right one; and, failing an
-absolute proof that the greatest balance of pleasure <i>always</i> coincides
-with the greatest balance of other goods, which it is not generally
-attempted to give, this principle can only be justified if pleasure
-be the sole good. Indeed it can hardly be doubted that Hedonists are
-distinguished by arguing, in disputed practical questions, <i>as if</i>
-pleasure were the sole good; and that it is justifiable, for this among
-other reasons, to take this as <i>the</i> ethical principle of Hedonism
-will, I hope, be made further evident by the whole discussion of this
-chapter.</p>
-
-<p>By Hedonism, then, I mean the doctrine that pleasure <i>alone</i> is
-good as an end&mdash;‘good’ in the sense which I have tried to point
-out as indefinable. The doctrine that pleasure, <i>among other things</i>,
-is good as an end, is not Hedonism; and I shall not dispute its truth.
-Nor again is the doctrine that other things, beside pleasure, are good
-as means, at all inconsistent with Hedonism: the Hedonist is not bound
-to maintain that ‘Pleasure alone is good,’ if under good he includes,
-as we generally do, what is good as means to an end, <i>as well as</i> the
-end itself. In attacking Hedonism, I am therefore simply and solely
-attacking the doctrine that ‘Pleasure <i>alone</i> is good as an end or in
-itself’: I am not attacking the doctrine that ‘Pleasure <i>is</i> good as an
-end or in itself,’ nor am I attacking any doctrine whatever as to what
-are the best means we can take in order to obtain pleasure or any other
-end. Hedonists do, in general, recommend a course of conduct which is
-very similar to that which I should recommend. I do not quarrel with
-them about most of their practical conclusions, I quarrel only with the
-reasons by which they seem to think their conclusions can be supported;
-and I do emphatically deny that the correctness of their conclusions is
-any ground for inferring the correctness of their principles. A correct
-conclusion may always be obtained by fallacious reasoning; and the good
-life or virtuous maxims of a Hedonist afford absolutely no presumption
-that his ethical philosophy is also good. It is his ethical philosophy
-alone with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[p. 63]</span> which I
-am concerned: what I dispute is the excellence of his reasoning, not
-the excellence of his character as a man or even as moral teacher. It
-may be thought that my contention is unimportant, but that is no ground
-for thinking that I am not in the right. What I am concerned with is
-knowledge only&mdash;that we should think correctly and so far arrive
-at some truth, however unimportant: I do not say that such knowledge
-will make us more useful members of society. If any one does not care
-for knowledge for its own sake, then I have nothing to say to him; only
-it should not be thought that a lack of interest in what I have to say
-is any ground for holding it untrue.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_38"><b>38.&emsp;</b>Hedonists, then, hold that all other things
-but pleasure, whether conduct or virtue or knowledge, whether life or
-nature or beauty, are only good as means to pleasure or for the sake
-of pleasure, never for their own sakes or as ends in themselves. This
-view was held by Aristippus, the disciple of Socrates, and by the
-Cyrenaic school which he founded; it is associated with Epicurus and
-the Epicureans; and it has been held in modern times, chiefly by those
-philosophers who call themselves ‘Utilitarians’&mdash;by Bentham, and
-by Mill, for instance. Herbert Spencer, as we have seen, also says he
-holds it; and Professor Sidgwick, as we shall see, holds it too.</p>
-
-<p>Yet all these philosophers, as has been said, differ from one
-another more or less, both as to what they mean by Hedonism, and as
-to the reasons for which it is to be accepted as a true doctrine.
-The matter is therefore obviously not quite so simple as it might
-at first appear. My own object will be to shew quite clearly what
-the theory must imply, if it is made precise, if all confusions and
-inconsistencies are removed from the conception of it; and, when this
-is done, I think it will appear that all the various reasons given
-for holding it to be true, are really quite inadequate; that they are
-not reasons for holding Hedonism, but only for holding some other
-doctrine which is confused therewith. In order to attain this object I
-propose to take first Mill’s doctrine, as set forth in his book called
-<i>Utilitarianism</i>: we shall find in Mill a conception of Hedonism, and
-arguments in its favour, which fairly represent those of a large class
-of hedonistic writers. To these representative<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_64">[p. 64]</span> conceptions and arguments grave objections,
-objections which appear to me to be conclusive, have been urged by
-Professor Sidgwick. These I shall try to give in my own words; and
-shall then proceed to consider and refute Professor Sidgwick’s own much
-more precise conceptions and arguments. With this, I think, we shall
-have traversed the whole field of Hedonistic doctrine. It will appear,
-from the discussion, that the task of deciding what is or is not good
-in itself is by no means an easy one; and in this way the discussion
-will afford a good example of the method which it is necessary to
-pursue in attempting to arrive at the truth with regard to this primary
-class of ethical principles. In particular it will appear that two
-principles of method must be constantly kept in mind: (1) that the
-naturalistic fallacy must not be committed; (2) that the distinction
-between means and ends must be observed.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_39"><b>39.&emsp;</b>I propose, then, to begin by an examination
-of Mill’s <i>Utilitarianism</i>. That is a book which contains an admirably
-clear and fair discussion of many ethical principles and methods.
-Mill exposes not a few simple mistakes which are very likely to be
-made by those who approach ethical problems without much previous
-reflection. But what I am concerned with is the mistakes which Mill
-himself appears to have made, and these only so far as they concern
-the Hedonistic principle. Let me repeat what that principle is. It is,
-I said, that pleasure is the only thing at which we ought to aim, the
-only thing that is good as an end and for its own sake. And now let
-us turn to Mill and see whether he accepts this description of the
-question at issue. ‘Pleasure,’ he says at the outset, ‘and freedom from
-pain, are the only things desirable as ends’ (p. 10<a id="FNanchor_9"
-href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>); and again, at the end
-of his argument, ‘To think of an object as desirable (unless for the
-sake of its consequences) and to think of it as pleasant are one and
-the same thing’ (p. 58). These statements, taken together, and apart
-from certain confusions which are obvious in them, seem to imply the
-principle I have stated; and if I succeed in shewing that Mill’s
-reasons for them do not prove them, it must at least be admitted that I
-have not been fighting with shadows or demolishing a man of straw.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[p. 65]</span></p> <p>It will be
-observed that Mill adds ‘absence of pain’ to ‘pleasure’ in his first
-statement, though not in his second. There is, in this, a confusion,
-with which, however, we need not deal. I shall talk of ‘pleasure’
-alone, for the sake of conciseness; but all my arguments will apply
-<i>à fortiori</i> to ‘absence of pain’: it is easy to make the necessary
-substitutions.</p>
-
-<p>Mill holds, then, that ‘happiness is desirable, and <i>the
-only thing desirable</i><a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10"
-class="fnanchor">[10]</a>, as an end; all other things being only
-desirable as means to that end’ (p. 52). Happiness he has already
-defined as ‘pleasure, and the absence of pain’ (p. 10); he does not
-pretend that this is more than an arbitrary verbal definition; and, as
-<i>such</i>, I have not a word to say against it. His principle, then, is
-‘pleasure is the only thing desirable,’ if I may be allowed, when I
-say ‘pleasure,’ to include in that word (so far as necessary) absence
-of pain. And now what are his reasons for holding that principle to be
-true? He has already told us (p. 6) that ‘Questions of ultimate ends
-are not amenable to direct proof. Whatever can be proved to be good,
-must be so by being shewn to be a means to something <i>admitted to be
-good without proof</i>.’ With this, I perfectly agree: indeed the chief
-object of my first chapter was to shew that this is so. Anything which
-is good as an end must be admitted to be good without proof. We are
-agreed so far. Mill even uses the same examples which I used in my
-second chapter. ‘How,’ he says, ‘is it possible to prove that health is
-good?’ ‘What proof is it possible to give that pleasure is good?’ Well,
-in Chapter IV, in which he deals with the proof of his Utilitarian
-principle, Mill repeats the above statement in these words: ‘It has
-already,’ he says, ‘been remarked, that questions of ultimate ends
-do not admit of proof, in the ordinary acceptation of the term’ (p.
-52). ‘Questions about ends,’ he goes on in this same passage, ‘are, in
-other words, questions what things are desirable.’ I am quoting these
-repetitions, because they make it plain what otherwise might have been
-doubted, that Mill is using the words ‘desirable’ or ‘desirable as an
-end’ as absolutely and precisely equivalent to the words ‘good as an
-end.’ We are,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[p. 66]</span> then,
-now to hear, what reasons he advances for this doctrine that pleasure
-alone is good as an end.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_40"><b>40.&emsp;</b>‘Questions about ends,’ he says (pp.
-52-3), ‘are, in other words, questions what things are desirable.
-The utilitarian doctrine is, that happiness is desirable, and
-the only thing desirable, as an end; all other things being only
-desirable as means to that end. What ought to be required of this
-doctrine&mdash;what conditions is it requisite that the doctrine should
-fulfil&mdash;to make good its claim to be believed?</p>
-
-<p>‘The only proof capable of being given that a thing is visible, is
-that people actually see it. The only proof that a sound is audible, is
-that people hear it; and so of the other sources of our experience. In
-like manner, I apprehend, the sole evidence it is possible to produce
-that anything is desirable, is that people do actually desire it. If
-the end which the utilitarian doctrine proposes to itself were not,
-in theory and in practice, acknowledged to be an end, nothing could
-ever convince any person that it was so. No reason can be given why
-the general happiness is desirable, except that each person, so far
-as he believes it to be attainable, desires his own happiness. This,
-however, being the fact, we have not only all the proof which the case
-admits of, but all which it is possible to require, that happiness is
-a good: that each person’s happiness is a good to that person, and the
-general happiness, therefore, a good to the aggregate of all persons.
-Happiness has made out its title as <i>one</i> of the ends of conduct, and
-consequently one of the criteria of morality.’</p>
-
-<p>There, that is enough. That is my first point. Mill has made as
-naïve and artless a use of the naturalistic fallacy as anybody could
-desire. ‘Good,’ he tells us, means ‘desirable,’ and you can only find
-out what is desirable by seeking to find out what is actually desired.
-This is, of course, only one step towards the proof of Hedonism; for
-it may be, as Mill goes on to say, that other things beside pleasure
-are desired. Whether or not pleasure is the only thing desired is,
-as Mill himself admits (p. 58), a psychological question, to which
-we shall presently proceed. The important step for Ethics is this
-one just taken, the step which pretends to prove that ‘good’ means
-‘desired.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[p. 67]</span>’ Well, the
-fallacy in this step is so obvious, that it is quite wonderful how Mill
-failed to see it. The fact is that ‘desirable’ does not mean ‘able to
-be desired’ as ‘visible’ means ‘able to be seen.’ The desirable means
-simply what <i>ought</i> to be desired or <i>deserves</i> to be desired; just
-as the detestable means not what can be but what ought to be detested
-and the damnable what deserves to be damned. Mill has, then, smuggled
-in, under cover of the word ‘desirable,’ the very notion about which
-he ought to be quite clear. ‘Desirable’ does indeed mean ‘what it is
-good to desire’; but when this is understood, it is no longer plausible
-to say that our only test of <i>that</i>, is what is actually desired. Is
-it merely a tautology when the Prayer Book talks of <i>good</i> desires?
-Are not <i>bad</i> desires also possible? Nay, we find Mill himself talking
-of a ‘better and nobler object of desire’ (p. 10), as if, after all,
-what is desired were not <i>ipso facto</i> good, and good in proportion to
-the amount it is desired. Moreover, if the desired is <i>ipso facto</i> the
-good; then the good is <i>ipso facto</i> the motive of our actions, and
-there can be no question of finding motives for doing it, as Mill is
-at such pains to do. If Mill’s explanation of ‘desirable’ be <i>true</i>,
-then his statement (p. 26) that the rule of action may be <i>confounded</i>
-with the motive of it is untrue: for the motive of action will then be
-according to him <i>ipso facto</i> its rule; there can be no distinction
-between the two, and therefore no confusion, and thus he has
-contradicted himself flatly. These are specimens of the contradictions,
-which, as I have tried to shew, must always follow from the use of
-the naturalistic fallacy; and I hope I need now say no more about the
-matter.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_41"><b>41.&emsp;</b>Well, then, the first step by which Mill
-has attempted to establish his Hedonism is simply fallacious. He has
-attempted to establish the identity of the good with the desired, by
-confusing the proper sense of ‘desirable,’ in which it denotes that
-which it is good to desire, with the sense which it would bear, if it
-were analogous to such words as ‘visible.’ If ‘desirable’ is to be
-identical with ‘good,’ then it must bear one sense; and if it is to
-be identical with ‘desired,’ then it must bear quite another sense.
-And yet to Mill’s contention that the desired is necessarily good,
-it is quite essential that these two senses of<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_68">[p. 68]</span> ‘desirable’ should be the same. If he
-holds they are the same, then he has contradicted himself elsewhere;
-if he holds they are not the same, then the first step in his proof of
-Hedonism is absolutely worthless.</p>
-
-<p>But now we must deal with the second step. Having proved, as he
-thinks, that the good means the desired, Mill recognises that, if he
-is further to maintain that pleasure alone is good, he must prove
-that pleasure alone is really desired. This doctrine that ‘pleasure
-alone is the object of all our desires’ is the doctrine which Prof.
-Sidgwick has called Psychological Hedonism: and it is a doctrine which
-most eminent psychologists are now agreed in rejecting. But it is
-a necessary step in the proof of any such Naturalistic Hedonism as
-Mill’s; and it is so commonly held, by people not expert either in
-psychology or in philosophy, that I wish to treat it at some length. It
-will be seen that Mill does not hold it in this bare form. He admits
-that other things than pleasure are desired; and this admission is
-at once a contradiction of his Hedonism. One of the shifts by which
-he seeks to evade this contradiction we shall afterwards consider.
-But some may think that no such shifts are needed: they may say of
-Mill, what Callicles says of Polus in the <i>Gorgias</i><a id="FNanchor_11"
-href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>, that he has made this
-fatal admission through a most unworthy fear of appearing paradoxical;
-that they, on the other hand, will have the courage of their
-convictions, and will not be ashamed to go to any lengths of paradox,
-in defence of what they hold to be the truth.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_42"><b>42.&emsp;</b>Well, then, we are supposing it held that
-pleasure is the object of all desire, that it is the universal end of
-all human activity. Now I suppose it will not be denied that people
-are commonly said to desire other things: for instance, we usually
-talk of desiring food and drink, of desiring money, approbation, fame.
-The question, then, must be of what is meant by desire, and by the
-object of desire. There is obviously asserted some sort of necessary
-or universal relation between something which is called desire, and
-another thing which is called pleasure. The question is of what sort
-this relation is; whether in conjunction with the naturalistic fallacy
-above mentioned, it will justify<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[p.
-69]</span> Hedonism. Now I am not prepared to deny that there is some
-universal relation between pleasure and desire; but I hope to shew,
-that, if there is, it is of such sort as will rather make against than
-for Hedonism. It is urged that pleasure is always the object of desire,
-and I am ready to admit that pleasure is always, in part at least, the
-<i>cause</i> of desire. But this distinction is very important. Both views
-might be expressed in the same language; both might be said to hold
-that whenever we desire, we always desire <i>because of</i> some pleasure:
-if I asked my supposed Hedonist, ‘Why do you desire that?’ he might
-answer, quite consistently with his contention, ‘Because there is
-pleasure there,’ and if he asked me the same question, I might answer,
-equally consistently with my contention, ‘Because there is pleasure
-here.’ Only our two answers would not mean the same thing. It is this
-use of the same language to denote quite different facts, which I
-believe to be the chief cause why Psychological Hedonism is so often
-held, just as it was also the cause of Mill’s naturalistic fallacy.</p>
-
-<p>Let us try to analyse the psychological state which is called
-‘desire.’ That name is usually confined to a state of mind in which
-the idea of some object or event, not yet existing, is present to us.
-Suppose, for instance, I am desiring a glass of port wine. I have the
-idea of drinking such a glass before my mind, although I am not yet
-drinking it. Well, how does pleasure enter in to this relation? My
-theory is that it enters in, in this way. The <i>idea</i> of the drinking
-causes a feeling of pleasure in my mind, which helps to produce
-that state of incipient activity, which is called ‘desire.’ It is,
-therefore, because of a pleasure, which I already have&mdash;the
-pleasure excited by a mere idea&mdash;that I desire the wine, which
-I have not. And I am ready to admit that a pleasure of this kind, an
-actual pleasure, is always among the causes of every desire, and not
-only of every desire, but of every mental activity, whether conscious
-or sub-conscious. I am ready to <i>admit</i> this, I say: I cannot vouch
-that it is the true psychological doctrine; but, at all events, it is
-not <i>primâ facie</i> quite absurd. And now, what is the other doctrine,
-the doctrine which I am supposing held, and which is at all events
-essential to Mill’s argument?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[p.
-70]</span> It is this. That when I desire the wine, it is not the
-wine which I desire but the pleasure which I expect to get from it.
-In other words, the doctrine is that the idea of a pleasure <i>not
-actual</i> is always necessary to cause desire; whereas my doctrine was
-that the <i>actual</i> pleasure caused by the idea of something else was
-always necessary to cause desire. It is these two different theories
-which I suppose the Psychological Hedonists to confuse: the confusion
-is, as Mr Bradley puts it<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12"
-class="fnanchor">[12]</a>, between ‘a pleasant thought’ and ‘the
-thought of a pleasure.’ It is in fact only where the latter, the
-‘thought of a pleasure,’ is present, that pleasure can be said to be
-the <i>object</i> of desire, or the <i>motive</i> to action. On the other hand,
-when only a pleasant thought is present, as, I admit, <i>may</i> always be
-the case, then it is the object of the thought&mdash;that which we
-are thinking about&mdash;which is the object of desire and the motive
-to action; and the pleasure, which that thought excites, may, indeed,
-cause our desire or move us to action, but it is not our end or object
-nor our motive.</p>
-
-<p>Well, I hope this distinction is sufficiently clear. Now let us see
-how it bears upon Ethical Hedonism. I assume it to be perfectly obvious
-that the idea of the object of desire is not always and only the idea
-of a pleasure. In the first place, plainly, we are not always conscious
-of expecting pleasure, when we desire a thing. We may be only conscious
-of the thing which we desire, and may be impelled to make for it at
-once, without any calculation as to whether it will bring us pleasure
-or pain. And, in the second place, even when we do expect pleasure,
-it can certainly be very rarely pleasure <i>only</i> which we desire. For
-instance, granted that, when I desire my glass of port wine, I have
-also an idea of the pleasure I expect from it, plainly that pleasure
-cannot be the only object of my desire; the port wine must be included
-in my object, else I might be led by my desire to take wormwood instead
-of wine. If the desire were directed <i>solely</i> towards the pleasure,
-it could not lead me to take the wine; if it is to take a definite
-direction, it is absolutely necessary that the idea of the object,
-from which the pleasure is expected, should also be present and<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[p. 71]</span> should control my activity.
-The theory then that what is desired is always and only pleasure must
-break down: it is impossible to prove that pleasure alone is good, by
-that line of argument. But, if we substitute for this theory, that
-other, possibly true, theory, that pleasure is always the cause of
-desire, then all the plausibility of our ethical doctrine that pleasure
-alone is good straightway disappears. For in this case, pleasure is not
-what I desire, it is not what I want: it is something which I already
-have, before I can want anything. And can any one feel inclined to
-maintain, that that which I already have, while I am still desiring
-something else, is always and alone the good?</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_43"><b>43.&emsp;</b>But now let us return to consider another
-of Mill’s arguments for his position that ‘happiness is the sole
-end of human action.’ Mill admits, as I have said, that pleasure
-is not the only thing we actually desire. ‘The desire of virtue,’
-he says, ‘is not as universal, but it is as authentic a fact, as
-the desire of happiness<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13"
-class="fnanchor">[13]</a>.’ And again, ‘Money is, in many cases,
-desired in and for itself<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14"
-class="fnanchor">[14]</a>.’ These admissions are, of course, in
-naked and glaring contradiction with his argument that pleasure is
-the only thing desirable, because it is the only thing desired. How
-then does Mill even attempt to avoid this contradiction? His chief
-argument seems to be that ‘virtue,’ ‘money’ and other such objects,
-when they are thus desired in and for themselves, are desired only
-as ‘a part of happiness<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15"
-class="fnanchor">[15]</a>.’ Now what does this mean? Happiness, as
-we saw, has been defined by Mill, as ‘pleasure and the absence of
-pain.’ Does Mill mean to say that ‘money,’ these actual coins, which
-he admits to be desired in and for themselves, are a part either of
-pleasure or of the absence of pain? Will he maintain that those coins
-themselves are in my mind, and actually a part of my pleasant feelings?
-If this is to be said, all words are useless: nothing can possibly be
-distinguished from anything else; if these two things are not distinct,
-what on earth is? We shall hear next that this table is really and
-truly the same thing as this room; that a cab-horse is in fact
-indistinguishable from St Paul’s Cathedral; that this book of Mill’s
-which I hold in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[p. 72]</span> my
-hand, because it was his pleasure to produce it, is now and at this
-moment a part of the happiness which he felt many years ago and which
-has so long ceased to be. Pray consider a moment what this contemptible
-nonsense really means. ‘Money,’ says Mill, ‘is only desirable as a
-means to happiness.’ Perhaps so; but what then? ‘Why,’ says Mill,
-‘money is undoubtedly desired for its own sake.’ ‘Yes, go on,’ say we.
-‘Well,’ says Mill, ‘if money is desired for its own sake, it must be
-desirable as an end-in-itself: I have said so myself.’ ‘Oh,’ say we,
-‘but you also said just now that it was only desirable as a means.’ ‘I
-own I did,’ says Mill, ‘but I will try to patch up matters, by saying
-that what is only a means to an end, is the same thing as a part of
-that end. I daresay the public won’t notice.’ And the public haven’t
-noticed. Yet this is certainly what Mill has done. He has broken down
-the distinction between means and ends, upon the precise observance of
-which his Hedonism rests. And he has been compelled to do this, because
-he has failed to distinguish ‘end’ in the sense of what is desirable,
-from ‘end’ in the sense of what is desired: a distinction which,
-nevertheless, both the present argument and his whole book presupposes.
-This is a consequence of the naturalistic fallacy.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_44"><b>44.&emsp;</b>Mill, then, has nothing better to say for
-himself than this. His two fundamental propositions are, in his own
-words, ‘that to think of an object as desirable (unless for the sake
-of its consequences), and to think of it as pleasant, are one and the
-same thing; and that to desire anything except in proportion as the
-idea of it is pleasant, is a physical and metaphysical impossibility<a
-id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>.’ Both
-of these statements are, we have seen, merely supported by fallacies.
-The first seems to rest on the naturalistic fallacy; the second rests
-partly on this, partly on the fallacy of confusing ends and means, and
-partly on the fallacy of confusing a pleasant thought with the thought
-of a pleasure. His very language shews this. For that the idea of a
-thing is pleasant, in his second clause, is obviously meant to be the
-same fact which he denotes by ‘thinking of it as pleasant,’ in his
-first.</p> <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[p. 73]</span></p>
-<p>Accordingly, Mill’s arguments for the proposition that pleasure is
-the sole good, and our refutation of those arguments, may be summed up
-as follows:</p>
-
-<p>First of all, he takes ‘the desirable,’ which he uses as a synonym
-for ‘the good,’ to <i>mean</i> what <i>can</i> be desired. The test, again, of
-what can be desired, is, according to him, what actually is desired:
-if, therefore, he says, we can find some one thing which is always and
-alone desired, that thing will necessarily be the only thing that is
-desirable, the only thing that is good as an end. In this argument the
-naturalistic fallacy is plainly involved. That fallacy, I explained,
-consists in the contention that good <i>means</i> nothing but some simple or
-complex notion, that can be defined in terms of natural qualities. In
-Mill’s case, good is thus supposed to <i>mean</i> simply what is desired;
-and what is desired is something which can thus be defined in natural
-terms. Mill tells us that we ought to desire something (an ethical
-proposition), because we actually do desire it; but if his contention
-that ‘I ought to desire’ means nothing but ‘I do desire’ were true,
-then he is only entitled to say, ‘We do desire so and so, because we
-do desire it’; and that is not an ethical proposition at all; it is
-a mere tautology. The whole object of Mill’s book is to help us to
-discover what we ought to do; but, in fact, by attempting to define the
-meaning of this ‘ought,’ he has completely debarred himself from ever
-fulfilling that object: he has confined himself to telling us what we
-do do.</p>
-
-<p>Mill’s first argument then is that, because good means desired,
-therefore the desired is good; but having thus arrived at an ethical
-conclusion, by denying that any ethical conclusion is possible, he
-still needs another argument to make his conclusion a basis for
-Hedonism. He has to prove that we always do desire pleasure or freedom
-from pain, and that we never desire anything else whatever. This second
-doctrine, which Professor Sidgwick has called Psychological Hedonism,
-I accordingly discussed. I pointed out how obviously untrue it is
-that we never desire anything but pleasure; and how there is not a
-shadow of ground for saying even that, whenever we desire anything, we
-always desire pleasure <i>as well as</i> that thing.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_74">[p. 74]</span> I attributed the obstinate belief in these
-untruths partly to a confusion between the cause of desire and the
-object of desire. It may, I said, be true that desire can never occur
-unless it be preceded by some <i>actual</i> pleasure; but even if this is
-true, it obviously gives no ground for saying that the object of desire
-is always some <i>future</i> pleasure. By the object of desire is meant
-that, of which the idea causes desire in us; it is some pleasure, which
-we anticipate, some pleasure which we have not got, which is the object
-of desire, whenever we do desire pleasure. And any actual pleasure,
-which may be excited by the idea of this anticipated pleasure, is
-obviously not the same pleasure as that anticipated pleasure, of which
-only the idea is actual. This actual pleasure is not what we want;
-what we want is always something which we have not got; and to say
-that pleasure always causes us to want is quite a different thing from
-saying that what we want is always pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, we saw, Mill admits all this. He insists that we do
-<i>actually</i> desire other things than pleasure, and yet he says we
-do <i>really</i> desire nothing else. He tries to explain away this
-contradiction, by confusing together two notions, which he has before
-carefully distinguished&mdash;the notions of means and of end. He now
-says that a means to an end is the same thing as a part of that end. To
-this last fallacy special attention should be given, as our ultimate
-decision with regard to Hedonism will largely turn upon it.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_45"><b>45.&emsp;</b>It is this ultimate decision with regard to
-Hedonism at which we must now try to arrive. So far I have been only
-occupied with refuting Mill’s naturalistic arguments for Hedonism;
-but the doctrine that pleasure alone is desirable may still be true,
-although Mill’s fallacies cannot prove it so. This is the question
-which we have now to face. This proposition, ‘pleasure alone is good
-or desirable,’ belongs undoubtedly to that class of propositions, to
-which Mill at first rightly pretended it belonged, the class of first
-principles, which are not amenable to direct proof. But in this case,
-as he also rightly says, ‘considerations may be presented capable of
-determining the intellect either to give or withhold its assent to
-the doctrine’ (p. 7). It is such considerations that Professor<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[p. 75]</span> Sidgwick presents, and
-such also that I shall try to present for the opposite view. This
-proposition that ‘pleasure alone is good as an end,’ the fundamental
-proposition of Ethical Hedonism, will then appear, in Professor
-Sidgwick’s language, as an object of intuition. I shall try to shew you
-why my intuition denies it, just as his intuition affirms it. It <i>may</i>
-always be true notwithstanding; neither intuition can <i>prove</i> whether
-it is true or not; I am bound to be satisfied, if I can ‘present
-considerations capable of determining the intellect’ to reject it.</p>
-
-<p>Now it may be said that this is a very unsatisfactory state of
-things. It is indeed; but it is important to make a distinction
-between two different reasons, which may be given for calling it
-unsatisfactory. Is it unsatisfactory because our principle cannot be
-proved? or is it unsatisfactory merely because we do not agree with one
-another about it? I am inclined to think that the latter is the chief
-reason. For the mere fact that in certain cases proof is impossible
-does not usually give us the least uneasiness. For instance, nobody can
-prove that this is a chair beside me; yet I do not suppose that any one
-is much dissatisfied for that reason. We all agree that it is a chair,
-and that is enough to content us, although it is quite possible we may
-be wrong. A madman, of course, might come in and say that it is not a
-chair but an elephant. We could not prove that he was wrong, and the
-fact that he did not agree with us might then begin to make us uneasy.
-Much more, then, shall we be uneasy, if some one, whom we do not think
-to be mad, disagrees with us. We shall try to argue with him, and we
-shall probably be content if we lead him to agree with us, although we
-shall not have proved our point. We can only persuade him by shewing
-him that our view is consistent with something else which he holds to
-be true, whereas his original view is contradictory to it. But it will
-be impossible to prove that that something else, which we both agree
-to be true, is really so; we shall be satisfied to have settled the
-matter in dispute by means of it, merely because we are agreed on it.
-In short, our dissatisfaction in these cases is almost always of the
-type felt by the poor lunatic in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[p.
-76]</span> the story. ‘I said the world was mad,’ says he, ‘and the
-world said that I was mad; and, confound it, they outvoted me.’ It is,
-I say, almost always such a disagreement, and not the impossibility of
-proof, which makes us call the state of things unsatisfactory. For,
-indeed, who can prove that proof itself is a warrant of truth? We are
-all agreed that the laws of logic are true and therefore we accept a
-result which is proved by their means; but such a proof is satisfactory
-to us only because we are all so fully agreed that it is a warrant of
-truth. And yet we cannot, by the nature of the case, prove that we are
-right in being so agreed.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, I do not think we need be much distressed by our
-admission that we cannot prove whether pleasure alone is good or not.
-We may be able to arrive at an agreement notwithstanding; and if so,
-I think it will be satisfactory. And yet I am not very sanguine about
-our prospects of such satisfaction. Ethics, and philosophy in general,
-have always been in a peculiarly unsatisfactory state. There has been
-no agreement about them, as there is about the existence of chairs and
-lights and benches. I should therefore be a fool if I hoped to settle
-one great point of controversy, now and once for all. It is extremely
-improbable I shall convince. It would be highly presumptuous even to
-hope that in the end, say two or three centuries hence, it will be
-agreed that pleasure is not the sole good. Philosophical questions
-are so difficult, the problems they raise are so complex, that no one
-can fairly expect, now, any more than in the past, to win more than a
-very limited assent. And yet I confess that the considerations which
-I am about to present appear to me to be absolutely convincing. I do
-think that they <i>ought</i> to convince, if only I can put them well.
-In any case, I can but try. I <i>shall</i> try now to put an end to that
-unsatisfactory state of things, of which I have been speaking. I shall
-try to produce an agreement that the fundamental principle of Hedonism
-is very like an absurdity, by shewing what it must mean, if it is
-clearly thought out, and how that clear meaning is in conflict with
-other beliefs, which will, I hope, not be so easily given up.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_46"><b>46.&emsp;</b>Well, then, we now proceed to discuss
-Intuitionistic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[p. 77]</span>
-Hedonism. And the beginning of this discussion marks, it is to be
-observed, a turning-point in my ethical method. The point I have been
-labouring hitherto, the point that ‘good is indefinable,’ and that
-to deny this involves a fallacy, is a point capable of strict proof:
-for to deny it involves contradictions. But now we are coming to the
-question, for the sake of answering which Ethics exists, the question
-what things or qualities are good. Of any answer to <i>this</i> question no
-direct proof is possible, and that, just because of our former answer,
-as to the meaning of good, direct proof <i>was</i> possible. We are now
-confined to the hope of what Mill calls ‘indirect proof,’ the hope of
-determining one another’s intellect; and we are now so confined, just
-because, in the matter of the former question we are not so confined.
-Here, then, is an intuition to be submitted to our verdict&mdash;the
-intuition that ‘pleasure alone is good as an end&mdash;good in and for
-itself.’</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_47"><b>47.&emsp;</b>Well, in this connection it seems first
-desirable to touch on another doctrine of Mill’s&mdash;another
-doctrine which, in the interest of Hedonism, Professor Sidgwick has
-done very wisely to reject. This is the doctrine of ‘difference of
-quality in pleasures.’ ‘If I am asked,’ says Mill<a id="FNanchor_17"
-href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>, ‘what I mean by
-difference of quality in pleasures, or what makes one pleasure more
-valuable than another, merely as a pleasure, except its being greater
-in amount, there is but one possible answer. Of two pleasures, if there
-be one to which all or almost all who have experience of both give a
-decided preference, irrespective of any feeling of moral obligation to
-prefer it, that is the more desirable pleasure. If one of the two is,
-by those who are competently acquainted with both, placed so far above
-the other that they prefer it, even though knowing it to be attended
-with a greater amount of discontent, and would not resign it for any
-quantity of the other pleasure which their nature is capable of, we
-are justified in ascribing to the preferred enjoyment a superiority in
-quality, so far outweighing quantity as to render it, in comparison, of
-small account.’</p>
-
-<p>Now it is well known that Bentham rested his case for Hedonism on
-‘quantity of pleasure’ alone. It was his maxim,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_78">[p. 78]</span> that ‘quantity of pleasure being equal,
-pushpin is as good as poetry.’ And Mill apparently considers Bentham
-to have proved that nevertheless poetry is better than pushpin; that
-poetry does produce a greater quantity of pleasure. But yet, says Mill,
-the Utilitarians ‘might have taken the other and, as it may be called,
-higher ground, with entire consistency’ (p. 11). Now we see from this
-that Mill acknowledges ‘quality of pleasure’ to be another or different
-ground for estimating pleasures, than Bentham’s quantity; and moreover,
-by that question-begging ‘higher,’ which he afterwards translates
-into ‘superior,’ he seems to betray an uncomfortable feeling, that,
-after all, if you take quantity of pleasure for your only standard,
-something may be wrong and you may deserve to be called a pig. And it
-may presently appear that you very likely would deserve that name.
-But, meanwhile, I only wish to shew that Mill’s admissions as to
-quality of pleasure are either inconsistent with his Hedonism, or else
-afford no other ground for it than would be given by mere quantity of
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen that Mill’s test for one pleasure’s superiority
-in quality over another is the preference of most people who have
-experienced both. A pleasure so preferred, he holds, is more desirable.
-But then, as we have seen, he holds that ‘to think of an object as
-desirable and to think of it as pleasant are one and the same thing’
-(p. 58). He holds, therefore, that the preference of experts merely
-proves that one pleasure is pleasanter than another. But if that is
-so, how can he distinguish this standard from the standard of quantity
-of pleasure? Can one pleasure be pleasanter than another, except in
-the sense that it gives <i>more</i> pleasure? ‘Pleasant’ must, if words are
-to have any meaning at all, denote some one quality common to all the
-things that are pleasant; and, if so, then one thing can only be more
-pleasant than another, according as it has more or less of this one
-quality. But, then, let us try the other alternative, and suppose that
-Mill does not seriously mean that this preference of experts merely
-proves one pleasure to be pleasanter than another. Well, in this case
-what does ‘preferred’ mean? It cannot mean ‘more desired,’ since, as we
-know, the degree of desire is always, according<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_79">[p. 79]</span> to Mill, in exact proportion to the degree
-of pleasantness. But, in that case, the basis of Mill’s Hedonism
-collapses, for he is admitting that one thing may be preferred over
-another, and thus proved more desirable, although it is not more
-desired. In this case Mill’s judgment of preference is just a judgment
-of that intuitional kind which I have been contending to be necessary
-to establish the hedonistic or any other principle. It is a direct
-judgment that one thing is more desirable, or better than another; a
-judgment utterly independent of all considerations as to whether one
-thing is more desired or pleasanter than another. This is to admit that
-good is good and indefinable.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_48"><b>48.&emsp;</b>And note another point that is brought
-out by this discussion. Mill’s judgment of preference, so far from
-establishing the principle that pleasure alone is good, is obviously
-inconsistent with it. He admits that experts can judge whether one
-pleasure is more desirable than another, because pleasures differ
-in quality. But what does this mean? If one pleasure can differ
-from another in quality, that means, that <i>a</i> pleasure is something
-complex, something composed, in fact, of pleasure <i>in addition to</i>
-that which produces pleasure. For instance, Mill speaks of ‘sensual
-indulgences’ as ‘lower pleasures.’ But what is a sensual indulgence?
-It is surely a certain excitement of some sense <i>together with</i> the
-pleasure caused by such excitement. Mill, therefore, in admitting that
-a sensual indulgence can be directly judged to be lower than another
-pleasure, in which the degree of pleasure involved may be the same, is
-admitting that other things may be good, or bad, quite independently of
-the pleasure which accompanies them. <i>A</i> pleasure is, in fact, merely
-a misleading term which conceals the fact that what we are dealing
-with is not pleasure but something else, which may indeed necessarily
-produce pleasure, but is nevertheless quite distinct from it.</p>
-
-<p>Mill, therefore, in thinking that to estimate quality of pleasure
-is quite consistent with his hedonistic principle that pleasure and
-absence of pain alone are desirable as ends, has again committed the
-fallacy of confusing ends and means. For take even the most favourable
-supposition of his meaning; let<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[p.
-80]</span> us suppose that by a pleasure he does not mean, as his words
-imply, that which produces pleasure and the pleasure produced. Let
-us suppose him to mean that there are various kinds of pleasure, in
-the sense in which there are various kinds of colour&mdash;blue, red,
-green, etc. Even in this case, if we are to say that our end is colour
-alone, then, although it is impossible we should have colour without
-having some particular colour, yet the particular colour we must have,
-is only a <i>means</i> to our having colour, if colour is really our end.
-And if colour is our only possible end, as Mill says pleasure is, then
-there can be no possible reason for preferring one colour to another,
-red, for instance, to blue, except that the one is more of a colour
-than the other. Yet the opposite of this is what Mill is attempting to
-hold with regard to pleasures.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly a consideration of Mill’s view that some pleasures are
-superior to others <i>in quality</i> brings out one point which may ‘help
-to determine the intellect’ with regard to the intuition ‘Pleasure is
-the only good.’ For it brings out the fact that if you say ‘pleasure,’
-you must mean ‘pleasure’: you must mean some one thing common to all
-different ‘pleasures,’ some one thing, which may exist in different
-degrees, but which cannot differ in <i>kind</i>. I have pointed out that,
-if you say, as Mill does, that quality of pleasure is to be taken
-into account, then you are no longer holding that pleasure <i>alone</i> is
-good as an end, since you imply that something else, something which
-is <i>not</i> present in all pleasures, is <i>also</i> good as an end. The
-illustration I have given from colour expresses this point in its most
-acute form. It is plain that if you say ‘Colour alone is good as an
-end,’ then you can give no possible reason for preferring one colour to
-another. Your only standard of good and bad will then be ‘colour’; and
-since red and blue both conform equally to this, the only standard, you
-can have no other whereby to judge whether red is better than blue. It
-is true that you cannot have colour unless you also have one or all of
-the particular colours: they, therefore, if colour is the end, will all
-be good as means, but none of them can be better than another even as
-a means, far less can any one of them be regarded as an end in itself.
-Just so with pleasure: If we do<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[p.
-81]</span> really mean ‘Pleasure alone is good as an end,’ then we must
-agree with Bentham that ‘Quantity of pleasure being equal, pushpin
-is as good as poetry.’ To have thus dismissed Mill’s reference to
-quality of pleasure, is therefore to have made one step in the desired
-direction. The reader will now no longer be prevented from agreeing
-with me, by any idea that the hedonistic principle ‘Pleasure alone is
-good as an end’ is consistent with the view that one pleasure may be
-of a better quality than another. These two views, we have seen, are
-contradictory to one another. We must choose between them: and if we
-choose the latter, then we must give up the principle of Hedonism.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_49"><b>49.&emsp;</b>But, as I said, Professor Sidgwick has seen
-that they are inconsistent. He has seen that he must choose between
-them. He has chosen. He has rejected the test by quality of pleasure,
-and has accepted the hedonistic principle. He still maintains that
-‘Pleasure alone is good as an end.’ I propose therefore to discuss the
-considerations which he has offered in order to convince us. I shall
-hope by that discussion to remove some more of such prejudices and
-misunderstandings as might prevent agreement with me. If I can shew
-that some of the considerations which Professor Sidgwick urges are such
-as we need by no means agree with, and that others are actually rather
-in my favour than in his, we may have again advanced a few steps nearer
-to the unanimity which we desire.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_50"><b>50.&emsp;</b>The passages in the <i>Methods of
-Ethics</i> to which I shall now invite attention are to be found in I.
-<small>IX.</small> 4 and in III. <small>XIV.</small> 4-5.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these two passages runs as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“I think that if we consider carefully such permanent results as are
-commonly judged to be good, other than qualities of human beings, we
-can find nothing that, on reflection, appears to possess this quality
-of goodness out of relation to human existence, or at least to some
-consciousness or feeling.</p>
-
-<p>“For example, we commonly judge some inanimate objects, scenes, etc.
-to be good as possessing beauty, and others bad from ugliness: still no
-one would consider it rational to aim at the production of beauty in
-external nature, apart from any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[p.
-82]</span> possible contemplation of it by human beings. In fact when
-beauty is maintained to be objective, it is not commonly meant that it
-exists as beauty out of relation to any mind whatsoever: but only that
-there is some standard of beauty valid for all minds.</p>
-
-<p>“It may, however, be said that beauty and other results commonly
-judged to be good, though we do not conceive them to exist out of
-relation to human beings (or at least minds of some kind), are
-yet so far separable as ends from the human beings on whom their
-existence depends, that their realization may conceivably come into
-competition with the perfection or happiness of these beings. Thus,
-though beautiful things cannot be thought worth producing except as
-possible objects of contemplation, still a man may devote himself to
-their production without any consideration of the persons who are to
-contemplate them. Similarly knowledge is a good which cannot exist
-except in minds; and yet one may be more interested in the development
-of knowledge than in its possession by any particular minds; and may
-take the former as an ultimate end without regarding the latter.</p>
-
-<p>“Still, as soon as the alternatives are clearly apprehended, it
-will, I think, be generally held that beauty, knowledge, and other
-ideal goods, as well as all external material things, are only
-reasonably to be sought by men in so far as they conduce (1) to
-Happiness or (2) to the Perfection or Excellence of human existence.
-I say ‘human,’ for though most utilitarians consider the pleasure
-(and freedom from pain) of the inferior animals to be included in the
-Happiness which they take as the right and proper end of conduct,
-no one seems to contend that we ought to aim at perfecting brutes
-except as a means to our ends, or at least as objects of scientific
-or æsthetic contemplation for us. Nor, again, can we include, as a
-practical end, the existence of beings above the human. We certainly
-apply the idea of Good to the Divine Existence, just as we do to His
-work, and indeed in a preeminent manner: and when it is said that,
-‘we should do all things to the glory of God,’ it may seem to be
-implied that the existence of God is made better by our glorifying
-Him. Still this inference when explicitly drawn appears somewhat
-impious; and theologians generally recoil from<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_83">[p. 83]</span> it, and refrain from using the notion
-of a possible addition to the Goodness of the Divine Existence as a
-ground of human duty. Nor can the influence of our actions on other
-extra-human intelligences besides the Divine be at present made matter
-of scientific discussion.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall therefore confidently lay down, that if there be any Good
-other than Happiness to be sought by man, as an ultimate practical
-end, it can only be the Goodness, Perfection, or Excellence of Human
-Existence. How far this notion includes more than Virtue, what its
-precise relation to Pleasure is, and to what method we shall be
-logically led if we accept it as fundamental, are questions which we
-shall more conveniently discuss after the detailed examination of these
-two other notions, Pleasure and Virtue, in which we shall be engaged in
-the two following Books.”</p>
-
-<p>It will be observed that in this passage Prof. Sidgwick tries to
-limit the range of objects among which the ultimate end may be found.
-He does not yet say what that end is, but he does exclude from it
-everything but certain characters of Human Existence. And the possible
-ends, which he thus excludes, do not again come up for consideration.
-They are put out of court once for all by this passage and by this
-passage only. Now is this exclusion justified?</p>
-
-<p>I cannot think it is. ‘No one,’ says Prof. Sidgwick, ‘would consider
-it rational to aim at the production of beauty in external nature,
-apart from any possible contemplation of it by human beings.’ Well,
-I may say at once, that I, for one, do consider this rational; and
-let us see if I cannot get any one to agree with me. Consider what
-this admission really means. It entitles us to put the following
-case. Let us imagine one world exceedingly beautiful. Imagine it as
-beautiful as you can; put into it whatever on this earth you most
-admire&mdash;mountains, rivers, the sea; trees, and sunsets, stars and
-moon. Imagine these all combined in the most exquisite proportions,
-so that no one thing jars against another, but each contributes to
-increase the beauty of the whole. And then imagine the ugliest world
-you can possibly conceive. Imagine it simply one heap of filth,
-containing everything that is most disgusting<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_84">[p. 84]</span> to us, for whatever reason, and the whole,
-as far as may be, without one redeeming feature. Such a pair of worlds
-we are entitled to compare: they fall within Prof. Sidgwick’s meaning,
-and the comparison is highly relevant to it. The only thing we are
-not entitled to imagine is that any human being ever has or ever, by
-any possibility, <i>can</i>, live in either, can ever see and enjoy the
-beauty of the one or hate the foulness of the other. Well, even so,
-supposing them quite apart from any possible contemplation by human
-beings; still, is it irrational to hold that it is better that the
-beautiful world should exist, than the one which is ugly? Would it not
-be well, in any case, to do what we could to produce it rather than
-the other? Certainly I cannot help thinking that it would; and I hope
-that some may agree with me in this extreme instance. The instance is
-extreme. It is highly improbable, not to say, impossible, we should
-ever have such a choice before us. In any actual choice we should have
-to consider the possible effects of our action upon conscious beings,
-and among these possible effects there are always some, I think, which
-ought to be preferred to the existence of mere beauty. But this only
-means that in our present state, in which but a very small portion of
-the good is attainable, the pursuit of beauty for its own sake must
-always be postponed to the pursuit of some greater good, which is
-equally attainable. But it is enough for my purpose, if it be admitted
-that, <i>supposing</i> no greater good were at all attainable, then beauty
-must in itself be regarded as a greater good than ugliness; if it be
-admitted that, in that case, we should not be left without any reason
-for preferring one course of action to another, we should not be left
-without any duty whatever, but that it would then be our positive
-duty to make the world more beautiful, so far as we were able, since
-nothing better than beauty could then result from our efforts. If
-this be once admitted, if in any imaginable case you do admit that
-the existence of a more beautiful thing is better in itself than that
-of one more ugly, quite apart from its effects on any human feeling,
-then Prof. Sidgwick’s principle has broken down. Then we shall have
-to include in our ultimate end something beyond the limits of human
-existence. I admit,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[p. 85]</span>
-of course, that our beautiful world would be better still, if there
-were human beings in it to contemplate and enjoy its beauty. But that
-admission makes nothing against my point. If it be once admitted that
-the beautiful world <i>in itself</i> is better than the ugly, then it
-follows, that however many beings may enjoy it, and however much better
-their enjoyment may be than it is itself, yet its mere existence adds
-<i>something</i> to the goodness of the whole: it is not only a means to our
-end, but also itself a part thereof.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_51"><b>51.&emsp;</b>In the second passage to which I referred
-above, Prof. Sidgwick returns from the discussion of Virtue and
-Pleasure, with which he has meanwhile been engaged, to consider
-what among the parts of Human Existence to which, as we saw, he has
-limited the ultimate end, can really be considered as such end. What
-I have just said, of course, appears to me to destroy the force of
-this part of his argument too. If, as I think, other things than
-any part of Human Existence can be ends-in-themselves, then Prof.
-Sidgwick cannot claim to have discovered the Summum Bonum, when he
-has merely determined what parts of Human Existence are in themselves
-desirable. But this error may be admitted to be utterly insignificant
-in comparison with that which we are now about to discuss.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be said,” says Prof. Sidgwick (III. <small>XIV.</small>
-§§&nbsp;4-5), “that we may ... regard cognition of Truth, contemplation
-of Beauty, Free or Virtuous action, as in some measure preferable
-alternatives to Pleasure or Happiness&mdash;even though we admit that
-Happiness must be included as a part of Ultimate Good.... I think,
-however, that this view ought not to commend itself to the sober
-judgment of reflective persons. In order to shew this, I must ask the
-reader to use the same twofold procedure that I before requested him
-to employ in considering the absolute and independent validity of
-common moral precepts. I appeal firstly to his intuitive judgment after
-due consideration of the question when fairly placed before it: and
-secondly to a comprehensive comparison of the ordinary judgments of
-mankind. As regards the first argument, to me at least it seems clear
-after reflection that these objective relations of the conscious<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[p. 86]</span> subject, when distinguished
-from the consciousness accompanying and resulting from them, are not
-ultimately and intrinsically desirable; any more than material or other
-objects are, when considered apart from any relation to conscious
-existence. Admitting that we have actual experience of such preferences
-as have just been described, of which the ultimate object is something
-that is not merely consciousness: it still seems to me that when (to
-use Butler’s phrase) we ‘sit down in a cool hour,’ we can only justify
-to ourselves the importance that we attach to any of these objects by
-considering its conduciveness, in one way or another, to the happiness
-of sentient beings.</p>
-
-<p>“The second argument, that refers to the common sense of mankind,
-obviously cannot be made completely cogent; since, as above stated,
-several cultivated persons do habitually judge that knowledge, art,
-etc.,&mdash;not to speak of Virtue&mdash;are ends independently of the
-pleasure derived from them. But we may urge not only that all these
-elements of ‘ideal good’ are productive of pleasure in various ways;
-but also that they seem to obtain the commendation of Common Sense,
-roughly speaking, in proportion to the degree of this productiveness.
-This seems obviously true of Beauty; and will hardly be denied in
-respect of any kind of social ideal: it is paradoxical to maintain
-that any degree of Freedom, or any form of social order, would still
-be commonly regarded as desirable even if we were certain that it had
-no tendency to promote the general happiness. The case of Knowledge is
-rather more complex; but certainly Common Sense is most impressed with
-the value of knowledge, when its ‘fruitfulness’ has been demonstrated.
-It is, however, aware that experience has frequently shewn how
-knowledge, long fruitless, may become unexpectedly fruitful, and how
-light may be shed on one part of the field of knowledge from another
-apparently remote: and even if any particular branch of scientific
-pursuit could be shewn to be devoid of even this indirect utility,
-it would still deserve some respect on utilitarian grounds; both as
-furnishing to the inquirer the refined and innocent pleasures of
-curiosity, and because the intellectual disposition which it exhibits
-and sustains is likely on the whole to produce fruitful knowledge.
-Still in cases approximating to this last, Common<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_87">[p. 87]</span> Sense is somewhat disposed to complain
-of the mis-direction of valuable effort; so that the meed of honour
-commonly paid to Science seems to be graduated, though perhaps
-unconsciously, by a tolerably exact utilitarian scale. Certainly the
-moment the legitimacy of any branch of scientific inquiry is seriously
-disputed, as in the recent case of vivisection, the controversy on both
-sides is generally conducted on an avowedly utilitarian basis.</p>
-
-<p>“The case of Virtue requires special consideration: since the
-encouragement in each other of virtuous impulses and dispositions is a
-main aim of men’s ordinary moral discourse; so that even to raise the
-question whether this encouragement can go too far has a paradoxical
-air. Still, our experience includes rare and exceptional cases in which
-the concentration of effort on the cultivation of virtue has seemed to
-have effects adverse to general happiness, through being intensified
-to the point of moral fanaticism, and so involving a neglect of other
-conditions of happiness. If, then, we admit as actual or possible
-such ‘infelicific’ effects of the cultivation of Virtue, I think we
-shall also generally admit that, in the case supposed, conduciveness
-to general happiness should be the criterion for deciding how far the
-cultivation of Virtue should be carried.”</p>
-
-<p>There we have Prof. Sidgwick’s argument completed. We ought not,
-he thinks, to aim at knowing the Truth, or at contemplating Beauty,
-except in so far as such knowledge or such contemplation contributes
-to increase the pleasure or to diminish the pain of sentient beings.
-Pleasure alone is good for its own sake: knowledge of the Truth is good
-only as a means to pleasure.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_52"><b>52.&emsp;</b>Let us consider what this means. What is
-pleasure? It is certainly something of which we may be conscious, and
-which, therefore, may be distinguished from our consciousness of it.
-What I wish first to ask is this: Can it really be said that we value
-pleasure, except in so far as we are conscious of it? Should we think
-that the attainment of pleasure, of which we never were and never could
-be conscious, was something to be aimed at for its own sake? It may be
-impossible that such pleasure should ever exist, that it should ever be
-thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[p. 88]</span> divorced from
-consciousness; although there is certainly much reason to believe that
-it is not only possible but very common. But, even supposing that it
-were impossible, that is quite irrelevant. Our question is: Is it the
-pleasure, as distinct from the consciousness of it, that we set value
-on? Do we think the pleasure valuable in itself, or must we insist
-that, if we are to think the pleasure good, we must have consciousness
-of it too?</p>
-
-<p>This consideration is very well put by Socrates in Plato’s dialogue
-<i>Philebus</i> (21 <small>A</small>).</p>
-
-<p>‘Would <i>you</i> accept, Protarchus,’ says Socrates, ‘to live your whole
-life in the enjoyment of the greatest pleasures?’ ‘Of course I would,’
-says Protarchus.</p>
-
-<p><i>Socrates.</i>&emsp;Then would you think you needed anything else besides,
-if you possessed this one blessing in completeness?</p>
-
-<p><i>Protarchus.</i>&emsp;Certainly not.</p>
-
-<p><i>Socrates.</i>&emsp;Consider what you are saying. You would not need to be
-wise and intelligent and reasonable, nor anything like this? Would you
-not even care to keep your sight?</p>
-
-<p><i>Protarchus.</i>&emsp;Why should I? I suppose I should have all I want, if I
-was pleased.</p>
-
-<p><i>Socrates.</i>&emsp;Well, then, supposing you lived so, you would enjoy
-always throughout your life the greatest pleasure?</p>
-
-<p><i>Protarchus.</i>&emsp;Of course.</p>
-
-<p><i>Socrates.</i> But, on the other hand, inasmuch as you would <i>not</i>
-possess intelligence and memory and knowledge and true opinion, you
-would, in the first place, necessarily be without the knowledge whether
-you were pleased or not. For you would be devoid of any kind of wisdom.
-You admit this?</p>
-
-<p><i>Protarchus.</i>&emsp;I do. The consequence is absolutely necessary.</p>
-
-<p><i>Socrates.</i>&emsp;Well, then, besides this, not having memory, you must
-also be unable to remember even that you ever were pleased; of the
-pleasure which falls upon you at the moment not the least vestige must
-afterwards remain. And again, not having true opinion, you cannot
-think that you are pleased when you are; and, being bereft of your
-reasoning faculties, you cannot even have the power to reckon that you
-will be pleased in future. You must live the life of an oyster, or of
-some other of those living creatures, whose home is the seas<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[p. 89]</span> and whose souls are
-concealed in shelly bodies. Is all this so, or can we think otherwise
-than this?</p>
-
-<p><i>Protarchus.</i>&emsp;How can we?</p>
-
-<p><i>Socrates.</i>&emsp;Well, then, can we think such a life desirable?</p>
-
-<p><i>Protarchus.</i>&emsp;Socrates, your reasoning has left me utterly dumb.’</p>
-
-<p>Socrates, we see, persuades Protarchus that Hedonism is absurd.
-If we are really going to maintain that pleasure alone is good as an
-end, we must maintain that it is good, whether we are conscious of
-it or not. We must declare it reasonable to take as our ideal (an
-unattainable ideal it may be) that we should be as happy as possible,
-even on condition that we never know and never can know that we are
-happy. We must be willing to sell in exchange for the mere happiness
-every vestige of knowledge, both in ourselves and in others, both
-of happiness itself and of every other thing. Can we really still
-disagree? Can any one still declare it obvious that this is reasonable?
-That pleasure alone is good as an end?</p>
-
-<p>The case, it is plain, is just like that of the colours<a
-id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>, only,
-as yet, not nearly so strong. It is far more possible that we should
-some day be able to produce the intensest pleasure, without any
-consciousness that it is there, than that we should be able to produce
-mere colour, without its being any particular colour. Pleasure and
-consciousness can be far more easily distinguished from one another,
-than colour from the particular colours. And yet even if this were
-not so, we should be bound to distinguish them if we really wished to
-declare pleasure alone to be our ultimate end. Even if consciousness
-were an inseparable accompaniment of pleasure, a <i>sine quâ non</i> of
-its existence, yet, if pleasure is the only end, we are bound to
-call consciousness a mere <i>means</i> to it, in any intelligible sense
-that can be given to the word <i>means</i>. And if, on the other hand, as
-I hope is now plain, the pleasure would be comparatively valueless
-without the consciousness, then we are bound to say that pleasure is
-<i>not</i> the only end, that some consciousness at least must be included
-with it as a veritable part of the end.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_90">[p. 90]</span></p> <p>For our question now is solely
-what the end is: it is quite another question how far that end may be
-attainable <i>by itself</i>, or must involve the simultaneous attainment of
-other things. It may well be that the <i>practical</i> conclusions at which
-Utilitarians do arrive, and even those at which they ought logically to
-arrive, are not far from the truth. But in so far as their <i>reason</i> for
-holding these conclusions to be true is that ‘Pleasure alone is good as
-an end,’ they are <i>absolutely</i> wrong: and it is with <i>reasons</i> that we
-are chiefly concerned in any scientific Ethics.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<p id="Sec_53"><b>53.&emsp;</b>It seems, then, clear that Hedonism is
-in error, so far as it maintains that pleasure alone, and not the
-consciousness of pleasure, is the sole good. And this error seems
-largely due to the fallacy which I pointed out above in Mill&mdash;the
-fallacy of confusing means and end. It is falsely supposed that,
-since pleasure must always be accompanied by consciousness (which is,
-itself, extremely doubtful), therefore it is indifferent whether we
-say that pleasure or the consciousness of pleasure is the sole good.
-<i>Practically</i>, of course, it would be indifferent at which we aimed, if
-it were certain that we could not get the one without the other; but
-where the question is of what is good in itself&mdash;where we ask: For
-the sake of what is it desirable to get that which we aim at?&mdash;the
-distinction is by no means unimportant. Here we are placed before an
-exclusive alternative. <i>Either</i> pleasure by itself (even though we
-can’t get it) would be all that is desirable, <i>or</i> a consciousness
-of it would be more desirable still. Both these propositions cannot
-be true; and I think it is plain that the latter is true; whence it
-follows that pleasure is <i>not</i> the sole good.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Still it may be said that, even if consciousness of pleasure, and
-not pleasure alone, is the sole good, this conclusion is not very
-damaging to Hedonism. It may be said that Hedonists have always meant
-by pleasure the consciousness of pleasure, though they have not been at
-pains to say so; and this, I think is, in the main, true. To correct
-their formula in this respect could, therefore, only be a matter of
-practical importance, if it is possible to produce pleasure without
-producing consciousness of it. But even this importance, which I
-think our conclusion so far really has, is, I admit, comparatively
-slight.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[p. 91]</span> What I
-wish to maintain is that even consciousness of pleasure is not the
-sole good: that, indeed, it is absurd so to regard it. And the chief
-importance of what has been said so far lies in the fact that the same
-method, which shews that consciousness of pleasure is more valuable
-than pleasure, seems also to shew that consciousness of pleasure is
-itself far less valuable than other things. The supposition that
-consciousness of pleasure is the sole good is due to a neglect of the
-same distinctions which have encouraged the careless assertion that
-pleasure is the sole good.</p>
-
-<p>The method which I employed in order to shew that pleasure itself
-was not the sole good, was that of considering what value we should
-attach to it, if it existed in absolute isolation, stripped of all its
-usual accompaniments. And this is, in fact, the only method that can
-be safely used, when we wish to discover what degree of value a thing
-has in itself. The necessity of employing this method will be best
-exhibited by a discussion of the arguments used by Prof. Sidgwick in
-the passage last quoted, and by an exposure of the manner in which they
-are calculated to mislead.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_54"><b>54.&emsp;</b>With regard to the second of them, it only
-maintains that other things, which might be supposed to share with
-pleasure the attribute of goodness, ‘seem to obtain the commendation of
-Common Sense, roughly speaking, in proportion to the degree’ of their
-productiveness of pleasure. Whether even this rough proportion holds
-between the commendation of Common Sense and the felicific effects of
-that which it commends is a question extremely difficult to determine;
-and we need not enter into it here. For, even assuming it to be true,
-and assuming the judgments of Common Sense to be on the whole correct,
-what would it shew? It would shew, certainly, that pleasure was a
-good <i>criterion</i> of right action&mdash;that the same conduct which
-produced most pleasure would also produce most good on the whole. But
-this would by no means entitle us to the conclusion that the greatest
-pleasure <i>constituted</i> what was best on the whole: it would still leave
-open the alternative that the greatest quantity of pleasure was as a
-matter of fact, <i>under actual conditions</i>, generally accompanied by the
-greatest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[p. 92]</span> quantity of
-<i>other goods</i>, and that it therefore was <i>not</i> the sole good. It might
-indeed seem to be a strange coincidence that these two things should
-always, even in this world, be in proportion to one another. But the
-strangeness of this coincidence will certainly not entitle us to argue
-directly that it does not exist&mdash;that it is an illusion, due to
-the fact that pleasure is really the sole good. The coincidence may
-be susceptible of other explanations; and it would even be our duty
-to accept it unexplained, if direct intuition seemed to declare that
-pleasure was not the sole good. Moreover it must be remembered that
-the need for assuming such a coincidence rests in any case upon the
-extremely doubtful proposition that felicific effects <i>are</i> roughly in
-proportion to the approval of Common Sense. And it should be observed
-that, though Prof. Sidgwick maintains this to be the case, his detailed
-illustrations only tend to shew the very different proposition that a
-thing is not held to be good, unless it gives a balance of pleasure;
-not that the degree of commendation is in proportion to the quantity of
-pleasure.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_55"><b>55.&emsp;</b>The decision, then, must rest upon Prof.
-Sidgwick’s first argument&mdash;‘the appeal’ to our ‘intuitive judgment
-after due consideration of the question when fairly placed before it.’
-And here it seems to me plain that Prof. Sidgwick has failed, in two
-essential respects, to place the question fairly before either himself
-or his reader.</p>
-
-<p>(1) What he has to shew is, as he says himself, not merely that
-‘Happiness must be included as a part of Ultimate Good.’ This view,
-he says, ‘ought not to commend itself to the sober judgment of
-reflective persons.’ And why? Because ‘these objective relations,
-when distinguished from the consciousness accompanying and resulting
-from them, are not ultimately and intrinsically desirable.’ Now, this
-reason, which is offered as shewing that to consider Happiness as
-a mere part of Ultimate Good does not meet the facts of intuition,
-is, on the contrary, only sufficient to shew that it <i>is</i> a part of
-Ultimate Good. For from the fact that no value resides in one part
-of a whole, considered by itself, we cannot infer that all the value
-belonging to the whole does reside in the other part, considered by
-itself. Even if we admit that there is much value in the enjoyment
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[p. 93]</span> Beauty, and none
-in the mere contemplation of it, which is one of the constituents
-of that complex fact, it does not follow that all the value belongs
-to the other constituent, namely, the pleasure which we take in
-contemplating it. It is quite possible that this constituent also has
-no value in itself; that the value belongs to the whole state, and to
-that only: so that <i>both</i> the pleasure <i>and</i> the contemplation are
-mere parts of the good, and both of them equally necessary parts.
-In short, Prof. Sidgwick’s argument here depends upon the neglect
-of that principle, which I tried to explain in my first chapter and
-which I said I should call the principle of ‘organic relations<a
-id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>.’ The
-argument is calculated to mislead, because it supposes that, if we see
-a whole state to be valuable, and also see that one element of that
-state has no value <i>by itself</i>, then the other element, <i>by itself</i>,
-must have all the value which belongs to the whole state. The fact
-is, on the contrary, that, since the whole may be organic, the other
-element need have no value whatever, and that even if it have some,
-the value of the whole may be very much greater. For this reason, as
-well as to avoid confusion between means and end, it is absolutely
-essential to consider each distinguishable quality, <i>in isolation</i>,
-in order to decide what value it possesses. Prof. Sidgwick, on the
-other hand, applies this method of isolation only to <i>one</i> element
-in the wholes he is considering. He does not ask the question: If
-consciousness of pleasure existed absolutely by itself, would a sober
-judgment be able to attribute much value to it? It is, in fact, always
-misleading to take a whole, that is valuable (or the reverse), and
-then to ask simply: To which of its constituents does this whole owe
-its value or its vileness? It may well be that it owes it to <i>none</i>;
-and, if one of them does appear to have some value in itself, we shall
-be led into the grave error of supposing that all the value of the
-whole belongs to it alone. It seems to me that this error has commonly
-been committed with regard to pleasure. Pleasure does seem to be a
-necessary constituent of most valuable wholes; and, since the other
-constituents, into which we may analyse them, may easily seem not to
-have any value, it is natural to suppose that all the value belongs to
-pleasure. That<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[p. 94]</span> this
-natural supposition does not follow from the premises is certain; and
-that it is, on the contrary, ridiculously far from the truth appears
-evident to my ‘reflective judgment.’ If we apply either to pleasure or
-to consciousness of pleasure the only safe method, that of isolation,
-and ask ourselves: Could we accept, as a very good thing, that mere
-consciousness of pleasure, and absolutely nothing else, should exist,
-even in the greatest quantities? I think we can have no doubt about
-answering: No. Far less can we accept this as the <i>sole</i> good. Even
-if we accept Prof. Sidgwick’s implication (which yet appears to me
-extremely doubtful) that consciousness of pleasure has a greater
-value by itself than Contemplation of Beauty, it seems to me that a
-pleasurable Contemplation of Beauty has certainly an immeasurably
-greater value than mere Consciousness of Pleasure. In favour of this
-conclusion I can appeal with confidence to the ‘sober judgment of
-reflective persons.’</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_56"><b>56.&emsp;</b>(2) That the value of a pleasurable whole
-does not belong solely to the pleasure which it contains, may, I think,
-be made still plainer by consideration of another point in which Prof.
-Sidgwick’s argument is defective. Prof. Sidgwick maintains, as we saw,
-the doubtful proposition, that the <i>conduciveness</i> to pleasure of a
-thing is in rough proportion to its commendation by Common Sense.
-But he does not maintain, what would be undoubtedly false, that the
-pleasantness of every state is in proportion to the commendation of
-that state. In other words, it is only when you take into account
-<i>the whole consequences of any state</i>, that he is able to maintain
-the coincidence of quantity of pleasure with the objects approved by
-Common Sense. If we consider each state by itself, and ask what is the
-judgment of Common Sense as to its goodness <i>as an end</i>, quite apart
-from its goodness as a means, there can be no doubt that Common Sense
-holds many much less pleasant states to be better than many far more
-pleasant: that it holds, with Mill, that there are higher pleasures,
-which are more valuable, though less pleasant, than those which are
-lower. Prof. Sidgwick might, of course, maintain that in this Common
-Sense is merely confusing means and ends: that what it holds to be
-better as an end, is in reality only better as a means. But I think his
-argument is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[p. 95]</span> defective
-in that he does not seem to see sufficiently plainly that, as far as
-intuitions of goodness <i>as an end</i> are concerned, he is running grossly
-counter to Common Sense; that he does not emphasise sufficiently the
-distinction between <i>immediate</i> pleasantness and <i>conduciveness</i> to
-pleasure. In order to place fairly before us the question what is good
-as an end we must take states that are immediately pleasant and ask if
-the more pleasant are always also the better; and whether, if some that
-are less pleasant appear to be so, it is only because we think they
-are likely to increase the number of the more pleasant. That Common
-Sense would deny both these suppositions, and rightly so, appears to me
-indubitable. It is commonly held that certain of what would be called
-the lowest forms of sexual enjoyment, for instance, are positively bad,
-although it is by no means clear that they are not the most pleasant
-states we ever experience. Common Sense would certainly not think it
-a sufficient justification for the pursuit of what Prof. Sidgwick
-calls the ‘refined pleasures’ here and now, that they are the best
-means to the future attainment of a heaven, in which there would be no
-more refined pleasures&mdash;no contemplation of beauty, no personal
-affections&mdash;but in which the greatest possible pleasure would be
-obtained by a perpetual indulgence in bestiality. Yet Prof. Sidgwick
-would be bound to hold that, if the greatest possible pleasure could
-be obtained in this way, and if it were attainable, such a state of
-things would be a heaven indeed, and that all human endeavours should
-be devoted to its realisation. I venture to think that this view is as
-false as it is paradoxical.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_57"><b>57.&emsp;</b>It seems to me, then, that if we place fairly
-before us the question: Is consciousness of pleasure the sole good?
-the answer must be: No. And with this the last defence of Hedonism has
-been broken down. In order to put the question fairly we must isolate
-consciousness of pleasure. We must ask: Suppose we were conscious
-of pleasure only, and of nothing else, not even that we <i>were</i>
-conscious, would that state of things, however great the quantity,
-be very desirable? No one, I think, can suppose it so. On the other
-hand, it seems quite plain, that we do regard as very desirable, many
-complicated states<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[p. 96]</span>
-of mind in which the consciousness of pleasure is combined with
-consciousness of other things&mdash;states which we call ‘enjoyment of’
-so and so. If this is correct, then it follows that consciousness of
-pleasure is not the sole good, and that many other states, in which it
-is included as a part, are much better than it. Once we recognise the
-principle of organic unities, any objection to this conclusion, founded
-on the supposed fact that the other elements of such states have no
-value in themselves, must disappear. And I do not know that I need say
-any more in refutation of Hedonism.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_58"><b>58.&emsp;</b>It only remains to say something of the two
-forms in which a hedonistic doctrine is commonly held&mdash;Egoism and
-Utilitarianism.</p>
-
-<p>Egoism, as a form of Hedonism, is the doctrine which holds that we
-ought each of us to pursue our own greatest happiness as our ultimate
-end. The doctrine will, of course, admit that sometimes the best means
-to this end will be to give pleasure to others; we shall, for instance,
-by so doing, procure for ourselves the pleasures of sympathy, of
-freedom from interference, and of self-esteem; and these pleasures,
-which we may procure by sometimes aiming directly at the happiness
-of other persons, may be greater than any we could otherwise get.
-Egoism in this sense must therefore be carefully distinguished from
-Egoism in another sense, the sense in which Altruism is its proper
-opposite. Egoism, as commonly opposed to Altruism, is apt to denote
-merely selfishness. In this sense, a man is an egoist, if all his
-actions are actually directed towards gaining pleasure for himself;
-whether he holds that he ought to act so, because he will thereby
-obtain for himself the greatest possible happiness on the whole, or
-not. Egoism may accordingly be used to denote the theory that we should
-always aim at getting pleasure for ourselves, because that is the
-best <i>means</i> to the ultimate end, whether the ultimate end be our own
-greatest pleasure or not. Altruism, on the other hand, may denote the
-theory that we ought always to aim at other people’s happiness, on the
-ground that this is the best <i>means</i> of securing our own as well as
-theirs. Accordingly an Egoist, in the sense in which I am now going
-to talk of Egoism, an Egoist, who holds that his own greatest<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[p. 97]</span> happiness is the ultimate
-end, may at the same time be an Altruist: he may hold that he ought to
-‘love his neighbour,’ as the best means to being happy himself. And
-conversely an Egoist, in the other sense, may at the same time be a
-Utilitarian. He may hold that he ought always to direct his efforts
-towards getting pleasure for himself on the ground that he is thereby
-most likely to increase the general sum of happiness.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_59"><b>59.&emsp;</b>I shall say more later about this second
-kind of Egoism, this anti-altruistic Egoism, this Egoism as a doctrine
-of means. What I am now concerned with is that utterly distinct kind
-of Egoism, which holds that each man ought rationally to hold: My own
-greatest happiness is the only good thing there is; my actions can
-only be good as means, in so far as they help to win me this. This
-is a doctrine which is not much held by writers now-a-days. It is a
-doctrine that was largely held by English Hedonists in the 17th and
-18th centuries: it is, for example, at the bottom of Hobbes’ Ethics.
-But even the English school appear to have made one step forward in the
-present century: they are most of them now-a-days Utilitarians. They do
-recognise that if my own happiness is good, it would be strange that
-other people’s happiness should not be good too.</p>
-
-<p>In order fully to expose the absurdity of this kind of Egoism, it
-is necessary to examine certain confusions upon which its plausibility
-depends.</p>
-
-<p>The chief of these is the confusion involved in the conception of
-‘my own good’ as distinguished from ‘the good of others.’ This is a
-conception which we all use every day; it is one of the first to which
-the plain man is apt to appeal in discussing any question of Ethics:
-and Egoism is commonly advocated chiefly because its meaning is not
-clearly perceived. It is plain, indeed, that the name ‘Egoism’ more
-properly applies to the theory that ‘my own good’ is the sole good,
-than that my own pleasure is so. A man may quite well be an Egoist,
-even if he be not a Hedonist. The conception which is, perhaps, most
-closely associated with Egoism is that denoted by the words ‘my own
-interest.’ The Egoist is the man who holds that a tendency to promote
-his own interest is the sole possible, and sufficient, justification of
-all his actions. But this conception of ‘my own<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_98">[p. 98]</span> interest’ plainly includes, in general,
-very much more than my own pleasure. It is, indeed, only because and
-in so far as ‘my own interest’ has been thought to consist solely
-in my own pleasure, that Egoists have been led to hold that my own
-pleasure is the sole good. Their course of reasoning is as follows: The
-only thing I ought to secure is my own interest; but my own interest
-consists in my greatest possible pleasure; and therefore the only thing
-I ought to pursue is my own pleasure. That it is very natural, <i>on
-reflection</i>, thus to identify my own pleasure with my own interest; and
-that it has been generally done by modern <i>moralists</i>, may be admitted.
-But, when Prof. Sidgwick points this out (III. <small>XIV.</small>
-§&nbsp;5, Div. <small>III.</small>), he should have also pointed out
-that this identification has by no means been made in ordinary thought.
-When the plain man says ‘my own interest,’ he does <i>not</i> mean ‘my own
-pleasure’&mdash;he does not commonly even include this&mdash;he means
-my own advancement, my own reputation, the getting of a better income
-etc., etc. That Prof. Sidgwick should not have noticed this, and that
-he should give the reason he gives for the fact that the ancient
-<i>moralists</i> did not identify ‘my own interest’ with my own pleasure,
-seems to be due to his having failed to notice that very confusion
-in the conception of ‘my own good’ which I am now to point out. That
-confusion has, perhaps, been more clearly perceived by Plato than
-by any other moralist, and to point it out suffices to refute Prof.
-Sidgwick’s own view that Egoism is rational.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, is meant by ‘my own good’? In what sense can a thing be
-good <i>for me</i>? It is obvious, if we reflect, that the only thing which
-can belong to me, which can be <i>mine</i>, is something which is good, and
-not the fact that it is good. When, therefore, I talk of anything I get
-as ‘my own good,’ I must mean either that the thing I get is good, or
-that my possessing it is good. In both cases it is only the thing or
-the possession of it which is <i>mine</i>, and not <i>the goodness</i> of that
-thing or that possession. There is no longer any meaning in attaching
-the ‘my’ to our predicate, and saying: The possession of this <i>by me</i>
-is <i>my</i> good. Even if we interpret this by ‘My possession of this is
-what <i>I</i> think good,’ the same still holds: for <i>what</i> I think is that
-my possession of it is good <i>simply</i>; and, if I think rightly,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[p. 99]</span> then the truth is that my
-possession of it <i>is</i> good simply&mdash;not, in any sense, <i>my</i> good;
-and, if I think wrongly, it is not good at all. In short, when I talk
-of a thing as ‘my own good’ all that I can mean is that something which
-will be exclusively mine, as my own pleasure is mine (whatever be the
-various senses of this relation denoted by ‘possession’), is also <i>good
-absolutely</i>; or rather that my possession of it is <i>good absolutely</i>.
-The <i>good</i> of it can in no possible sense be ‘private’ or belong to me;
-any more than a thing can <i>exist</i> privately or <i>for</i> one person only.
-The only reason I can have for aiming at ‘my own good,’ is that it is
-<i>good absolutely</i> that what I so call should belong to me&mdash;<i>good
-absolutely</i> that I should <i>have</i> something, which, if I have it, others
-cannot have. But if it is <i>good absolutely</i> that I should have it, then
-everyone else has as much reason for aiming at <i>my</i> having it, as I
-have myself. If, therefore, it is true of <i>any</i> single man’s ‘interest’
-or ‘happiness’ that it ought to be his sole ultimate end, this can only
-mean that <i>that</i> man’s ‘interest’ or ‘happiness’ is <i>the sole good,
-the</i> Universal Good, and the only thing that anybody ought to aim at.
-What Egoism holds, therefore, is that <i>each</i> man’s happiness is the
-sole good&mdash;that a number of different things are <i>each</i> of them
-the only good thing there is&mdash;an absolute contradiction! No more
-complete and thorough refutation of any theory could be desired.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_60"><b>60.&emsp;</b>Yet Prof. Sidgwick holds that Egoism is
-rational; and it will be useful briefly to consider the reasons which
-he gives for this absurd conclusion. ‘The Egoist,’ he says (last Chap.
-§&nbsp;1), ‘may avoid the proof of Utilitarianism by declining to affirm,’
-either ‘implicitly or explicitly, that his own greatest happiness
-is not merely the ultimate rational end for himself, but a part of
-Universal Good.’ And in the passage to which he here refers us, as
-having there ‘seen’ this, he says: ‘It cannot be proved that the
-difference between his own happiness and another’s happiness is not
-<i>for him</i> all-important’ (<small>IV.</small> ii. §&nbsp;1). What
-does Prof. Sidgwick mean by these phrases ‘the ultimate rational end
-for himself,’ and ‘<i>for him</i> all-important’? He does not attempt to
-define them; and it is largely the use of such undefined phrases which
-causes absurdities to be committed in philosophy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[p. 100]</span></p>
-
-<p>Is there any sense in which a thing can be an ultimate rational
-end for one person and not for another? By ‘ultimate’ must be meant
-at least that the end is good-in-itself&mdash;good in our undefinable
-sense; and by ‘rational,’ at least, that it is truly good. That a
-thing should be an ultimate rational end means, then, that it is
-truly good in itself; and that it is truly good in itself means that
-it is a part of Universal Good. Can we assign any meaning to that
-qualification ‘for himself,’ which will make it cease to be a part of
-Universal Good? The thing is impossible: for the Egoist’s happiness
-must <i>either</i> be good in itself, and so a part of Universal Good, <i>or
-else</i> it cannot be good in itself at all: there is no escaping this
-dilemma. And if it is not good at all, what reason can he have for
-aiming at it? how can it be a rational end for him? That qualification
-‘for himself’ has no meaning unless it implies ‘<i>not</i> for others’; and
-if it implies ‘not for others,’ then it cannot be a rational end for
-him, since it cannot be truly good in itself: the phrase ‘an ultimate
-rational end for himself’ is a contradiction in terms. By saying that
-a thing is an end for one particular person, or good for him, can only
-be meant one of four things. Either (1) it may be meant that the end
-in question is something which will belong exclusively to him; but
-in that case, if it is to be rational for him to aim at it, that he
-should exclusively possess it must be a part of Universal Good. Or (2)
-it may be meant that it is the only thing at which he ought to aim;
-but this can only be, because, by so doing, he will do the most he can
-towards realising Universal Good: and this, in our case, will only give
-Egoism as a doctrine of <i>means</i>. Or (3) it may be meant that the thing
-is what he desires or thinks good; and then, if he thinks wrongly,
-it is not a rational end at all, and, if he thinks rightly, it is a
-part of Universal Good. Or (4) it may be meant that it is peculiarly
-appropriate that a thing which will belong exclusively to him should
-also by him be approved or aimed at; but, in this case, both that it
-should belong to him and that he should aim at it must be parts of
-Universal Good: by saying that a certain relation between two things
-is fitting or appropriate, we can only mean that the existence of that
-relation is absolutely good<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[p.
-101]</span> in itself (unless it be so as a means, which gives case
-(2)). By no possible meaning, then, that can be given to the phrase
-that his own happiness is the ultimate rational end for himself can
-the Egoist escape the implication that his own happiness is absolutely
-good; and by saying that it is <i>the</i> ultimate rational end, he must
-mean that it is the only good thing&mdash;the whole of Universal
-Good: and, if he further maintains, that each man’s happiness is the
-ultimate rational end for <i>him</i>, we have the fundamental contradiction
-of Egoism&mdash;that an immense number of different things are, <i>each</i>
-of them, <i>the sole good</i>.&mdash;And it is easy to see that the same
-considerations apply to the phrase that ‘the difference between his own
-happiness and another’s is <i>for him</i> all-important.’ This can only mean
-either (1) that his own happiness is the only end which will affect
-him, or (2) that the only important thing for him (as a means) is to
-look to his own happiness, or (3) that it is only his own happiness
-which he cares about, or (4) that it is good that each man’s happiness
-should be the only concern of that man. And none of these propositions,
-true as they may be, have the smallest tendency to shew that if his
-own happiness is desirable at all, it is not a part of Universal Good.
-Either his own happiness is a good thing or it is not; and, in whatever
-sense it may be all-important for him, it must be true that, if it
-is not good, he is not justified in pursuing it, and that, if it is
-good, everyone else has an equal reason to pursue it, so far as they
-are able and so far as it does not exclude their attainment of other
-more valuable parts of Universal Good. In short it is plain that the
-addition of ‘for him’ ‘for me’ to such words as ‘ultimate rational
-end,’ ‘good,’ ‘important’ can introduce nothing but confusion. The only
-possible reason that can justify any action is that by it the greatest
-possible amount of what is good absolutely should be realised. And if
-anyone says that the attainment of his own happiness justifies his
-actions, he must mean that this is the greatest possible amount of
-Universal Good which he can realise. And this again can only be true
-either because <i>he</i> has no power to realise more, in which case he only
-holds Egoism as a doctrine of means; or else because his own happiness
-is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[p. 102]</span> greatest
-amount of Universal Good which can be realised at all, in which case we
-have Egoism proper, and the flagrant contradiction that every person’s
-happiness is singly the greatest amount of Universal Good which can be
-realised at all.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_61"><b>61.&emsp;</b>It should be observed that, since this
-is so, ‘the relation of Rational Egoism to Rational Benevolence,’
-which Prof. Sidgwick regards ‘as the profoundest problem of Ethics’
-(III. <small>XIII.</small> §&nbsp;5, <i>n.</i> 1), appears in quite a
-different light to that in which he presents it. ‘Even if a man,’
-he says, ‘admits the self-evidence of the principle of Rational
-Benevolence, he may still hold that his own happiness is an end which
-it is irrational for him to sacrifice to any other; and that therefore
-a harmony between the maxim of Prudence and the maxim of Rational
-Benevolence must be somehow demonstrated, if morality is to be made
-completely rational. This latter view is that which I myself hold’
-(last Chap. §&nbsp;1). Prof. Sidgwick then goes on to shew ‘that the
-inseparable connection between Utilitarian Duty and the greatest
-happiness of the individual who conforms to it cannot be satisfactorily
-demonstrated on empirical grounds’ (Ib. §&nbsp;3). And the final
-paragraph of his book tells us that, since ‘the reconciliation of duty
-and self-interest is to be regarded as a hypothesis logically necessary
-to avoid a fundamental <i>contradiction</i> in one chief department of
-our thought, it remains to ask how far this necessity constitutes a
-sufficient reason for accepting this hypothesis<a id="FNanchor_20"
-href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>’ (Ib. §&nbsp;5). To
-‘assume the existence of such a Being, as God, by the <i>consensus</i> of
-theologians, is conceived to be’ would, he has already argued, ensure
-the required reconciliation; since the Divine Sanctions of such a God
-‘would, of course, suffice to make it always every one’s interest
-to promote universal happiness to the best of his knowledge’ (Ib.
-§&nbsp;5).</p>
-
-<p>Now what is this ‘reconciliation of duty and self-interest,’ which
-Divine Sanctions could ensure? It would consist in the mere fact that
-the same conduct which produced the greatest possible happiness of
-the greatest number would always also produce the greatest possible
-happiness of the agent. If this were the case (and our empirical
-knowledge shews that it is not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[p.
-103]</span> the case in this world), ‘morality’ would, Prof. Sidgwick
-thinks, be ‘completely rational’: we should avoid ‘an ultimate and
-fundamental contradiction in our apparent intuitions of what is
-Reasonable in conduct.’ That is to say, we should avoid the necessity
-of thinking that it is as manifest an obligation to secure our own
-greatest Happiness (maxim of Prudence), as to secure the greatest
-Happiness on the whole (maxim of Benevolence). But it is perfectly
-obvious we should not. Prof. Sidgwick here commits the characteristic
-fallacy of Empiricism&mdash;the fallacy of thinking that an alteration
-in <i>facts</i> could make a contradiction cease to be a contradiction.
-That a single man’s happiness should be <i>the sole good</i>, and that also
-everybody’s happiness should be <i>the sole good</i>, is a contradiction
-which cannot be solved by the assumption that the same conduct will
-secure both: it would be equally contradictory, however certain we were
-that that assumption was justified. Prof. Sidgwick strains at a gnat
-and swallows a camel. He thinks the Divine Omnipotence must be called
-into play to secure that what gives other people pleasure should also
-give it to him&mdash;that only so can Ethics be made rational; while
-he overlooks the fact that even this exercise of Divine Omnipotence
-would leave in Ethics a contradiction, in comparison with which his
-difficulty is a trifle&mdash;a contradiction, which would reduce all
-Ethics to mere nonsense, and before which the Divine Omnipotence must
-be powerless to all eternity. That <i>each</i> man’s happiness should be
-the <i>sole good</i>, which we have seen to be the principle of Egoism,
-is in itself a contradiction: and that it should also be true that
-the Happiness of all is the <i>sole good</i>, which is the principle of
-Universalistic Hedonism, would introduce another contradiction. And
-that these propositions should all be true might well be called ‘the
-profoundest problem in Ethics’: it would be a problem necessarily
-insoluble. But they <i>cannot</i> all be true, and there is no reason,
-but confusion, for the supposition that they are. Prof. Sidgwick
-confuses this contradiction with the mere fact (in which there is no
-contradiction) that our own greatest happiness and that of all do not
-seem always attainable by the same means. This fact, if Happiness
-were the sole good, would indeed be of some importance; and,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[p. 104]</span> on any view, similar
-facts are of importance. But they are nothing but instances of the
-one important fact that in this world the quantity of good which is
-attainable is ridiculously small compared to that which is imaginable.
-That I cannot get the most possible pleasure for myself, if I produce
-the most possible pleasure on the whole, is no more <i>the</i> profoundest
-problem of Ethics, than that in any case I cannot get as much pleasure
-altogether as would be desirable. It only states that, if we get as
-much good as possible in one place, we may get less on the whole,
-because the quantity of attainable good is limited. To say that I have
-to choose between my own good and that of <i>all</i> is a false antithesis:
-the only rational question is how to choose between my own and that of
-<i>others</i>, and the principle on which this must be answered is exactly
-the same as that on which I must choose whether to give pleasure to
-this other person or to that.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_62"><b>62.&emsp;</b>It is plain, then, that the doctrine of
-Egoism is self-contradictory; and that one reason why this is not
-perceived, is a confusion with regard to the meaning of the phrase ‘my
-own good.’ And it may be observed that this confusion and the neglect
-of this contradiction are necessarily involved in the transition
-from Naturalistic Hedonism, as ordinarily held, to Utilitarianism.
-Mill, for instance, as we saw, declares: ‘Each person, so far as he
-believes it to be attainable, desires his own happiness’ (p. 53). And
-he offers this as a reason why the general happiness is desirable. We
-have seen that to regard it as such, involves, in the first place,
-the naturalistic fallacy. But moreover, even if that fallacy were
-not a fallacy, it could only be a reason for Egoism and not for
-Utilitarianism. Mill’s argument is as follows: A man desires his own
-happiness; therefore his own happiness is desirable. Further: A man
-desires nothing but his own happiness; therefore his own happiness is
-alone desirable. We have next to remember, that everybody, according
-to Mill, so desires his own happiness: and then it will follow
-that everybody’s happiness is alone desirable. And this is simply
-a contradiction in terms. Just consider what it means. Each man’s
-happiness is the only thing desirable: several different things are
-<i>each</i> of them the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[p. 105]</span>
-<i>only</i> thing desirable. This is the fundamental contradiction of
-Egoism. In order to think that what his arguments tend to prove is not
-Egoism but Utilitarianism, Mill must think that he can infer from the
-proposition ‘Each man’s happiness is his own good,’ the proposition
-‘The happiness of all is the good of all’; whereas in fact, if we
-understand what ‘his own good’ means, it is plain that the latter can
-only be inferred from ‘The happiness of all is the good of each.’
-Naturalistic Hedonism, then, logically leads only to Egoism. Of course,
-a Naturalist might hold that what we aimed at was simply ‘pleasure’
-not our own pleasure; and <i>that</i>, always assuming the naturalistic
-fallacy, would give an unobjectionable ground for Utilitarianism. But
-more commonly he will hold that it is his own pleasure he desires, or
-at least will confuse this with the other; and then he must logically
-be led to adopt Egoism and not Utilitarianism.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_63"><b>63.&emsp;</b>The second cause I have to give why Egoism
-should be thought reasonable, is simply its confusion with that other
-kind of Egoism&mdash;Egoism as a doctrine of means. This second Egoism
-has a right to say: You ought to pursue your own happiness, sometimes
-at all events; it may even say: Always. And when we find it saying this
-we are apt to forget its proviso: But only as a means to something
-else. The fact is we are in an imperfect state; we cannot get the
-ideal all at once. And hence it is often our bounden duty, we often
-<i>absolutely</i> ‘<i>ought</i>,’ to do things which are good only or chiefly as
-means: we have to do the best we can, what is absolutely ‘right,’ but
-not what is absolutely good. Of this I shall say more hereafter. I only
-mention it here because I think it is much more plausible to say that
-we ought to pursue our own pleasure as a means than as an end, and that
-this doctrine, through confusion, lends some of its plausibility to the
-utterly different doctrine of Egoism proper: My own greatest pleasure
-is the only good thing.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_64"><b>64.&emsp;</b>So much for Egoism. Of Utilitarianism not
-much need be said; but two points may seem deserving of notice.</p>
-
-<p>The first is that this name, like that of Egoism, does not
-naturally suggest that all our actions are to be judged according
-to the degree in which they are a means to <i>pleasure</i>. Its<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[p. 106]</span> natural meaning is
-that the standard of right and wrong in conduct is its tendency to
-promote the <i>interest</i> of everybody. And by <i>interest</i> is commonly
-meant a variety of different goods, classed together only because they
-are what a man commonly desires for himself, so far as his desires
-have not that psychological quality which is meant by ‘moral.’ The
-‘useful’ thus means, and was in ancient Ethics systematically used
-to mean, what is a means to the attainment of goods other than moral
-goods. It is quite an unjustifiable assumption that these goods are
-only good as means to pleasure or that they are commonly so regarded.
-The chief reason for adopting the name ‘Utilitarianism’ was, indeed,
-merely to emphasize the fact that right and wrong conduct must be
-judged by its results&mdash;as a means, in opposition to the strictly
-Intuitionistic view that certain ways of acting were right and others
-wrong, whatever their results might be. In thus insisting that what is
-right must mean what produces the best possible results Utilitarianism
-is fully justified. But with this correct contention there has been
-historically, and very naturally, associated a double error. (1)
-The best possible results were assumed to consist only in a limited
-class of goods, roughly coinciding with those which were popularly
-distinguished as the results of merely ‘useful’ or ‘interested’
-actions; and these again were hastily assumed to be good only as means
-to pleasure. (2) The Utilitarians tend to regard everything as a mere
-means, neglecting the fact that some things which are good as means
-are also good as ends. Thus, for instance, assuming pleasure to be a
-good, there is a tendency to value present pleasure only as a means to
-future pleasure, and not, as is strictly necessary if pleasure is good
-as an end, also to <i>weigh it against</i> possible future pleasures. Much
-utilitarian argument involves the logical absurdity that what is here
-and now, never has any value in itself, but is only to be judged by its
-consequences; which again, of course, when they are realised, would
-have no value in themselves, but would be mere means to a still further
-future, and so on <i>ad infinitum</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The second point deserving notice with regard to Utilitarianism
-is that, when the name is used for a form of Hedonism, it does not
-commonly, even in its description of its <i>end</i>,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_107">[p. 107]</span> accurately distinguish between means and
-end. Its best-known formula is that the result by which actions are
-to be judged is ‘the greatest happiness of the greatest number.’ But
-it is plain that, if pleasure is the sole good, provided the quantity
-be equally great, an equally desirable result will have been obtained
-whether it be enjoyed by many or by few, or even if it be enjoyed by
-nobody. It is plain that, if we ought to aim at the greatest happiness
-of the greatest number, this can only, on the hedonistic principle, be
-because the existence of pleasure in a great number of persons seems
-to be the best <i>means</i> available for attaining the existence of the
-greatest quantity of pleasure. This may actually be the case; but it
-is fair to suspect that Utilitarians have been influenced, in their
-adoption of the hedonistic principle, by this failure to distinguish
-clearly between pleasure or consciousness of pleasure and its
-possession by a person. It is far easier to regard the possession of
-pleasure by a number of persons as the sole good, than so to regard the
-mere existence of an equally great quantity of pleasure. If, indeed,
-we were to take the Utilitarian principle strictly, and to assume them
-to mean that the possession of pleasure by many persons was good in
-itself, the principle is not hedonistic: it includes as a necessary
-part of the ultimate end, the existence of a number of persons, and
-this will include very much more than mere pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>Utilitarianism, however, as commonly held, must be understood to
-maintain that either mere consciousness of pleasure, or consciousness
-of pleasure together with the minimum adjunct which may be meant by
-the existence of such consciousness in at least one <i>person</i>, is the
-<i>sole good</i>. This is its significance as an ethical doctrine; and as
-such it has already been refuted in my refutation of Hedonism. The
-most that can be said for it is that it does not seriously mislead in
-its practical conclusions, on the ground that, as an empirical fact,
-the method of acting which brings most good on the whole does also
-bring most pleasure. Utilitarians do indeed generally devote most of
-their arguments to shewing that the course of action which will bring
-most pleasure is in general such as common sense would approve. We
-have seen that Prof. Sidgwick appeals to this<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_108">[p. 108]</span> fact as tending to shew that pleasure
-is the sole good; and we have also seen that it does not tend to shew
-this. We have seen how very flimsy the other arguments advanced for
-this proposition are; and that, if it be fairly considered by itself,
-it appears to be quite ridiculous. And, moreover, that the actions
-which produce most good on the whole do also produce most pleasure
-is extremely doubtful. The arguments tending to shew it are all more
-or less vitiated by the assumption that what appear to be necessary
-conditions for the attainment of most pleasure in the near future,
-will always continue so to be. And, even with this vicious assumption,
-they only succeed in making out a highly problematical case. How,
-therefore, this fact is to be explained, if it be a fact, need not
-concern us. It is sufficient to have shewn that many complex states of
-mind are much more valuable than the pleasure they contain. If this
-be so, <i>no form of Hedonism can be true</i>. And, since the practical
-guidance afforded by pleasure as a <i>criterion</i> is small in proportion
-as the calculation attempts to be accurate, we can well afford to await
-further investigation, before adopting a guide, whose utility is very
-doubtful and whose trustworthiness we have grave reason to suspect.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_65"><b>65.&emsp;</b>The most important points which I have
-endeavoured to establish in this chapter are as follows. (1) Hedonism
-must be strictly defined as the doctrine that ‘Pleasure is the only
-thing which is good in itself’: this view seems to owe its prevalence
-mainly to the naturalistic fallacy, and Mill’s arguments may be taken
-as a type of those which are fallacious in this respect; Sidgwick
-alone has defended it without committing this fallacy, and its final
-refutation must therefore point out the errors in his arguments
-(36-38). (2) Mill’s ‘Utilitarianism’ is criticised: it being shewn
-(<i>a</i>) that he commits the naturalistic fallacy in identifying
-‘desirable’ with ‘desired’; (<i>b</i>) that pleasure is not the only object
-of desire. The common arguments for Hedonism seem to rest on these
-two errors (39-44). (3) Hedonism is considered as an ‘Intuition,’ and
-it is pointed out (<i>a</i>) that Mill’s allowance that some pleasures are
-inferior in quality to others implies both that it is an Intuition
-and that it is a false one (46-48); (<i>b</i>) that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_109">[p. 109]</span> Sidgwick fails to distinguish ‘pleasure’
-from ‘consciousness of pleasure,’ and that it is absurd to regard the
-former, at all events, as the sole good (49-52); (<i>c</i>) that it seems
-equally absurd to regard ‘consciousness of pleasure’ as the sole good,
-since, if it were so, a world in which nothing else existed might be
-absolutely perfect: Sidgwick fails to put to himself this question,
-which is the only clear and decisive one (53-57). (4) What are commonly
-considered to be the two main types of Hedonism, namely, Egoism and
-Utilitarianism, are not only different from, but strictly contradictory
-of, one another; since the former asserts ‘My own greatest pleasure
-is the <i>sole</i> good,’ the latter ‘The greatest pleasure of all is
-the <i>sole</i> good.’ Egoism seems to owe its plausibility partly to
-the failure to observe this contradiction&mdash;a failure which is
-exemplified by Sidgwick; partly to a confusion of Egoism as doctrine of
-end, with the same as doctrine of means. If Hedonism is true, Egoism
-cannot be so; still less can it be so, if Hedonism is false. The end
-of Utilitarianism, on the other hand, would, if Hedonism were true,
-be, not indeed the best conceivable, but the best possible for us to
-promote; but it is refuted by the refutation of Hedonism (58-64).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[p. 110]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak" title="CHAPTER IV. METAPHYSICAL ETHICS.">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
- <p class="subh2">METAPHYSICAL ETHICS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p id="Sec_66"><b>66.&emsp;</b><span class="smcap">In</span> this chapter I
-propose to deal with a type of ethical theory which is exemplified in
-the ethical views of the Stoics, of Spinoza, of Kant, and especially
-of a number of modern writers, whose views in this respect are mainly
-due to the influence of Hegel. These ethical theories have this in
-common, that they use some <i>metaphysical</i> proposition as a ground for
-inferring some fundamental proposition of Ethics. They all imply, and
-many of them expressly hold, that ethical truths follow logically from
-metaphysical truths&mdash;that Ethics should be based on <i>Metaphysics</i>.
-And the result is that they all describe the Supreme Good in
-<i>metaphysical</i> terms.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, is to be understood by ‘metaphysical’? I use the term,
-as I explained in Chapter II., in opposition to ‘natural.’ I call
-those philosophers preeminently ‘metaphysical’ who have recognised
-most clearly that not everything which <i>is</i> is a ‘natural object.’
-‘Metaphysicians’ have, therefore, the great merit of insisting that
-our knowledge is not confined to the things which we can touch and
-see and feel. They have always been much occupied, not only with that
-other class of natural objects which consists in mental facts, but also
-with the class of objects or properties of objects, which certainly do
-not exist in time, are not therefore parts of Nature, and which, in
-fact, do not exist at all. To this class, as I have said, belongs what
-we mean by the adjective ‘good.’ It is not <i>goodness</i>, but only the
-things or qualities which are good, which can exist in time&mdash;can
-have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[p. 111]</span> duration, and
-begin and cease to exist&mdash;can be objects of <i>perception</i>. But
-the most prominent members of this class are perhaps numbers. It is
-quite certain that two natural objects may exist; but it is equally
-certain that <i>two</i> itself does not exist and never can. Two and two
-<i>are</i> four. But that does not mean that either two or four exists. Yet
-it certainly means <i>something</i>. Two <i>is</i> somehow, although it does
-not exist. And it is not only simple terms of propositions&mdash;the
-objects <i>about</i> which we know truths&mdash;that belong to this class.
-The truths which we know about them form, perhaps, a still more
-important subdivision. No truth does, in fact, <i>exist</i>; but this is
-peculiarly obvious with regard to truths like ‘Two and two are four,’
-in which the objects, <i>about</i> which they are truths, do not exist
-either. It is with the recognition of such truths as these&mdash;truths
-which have been called ‘universal’&mdash;and of their essential
-unlikeness to what we can touch and see and feel, that metaphysics
-proper begins. Such ‘universal’ truths have always played a large
-part in the reasonings of metaphysicians from Plato’s time till now;
-and that they have directed attention to the difference between
-these truths and what I have called ‘natural objects’ is the chief
-contribution to knowledge which distinguishes them from that other
-class of philosophers&mdash;‘empirical’ philosophers&mdash;to which
-most Englishmen have belonged.</p>
-
-<p>But though, if we are to define ‘metaphysics’ by the contribution
-which it has actually made to knowledge, we should have to say that
-it has emphasized the importance of objects which do not exist at
-all, metaphysicians themselves have not recognised this. They have
-indeed recognised and insisted that there are, or may be, objects of
-knowledge which do not <i>exist in time</i>, or at least which we cannot
-perceive; and in recognising the <i>possibility</i> of these, as an object
-of investigation, they have, it may be admitted, done a service to
-mankind. But they have in general supposed that whatever does not
-exist in time, must at least <i>exist</i> elsewhere, if it is to <i>be</i> at
-all&mdash;that, whatever does not exist in Nature, must exist in some
-supersensible reality, whether timeless or not. Consequently they
-have held that the truths with which they have been occupied, over
-and above<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[p. 112]</span> the
-objects of perception, were in some way truths about such supersensible
-reality. If, therefore, we are to define ‘metaphysics’ not by what
-it has attained, but by what it has attempted, we should say that it
-consists in the attempt to obtain knowledge, by processes of reasoning,
-of what exists but is <i>not</i> a part of Nature. Metaphysicians have
-actually held that they could give us such knowledge of non-natural
-existence. They have held that their science consists in giving us
-such knowledge as can be supported by reasons, of that supersensible
-reality of which religion professes to give us a fuller knowledge,
-without any reasons. When, therefore, I spoke above of ‘metaphysical’
-propositions, I meant propositions about the existence of something
-supersensible&mdash;of something which is not an object of perception,
-and which cannot be inferred from what is an object of perception by
-the same rules of inference by which we infer the past and future of
-what we call ‘Nature.’ And when I spoke of ‘metaphysical’ terms, I
-meant terms which refer to qualities of such a supersensible reality,
-which do not belong to anything ‘natural.’ I admit that ‘metaphysics’
-should investigate what reasons there may be for belief in such a
-supersensible reality; since I hold that its peculiar province is the
-truth about all objects which are not natural objects. And I think that
-the most prominent characteristic of metaphysics, in history, has been
-its profession to <i>prove</i> the truth about non-natural <i>existents</i>.
-I define ‘metaphysical,’ therefore, by a reference to supersensible
-<i>reality</i>; although I think that the only non-natural objects, about
-which it has <i>succeeded</i> in obtaining truth, are objects which do not
-exist at all.</p>
-
-<p>So much, I hope, will suffice to explain what I mean by the
-term ‘metaphysical,’ and to shew that it refers to a clear and
-important distinction. It was not necessary for my purpose to
-make the definition exhaustive or to shew that it corresponds in
-essentials with established usage. The distinction between ‘Nature’
-and a supersensible reality is very familiar and very important: and
-since the metaphysician endeavours to <i>prove</i> things with regard
-to a supersensible reality, and since he deals largely in truths
-which are <i>not</i> mere natural facts, it is plain that his arguments,
-and errors (if any), will be of a more subtle<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_113">[p. 113]</span> kind than those which I have dealt
-with under the name of ‘Naturalism.’ For these two reasons it seemed
-convenient to treat ‘Metaphysical Ethics’ by themselves.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_67"><b>67.&emsp;</b>I have said that those systems of Ethics,
-which I propose to call ‘Metaphysical,’ are characterised by the
-fact that they describe the Supreme Good in ‘metaphysical’ terms;
-and this has now been explained as meaning that they describe it in
-terms of something which (they hold) does exist, but does not exist
-in Nature&mdash;in terms of a supersensible reality. A ‘Metaphysical
-Ethics’ is marked by the fact that it makes the assertion: That which
-would be perfectly good is something which exists, but is not natural;
-that which has some characteristic possessed by a supersensible
-reality. Such an assertion was made by the Stoics when they asserted
-that a life in accordance with Nature was perfect. For they did not
-mean by ‘Nature,’ what I have so defined, but something supersensible
-which they inferred to exist, and which they held to be perfectly good.
-Such an assertion, again, is made by Spinoza when he tells us that we
-are more or less perfect, in proportion as we are more or less closely
-united with Absolute Substance by the ‘intellectual love’ of God.
-Such an assertion is made by Kant when he tells us that his ‘Kingdom
-of Ends’ is the ideal. And such, finally, is made by modern writers
-who tell us that the final and perfect end is to realise our <i>true</i>
-selves&mdash;a self different both from the whole and from any part of
-that which exists here and now in Nature.</p>
-
-<p>Now it is plain that such ethical principles have a merit, not
-possessed by Naturalism, in recognising that for perfect goodness
-much more is required than any quantity of what exists here and now
-or can be inferred as likely to exist in the future. And moreover it
-is quite possible that their assertions should be true, if we only
-understand them to assert that something which is real possesses all
-the characteristics necessary for perfect goodness. But this is not
-all that they assert. They also imply, as I said, that this ethical
-proposition <i>follows</i> from some proposition which is metaphysical: that
-the question ‘What is real?’ has some logical bearing upon the question
-‘What is good?’ It was for this reason that I described ‘Meta<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[p. 114]</span>physical Ethics’ in
-Chapter II. as based upon the naturalistic fallacy. To hold that from
-any proposition asserting ‘Reality is of this nature’ we can infer, or
-obtain confirmation for, any proposition asserting ‘This is good in
-itself’ is to commit the naturalistic fallacy. And that a knowledge of
-what is real supplies reasons for holding certain things to be good
-in themselves is either implied or expressly asserted by all those
-who define the Supreme Good in metaphysical terms. This contention
-is part of what is meant by saying that Ethics should be ‘based’
-on Metaphysics. It is meant that some knowledge of supersensible
-reality is necessary <i>as a premise</i> for correct conclusions as to what
-ought to exist. This view is, for instance, plainly expressed in the
-following statements: ‘The truth is that the theory of Ethics which
-seems most satisfactory has a metaphysical basis.... If we rest our
-view of Ethics on the idea of the development of the ideal self or of
-the rational universe, the significance of this cannot be made fully
-apparent without a metaphysical examination of the nature of self; <i>nor
-can its validity be established except by a discussion of the reality
-of the rational universe</i><a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21"
-class="fnanchor">[21]</a>.’ The validity of an ethical conclusion about
-the nature of the ideal, it is here asserted, cannot be established
-except by considering the question whether that ideal is <i>real</i>. Such
-an assertion involves the naturalistic fallacy. It rests upon the
-failure to perceive that any truth which asserts ‘This is good in
-itself’ is quite unique in kind&mdash;that it cannot be reduced to any
-assertion about reality, and therefore must remain unaffected by any
-conclusions we may reach about the nature of reality. This confusion as
-to the unique nature of ethical truths is, I have said, involved in all
-those ethical theories which I have called metaphysical. It is plain
-that, but for some confusion of the sort, no-one would think it worth
-while even to describe the Supreme Good in metaphysical terms. If, for
-instance, we are told that the ideal consists in the realisation of
-the ‘true self,’ the very words suggest that the fact that the self in
-question is <i>true</i> is supposed to have some bearing on the fact that it
-is good. All the ethical truth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[p.
-115]</span> which can possibly be conveyed by such an assertion would
-be just as well conveyed by saying that the ideal consisted in the
-realisation of a particular kind of self, which might be either real or
-purely imaginary. ‘Metaphysical Ethics,’ then, involve the supposition
-that Ethics can be <i>based</i> on Metaphysics; and our first concern with
-them is to make clear that this supposition must be false.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_68"><b>68.&emsp;</b>In what way can the nature of supersensible
-reality possibly have a bearing upon Ethics?</p>
-
-<p>I have distinguished two kinds of ethical questions, which are
-far too commonly confused with one another. Ethics, as commonly
-understood, has to answer both the question ‘What ought to be?’ and
-the question ‘What ought we to do?’ The second of these questions can
-only be answered by considering what effects our actions will have. A
-complete answer to it would give us that department of Ethics which
-may be called the doctrine of <i>means</i> or practical Ethics. And upon
-this department of ethical enquiry it is plain that the nature of a
-supersensible reality may have a bearing. If, for instance, Metaphysics
-could tell us not only that we are immortal, but also, in any degree,
-what effects our actions in this life will have upon our condition in a
-future one, such information would have an undoubted bearing upon the
-question what we ought to do. The Christian doctrines of heaven and
-hell are in this way highly relevant to practical Ethics. But it is
-worthy of notice that the most characteristic doctrines of Metaphysics
-are such as either have no such bearing upon practical Ethics or have
-a purely negative bearing&mdash;involving the conclusion that there
-is nothing which we ought to do at all. They profess to tell us the
-nature not of a future reality, but of one that is eternal and which
-therefore no actions of ours can have power to alter. Such information
-<i>may</i> indeed have relevance to practical Ethics, but it must be of a
-purely negative kind. For, if it holds, not only that such an eternal
-reality exists, but also, as is commonly the case, that nothing else
-is real&mdash;that nothing either has been, is now, or will be real
-in time&mdash;then truly it will follow that nothing we can do will
-ever bring any good to pass. For it is certain that our actions can
-only affect the future; and if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[p.
-116]</span> nothing can be real in the future, we can certainly not
-hope ever to make any good thing real. It would follow, then, that
-there can be nothing which we ought to do. We cannot possibly do any
-good; for neither our efforts, nor any result which they may seem
-to effect, have any real existence. But this consequence, though it
-follows strictly from many metaphysical doctrines, is rarely drawn.
-Although a metaphysician may say that nothing is real but that which
-is eternal, he will generally allow that there is some reality also in
-the temporal: and his doctrine of an eternal reality need not interfere
-with practical Ethics, if he allows that, however good the eternal
-reality may be, yet some things will also exist in time, and that the
-existence of some will be better than that of others. It is, however,
-worth while to insist upon this point, because it is rarely fully
-realised.</p>
-
-<p>If it is maintained that there is any validity at all in practical
-Ethics&mdash;that any proposition which asserts ‘We ought to do so and
-so’ can have any truth&mdash;this contention can only be consistent
-with the Metaphysics of an eternal reality, under two conditions.
-One of these is, (1) that the true eternal reality, which is to be
-our guide, cannot, as is implied by calling it true, be the <i>only</i>
-true reality. For a moral rule, bidding us realise a certain end, can
-only be justified, if it is possible that that end should, at least
-partially, be realised. Unless our efforts can effect the <i>real</i>
-existence of some good, however little, we certainly have no reason
-for making them. And if the eternal reality is the sole reality, then
-nothing good can possibly exist in time: we can only be told to try
-to bring into existence something which we know beforehand cannot
-possibly exist. If it is said that what exists in time can only be a
-manifestation of the true reality, it must at least be allowed that
-that manifestation is another true reality&mdash;a good which we really
-can cause to exist; for the production of something quite unreal, even
-if it were possible, cannot be a reasonable end of action. But if the
-manifestation of that which eternally exists is real, then that which
-eternally exists is not the sole reality.</p>
-
-<p>And the second condition which follows from such a metaphysical
-principle of Ethics, is (2) that the eternal reality cannot<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[p. 117]</span> be perfect&mdash;cannot
-be the sole good. For just as a reasonable rule of conduct requires
-that what we are told to realise should be capable of being truly
-real, so it requires that the realisation of this ideal shall be truly
-good. It is just that which <i>can</i> be realised by our efforts&mdash;the
-appearance of the eternal in time, or whatsoever else is allowed to be
-attainable&mdash;which must be truly good, if it is to be worth our
-efforts. That the eternal reality is good, will by no means justify us
-in aiming at its manifestation, unless that manifestation itself be
-also good. For the manifestation is different from the reality: its
-difference is allowed, when we are told that it can be made to exist,
-whereas the reality itself exists unalterably. And the existence of
-this manifestation is the only thing which we can hope to effect: that
-also is admitted. If, therefore, the moral maxim is to be justified,
-it is the existence of this manifestation, as distinguished from the
-existence of its corresponding reality, which must be truly good. The
-reality may be good too: but to justify the statement that we ought to
-produce anything, it must be maintained, that just that thing itself,
-and not something else which may be like it, is truly good. If it is
-not true that the existence of the manifestation will add something
-to the sum of good in the Universe, then we have no reason to aim
-at making it exist; and if it is true that it will add something to
-the sum of good, then the existence of that which is eternal cannot
-be perfect by itself&mdash;it cannot include the whole of possible
-goods.</p>
-
-<p>Metaphysics, then, will have a bearing upon practical
-Ethics&mdash;upon the question what we ought to do&mdash;if it can
-tell us anything about the future consequences of our actions beyond
-what can be established by ordinary inductive reasoning. But the most
-characteristic metaphysical doctrines, those which profess to tell us
-not about the future but about the nature of an eternal reality, can
-either have no bearing upon this practical question or else must have a
-purely destructive bearing. For it is plain that what exists eternally
-cannot be affected by our actions; and only what is affected by our
-actions can have a bearing on their value as means. But the nature
-of an eternal reality either admits no inference as to the results
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[p. 118]</span> our actions,
-except in so far as it can <i>also</i> give us information about the future
-(and how it can do this is not plain), or else, if, as is usual, it is
-maintained to be the sole reality and the sole good, it shews that no
-results of our actions can have any value whatever.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_69"><b>69.&emsp;</b>But this bearing upon practical Ethics,
-such as it is, is not what is commonly meant when it is maintained
-that Ethics must be based on Metaphysics. It is not the assertion of
-this relation which I have taken to be characteristic of Metaphysical
-Ethics. What metaphysical writers commonly maintain is not merely that
-Metaphysics can help us to decide what the effects of our actions will
-be, but that it can tell us which among possible effects will be good
-and which will be bad. They profess that Metaphysics is a necessary
-basis for an answer to that other and primary ethical question: What
-ought to be? What is good in itself? That no truth about what is real
-can have any logical bearing upon the answer to this question has been
-proved in Chapter I. To suppose that it has, implies the naturalistic
-fallacy. All that remains for us to do is, therefore, to expose the
-main errors which seem to have lent plausibility to this fallacy in
-its metaphysical form. If we ask: What bearing can Metaphysics have
-upon the question, What is good? the only possible answer is: Obviously
-and absolutely none. We can only hope to enforce conviction that this
-answer is the only true one by answering the question: Why has it
-been supposed to have such a bearing? We shall find that metaphysical
-writers seem to have failed to distinguish this primary ethical
-question: What is good? from various other questions; and to point out
-these distinctions will serve to confirm the view that their profession
-to base Ethics on Metaphysics is solely due to confusion.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_70"><b>70.&emsp;</b>And, first of all, there is an ambiguity
-in the very question: What is good? to which it seems some influence
-must be attributed. The question may mean either: Which among existing
-things are good? or else: What <i>sort of</i> things are good, what are the
-things which, whether they <i>are</i> real or not, ought to be real? And
-of these two questions it is plain that to answer the first, we must
-know both the answer to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[p.
-119]</span> second and also the answer to the question: What is real?
-It asks us for a catalogue of all the good things in the Universe;
-and to answer it we must know both what things there are in the
-Universe and also which of them are good. Upon this question then our
-Metaphysics would have a bearing, if it can tell us what is real. It
-would help us to complete the list of things which are both real and
-good. But to make such a list is not the business of Ethics. So far
-as it enquires What is good? its business is finished when it has
-completed the list of things which ought to exist, whether they do
-exist or not. And if our Metaphysics is to have any bearing upon this
-part of the ethical problem, it must be because the fact that something
-is real gives a reason for thinking that it or something else is good,
-whether it be real or not. That any such fact can give any such reason
-is impossible; but it may be suspected that the contrary supposition
-has been encouraged by the failure to distinguish between the assertion
-‘This is good,’ when it means ‘<i>This sort of thing</i> is good,’ or ‘This
-would be good, if it existed,’ and the assertion ‘This existing thing
-is good.’ The latter proposition obviously cannot be true, unless
-the thing exists; and hence the proof of the thing’s existence is a
-necessary step to its proof. Both propositions, however, in spite
-of this immense difference between them, are commonly expressed in
-the same terms. We use the same words, when we assert an ethical
-proposition about a subject that is actually real, and when we assert
-it about a subject considered as merely possible.</p>
-
-<p>In this ambiguity of language we have, then, a possible source of
-error with regard to the bearing of truths that assert reality upon
-truths that assert goodness. And that this ambiguity is actually
-neglected by those metaphysical writers who profess that the Supreme
-Good consists in an eternal reality may be shewn in the following
-way. We have seen, in considering the possible bearing of Metaphysics
-upon Practical Ethics, that, since what exists eternally cannot
-possibly be affected by our actions, no practical maxim can possibly
-be true, if the sole reality is eternal. This fact, as I said, is
-commonly neglected by metaphysical writers: they assert both<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[p. 120]</span> of the two contradictory
-propositions that the sole reality is eternal and that its realisation
-in the future is a good too. Prof. Mackenzie, we saw, asserts that we
-ought to aim at the realisation of ‘the true self’ or ‘the rational
-universe’: and yet Prof. Mackenzie holds, as the word ‘true’ plainly
-implies, that both ‘the true self’ and ‘the rational universe’ are
-eternally real. Here we have already a contradiction in the supposition
-that what is eternally real can be realised in the future; and it is
-comparatively unimportant whether or not we add to this the further
-contradiction involved in the supposition that the eternal is the sole
-reality. That such a contradiction should be supposed valid can only be
-explained by a neglect of the distinction between a real subject and
-the character which that real subject possesses. <i>What</i> is eternally
-real may, indeed, be realised in the future, if by this be only meant
-the <i>sort of thing</i> which is eternally real. But when we assert that
-a thing is good, what we mean is that its existence or reality is
-good; and the eternal existence of a thing cannot possibly be the
-same good as the existence in time of what, in a necessary sense,
-is nevertheless the <i>same</i> thing. When, therefore, we are told that
-the future realisation of the <i>true</i> self is good, this can at most
-only mean that the future realisation of a self <i>exactly like</i> the
-self, which is true and exists eternally, is good. If this fact were
-clearly stated, instead of consistently ignored, by those who advocate
-the view that the Supreme Good can be defined in these metaphysical
-terms, it seems probable that the view that a knowledge of reality is
-necessary to a knowledge of the Supreme Good would lose part of its
-plausibility. That that at which we ought to aim cannot possibly be
-that which is eternally real, even if it be exactly like it; and that
-the eternal reality cannot possibly be the sole good&mdash;these two
-propositions seem sensibly to diminish the probability that Ethics
-must be based on Metaphysics. It is not very plausible to maintain
-that because one thing is real, therefore something like it, which
-is not real, would be good. It seems, therefore, that some of the
-plausibility of Metaphysical Ethics may be reasonably attributed to the
-failure to observe that verbal ambiguity, whereby ‘This is good’ may
-mean either ‘This real thing is good’ or ‘The<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_121">[p. 121]</span> existence of this thing (whether it
-exists or not) would be good.’</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_71"><b>71.&emsp;</b>By exposing this ambiguity, then, we are
-enabled to see more clearly what must be meant by the question: Can
-Ethics be based on Metaphysics? and we are, therefore, more likely to
-find the correct answer. It is now plain that a metaphysical principle
-of Ethics which says ‘This eternal reality is the Supreme Good’ can
-only mean ‘Something like this eternal reality would be the Supreme
-Good.’ We are now to understand such principles as having the only
-meaning which they can consistently have, namely, as describing the
-kind of thing which ought to exist in the future, and which we ought to
-try to bring about. And, when this is clearly recognised, it seems more
-evident that the knowledge that such a kind of thing is also eternally
-real, cannot help us at all towards deciding the properly ethical
-question: Is the existence of that kind of good thing? If we can see
-that an eternal reality is good, we can see, equally easily, once the
-idea of such a thing has been suggested to us, that it <i>would</i> be good.
-The metaphysical construction of Reality would therefore be quite as
-useful, for the purposes of Ethics, if it were a mere construction
-of an imaginary Utopia: provided the kind of thing suggested is the
-same, fiction is as useful as truth, for giving us matter, upon which
-to exercise the judgment of value. Though, therefore, we admit that
-Metaphysics may serve an ethical purpose, in suggesting things, which
-would not otherwise have occurred to us, but which, when they are
-suggested, we see to be good; yet, it is not as Metaphysics&mdash;as
-professing to tell us what is real&mdash;that it has this use. And, in
-fact, the pursuit of truth must limit the usefulness of Metaphysics
-in this respect. Wild and extravagant as are the assertions which
-metaphysicians have made about reality, it is not to be supposed but
-that they have been partially deterred from making them wilder still,
-by the idea that it was their business to tell nothing but the truth.
-But the wilder they are, and the less useful for Metaphysics, the more
-useful will they be for Ethics; since, in order to be sure that we have
-neglected nothing in the description of our ideal, we should have had
-before us as wide a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[p. 122]</span>
-field as possible of suggested goods. It is probable that this utility
-of Metaphysics, in suggesting possible ideals, may sometimes be what
-is meant by the assertion that Ethics should be based on Metaphysics.
-It is not uncommon to find that which suggests a truth confused with
-that on which it logically depends; and I have already pointed out
-that Metaphysical have, in general, this superiority over Naturalistic
-systems, that they conceive the Supreme Good as something differing
-more widely from what exists here and now. But, if it be recognised
-that, in this sense, Ethics should, far more emphatically, be <i>based
-on</i> fiction, metaphysicians will, I think, admit that a connection of
-this kind between Metaphysics and Ethics would by no means justify the
-importance which they attribute to the bearing of the one study on the
-other.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_72"><b>72.&emsp;</b>We may, then, attribute the obstinate
-prejudice that a knowledge of supersensible reality is a necessary
-step to a knowledge of what is good in itself, partly to a failure
-to perceive that the subject of the latter judgment is not anything
-<i>real</i> as such, and partly to a failure to distinguish the cause of
-our perception of a truth from the reason why it is true. But these
-two causes will carry us only a very little way in our explanation
-of why Metaphysics should have been supposed to have a bearing upon
-Ethics. The first explanation which I have given would only account for
-the supposition that a thing’s reality is a <i>necessary condition</i> for
-its goodness. This supposition is, indeed, commonly made; we find it
-commonly presupposed that unless a thing can be shewn to be involved in
-the constitution of reality, it cannot be good. And it is, therefore,
-worth while to insist that this is not the case; that Metaphysics is
-not even necessary to furnish <i>part</i> of the basis of Ethics. But when
-metaphysicians talk of basing Ethics on Metaphysics they commonly
-mean much more than this. They commonly mean that Metaphysics is the
-<i>sole</i> basis of Ethics&mdash;that it furnishes not only one necessary
-condition but <i>all</i> the conditions necessary to prove that certain
-things are good. And this view may, at first sight, appear to be held
-in two different forms. It may be asserted that merely to prove a thing
-supersensibly real is sufficient to prove it good: that the truly<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[p. 123]</span> real must, for that
-reason alone, be truly good. But more commonly it appears to be held
-that the real must be good because it possesses certain characters.
-And we may, I think, reduce the first kind of assertion to no more
-than this. When it is asserted that the real must be good, because it
-is real, it is commonly also held that this is only because, in order
-to be real, it must be of a certain kind. The reasoning by which it
-is thought that a metaphysical enquiry can give an ethical conclusion
-is of the following form. From a consideration of what it is to be
-real, we can infer that what is real must have certain supersensible
-properties: but to have these properties is identical with being
-good&mdash;it is the very meaning of the word: it follows therefore
-that what has these properties is good: and from a consideration of
-what it is to be real, we can again infer what it is that has these
-properties. It is plain that, if such reasoning were correct, any
-answer which could be given to the question ‘What is good in itself?’
-could be arrived at by a purely metaphysical discussion and by that
-alone. Just as, when Mill supposed that ‘to be good’ <i>meant</i> ‘to be
-desired,’ the question ‘What is good?’ could be and must be answered
-solely by an empirical investigation of the question what was desired;
-so here, if to be good means to have some supersensible property, the
-ethical question can and must be answered by a metaphysical enquiry
-into the question, What has this property? What, then, remains to be
-done in order to destroy the plausibility of Metaphysical Ethics,
-is to expose the chief errors which seem to have led metaphysicians
-to suppose that to be good <i>means</i> to possess some supersensible
-property.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_73"><b>73.&emsp;</b>What, then, are the chief reasons which
-have made it seem plausible to maintain that to be good must <i>mean</i>
-to possess some supersensible property or to be related to some
-supersensible reality?</p>
-
-<p>We may, first of all, notice one, which seems to have had some
-influence in causing the view that good must be defined by <i>some</i> such
-property, although it does not suggest any <i>particular</i> property as the
-one required. This reason lies in the supposition that the proposition
-‘This is good’ or ‘This would be good, if it existed’ must, in a
-certain respect, be of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[p.
-124]</span> same type as other propositions. The fact is that there
-is one type of proposition so familiar to everyone, and therefore
-having such a strong hold upon the imagination, that philosophers have
-always supposed that all other types must be reducible to it. This
-type is that of the objects of experience&mdash;of all those truths
-which occupy our minds for the immensely greater part of our waking
-lives: truths such as that somebody is in the room, that I am writing
-or eating or talking. All these truths, however much they may differ,
-have this in common that in them both the grammatical subject and the
-grammatical predicate stand for something which exists. Immensely the
-commonest type of truth, then, is one which asserts a relation between
-two existing things. Ethical truths are immediately felt not to conform
-to this type, and the naturalistic fallacy arises from the attempt to
-make out that, in some roundabout way, they do conform to it. It is
-immediately obvious that when we see a thing to be good, its goodness
-is not a property which we can take up in our hands, or separate from
-it even by the most delicate scientific instruments, and transfer to
-something else. It is not, in fact, like most of the predicates which
-we ascribe to things, a <i>part</i> of the thing to which we ascribe it. But
-philosophers suppose that the reason why we cannot take goodness up
-and move it about, is not that it is a different <i>kind</i> of object from
-any which can be moved about, but only that it <i>necessarily</i> exists
-together with anything with which it does exist. They explain the type
-of ethical truths by supposing it identical with the type of scientific
-laws. And it is only when they have done this that the naturalistic
-philosophers proper&mdash;those who are empiricists&mdash;and those
-whom I have called ‘metaphysical’ part company. These two classes of
-philosophers do, indeed, differ with regard to the nature of scientific
-laws. The former class tend to suppose that when they say ‘This always
-accompanies that’ they mean only ‘This has accompanied, does now,
-and will accompany that in these particular instances’: they reduce
-the scientific law quite simply and directly to the familiar type of
-proposition which I have pointed out. But this does not satisfy the
-metaphysicians. They see that when you say ‘This would accompany that,
-<i>if</i> that existed,’ you don’t mean only that this<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_125">[p. 125]</span> and that have existed and will exist
-together so many times. But it is beyond even their powers to believe
-that what you do mean is merely what you say. They still think you
-must mean, somehow or other, that something does exist, since that is
-what you generally mean when you say anything. They are as unable as
-the empiricists to imagine that you can ever mean that 2 + 2 = 4. The
-empiricists say this means that so many couples of couples of things
-have in each case been four things; and hence that 2 and 2 would not
-make 4, unless precisely those things had existed. The metaphysicians
-feel that this is wrong; but they themselves have no better account
-of its meaning to give than either, with Leibniz, that God’s mind is
-in a certain state, or, with Kant, that your mind is in a certain
-state, or finally, with Mr Bradley, that something is in a certain
-state. Here, then, we have the root of the naturalistic fallacy. The
-metaphysicians have the merit of seeing that when you say ‘This would
-be good, if it existed,’ you can’t mean merely ‘This has existed and
-was desired,’ however many times that may have been the case. They will
-admit that some good things have not existed in this world, and even
-that some may not have been desired. But what you can mean, except that
-<i>something</i> exists, they really cannot see. Precisely the same error
-which leads them to suppose that there must <i>exist</i> a supersensible
-Reality, leads them to commit the naturalistic fallacy with regard to
-the meaning of ‘good.’ Every truth, they think, must mean somehow that
-something exists; and since, unlike the empiricists, they recognise
-some truths which do not mean that anything exists here and now, these
-they think must mean that something exists <i>not</i> here and now. On the
-same principle, since ‘good’ is a predicate which neither does nor can
-exist, they are bound to suppose either that ‘to be good’ means to be
-related to some other particular thing which can exist and does exist
-‘in reality’; or else that it means merely ‘to belong to the real
-world’&mdash;that goodness is transcended or absorbed in reality.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_74"><b>74.&emsp;</b>That such a reduction of <i>all</i> propositions
-to the type of those which assert either that something exists or that
-something which exists has a certain attribute (which means, that
-both exist in a certain relation to one another), is erroneous,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[p. 126]</span> may easily be seen by
-reference to the particular class of ethical propositions. For whatever
-we may have proved to exist, and whatever two existents we may have
-proved to be necessarily connected with one another, it still remains
-a distinct and different question whether what thus exists is good;
-whether either or both of the two existents is so; and whether it is
-good that they should exist together. To assert the one is plainly and
-obviously <i>not</i> the same thing as to assert the other. We understand
-what we mean by asking: Is this, which exists, or necessarily exists,
-after all, good? and we perceive that we are asking a question which
-has <i>not</i> been answered. In face of this direct perception that the
-two questions are distinct, no proof that they <i>must</i> be identical can
-have the slightest value. That the proposition ‘This is good’ is thus
-distinct from every other proposition was proved in Chapter I.; and I
-may now illustrate this fact by pointing out how it is distinguished
-from two particular propositions with which it has commonly been
-identified. That so and so <i>ought to be done</i> is commonly called a
-moral <i>law</i>, and this phrase naturally suggests that this proposition
-is in some way analogous either to a natural law, or to a law in the
-legal sense, or to both. All three are, in fact, really analogous in
-one respect, and in one respect only: that they include a proposition
-which is <i>universal</i>. A moral law asserts ‘This is good <i>in all
-cases</i>’; a natural law asserts ‘This happens <i>in all cases</i>’; and a
-law, in the legal sense, ‘It is commanded that this be done, or be
-left undone, <i>in all cases</i>.’ But since it is very natural to suppose
-that the analogy extends further, and that the assertion ‘This is
-good in all cases’ is equivalent to the assertion ‘This happens in
-all cases’ or to the assertion ‘It is commanded that this be done in
-all cases,’ it may be useful briefly to point out that they are <i>not</i>
-equivalent.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_75"><b>75.&emsp;</b>The fallacy of supposing moral law to be
-analogous to natural law in respect of asserting that some action is
-one which is always necessarily done is contained in one of the most
-famous doctrines of Kant. Kant identifies what ought to be with the law
-according to which a Free or Pure Will <i>must</i> act&mdash;with the only
-kind of action which is possible for it. And by this identification
-he does not mean merely to assert that the Free<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_127">[p. 127]</span> Will is <i>also</i> under the necessity of
-doing what it ought; he means that what it ought to do <i>means</i> nothing
-but its own law&mdash;the law according to which it must act. It
-differs from the human will just in that, what <i>we</i> ought to do, is
-what <i>it</i> necessarily does. It is ‘autonomous’; and by this is meant
-(among other things) that there is no separate standard by which it can
-be judged: that the question ‘Is the law by which this Will acts a good
-one?’ is, in its case, meaningless. It follows that what is necessarily
-willed by this Pure Will is good, not <i>because</i> that Will is good, nor
-for any other reason; but merely because it is what is necessarily
-willed by a Pure Will.</p>
-
-<p>Kant’s assertion of the ‘Autonomy of the Practical Reason’ thus
-has the very opposite effect to that which he desired; it makes his
-Ethics ultimately and hopelessly ‘heteronomous.’ His Moral Law is
-‘independent’ of Metaphysics only in the sense that according to him
-we can <i>know</i> it independently; he holds that we can only infer that
-there is Freedom, from the fact that the Moral Law is true. And so far
-as he keeps strictly to this view, he does avoid the error, into which
-most metaphysical writers fall, of allowing his opinions as to what is
-real to influence his judgments of what is good. But he fails to see
-that on his view the Moral Law is dependent upon Freedom in a far more
-important sense than that in which Freedom depends on the Moral Law. He
-admits that Freedom is the <i>ratio essendi</i> of the Moral Law, whereas
-the latter is only <i>ratio cognoscendi</i> of Freedom. And this means that,
-unless Reality be such as he says, no assertion that ‘This is good’ can
-possibly be true: it can indeed have no meaning. He has, therefore,
-furnished his opponents with a conclusive method of attacking the
-validity of the Moral Law. If they can only shew by some other means
-(which he denies to be possible but leaves theoretically open) that the
-nature of Reality is not such as he says, he cannot deny that they will
-have proved his ethical principle to be false. If that ‘This ought to
-be done’ <i>means</i> ‘This is willed by a Free Will,’ then, if it can be
-shewn that there is no Free Will which wills anything, it will follow
-that nothing ought to be done.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_76"><b>76.&emsp;</b>And Kant also commits the fallacy of
-supposing that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[p. 128]</span>
-‘This ought to be’ means ‘This is commanded.’ He conceives the Moral
-Law to be an Imperative. And this is a very common mistake. ‘This
-ought to be,’ it is assumed, must mean ‘This is commanded’; nothing,
-therefore, would be good unless it were commanded; and since commands
-in this world are liable to be erroneous, what ought to be in its
-ultimate sense means ‘what is commanded by some real supersensible
-authority.’ With regard to this authority it is, then, no longer
-possible to ask ‘Is it righteous?’ Its commands cannot fail to be
-right, because to be right means to be what it commands. Here,
-therefore, law, in the moral sense, is supposed analogous to law, in
-the legal sense, rather than, as in the last instance, to law in the
-natural sense. It is supposed that moral obligation is analogous to
-legal obligation, with this difference only that whereas the source
-of legal obligation is earthly, that of moral obligation is heavenly.
-Yet it is obvious that if by a source of obligation is meant only a
-power which binds you or compels you to do a thing, it is not because
-it does do this that you ought to obey it. It is only if it be itself
-so good, that it commands and enforces only what is good, that it can
-be a source of moral obligation. And in that case what it commands
-and enforces would be good, whether commanded and enforced or not.
-Just that which makes an obligation legal, namely the fact that it is
-commanded by a certain kind of authority, is entirely irrelevant to a
-moral obligation. However an authority be defined, its commands will
-be <i>morally</i> binding only if they are&mdash;morally binding; only if
-they tell us what ought to be or what is a means to that which ought to
-be.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_77"><b>77.&emsp;</b>In this last error, in the supposition that
-when I say ‘You ought to do this’ I must mean ‘You are commanded to
-do this,’ we have one of the reasons which has led to the supposition
-that the particular supersensible property by reference to which good
-must be defined is Will. And that ethical conclusions may be obtained
-by enquiring into the nature of a fundamentally real Will seems to be
-by far the commonest assumption of Metaphysical Ethics at the present
-day. But this assumption seems to owe its plausibility, not so much to
-the supposition that ‘ought’ expresses a ‘command,’ as to a far more
-funda<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[p. 129]</span>mental error.
-This error consists in supposing that to ascribe certain predicates to
-a thing is the same thing as to say that that thing is the object of
-a certain kind of psychical state. It is supposed that to say that a
-thing is real or true is the same thing as to say that it is known in
-a certain way; and that the difference between the assertion that it
-is good and the assertion that it is real&mdash;between an ethical,
-therefore, and a metaphysical proposition&mdash;<i>consists</i> in the fact
-that whereas the latter asserts its relation to Cognition the former
-asserts its relation to Will.</p>
-
-<p>Now that this is an error has been already shewn in Chapter I. That
-the assertion ‘This is good’ is <i>not</i> identical with the assertion
-‘This is willed,’ either by a supersensible will, or otherwise, nor
-with any other proposition, has been proved; nor can I add anything
-to that proof. But in face of this proof it may be anticipated that
-two lines of defence may be taken up. (1) It may be maintained that,
-nevertheless, they really are identical, and facts may be pointed out
-which seem to prove that identity. Or else (2) it may be said that an
-<i>absolute</i> identity is not maintained: that it is only meant to assert
-that there is some special connection between will and goodness, such
-as makes an enquiry into the real nature of the former an essential
-step in the proof of ethical conclusions. In order to meet these two
-possible objections, I propose first to shew what possible connections
-there are or may be between goodness and will; and that none of these
-can justify us in asserting that ‘This is good’ is identical with ‘This
-is willed.’ On the other hand it will appear that some of them may be
-easily confused with this assertion of identity; and that therefore the
-confusion is likely to have been made. This part of my argument will,
-therefore, already go some way towards meeting the second objection.
-But what must be conclusive against this is to shew that any possible
-connection between will and goodness <i>except</i> the <i>absolute</i> identity
-in question, would not be sufficient to give an enquiry into Will the
-smallest relevance to the proof of any ethical conclusion.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_78"><b>78.&emsp;</b>It has been customary, since Kant’s
-time, to assert that Cognition, Volition, and Feeling are three
-fundamentally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[p. 130]</span>
-distinct attitudes of the mind towards reality. They are three distinct
-ways of experiencing, and each of them informs us of a distinct aspect
-under which reality may be considered. The ‘Epistemological’ method of
-approaching Metaphysics rests on the assumption that by considering
-what is ‘implied in’ Cognition&mdash;what is its ‘ideal’&mdash;we
-may discover what properties the world must have, if it is to be
-<i>true</i>. And similarly it is held that by considering what is ‘implied
-in’ the fact of Willing or Feeling&mdash;what is the ‘ideal’ which
-they presuppose&mdash;we may discover what properties the world must
-have, if it is to be good or beautiful. The orthodox Idealistic
-Epistemologist differs from the Sensationalist or Empiricist in holding
-that what we directly cognise is neither all true nor yet the whole
-truth: in order to reject the false and to discover further truths
-we must, he says, not take cognition merely as it presents itself,
-but discover what is <i>implied</i> in it. And similarly the orthodox
-Metaphysical Ethicist differs from the mere Naturalist, in holding that
-not everything which we actually will is good, nor, if good, completely
-good: what is really good is that which is implied in the essential
-nature of will. Others again think that Feeling, and not Will, is the
-fundamental <i>datum</i> for Ethics. But, in either case, it is agreed
-that Ethics has some relation to Will or Feeling which it has not to
-Cognition, and which other objects of study have to Cognition. Will or
-Feeling, on the one hand, and Cognition, on the other, are regarded as
-in some sense coordinate sources of philosophical knowledge&mdash;the
-one of Practical, the other of Theoretical philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>What, that is true, can possibly be meant by this view?</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_79"><b>79.&emsp;</b>First of all, it may be meant that, just as,
-by reflection on our perceptual and sensory experience, we become aware
-of the distinction between truth and falsehood, so it is by reflection
-on our experiences of feeling and willing that we become aware of
-ethical distinctions. We should not know what was meant by thinking one
-thing better than another unless the attitude of our will or feeling
-towards one thing was different from its attitude towards another. All
-this may be admitted. But so far we have only the psychological fact
-that it is only <i>because</i> we will or feel things in a certain way, that
-we ever come to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[p. 131]</span>
-think them good; just as it is only because we have certain perceptual
-experiences, that we ever come to think things true. Here, then, is
-a special connection between willing and goodness; but it is only a
-<i>causal</i> connection&mdash;that willing is a necessary condition for the
-cognition of goodness.</p>
-
-<p>But it may be said further that willing and feeling are not only the
-origin of cognitions of goodness; but that to will a thing, or to have
-a certain feeling towards a thing, is the <i>same thing</i> as to think it
-good. And it may be admitted that even this is <i>generally</i> true in a
-sense. It does seem to be true that we hardly ever think a thing good,
-and never very decidedly, without at the same time having a special
-attitude of feeling or will towards it; though it is certainly not the
-case that this is true universally. And the converse may possibly be
-true universally: it may be the case that a perception of goodness is
-included in the complex facts which we mean by willing and by having
-certain kinds of feeling. Let us admit then, that to think a thing good
-and to will it are <i>the same thing</i> in this sense, that, wherever the
-latter occurs, the former also occurs as a <i>part</i> of it; and even that
-they are <i>generally the same thing</i> in the converse sense, that when
-the former occurs it is generally a part of the latter.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_80"><b>80.&emsp;</b>These facts may seem to give countenance
-to the general assertion that to think a thing good is to prefer it
-or approve it, in the sense in which preference and approval denote
-certain kinds of will or feeling. It seems to be always true that when
-we thus prefer or approve, there is included in that fact the fact that
-we think good; and it is certainly true, in an immense majority of
-instances, that when we think good, we also prefer or approve. It is
-natural enough, then, to say that to think good is to prefer. And what
-more natural than to add: When I say a thing is good, I <i>mean</i> that I
-prefer it? And yet this natural addition involves a gross confusion.
-Even if it be true that to think good is the same thing as to prefer
-(which, as we have seen, is <i>never</i> true in the sense that they are
-absolutely identical; and not <i>always</i> true, even in the sense that
-they occur together), yet it is not true that <i>what</i> you think, when
-you think a thing good, is <i>that</i> you prefer it.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_132">[p. 132]</span> Even if your thinking the thing good
-is the same thing as your preference of it, yet the goodness of the
-thing&mdash;that <i>of</i> which you think&mdash;is, for that very reason,
-obviously <i>not</i> the same thing as your preference of it. Whether you
-have a certain thought or not is one question; and whether what you
-think is true is quite a different one, upon which the answer to the
-first has not the least bearing. The fact that you prefer a thing does
-not tend to shew that the thing is good; even if it does shew that you
-think it so.</p>
-
-<p>It seems to be owing to this confusion, that the question ‘What
-is good?’ is thought to be identical with the question ‘What is
-preferred?’ It is said, with sufficient truth, that you would never
-know a thing was good unless you preferred it, just as you would never
-know a thing existed unless you perceived it. But it is added, and
-this is false, that you would never know a thing was good unless you
-<i>knew</i> that you preferred it, or that it existed unless you <i>knew</i>
-that you perceived it. And it is finally added, and this is utterly
-false, that you cannot distinguish the fact that a thing is good from
-the fact that you prefer it, or the fact that it exists from the fact
-that you perceive it. It is often pointed out that I cannot at any
-given moment distinguish what is true from what I think so: and this
-is true. But though I cannot distinguish <i>what</i> is true from <i>what</i> I
-think so, I always can distinguish what I mean by saying <i>that</i> it is
-true from what I mean by saying <i>that</i> I think so. For I understand
-the meaning of the supposition that what I think true may nevertheless
-be false. When, therefore, I assert that it is true I mean to assert
-something different from the fact that I think so. <i>What</i> I think,
-namely <i>that</i> something is true, is always quite distinct from the fact
-that I think it. The assertion that it is true does not even <i>include</i>
-the assertion that I think it so; although, of course, whenever I do
-think a thing true, it is, as a matter of fact, also true that I do
-think it. This tautologous proposition that for a thing to be thought
-true it is necessary that it should be thought, is, however, commonly
-identified with the proposition that for a thing to <i>be</i> true it is
-necessary that it should be thought. A very little reflection should
-suffice to convince<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[p. 133]</span>
-anyone that this identification is erroneous; and a very little more
-will shew that, if so, we must mean by ‘true’ something which includes
-no reference to thinking or to any other psychical fact. It may be
-difficult to discover precisely <i>what</i> we mean&mdash;to hold the
-object in question before us, so as to compare it with other objects:
-but that we do mean something distinct and unique can no longer be
-matter of doubt. That ‘to be true’ <i>means</i> to be thought in a certain
-way is, therefore, certainly false. Yet this assertion plays the most
-essential part in Kant’s ‘Copernican revolution’ of philosophy, and
-renders worthless the whole mass of modern literature, to which that
-revolution has given rise, and which is called Epistemology. Kant held
-that what was unified in a certain manner by the synthetic activity of
-thought was <i>ipso facto</i> true: that this was the very meaning of the
-word. Whereas it is plain that the only connection which can possibly
-hold between being true and being thought in a certain way, is that
-the latter should be a <i>criterion</i> or test of the former. In order,
-however, to establish that it is so, it would be necessary to establish
-by the methods of induction that what was true was always thought in a
-certain way. Modern Epistemology dispenses with this long and difficult
-investigation at the cost of the self-contradictory assumption that
-‘truth’ and the criterion of truth are one and the same thing.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_81"><b>81.&emsp;</b>It is, then, a very natural, though an
-utterly false supposition that for a thing to <i>be</i> true is the same
-thing as for it to be perceived or thought of in a certain way. And
-since, for the reasons given above, the fact of preference seems
-roughly to stand in the same relation to thinking things good, in which
-the fact of perception stands to thinking that they are true or exist,
-it is very natural that for a thing to <i>be</i> good should be supposed
-identical with its being preferred in a certain way. But once this
-coordination of Volition and Cognition has been accepted, it is again
-very natural that every fact which seems to support the conclusion
-that being true is identical with being cognised should confirm the
-corresponding conclusion that being good is identical with being
-willed. It will, therefore, be in place to point out another confusion,
-which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[p. 134]</span> seems to have
-had great influence in causing acceptance of the view that to be true
-is the same thing as to be cognised.</p>
-
-<p>This confusion is due to a failure to observe that when we say
-we have a <i>sensation</i> or <i>perception</i> or that we <i>know</i> a thing, we
-mean to assert not only that our mind is cognitive, but <i>also</i> that
-that which it cognises is true. It is not observed that the usage
-of these words is such that, if a thing be untrue, that fact alone
-is sufficient to justify us in saying that the person who says he
-perceives or knows it, does not <i>perceive</i> or <i>know</i> it, without our
-either enquiring whether, or assuming that, his state of mind differs
-in any respect from what it would have been had he perceived or known.
-By this denial we do not accuse him of an error in introspection,
-even if there was such an error: we do not deny that he was aware of
-a certain object, nor even that his state of mind was exactly such
-as he took it to be: we merely deny that the object, of which he was
-aware, had a certain property. It is, however, commonly supposed that
-when we assert a thing to be perceived or known, we are asserting one
-fact only; and since of the two facts which we really assert, the
-existence of a psychical state is by far the easier to distinguish,
-it is supposed that this is the only one which we do assert. Thus
-perception and sensation have come to be regarded as if they denoted
-certain states of mind and nothing more; a mistake which was the
-easier to make since the commonest state of mind, to which we give a
-name which does not imply that its object is true, namely imagination,
-may, with some plausibility, be supposed to differ from sensation and
-perception not only in the property possessed by its object, but also
-in its character as a state of mind. It has thus come to be supposed
-that the only difference between perception and imagination, by which
-they can be defined, must be a merely psychical difference: and, if
-this were the case, it would follow at once that to <i>be</i> true was
-identical with being cognised in a certain way; since the assertion
-that a thing is perceived does certainly <i>include</i> the assertion that
-it is true, and if, nevertheless, that it is perceived means <i>only</i>
-that the mind has a certain attitude towards it, then its truth must be
-identical with the fact that it is regarded in this way. We may, then,
-attribute<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[p. 135]</span> the view
-that to be true <i>means</i> to be cognised in a certain way partly to the
-failure to perceive that certain words, which are commonly supposed to
-stand for nothing more than a certain kind of cognitive state, do, in
-fact, <i>also</i> include a reference to the truth of the object of such
-states.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_82"><b>82.&emsp;</b>I will now sum up my account of the apparent
-connections between will and ethical propositions, which seem to
-support the vague conviction that ‘This is good’ is somehow identical
-with ‘This is willed in a certain way.’ (1) It may be maintained, with
-sufficient show of truth, that it is only because certain things were
-originally willed, that we ever came to have ethical convictions at
-all. And it has been too commonly assumed that to shew what was the
-cause of a thing is the same thing as to shew what the thing itself
-is. It is, however, hardly necessary to point out that this is not
-the case. (2) It may be further maintained, with some plausibility,
-that to think a thing good and to will it in a certain way are <i>now</i>
-as a matter of fact identical. We must, however, distinguish certain
-possible meanings of this assertion. It may be admitted that when
-we think a thing good, we <i>generally</i> have a special attitude of
-will or feeling towards it; and that, perhaps, when we will it in a
-certain way, we do always think it good. But the very fact that we
-can thus distinguish the question whether, though the one is always
-accompanied by the other, yet this other may not always be accompanied
-by the first, shews that the two things are not, in the strict sense,
-identical. The fact is that, whatever we mean by will, or by any form
-of will, the fact we mean by it certainly always includes something
-else <i>beside</i> the thinking a thing good: and hence that, when willing
-and thinking good are asserted to be identical, the most that can be
-meant is that this other element in will always both accompanies and
-is accompanied by the thinking good; and this, as has been said, is
-of very doubtful truth. Even, however, if it were strictly true, the
-fact that the two things can be distinguished is fatal to the assumed
-coordination between will and cognition, in one of the senses in which
-that assumption is commonly made. For it is only in respect of the
-<i>other</i> element in will, that volition differs from cognition; whereas
-it is only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[p. 136]</span> in
-respect of the fact that volition, or some form of volition, <i>includes</i>
-a <i>cognition</i> of goodness, that will can have the same relation to
-ethical, which cognition has to metaphysical, propositions. Accordingly
-the fact of volition, <i>as a whole</i>, that is, if we include in it the
-element which makes it volition and distinguishes it from cognition,
-has <i>not</i> the same relation to ethical propositions which cognition
-has to those which are metaphysical. Volition and cognition are <i>not</i>
-coordinate ways of experiencing, since it is only in so far as volition
-denotes a <i>complex</i> fact, which includes in it the one identical
-simple fact, which is meant by <i>cognition</i>, that volition is a way of
-experiencing at all.</p>
-
-<p>But, (3) if we allow the terms ‘volition’ or ‘will’ to stand for
-‘thinking good,’ although they certainly do not commonly stand for
-this, there still remains the question: What connection would this
-fact establish between volition and Ethics? Could the enquiry into
-what was willed be identical with the ethical enquiry into what was
-good? It is plain enough that they could not be identical; though it
-is also plain why they should be thought so. The question ‘What is
-good?’ is confused with the question ‘What is thought good?’ and the
-question ‘What is true?’ with the question ‘What is thought true?’
-for two main reasons. (1) One of these is the general difficulty that
-is found in distinguishing what is cognised from the cognition of it.
-It is observed that I certainly cannot cognise anything that is true
-without cognising it. Since, therefore, whenever I know a thing that
-is true, the thing is certainly cognised, it is assumed that for a
-thing to <i>be</i> true at all is the same thing as for it to be cognised.
-And (2) it is not observed that certain words, which are supposed to
-denote only peculiar species of cognition, do as a matter of fact
-<i>also</i> denote that the object cognised is true. Thus if ‘perception’
-be taken to denote only a certain kind of mental fact, then, since the
-object of it is always true, it becomes easy to suppose that to be true
-means only to be object to a mental state of that kind. And similarly
-it is easy to suppose that to be truly good differs from being falsely
-thought so, solely in respect of the fact that to be the former is to
-be the object of a volition differing from that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_137">[p. 137]</span> of which an apparent good is the object,
-in the same way in which a perception (on this supposition) differs
-from an illusion.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_83"><b>83.&emsp;</b>Being good, then, is not identical with
-being willed or felt in any kind of way, any more than being true is
-identical with being thought in any kind of way. But let us suppose
-this to be admitted: Is it still possible that an enquiry into the
-nature of will or feeling should be a necessary step to the proof
-of ethical conclusions? If being good and being willed are <i>not</i>
-identical, then the most that can be maintained with regard to the
-connection of goodness with will is that what is good is always <i>also</i>
-willed in a certain way, and that what is willed in a certain way is
-always <i>also</i> good. And it may be said that this is all that is meant
-by those metaphysical writers who profess to base Ethics upon the
-Metaphysics of Will. What would follow from this supposition?</p>
-
-<p>It is plain that if what is willed in a certain way were always
-<i>also</i> good, then the fact that a thing was so willed would be a
-<i>criterion</i> of its goodness. But in order to establish that will is a
-criterion of goodness, we must be able to shew first and separately
-that in a great number of the instances in which we find a certain
-kind of will we also find that the objects of that will are good. We
-might, then, perhaps, be entitled to infer that in a few instances,
-where it was not obvious whether a thing was good or not but was
-obvious that it was willed in the way required, the thing was really
-good, since it had the property which in all other instances we
-had found to be accompanied by goodness. A reference to will might
-thus, just conceivably, become of use towards the end of our ethical
-investigations, when we had already been able to shew, independently,
-of a vast number of different objects that they were really good and
-in what degree they were so. And against even this conceivable utility
-it may be urged (1) That it is impossible to see why it should not
-be as easy (and it would certainly be the more secure way) to prove
-that the thing in question was good, by the same methods which we
-had used in proving that other things were good, as by reference to
-our criterion; and (2) That, if we set ourselves seriously to find
-out what things are good, we shall see reason to think (as<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[p. 138]</span> will appear in Chapter
-VI.) that they have <i>no</i> other property, both common and peculiar to
-them, beside their goodness&mdash;that, in fact, there is no criterion
-of goodness.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_84"><b>84.&emsp;</b>But to consider whether any form of will is
-or is not a criterion of goodness is quite unnecessary for our purpose
-here; since none of those writers who profess to base their Ethics
-on an investigation of will have ever recognised the need of proving
-directly and independently that all the things which are willed in
-a certain way are good. They make no attempt to shew that will is a
-<i>criterion</i> of goodness; and no stronger evidence could be given that
-they do not recognise that this, at most, is all it can be. As has
-been just pointed out, if we are to maintain that whatever is willed
-in a certain way is also good, we must in the first place be able to
-shew that certain things have one property ‘goodness,’ and that the
-same things <i>also</i> have the other property that they are willed in a
-certain way. And secondly we must be able to shew this in a very large
-number of instances, if we are to be entitled to claim any assent
-for the proposition that these two properties <i>always</i> accompany one
-another: even when this was shewn it would still be doubtful whether
-the inference from ‘generally’ to ‘always’ would be valid, and almost
-certain that this doubtful principle would be useless. But the very
-question which it is the business of Ethics to answer is this question
-what things are good; and, so long as Hedonism retains its present
-popularity, it must be admitted that it is a question upon which there
-is scarcely any agreement and which therefore requires the most careful
-examination. The greatest and most difficult part of the business
-of Ethics would therefore require to have been already accomplished
-before we could be entitled to claim that anything was a <i>criterion</i>
-of goodness. If, on the other hand, to be willed in a certain way
-was <i>identical</i> with being good, then indeed we should be entitled
-to start our ethical investigations by enquiring what was willed in
-the way required. That this is the way in which metaphysical writers
-start their investigations seems to shew conclusively that they are
-influenced by the idea that ‘goodness’ is <i>identical</i> with ‘being
-willed.’ They do not recognise that the question ‘What is good?’
-is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[p. 139]</span> a <i>different</i>
-one from the question ‘What is willed in a certain way?’ Thus we find
-Green explicitly stating that ‘<i>the</i> common characteristic of the good
-is that it satisfies some desire<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22"
-class="fnanchor">[22]</a>.’ If we are to take this statement strictly,
-it obviously asserts that good things have no characteristic in common,
-except that they satisfy some desire&mdash;not even, therefore,
-that they are good. And this can only be the case, if being good is
-<i>identical</i> with satisfying desire: if ‘good’ is merely another name
-for ‘desire-satisfying.’ There could be no plainer instance of the
-naturalistic fallacy. And we cannot take the statement as a mere verbal
-slip, which does not affect the validity of Green’s main argument. For
-he nowhere either gives or pretends to give any reason for believing
-anything to be good in any sense, except that it is what would satisfy
-a particular kind of desire&mdash;the kind of desire which he tries
-to shew to be that of a moral agent. An unhappy alternative is before
-us. Such reasoning would give valid reasons for his conclusions,
-if, and only if, being good and being desired in a particular way
-were identical: and in this case, as we have seen in Chapter I., his
-conclusions would not be ethical. On the other hand, if the two are not
-identical, his conclusions may be ethical and may even be right, but he
-has not given us a single reason for believing them. The thing which
-a scientific Ethics is required to shew, namely that certain things
-are really good, he has assumed to begin with, in assuming that things
-which are willed in a certain way are always good. We may, therefore,
-have as much respect for Green’s conclusions as for those of any other
-man who details to us his ethical convictions: but that any of his
-arguments are such as to give us any reason for holding that Green’s
-convictions are more likely to be true than those of any other man,
-must be clearly denied. The <i>Prolegomena to Ethics</i> is quite as far as
-Mr Spencer’s <i>Data of Ethics</i>, from making the smallest contribution to
-the solution of ethical problems.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_85"><b>85.&emsp;</b>The main object of this chapter has been
-to shew that Metaphysics, understood as the investigation of a
-supposed supersensible reality, can have no logical bearing whatever
-upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[p. 140]</span> the answer
-to the fundamental ethical question ‘What is good in itself?’ That
-this is so, follows at once from the conclusion of Chapter I., that
-‘good’ denotes an ultimate, unanalysable predicate; but this truth
-has been so systematically ignored, that it seemed worth while to
-discuss and distinguish, in detail, the principal relations, which do
-hold, or have been supposed to hold, between Metaphysics and Ethics.
-With this view I pointed out:&mdash;(1) That Metaphysics may have a
-bearing on <i>practical</i> Ethics&mdash;on the question ‘What ought we
-to do?’&mdash;so far as it may be able to tell us what the future
-effects of our action will be: what it can <i>not</i> tell us is whether
-those effects are good or bad in themselves. One particular type of
-metaphysical doctrine, which is very frequently held, undoubtedly
-has such a bearing on <i>practical</i> Ethics: for, if it is true that
-the sole reality is an eternal, immutable Absolute, then it follows
-that no actions of ours can have any real effect, and hence that no
-<i>practical</i> proposition can be true. The same conclusion follows from
-the ethical proposition, commonly combined with this metaphysical
-one&mdash;namely that this eternal Reality is also the sole good
-(68). (2) That metaphysical writers, as where they fail to notice the
-contradiction just noticed between any <i>practical</i> proposition and the
-assertion that an eternal reality is the sole good, seem frequently
-to confuse the proposition that one particular existing thing is
-good, with the proposition that the existence of that kind of thing
-<i>would</i> be good, wherever it might occur. To the proof of the former
-proposition Metaphysics might be relevant, by shewing that the thing
-existed; to the proof of the latter it is wholly irrelevant: it can
-only serve the <i>psychological</i> function of suggesting things which may
-be valuable&mdash;a function which would be still better performed by
-pure fiction (69-71).</p>
-
-<p>But the most important source of the supposition that Metaphysics
-is relevant to Ethics, seems to be the assumption that ‘good’ <i>must</i>
-denote some <i>real</i> property of things&mdash;an assumption which
-is mainly due to two erroneous doctrines, the first <i>logical</i>,
-the second <i>epistemological</i>. Hence (3) I discussed the <i>logical</i>
-doctrine that all propositions assert a relation<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_141">[p. 141]</span> between existents; and pointed out that
-the assimilation of ethical propositions either to natural laws or to
-commands are instances of this <i>logical</i> fallacy (72-76). And finally
-(4) I discussed the <i>epistemological</i> doctrine that to be good is
-equivalent to being willed or felt in some particular way; a doctrine
-which derives support from the analogous error, which Kant regarded
-as the cardinal point of his system and which has received immensely
-wide acceptance&mdash;the erroneous view that to be ‘true’ or ‘real’ is
-equivalent to being thought in a particular way. In this discussion the
-main points to which I desire to direct attention are these: (<i>a</i>) That
-Volition and Feeling are <i>not</i> analogous to Cognition in the manner
-assumed; since in so far as these words denote an attitude of the mind
-towards an object, they are themselves merely instances of Cognition:
-they differ only in respect of the kind of object of which they take
-cognisance, and in respect of the other mental accompaniments of such
-cognitions: (<i>b</i>) That universally the <i>object</i> of a cognition must
-be distinguished from the cognition of which it is the object; and
-hence that in no case can the question whether the object is <i>true</i>
-be identical with the question how it is cognised or whether it is
-cognised at all: it follows that even if the proposition ‘This is good’
-were always the object of certain kinds of will or feeling, the <i>truth</i>
-of that proposition could in no case be established by proving that it
-was their object; far less can that proposition itself be identical
-with the proposition that its subject is the object of a volition or a
-feeling (77-84).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[p. 142]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak" title="CHAPTER V. ETHICS IN RELATION TO CONDUCT.">CHAPTER V.</h2>
- <p class="subh2">ETHICS IN RELATION TO CONDUCT.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p id="Sec_86"><b>86.&emsp;</b><span class="smcap">In</span> the present
-chapter we have again to take a great step in ethical method. My
-discussion hitherto has fallen under two main heads. Under the first,
-I tried to shew what ‘good’&mdash;the adjective ‘good’&mdash;<i>means</i>.
-This appeared to be the first point to be settled in any treatment of
-Ethics, that should aim at being systematic. It is necessary we should
-know this, should know what good means, before we can go on to consider
-what is good&mdash;what things or qualities are good. It is necessary
-we should know it for two reasons. The first reason is that ‘good’ is
-the notion upon which all Ethics depends. We cannot hope to understand
-what we mean, when we say that this is good or that is good, until we
-understand quite clearly, not only what ‘this’ is or ‘that’ is (which
-the natural sciences and philosophy can tell us) but also what is meant
-by calling them good, a matter which is reserved for Ethics only.
-Unless we are quite clear on this point, our ethical reasoning will be
-always apt to be fallacious. We shall think that we are proving that a
-thing is ‘good,’ when we are really only proving that it is something
-else; since unless we know what ‘good’ means, unless we know what is
-meant by that notion in itself, as distinct from what is meant by any
-other notion, we shall not be able to tell when we are dealing with
-it and when we are dealing with something else, which is perhaps like
-it, but yet not the same. And the second reason why we should settle
-first of all this question ‘What good means?’ is a reason of method.
-It is this, that we can never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[p.
-143]</span> know on what <i>evidence</i> an ethical proposition rests, until
-we know the nature of the notion which makes the proposition ethical.
-We cannot tell what is possible, by way of proof, in favour of one
-judgment that ‘This or that is good,’ or against another judgment
-‘That this or that is bad,’ until we have recognised what the nature
-of such propositions must always be. In fact, it follows from the
-meaning of good and bad, that such propositions are all of them, in
-Kant’s phrase, ‘synthetic’: they all must rest in the end upon some
-proposition which must be simply accepted or rejected, which cannot
-be logically deduced from any other proposition. This result, which
-follows from our first investigation, may be otherwise expressed by
-saying that the fundamental principles of Ethics must be self-evident.
-But I am anxious that this expression should not be misunderstood. The
-expression ‘self-evident’ means properly that the proposition so called
-is evident or true, <i>by itself</i> alone; that it is not an inference from
-some proposition other than <i>itself</i>. The expression does <i>not</i> mean
-that the proposition is true, because it is evident to you or me or
-all mankind, because in other words it appears to us to be true. That
-a proposition appears to be true can never be a valid argument that
-true it really is. By saying that a proposition is self-evident, we
-mean emphatically that its appearing so to us, is <i>not</i> the reason why
-it is true: for we mean that it has absolutely no reason. It would not
-be a self-evident proposition, if we could say of it: I cannot think
-otherwise and therefore it is true. For then its evidence or proof
-would not lie in itself, but in something else, namely our conviction
-of it. That it appears true to us may indeed be the <i>cause</i> of our
-asserting it, or the reason why we think and say that it is true: but
-a reason in this sense is something utterly different from a logical
-reason, or reason why something is true. Moreover, it is obviously
-not a reason of the same thing. The <i>evidence</i> of a proposition to us
-is only a reason for <i>our holding it</i> to be true: whereas a logical
-reason, or reason in the sense in which self-evident propositions have
-no reason, is a reason why <i>the proposition itself</i> must be true, not
-why we hold it so to be. Again that a proposition is evident to us
-may not only be the reason why we do think or<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_144">[p. 144]</span> affirm it, it may even be a <i>reason</i> why
-we ought to think it or affirm it. But a reason, in this sense too,
-is not a logical reason for the truth of the proposition, though it
-is a logical reason for the rightness of holding the proposition. In
-our common language, however, these three meanings of ‘reason’ are
-constantly confused, whenever we say ‘I have a reason for thinking that
-true.’ But it is absolutely essential, if we are to get clear notions
-about Ethics or, indeed, about any other, especially any philosophical,
-study, that we should distinguish them. When, therefore, I talk of
-Intuitionistic Hedonism, I must not be understood to imply that my
-denial that ‘Pleasure is the only good’ is <i>based</i> on my Intuition of
-its falsehood. My Intuition of its falsehood is indeed <i>my</i> reason for
-<i>holding</i> and declaring it untrue; it is indeed the only valid reason
-for so doing. But that is just because there is <i>no</i> logical reason
-for it; because there is no proper evidence or reason of its falsehood
-except itself alone. It is untrue, because it is untrue, and there
-is no other reason: but I <i>declare</i> it untrue, because its untruth
-is evident to me, and I hold that that is a sufficient reason for my
-assertion. We must not therefore look on Intuition, as if it were
-an alternative to reasoning. Nothing whatever can take the place of
-<i>reasons</i> for the truth of any proposition: intuition can only furnish
-a reason for <i>holding</i> any proposition to be true: this however it must
-do when any proposition is self-evident, when, in fact, there are no
-reasons which prove its truth.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_87"><b>87.&emsp;</b>So much, then, for the first step in our
-ethical method, the step which established that good is good and
-nothing else whatever, and that Naturalism was a fallacy. A second step
-was taken when we began to consider proposed self-evident principles of
-Ethics. In this second division, resting on our result that good means
-good, we began the discussion of propositions asserting that such and
-such a thing or quality or concept was good. Of such a kind was the
-principle of Intuitionistic or Ethical Hedonism&mdash;the principle
-that ‘Pleasure alone is good.’ Following the method established by our
-first discussion, I claimed that the untruth of this proposition was
-self-evident. I could do nothing to <i>prove</i> that it was untrue;<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[p. 145]</span> I could only point out
-as clearly as possible what it means, and how it contradicts other
-propositions which appear to be equally true. My only object in all
-this was, necessarily, to convince. But even if I did convince, that
-does not prove that we are right. It justifies us in <i>holding</i> that
-we are so; but nevertheless we may be wrong. On one thing, however,
-we may justly pride ourselves. It is that we have had a better chance
-of answering our question rightly, than Bentham or Mill or Sidgwick
-or others who have contradicted us. For we have <i>proved</i> that these
-have never even asked themselves the question which they professed to
-answer. They have confused it with another question: small wonder,
-therefore, if their answer is different from ours. We must be quite
-sure that the same question has been put, before we trouble ourselves
-at the different answers that are given to it. For all we know, the
-whole world would agree with us, if they could once clearly understand
-the question upon which we want their votes. Certain it is, that in
-all those cases where we found a difference of opinion, we found also
-that the question had <i>not</i> been clearly understood. Though, therefore,
-we cannot prove that we are right, yet we have reason to believe that
-everybody, unless he is mistaken as to what he thinks, will think the
-same as we. It is as with a sum in mathematics. If we find a gross and
-palpable error in the calculations, we are not surprised or troubled
-that the person who made this mistake has reached a different result
-from ours. We think he will admit that his result is wrong, if his
-mistake is pointed out to him. For instance if a man has to add up 5
-+ 7 + 9, we should not wonder that he made the result to be 34, if he
-started by making 5 + 7 = 25. And so in Ethics, if we find, as we did,
-that ‘desirable’ is confused with ‘desired,’ or that ‘end’ is confused
-with ‘means,’ we need not be disconcerted that those who have committed
-these mistakes do not agree with us. The only difference is that in
-Ethics, owing to the intricacy of its subject-matter, it is far more
-difficult to persuade anyone either that he has made a mistake or that
-that mistake affects his result.</p>
-
-<p>In this second division of my subject&mdash;the division which
-is occupied with the question, ‘What is good in itself?’&mdash;I
-have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[p. 146]</span> hitherto only
-tried to establish one definite result, and that a negative one: namely
-that pleasure is <i>not</i> the sole good. This result, if true, refutes
-half, or more than half, of the ethical theories which have ever been
-held, and is, therefore, not without importance. It will, however, be
-necessary presently to deal positively with the question: What things
-are good and in what degrees?</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_88"><b>88.&emsp;</b>But before proceeding to this discussion
-I propose, first, to deal with the <i>third</i> kind of ethical
-question&mdash;the question: What ought we to do?</p>
-
-<p>The answering of this question constitutes the third great division
-of ethical enquiry; and its nature was briefly explained in Chap. I.
-(<a href="#Sec_15">§§&nbsp;15-17</a>). It introduces into Ethics, as was there pointed out, an
-entirely new question&mdash;the question what things are related as
-<i>causes</i> to that which is good in itself; and this question can only
-be answered by an entirely new method&mdash;the method of empirical
-investigation; by means of which causes are discovered in the other
-sciences. To ask what kind of actions we ought to perform, or what kind
-of conduct is right, is to ask what kind of effects such action and
-conduct will produce. Not a single question in practical Ethics can
-be answered except by a causal generalisation. All such questions do,
-indeed, <i>also</i> involve an ethical judgment proper&mdash;the judgment
-that certain effects are better, in themselves, than others. But they
-<i>do</i> assert that these better things are effects&mdash;are causally
-connected with the actions in question. Every judgment in practical
-Ethics may be reduced to the form: This is a cause of that good
-thing.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_89"><b>89.&emsp;</b>That this is the case, that the questions,
-What is right? what is my duty? what ought I to do? belong exclusively
-to this third branch of ethical enquiry, is the first point to which
-I wish to call attention. All moral laws, I wish to shew, are merely
-statements that certain kinds of actions will have good effects. The
-very opposite of this view has been generally prevalent in Ethics. ‘The
-right’ and ‘the useful’ have been supposed to be at least <i>capable</i> of
-conflicting with one another, and, at all events, to be essentially
-distinct. It has been characteristic of a certain school of moralists,
-as of moral<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[p. 147]</span> common
-sense, to declare that the end will never justify the means. What I
-wish first to point out is that ‘right’ does and can mean nothing but
-‘cause of a good result,’ and is thus identical with ‘useful’; whence
-it follows that the end always will justify the means, and that no
-action which is not justified by its results can be right. That there
-may be a true proposition, meant to be conveyed by the assertion ‘The
-end will not justify the means,’ I fully admit: but that, in another
-sense, and a sense far more fundamental for ethical theory, it is
-utterly false, must first be shewn.</p>
-
-<p>That the assertion ‘I am morally bound to perform this action’ is
-identical with the assertion ‘This action will produce the greatest
-possible amount of good in the Universe’ has already been briefly shewn
-in Chap. I. (<a href="#Sec_17">§&nbsp;17</a>); but it is important to insist that this fundamental
-point is demonstrably certain. This may, perhaps, be best made evident
-in the following way. It is plain that when we assert that a certain
-action is our absolute duty, we are asserting that the performance of
-that action at that time is unique in respect of value. But no dutiful
-action can possibly have unique value in the sense that it is the sole
-thing of value in the world; since, in that case, <i>every</i> such action
-would be the <i>sole</i> good thing, which is a manifest contradiction.
-And for the same reason its value cannot be unique in the sense that
-it has more intrinsic value than anything else in the world; since
-<i>every</i> act of duty would then be the <i>best</i> thing in the world, which
-is also a contradiction. It can, therefore, be unique only in the sense
-that the whole world will be better, if it be performed, than if any
-possible alternative were taken. And the question whether this is so
-cannot possibly depend solely on the question of its own intrinsic
-value. For any action will also have effects different from those of
-any other action; and if any of these have intrinsic value, their
-value is exactly as relevant to the total goodness of the Universe as
-that of their cause. It is, in fact, evident that, however valuable
-an action may be in itself, yet, owing to its existence, the sum of
-good in the Universe may conceivably be made less than if some other
-action, less valuable in itself, had been performed. But to say that
-this is the case is to say that it would have<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_148">[p. 148]</span> been better that the action should not
-have been done; and this again is obviously equivalent to the statement
-that it ought not to have been done&mdash;that it was not what duty
-required. ‘Fiat iustitia, ruat caelum’ can only be justified on the
-ground that by the doing of justice the Universe gains more than it
-loses by the falling of the heavens. It is, of course, possible that
-this is the case: but, at all events, to assert that justice <i>is</i>
-a duty, in spite of such consequences, is to assert that it is the
-case.</p>
-
-<p>Our ‘duty,’ therefore, can only be defined as that action, which
-will cause more good to exist in the Universe than any possible
-alternative. And what is ‘right’ or ‘morally permissible’ only differs
-from this, as what will <i>not</i> cause <i>less</i> good than any possible
-alternative. When, therefore, Ethics presumes to assert that certain
-ways of acting are ‘duties’ it presumes to assert that to act in those
-ways will always produce the greatest possible sum of good. If we are
-told that to ‘do no murder’ is a duty, we are told that the action,
-whatever it may be, which is called murder, will under no circumstances
-cause so much good to exist in the Universe as its avoidance.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_90"><b>90.&emsp;</b>But, if this be recognised, several most
-important consequences follow, with regard to the relation of Ethics to
-conduct.</p>
-
-<p>(1) It is plain that no moral law is self-evident, as has commonly
-been held by the Intuitional school of moralists. The Intuitional view
-of Ethics consists in the supposition that certain rules, stating that
-certain actions are always to be done or to be omitted, may be taken as
-self-evident premisses. I have shewn with regard to judgments of what
-is <i>good in itself</i>, that this is the case; no reason can be given for
-them. But it is the essence of Intuitionism to suppose that rules of
-action&mdash;statements not of what ought to <i>be</i>, but of what we ought
-to do&mdash;are in the same sense intuitively certain. Plausibility
-has been lent to this view by the fact that we do undoubtedly make
-immediate judgments that certain actions are obligatory or wrong: we
-are thus often intuitively certain of our duty, <i>in a psychological
-sense</i>. But, nevertheless, these judgments are not self-evident and
-cannot be taken as ethical premisses, since, as has now been shewn,
-they are capable of being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[p.
-149]</span> confirmed or refuted by an investigation of causes and
-effects. It is, indeed, possible that some of our immediate intuitions
-are true; but since <i>what</i> we intuit, <i>what</i> conscience tells us, is
-that certain actions will always produce the greatest sum of good
-possible under the circumstances, it is plain that reasons can be
-given, which will shew the deliverances of conscience to be true or
-false.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_91"><b>91.&emsp;</b>(2) In order to shew that any action is a
-duty, it is necessary to know both what are the other conditions, which
-will, conjointly with it, determine its effects; to know exactly what
-will be the effects of these conditions; and to know all the events
-which will be in any way affected by our action throughout an infinite
-future. We must have all this causal knowledge, and further we must
-know accurately the degree of value both of the action itself and of
-all these effects; and must be able to determine how, in conjunction
-with the other things in the Universe, they will affect its value as
-an organic whole. And not only this: we must also possess all this
-knowledge with regard to the effects of every possible alternative; and
-must then be able to see by comparison that the total value due to the
-existence of the action in question will be greater than that which
-would be produced by any of these alternatives. But it is obvious that
-our causal knowledge alone is far too incomplete for us ever to assure
-ourselves of this result. Accordingly it follows that we never have any
-reason to suppose that an action is our duty: we can never be sure that
-any action will produce the greatest value possible.</p>
-
-<p>Ethics, therefore, is quite unable to give us a list of duties:
-but there still remains a humbler task which may be possible for
-Practical Ethics. Although we cannot hope to discover which, in a given
-situation, is the best of all possible alternative actions, there may
-be some possibility of shewing which among the alternatives, <i>likely to
-occur to any one</i>, will produce the greatest sum of good. This second
-task is certainly all that Ethics can ever have accomplished: and it
-is certainly all that it has ever collected materials for proving;
-since no one has ever attempted to exhaust the possible alternative
-actions in any particular case. Ethical philosophers have in fact
-confined their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[p. 150]</span>
-attention to a very limited class of actions, which have been selected
-because they are those which most commonly occur to mankind as possible
-alternatives. With regard to these they may possibly have shewn that
-one alternative is better, <i>i.e.</i> produces a greater total of value,
-than others. But it seems desirable to insist, that though they have
-represented this result as a determination of <i>duties</i>, it can never
-really have been so. For the term duty is certainly so used that, if
-we are subsequently persuaded that any possible action would have
-produced more good than the one we adopted, we admit that we failed to
-do our duty. It will, however, be a useful task if Ethics can determine
-which among alternatives <i>likely to occur</i> will produce the greatest
-total value. For, though this alternative cannot be proved to be the
-best possible, yet it may be better than any course of action which we
-should otherwise adopt.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_92"><b>92.&emsp;</b>A difficulty in distinguishing this task,
-which Ethics may perhaps undertake with some hope of success, from the
-hopeless task of finding duties, arises from an ambiguity in the use of
-the term ‘possible.’ An action may, in one perfectly legitimate sense,
-be said to be ‘impossible’ solely because the idea of doing it does not
-occur to us. In this sense, then, the alternatives which do actually
-occur to a man would be the only <i>possible</i> alternatives; and the best
-of these would be the best possible action under the circumstances, and
-hence would conform to our definition of ‘duty.’ But when we talk of
-the best <i>possible</i> action as our duty, we mean by the term any action
-which no <i>other</i> known circumstance would prevent, <i>provided</i> the idea
-of it occurred to us. And this use of the term is in accordance with
-popular usage. For we admit that a man may fail to do his duty, through
-neglecting to think of what he <i>might</i> have done. Since, therefore,
-we say that he <i>might</i> have done, what nevertheless did not occur to
-him, it is plain that we do not limit his <i>possible</i> actions to those
-of which he thinks. It might be urged, with more plausibility, that we
-mean by a man’s duty only the best of those actions of which he <i>might</i>
-have thought. And it is true that we do not blame any man very severely
-for omitting an action of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[p.
-151]</span> which, as we say, ‘he could not be expected to think.’ But
-even here it is plain that we recognise a distinction between what he
-might have done and what he might have thought of doing: we regard it
-as a pity that he did not do otherwise. And ‘duty’ is certainly used in
-such a sense, that it would be a contradiction in terms to say it was a
-pity that a man did his duty.</p>
-
-<p>We must, therefore, distinguish a possible action from an action of
-which it is possible to think. By the former we mean an action which
-no known cause would prevent, <i>provided</i> the idea of it occurred to
-us: and that one among such actions, which will produce the greatest
-total good, is what we mean by duty. Ethics certainly cannot hope to
-discover what kind of action is always our duty in this sense. It may,
-however, hope to decide which among one or two such possible actions is
-the best: and those which it has chosen to consider are, as a matter of
-fact, the most important of those with regard to which men deliberate
-whether they shall or shall not do them. A decision with regard to
-these may therefore be easily confounded with a decision with regard
-to which is the best possible action. But it is to be noted that even
-though we limit ourselves to considering which is the better among
-alternatives likely to be thought of, the fact that these alternatives
-might be thought of is not included is what we mean by calling them
-possible alternatives. Even if in any particular case it was impossible
-that the idea of them should have occurred to a man, the question we
-are concerned with is, which, if it had occurred, would have been the
-best alternative? If we say that murder is always a worse alternative,
-we mean to assert that it is so, even where it was impossible for the
-murderer to think of doing anything else.</p>
-
-<p>The utmost, then, that Practical Ethics can hope to discover is
-which, among a few alternatives possible under certain circumstances,
-will, on the whole, produce the best result. It may tell us which is
-the best, in this sense, of certain alternatives about which we are
-likely to deliberate; and since we may also know that, even if we
-choose none of these, what we shall, in that case, do is unlikely to be
-as good as one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[p. 152]</span>
-them, it may thus tell us which of the alternatives, among which we
-<i>can</i> choose, it is best to choose. If it could do this it would be
-sufficient for practical guidance.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_93"><b>93.&emsp;</b>But (3) it is plain that even this is a task
-of immense difficulty. It is difficult to see how we can establish even
-a probability that by doing one thing we shall obtain a better total
-result than by doing another. I shall merely endeavour to point out how
-much is assumed, when we assume that there is such a probability, and
-on what lines it seems possible that this assumption may be justified.
-It will be apparent that it has never yet been justified&mdash;that no
-sufficient reason has ever yet been found for considering one action
-more right or more wrong than another.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) The first difficulty in the way of establishing a probability
-that one course of action will give a better total result than another,
-lies in the fact that we have to take account of the effects of both
-throughout an infinite future. We have no certainty but that, if we
-do one action now, the Universe will, throughout all time, differ in
-some way from what it would have been, if we had done another; and,
-if there is such a permanent difference, it is certainly relevant to
-our calculation. But it is quite certain that our causal knowledge is
-utterly insufficient to tell us what different effects will probably
-result from two different actions, except within a comparatively short
-space of time; we can certainly only pretend to calculate the effects
-of actions within what may be called an ‘immediate’ future. No one,
-when he proceeds upon what he considers a rational consideration of
-effects, would guide his choice by any forecast that went beyond a few
-centuries at most; and, in general, we consider that we have acted
-rationally, if we think we have secured a balance of good within a few
-years or months or days. Yet, if a choice guided by such considerations
-is to be rational, we must certainly have some reason to believe that
-no consequences of our action in a further future will generally
-be such as to reverse the balance of good that is probable in the
-future which we can foresee. This large postulate must be made, if
-we are ever to assert that the results of one<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_153">[p. 153]</span> action will be even probably better
-than those of another. Our utter ignorance of the far future gives us
-no justification for saying that it is even probably right to choose
-the greater good within the region over which a probable forecast
-may extend. We do, then, assume that it is improbable that effects,
-after a certain time, will, in general, be such as to reverse the
-comparative value of the alternative results within that time. And
-that this assumption is justified must be shewn before we can claim
-to have given any reason whatever for acting in one way rather than
-in another. It may, perhaps, be justified by some such considerations
-as the following. As we proceed further and further from the time at
-which alternative actions are open to us, the events of which either
-action would be part cause become increasingly dependent on those
-other circumstances, which are the same, whichever action we adopt.
-The effects of any individual action seem, after a sufficient space of
-time, to be found only in trifling modifications spread over a very
-wide area, whereas its immediate effects consist in some prominent
-modification of a comparatively narrow area. Since, however, most
-of the things which have any great importance for good or evil are
-things of this prominent kind, there may be a probability that after
-a certain time all the effects of any particular action become so
-nearly indifferent, that any difference between their value and that
-of the effects of another action, is very unlikely to outweigh an
-obvious difference in the value of the immediate effects. It does in
-fact appear to be the case that, in most cases, whatever action we now
-adopt, ‘it will be all the same a hundred years hence,’ so far as the
-existence at that time of anything greatly good or bad is concerned:
-and this might, perhaps, be <i>shewn</i> to be true, by an investigation
-of the manner in which the effects of any particular event become
-neutralised by lapse of time. Failing such a proof, we can certainly
-have no rational ground for asserting that one of two alternatives
-is even probably right and another wrong. If any of our judgments of
-right and wrong are to pretend to probability, we must have reason to
-think that the effects of our actions in the far future will not have
-value sufficient to outweigh<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[p.
-154]</span> any superiority of one set of effects over another in the
-immediate future.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_94"><b>94.&emsp;</b>(<i>b</i>) We must assume, then, that if the
-effects of one action are generally better than those of another,
-so far forward in the future as we are able to foresee any probable
-difference in their effects at all, then the total effect upon the
-Universe of the former action is also generally better. We certainly
-cannot hope directly to compare their effects except within a limited
-future; and all the arguments, which have ever been used in Ethics,
-and upon which we commonly act in common life, directed to shewing
-that one course is superior to another, are (apart from theological
-dogmas) confined to pointing out such probable immediate advantages.
-The question remains, then: Can we lay down any general rules to the
-effect that one among a few alternative actions will generally produce
-a greater total of good in the immediate future?</p>
-
-<p>It is important to insist that this question, limited as it is,
-is the utmost, to which, with any knowledge we have at present or
-are likely to have for a long time to come, Practical Ethics can
-hope to give an answer. I have already pointed out that we cannot
-hope to discover which is the <i>best</i> possible alternative in any
-given circumstances, but only which, among a few, is better than the
-others. And I have also pointed out that there is certainly no more
-than a probability, even if we are entitled to assert so much, that
-what is better in regard to its immediate effects will also be better
-on the whole. It now remains to insist that, even with regard to
-these immediate effects, we can only hope to discover which, among a
-few alternatives, will <i>generally</i> produce the greatest balance of
-good in the immediate future. We can secure no title to assert that
-obedience to such commands as ‘Thou shalt not lie,’ or even ‘Thou
-shalt do no murder,’ is <i>universally</i> better than the alternatives
-of lying and murder. Reasons why no more than a <i>general</i> knowledge
-is possible have been already given in Chap. I. (<a href="#Sec_16">§&nbsp;16</a>); but they may
-be recapitulated here. In the first place, of the effects, which
-principally concern us in ethical discussions, as having intrinsic
-value, we know the causes so little, that we can scarcely claim, with
-regard to any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[p. 155]</span>
-single one, to have obtained even a <i>hypothetical</i> universal law, such
-as has been obtained in the exact sciences. We cannot even say: If
-this action is performed, under exactly these circumstances, and if
-no others interfere, this important effect, at least, will <i>always</i>
-be produced. But, in the second place, an ethical law is not merely
-hypothetical. If we are to know that it will always be better to
-act in a certain way, under certain circumstances, we must know not
-merely what effects such actions will produce, <i>provided</i> no other
-circumstances interfere, but also that no other circumstances will
-interfere. And this it is obviously impossible to know with more than
-probability. An ethical law has the nature not of a scientific law
-but of a scientific <i>prediction</i>: and the latter is always merely
-probable, although the probability may be very great. An engineer is
-entitled to assert that, if a bridge be built in a certain way, it
-will probably bear certain loads for a certain time; but he can never
-be absolutely certain that it has been built in the way required, nor
-that, even if it has, some accident will not intervene to falsify his
-prediction. With any ethical law, the same must be the case; it can
-be no more than a generalisation: and here, owing to the comparative
-absence of accurate hypothetical knowledge, on which the prediction
-should be based, the probability is comparatively small. But finally,
-for an ethical generalisation, we require to know not only what effects
-will be produced, but also what are the comparative values of those
-effects; and on this question too, it must be admitted, considering
-what a prevalent opinion Hedonism has been, that we are very liable to
-be mistaken. It is plain, then, that we are not soon likely to know
-more than that one kind of action will <i>generally</i> produce better
-effects than another; and that more than this has certainly never been
-proved. In no two cases will <i>all</i> the effects of any kind of action be
-precisely the same, because in each case some of the circumstances will
-differ; and although the effects, that are important for good or evil,
-may be generally the same, it is extremely unlikely that they will
-always be so.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_95"><b>95.&emsp;</b>(<i>c</i>) If, now, we confine ourselves
-to a search for actions which are <i>generally</i> better as means
-than any probable alter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[p.
-156]</span>native, it seems possible to establish as much as this in
-defence of most of the rules most universally recognised by Common
-Sense. I do not propose to enter upon this defence in detail, but
-merely to point out what seem to be the chief distinct principles by
-the use of which it can be made.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, then, we can only shew that one action is
-generally better than another as a means, provided that certain other
-circumstances are given. We do, as a matter of fact, only observe its
-good effects under certain circumstances; and it may be easily seen
-that a sufficient change in these would render doubtful what seem the
-most universally certain of general rules. Thus, the general disutility
-of murder can only be proved, provided the majority of the human race
-will certainly persist in existing. In order to prove that murder, if
-it were so universally adopted as to cause the speedy extermination
-of the race, would not be good as a means, we should have to disprove
-the main contention of pessimism&mdash;namely that the existence of
-human life is on the whole an evil. And the view of pessimism, however
-strongly we may be convinced of its truth or falsehood, is one which
-never has been either proved or refuted conclusively. That universal
-murder would not be a good thing at this moment can therefore not be
-proved. But, as a matter of fact, we can and do assume with certainty
-that, even if a few people are willing to murder, most people will
-not be willing. When, therefore, we say that murder is in general to
-be avoided, we only mean that it is so, so long as the majority of
-mankind will certainly not agree to it, but will persist in living. And
-that, under these circumstances, it is generally wrong for any single
-person to commit murder seems capable of proof. For, since there is
-in any case no hope of exterminating the race, the only effects which
-we have to consider are those which the action will have upon the
-increase of the goods and the diminution of the evils of human life.
-Where the best is not attainable (assuming extermination to be the
-best) one alternative may still be better than another. And, apart from
-the immediate evils which murder generally produces, the fact that,
-if it were a common practice, the feeling of insecurity, thus caused,
-would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[p. 157]</span> absorb much
-time, which might be spent to better purpose, is perhaps conclusive
-against it. So long as men desire to live as strongly as they do, and
-so long as it is certain that they will continue to do so, anything
-which hinders them from devoting their energy to the attainment of
-positive goods, seems plainly bad as a means. And the general practice
-of murder, falling so far short of universality as it certainly must in
-all known conditions of society, seems certainly to be a hindrance of
-this kind.</p>
-
-<p>A similar defence seems possible for most of the rules, most
-universally enforced by legal sanctions, such as respect of property;
-and for some of those most commonly recognised by Common Sense, such
-as industry, temperance and the keeping of promises. In any state of
-society in which men have that intense desire for property of some
-sort, which seems to be universal, the common legal rules for the
-protection of property must serve greatly to facilitate the best
-possible expenditure of energy. And similarly: Industry is a means
-to the attainment of those necessaries, without which the further
-attainment of any great positive goods is impossible; temperance merely
-enjoins the avoidance of those excesses, which, by injuring health,
-would prevent a man from contributing as much as possible to the
-acquirement of these necessaries; and the keeping of promises greatly
-facilitates cooperation in such acquirement.</p>
-
-<p>Now all these rules seem to have two characteristics to which it
-is desirable to call attention. (1) They seem all to be such that, in
-any known state of society, a <i>general</i> observance of them <i>would</i>
-be good as a means. The conditions upon which their utility depends,
-namely the tendency to preserve and propagate life and the desire of
-property, seem to be so universal and so strong, that it would be
-impossible to remove them; and, this being so, we can say that, under
-any conditions which could actually be given, the general observance of
-these rules would be good as a means. For, while there seems no reason
-to think that their observance ever makes a society worse than one
-in which they are not observed, it is certainly necessary as a means
-for any state of things in which the greatest<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_158">[p. 158]</span> possible goods can be attained. And (2)
-these rules, since they can be recommended as a means to that which is
-itself only a necessary condition for the existence of any great good,
-can be defended independently of correct views upon the primary ethical
-question of what is good in itself. On any view commonly taken, it
-seems certain that the preservation of civilised society, which these
-rules are necessary to effect, is necessary for the existence, in any
-great degree, of anything which may be held to be good in itself.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_96"><b>96.&emsp;</b>But not by any means all the rules commonly
-recognised combine these two characteristics. The arguments offered in
-defence of Common Sense morality very often presuppose the existence
-of conditions, which cannot be fairly assumed to be so universally
-necessary as the tendency to continue life and to desire property. Such
-arguments, accordingly, only prove the utility of the rule, so long
-as certain conditions, which may alter, remain the same: it cannot
-be claimed of the rules thus defended, that they would be generally
-good as means in every state of society: in order to establish this
-<i>universal</i> general utility, it would be necessary to arrive at a
-correct view of what is good or evil in itself. This, for instance,
-seems to be the case with most of the rules comprehended under the name
-of Chastity. These rules are commonly defended, by Utilitarian writers
-or writers who assume as their end the conservation of society, with
-arguments which presuppose the necessary existence of such sentiments
-as conjugal jealousy and paternal affection. These sentiments are
-no doubt sufficiently strong and general to make the defence valid
-for many conditions of society. But it is not difficult to imagine
-a civilised society existing without them; and, in such a case, if
-chastity were still to be defended, it would be necessary to establish
-that its violation produced evil effects, other than those due to the
-assumed tendency of such violation to disintegrate society. Such a
-defence may, no doubt, be made; but it would require an examination
-into the primary ethical question of what is good and bad in itself,
-far more thorough than any ethical writer has ever offered to us.
-Whether this be so in this particular case or not, it is certain
-that a distinction, not commonly recognised,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_159">[p. 159]</span> should be made between those rules, of
-which the social utility depends upon the existence of circumstances,
-more or less likely to alter, and those of which the utility seems
-certain under all possible conditions.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_97"><b>97.&emsp;</b>It is obvious that all the rules, which
-were enumerated above as likely to be useful in <i>almost any</i> state of
-society, can <i>also</i> be defended owing to results which they produce
-under conditions which exist only in particular states of society.
-And it should be noticed that we are entitled to reckon among these
-conditions the sanctions of legal penalties, of social disapproval, and
-of private remorse, where these exist. These sanctions are, indeed,
-commonly treated by Ethics only as motives for the doing of actions
-of which the utility can be proved independently of the existence of
-these sanctions. And it may be admitted that sanctions <i>ought</i> not
-to be attached to actions which would not be right independently.
-Nevertheless it is plain that, where they do exist, they are not only
-motives but also justifications for the actions in question. One of
-the chief reasons why an action should not be done in any particular
-state of society is that it will be punished; since the punishment is
-in general itself a greater evil than would have been caused by the
-omission of the action punished. Thus the existence of a punishment may
-be an adequate reason for regarding an action as generally wrong, even
-though it has no other bad effects but even slightly good ones. The
-fact that an action will be punished is a condition of exactly the same
-kind as others of more or less permanence, which must be taken into
-account in discussing the general utility or disutility of an action in
-a particular state of society.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_98"><b>98.&emsp;</b>It is plain, then, that the rules commonly
-recognised by Common Sense, in the society in which we live, and
-commonly advocated as if they were all equally and universally right
-and good, are of very different orders. Even those which seem to be
-most universally good as means, can only be shewn to be so, because of
-the existence of conditions, which, though perhaps evils, may be taken
-to be necessary; and even these owe their more obvious utilities to the
-existence of other conditions, which cannot be taken to be necessary
-except over longer or shorter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[p.
-160]</span> periods of history, and many of which are evils. Others
-seem to be justifiable <i>solely</i> by the existence of such more or less
-temporary conditions, unless we abandon the attempt to shew that they
-are means to that preservation of society, which is itself a mere
-means, and are able to establish that they are directly means to things
-good or evil in themselves, but which are not commonly recognised to be
-such.</p>
-
-<p>If, then, we ask what rules are or would be useful to be observed
-in the society in which we live, it seems possible to prove a definite
-utility in most of those which are in general both recognised and
-practised. But a great part of ordinary moral exhortation and social
-discussion consists in the advocating of rules, which are <i>not</i>
-generally practised; and with regard to these it seems very doubtful
-whether a case for their general utility can ever be conclusively made
-out. Such proposed rules commonly suffer from three main defects. In
-the first place, (1) the actions which they advocate are very commonly
-such as it is impossible for most individuals to perform by any
-volition. It is far too usual to find classed together with actions,
-which can be performed, if only they be willed, others, of which the
-possibility depends upon the possession of a peculiar disposition,
-which is given to few and cannot even be acquired. It may, no doubt,
-be useful to point out that those who have the necessary disposition
-should obey these rules; and it would, in many cases, be desirable that
-everybody should have this disposition. But it should be recognised
-that, when we regard a thing as a moral rule or law, we mean that it
-is one which <i>almost everybody can</i> observe by an effort of volition,
-in that state of society to which the rule is supposed to apply. (2)
-Actions are often advocated, of which, though they themselves are
-possible, yet the proposed good effects are not possible, because the
-conditions necessary for their existence are not sufficiently general.
-A rule, of which the observance would produce good effects, if human
-nature were in other respects different from what it is, is advocated
-as if its general observance would produce the same effects now and
-at once. In fact, however, by the time that the conditions necessary
-to make its observance useful have arisen, it is quite as likely that
-other conditions,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[p. 161]</span>
-rendering its observance unnecessary or positively harmful, may also
-have arisen; and yet this state of things may be a better one than
-that in which the rule in question would have been useful. (3) There
-also occurs the case in which the usefulness of a rule depends upon
-conditions likely to change, or of which the change would be as easy
-and more desirable than the observance of the proposed rule. It may
-even happen that the general observance of the proposed rule would
-itself destroy the conditions upon which its utility depends.</p>
-
-<p>One or other of these objections seems generally to apply to
-proposed changes in social custom, advocated as being better rules
-to follow than those now actually followed; and, for this reason, it
-seems doubtful whether Ethics can establish the utility of any rules
-other than those generally practised. But its inability to do so is
-fortunately of little practical moment. The question whether the
-general observance of a rule not generally observed, would or would not
-be desirable, cannot much affect the question how any individual ought
-to act; since, on the one hand, there is a large probability that he
-will not, by any means, be able to bring about its general observance,
-and, on the other hand, the fact that its general observance would
-be useful could, in any case, give him no reason to conclude that
-he himself ought to observe it, in the absence of such general
-observance.</p>
-
-<p>With regard, then, to the actions commonly classed in Ethics,
-as duties, crimes, or sins, the following points seem deserving of
-notice. (1) By so classing them we mean that they are actions which
-it is possible for an individual to perform or avoid, if he only
-<i>wills</i> to do so; and that they are actions which <i>everybody</i> ought to
-perform or avoid, when occasion arises. (2) We can certainly not prove
-of any such action that it ought to be done or avoided under <i>all</i>
-circumstances; we can only prove that its performance or avoidance will
-<i>generally</i> produce better results than the alternative. (3) If further
-we ask of what actions as much as this can be proved, it seems only
-possible to prove it with regard to those which are actually generally
-practised among us. And of these some only are such that their general
-performance would be useful in any state of society that seems<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[p. 162]</span> possible; of others the
-utility depends upon conditions which exist now, but which seem to be
-more or less alterable.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_99"><b>99.&emsp;</b>(<i>d</i>) So much, then, for moral rules or laws,
-in the ordinary sense&mdash;rules which assert that it is generally
-useful, under more or less common circumstances, for <i>everybody</i>
-to perform or omit some definite kind of action. It remains to say
-something with regard to the principles by which <i>the individual</i>
-should decide what he ought to do, (α) with regard to those actions as
-to which some general rule is certainly true, and (β) with regard to
-those where such a certain rule is wanting.</p>
-
-<p>(α) Since, as I have tried to shew, it is impossible to establish
-that any kind of action will produce a better total result than
-its alternative <i>in all cases</i>, it follows that in some cases the
-neglect of an established rule will probably be the best course of
-action possible. The question then arises: Can the individual ever
-be justified in assuming that his is one of these exceptional cases?
-And it seems that this question may be definitely answered in the
-negative. For, if it is certain that in a large majority of cases
-the observance of a certain rule is useful, it follows that there
-is a large probability that it would be wrong to break the rule in
-any particular case; and the uncertainty of our knowledge both of
-effects and of their value, in particular cases, is so great, that
-it seems doubtful whether the individual’s judgment that the effects
-will probably be good in his case can ever be set against the general
-probability that that kind of action is wrong. Added to this general
-ignorance is the fact that, if the question arises at all, our judgment
-will generally be biassed by the fact that we strongly desire one of
-the results which we hope to obtain by breaking the rule. It seems,
-then, that with regard to any rule which is <i>generally</i> useful, we may
-assert that it ought <i>always</i> to be observed, not on the ground that in
-<i>every</i> particular case it will be useful, but on the ground that in
-<i>any</i> particular case the probability of its being so is greater than
-that of our being likely to decide rightly that we have before us an
-instance of its disutility. In short, though we may be sure that there
-are cases where the rule should be broken, we can never know which
-those cases are,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[p. 163]</span>
-and ought, therefore, never to break it. It is this fact which seems
-to justify the stringency with which moral rules are usually enforced
-and sanctioned, and to give a sense in which we may accept as true the
-maxims that ‘The end never justifies the means’ and ‘That we should
-never do evil that good may come.’ The ‘means’ and the ‘evil,’ intended
-by these maxims, are, in fact, the breaking of moral rules generally
-recognised and practised, and which, therefore, we may assume to be
-generally useful. Thus understood, these maxims merely point out that,
-in any particular case, although we cannot clearly perceive any balance
-of good produced by keeping the rule and do seem to see one that would
-follow from breaking it, nevertheless the rule should be observed. It
-is hardly necessary to point out that this is so only because it is
-certain that, in general, the end does justify the means in question,
-and that therefore there is a <i>probability</i> that in this case it will
-do so also, although we cannot see that it will.</p>
-
-<p>But moreover the universal observance of a rule which is generally
-useful has, in many cases, a special utility, which seems deserving of
-notice. This arises from the fact that, even if we can clearly discern
-that our case is one where to break the rule is advantageous, yet, so
-far as our example has any effect at all in encouraging similar action,
-it will certainly tend to encourage breaches of the rule which are not
-advantageous. We may confidently assume that what will impress the
-imagination of others will not be the circumstances in which our case
-differs from ordinary cases and which justify our exceptional action,
-but the points in which it resembles other actions that are really
-criminal. In cases, then, where example has any influence at all, the
-effect of an exceptional right action will generally be to encourage
-wrong ones. And this effect will probably be exercised not only on
-other persons but on the agent himself. For it is impossible for any
-one to keep his intellect and sentiments so clear, but that, if he has
-once approved of a generally wrong action, he will be more likely to
-approve of it also under other circumstances than those which justified
-it in the first instance. This inability to discriminate exceptional
-cases offers, of course, a still stronger<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_164">[p. 164]</span> reason for the universal enforcement,
-by legal or social sanctions, of actions generally useful. It is
-undoubtedly well to punish a man, who has done an action, right in
-his case but generally wrong, even if his example would not be likely
-to have a dangerous effect. For sanctions have, in general, much more
-influence upon conduct than example; so that the effect of relaxing
-them in an exceptional case will almost certainly be an encouragement
-of similar action in cases which are not exceptional.</p>
-
-<p>The individual can therefore be confidently recommended <i>always</i>
-to conform to rules which are both generally useful and generally
-practised. In the case of rules of which the general observance <i>would</i>
-be useful but does not exist, or of rules which are generally practised
-but which are not useful, no such universal recommendations can be
-made. In many cases the sanctions attached may be decisive in favour
-of conformity to the existing custom. But it seems worth pointing out
-that, even apart from these, the general utility of an action most
-commonly depends upon the fact that it is generally practised: in a
-society where certain kinds of theft are the common rule, the utility
-of abstinence from such theft on the part of a single individual
-becomes exceedingly doubtful, even though the common rule is a bad
-one. There is, therefore, a strong probability in favour of adherence
-to an existing custom, even if it be a bad one. But we cannot, in
-this case, assert with any confidence that this probability is always
-greater than that of the individual’s power to judge that an exception
-will be useful; since we are here supposing certain one relevant
-fact&mdash;namely, that the rule, which he proposes to follow, <i>would</i>
-be better than that which he proposes to break, <i>if</i> it were generally
-observed. Consequently the effect of his example, so far as it tends
-to break down the existing custom, will here be for the good. The
-cases, where another rule would certainly be better than that generally
-observed, are, however, according to what was said above, very rare;
-and cases of doubt, which are those which arise most frequently, carry
-us into the next division of our subject.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_100"><b>100.&emsp;</b>(β) This next division consists in the
-discussion of the method by which an individual should decide what to
-do with regard to possible actions of which the general utility<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[p. 165]</span> cannot be proved. And
-it should be observed, that, according to our previous conclusions,
-this discussion will cover almost all actions, except those which,
-in our present state of society, are generally practised. For it
-has been urged that a proof of general utility is so difficult,
-that it can hardly be conclusive except in a very few cases. It
-is certainly not possible with regard to all actions which <i>are</i>
-generally practised; though here, if the sanctions are sufficiently
-strong, they are sufficient by themselves to prove the general utility
-of the individual’s conformity to custom. And if it is possible to
-prove a general utility in the case of some actions, <i>not</i> generally
-practised, it is certainly not possible to do so by the ordinary
-method, which tries to shew in them a tendency to that preservation
-of society, which is itself a mere means, but only by the method, by
-which in any case, as will be urged, the individual ought to guide his
-judgment&mdash;namely, by shewing their direct tendency to produce what
-is good in itself or to prevent what is bad.</p>
-
-<p>The extreme improbability that any general rule with regard to the
-utility of an action will be correct seems, in fact, to be the chief
-principle which should be taken into account in discussing how the
-individual should guide his choice. If we except those rules which are
-both generally practised and strongly sanctioned among us, there seem
-to be hardly any of such a kind that equally good arguments cannot be
-found both for and against them. The most that can be said for the
-contradictory principles which are urged by moralists of different
-schools as universal duties, is, in general, that they point out
-actions which, for persons of a particular character and in particular
-circumstances, would and do lead to a balance of good. It is, no
-doubt, possible that the particular dispositions and circumstances
-which generally render certain kinds of action advisable, might to
-some degree be formulated. But it is certain that this has never
-yet been done; and it is important to notice that, even if it were
-done, it would not give us, what moral laws are usually supposed to
-be&mdash;rules which it would be desirable for every one, or even for
-most people, to follow. Moralists commonly assume<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_166">[p. 166]</span> that, in the matter of actions or habits
-of action, usually recognised as duties or virtues, it is desirable
-that every one should be alike. Whereas it is certain that, under
-actual circumstances, and possible that, even in a much more ideal
-condition of things, the principle of division of labour, according to
-special capacity, which is recognised in respect of employments, would
-also give a better result in respect of virtues.</p>
-
-<p>It seems, therefore, that, in cases of doubt, instead of following
-rules, of which he is unable to see the good effects in his particular
-case, the individual should rather guide his choice by a direct
-consideration of the intrinsic value or vileness of the effects
-which his action may produce. Judgments of intrinsic value have this
-superiority over judgments of means that, if once true, they are always
-true; whereas what is a means to a good effect in one case, will not
-be so in another. For this reason the department of Ethics, which it
-would be most useful to elaborate for practical guidance, is that
-which discusses what things have intrinsic value and in what degrees;
-and this is precisely that department which has been most uniformly
-neglected, in favour of attempts to formulate rules of conduct.</p>
-
-<p>We have, however, not only to consider the relative goodness of
-different effects, but also the relative probability of their being
-attained. A less good, that is more likely to be attained, is to be
-preferred to a greater, that is less probable, if the difference in
-probability is great enough to outweigh the difference in goodness.
-And this fact seems to entitle us to assert the general truth of three
-principles, which ordinary moral rules are apt to neglect. (1) That
-a lesser good, for which any individual has a strong preference (if
-only it be a good, and not an evil), is more likely to be a proper
-object for him to aim at, than a greater one, which he is unable to
-appreciate. For natural inclination renders it immensely more easy to
-attain that for which such inclination is felt. (2) Since almost every
-one has a much stronger preference for things which closely concern
-himself, it will in general be right for a man to aim rather at goods
-affecting himself and those in whom he has a strong personal interest,
-than to attempt a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[p. 167]</span>
-more extended beneficence. Egoism is undoubtedly superior to Altruism
-as a doctrine of means: in the immense majority of cases the best thing
-we can do is to aim at securing some good in which we are concerned,
-since for that very reason we are far more likely to secure it. (3)
-Goods, which can be secured in a future so near as to be called ‘the
-present,’ are in general to be preferred to those which, being in a
-further future, are, for that reason, far less certain of attainment.
-If we regard all that we do from the point of view of its rightness,
-that is to say as a mere means to good, we are apt to neglect one
-fact, at least, which is certain; namely, that a thing that is really
-good in itself, if it exist now, has precisely the same value as a
-thing of the same kind which may be caused to exist in the future.
-Moreover moral rules, as has been said, are, in general, not directly
-means to positive goods but to what is necessary for the existence of
-positive goods; and so much of our labour must in any case be devoted
-to securing the continuance of what is thus a mere means&mdash;the
-claims of industry and attention to health determine the employment of
-so large a part of our time, that, in cases where choice is open, the
-certain attainment of a present good will in general have the strongest
-claims upon us. If it were not so, the whole of life would be spent
-in merely assuring its continuance; and, so far as the same rule were
-continued in the future, that for the sake of which it is worth having,
-would never exist at all.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_101"><b>101.&emsp;</b>(4) A fourth conclusion, which follows
-from the fact that what is ‘right’ or what is our ‘duty’ must in
-any case be defined as what is a means to good, is, as was pointed
-out above (<a href="#Sec_89">§&nbsp;89</a>), that the common distinction between these and the
-‘expedient’ or ‘useful,’ disappears. Our ‘duty’ is merely that which
-will be a means to the best possible, and the expedient, if it is
-really expedient, must be just the same. We cannot distinguish them
-by saying that the former is something which we ought to do, whereas
-of the latter we cannot say we ‘<i>ought</i>.’ In short the two concepts
-are not, as is commonly assumed by all except Utilitarian moralists,
-simple concepts ultimately distinct. There is no such distinction
-in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[p. 168]</span> Ethics. The only
-fundamental distinction is between what is good in itself and what is
-good as a means, the latter of which implies the former. But it has
-been shewn that the distinction between ‘duty’ and ‘expediency’ does
-not correspond to this: both must be defined as means to good, though
-both <i>may also</i> be ends in themselves. The question remains, then: What
-is the distinction between duty and expediency?</p>
-
-<p>One distinction to which these distinct words refer is plain
-enough. Certain classes of action commonly excite the specifically
-moral sentiments, whereas other classes do not. And the word
-‘duty’ is commonly applied only to the class of actions which
-excite moral approval, or of which the omission excites moral
-disapproval&mdash;especially to the latter. Why this moral sentiment
-should have become attached to some kinds of actions and not to
-others is a question which can certainly not yet be answered; but it
-may be observed that we have no reason to think that the actions to
-which it was attached were or are, in all cases, such as aided or aid
-the survival of a race: it was probably originally attached to many
-religious rites and ceremonies which had not the smallest utility in
-this respect. It appears, however, that, among us, the classes of
-action to which it is attached also have two other characteristics in
-enough cases to have influenced the meaning of the words ‘duty’ and
-‘expediency.’ One of these is that ‘duties’ are, in general, actions
-which a considerable number of individuals are strongly tempted to
-omit. The second is that the omission of a ‘duty’ generally entails
-consequences markedly disagreeable to <i>some one else</i>. The first
-of these is a more universal characteristic than the second: since
-the disagreeable effects on other people of the ‘self-regarding
-duties,’ prudence and temperance, are not so marked as those on the
-future of the agent himself; whereas the temptations to imprudence
-and intemperance are very strong. Still, on the whole, the class of
-actions called duties exhibit both characteristics: they are not only
-actions, against the performance of which there are strong natural
-inclinations, but also actions of which the most obvious effects,
-commonly considered goods, are effects on other people. Expedient
-actions, on the other hand, are actions to<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_169">[p. 169]</span> which strong natural inclinations prompt
-us almost universally, and of which all the most obvious effects,
-commonly considered good, are effects upon the agent. We may then
-roughly distinguish ‘duties’ from expedient actions, as actions with
-regard to which there is a moral sentiment, which we are often tempted
-to omit, and of which the most obvious effects are effects upon others
-than the agent.</p>
-
-<p>But it is to be noticed that none of these characteristics, by
-which a ‘duty’ is distinguished from an expedient action, gives us
-any reason to infer that the former class of actions are more useful
-than the latter&mdash;that they tend to produce a greater balance of
-good. Nor, when we ask the question, ‘Is this my duty?’ do we mean to
-ask whether the action in question has these characteristics: we are
-asking simply whether it will produce the best possible result on the
-whole. And if we asked this question with regard to expedient actions,
-we should quite as often have to answer it in the affirmative as when
-we ask it with regard to actions which have the three characteristics
-of ‘duties.’ It is true that when we ask the question, ‘Is this
-expedient?’ we are asking a different question&mdash;namely, whether
-it will have certain kinds of effect, with regard to which we do not
-enquire whether they are good or not. Nevertheless, if it should be
-doubted in any particular case whether these effects were good, this
-doubt is understood as throwing doubt upon the action’s expediency: if
-we are required to <i>prove</i> an action’s expediency, we can only do so
-by asking precisely the same question by which we should prove it a
-duty&mdash;namely, ‘Has it the best possible effects on the whole?’</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly the question whether an action is a duty or merely
-expedient, is one which has no bearing on the ethical question whether
-we ought to do it. In the sense in which either duty or expediency
-are taken as ultimate <i>reasons</i> for doing an action, they are taken
-in exactly the same sense: if I ask whether an action is <i>really</i> my
-duty or <i>really</i> expedient, the predicate of which I question the
-applicability to the action in question is precisely the same. In
-both cases I am asking, ‘Is this event the best on the whole that I
-can effect?’; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[p. 170]</span>
-whether the event in question be some effect upon what is <i>mine</i> (as
-it usually is, where we talk of expediency) or some other event (as is
-usual, where we talk of duty), this distinction has no more relevance
-to my answer than the distinction between two different effects on
-me or two different effects on others. The true distinction between
-duties and expedient actions is not that the former are actions which
-it is in any sense more useful or obligatory or better to perform, but
-that they are actions which it is more useful to praise and to enforce
-by sanctions, since they are actions which there is a temptation to
-omit.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_102"><b>102.&emsp;</b>With regard to ‘interested’ actions,
-the case is somewhat different. When we ask the question, ‘Is this
-really to my interest?’ we appear to be asking exclusively whether its
-<i>effects upon me</i> are the best possible; and it may well happen that
-what will effect me in the manner, which is really the best possible,
-will not produce the best possible results on the whole. Accordingly
-<i>my true interest</i> may be different from the course which is really
-expedient and dutiful. To assert that an action is ‘to my interest,’
-is, indeed, as was pointed out in Chap. III. (<a href="#Sec_59">§§&nbsp;59-61</a>), to assert that
-its effects are really good. ‘My own good’ only denotes some event
-affecting me, which is good absolutely and objectively; it is the
-thing, and not its goodness, which is <i>mine</i>; everything must be either
-‘a part of universal good’ or else not good at all; there is no third
-alternative conception ‘good for me.’ But ‘my interest,’ though it
-must be something truly good, is only one among possible good effects;
-and hence, by effecting it, though we shall be doing <i>some</i> good, we
-may be doing less good on the whole, than if we had acted otherwise.
-Self-sacrifice may be a real duty; just as the sacrifice of any single
-good, whether affecting ourselves or others, may be necessary in order
-to obtain a better total result. Hence the fact that an action is
-really to my interest, can never be a sufficient reason for doing it:
-by shewing that it is not a means to the best possible, we do not shew
-that it is not to my interest, as we do shew that it is not expedient.
-Nevertheless there is no necessary conflict between duty and interest:
-what is to my interest may also be a means to the best possible.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[p. 171]</span> And the chief distinction
-conveyed by the distinct words ‘duty’ and ‘interest’ seems to be not
-this source of possible conflict, but the same which is conveyed by
-the contrast between ‘duty’ and ‘expediency.’ By ‘interested’ actions
-are <i>mainly</i> meant those which, whether a means to the best possible
-or not, are such as have their most obvious effects on the agent;
-which he generally has no temptation to omit; and with regard to which
-we feel no moral sentiment. That is to say, the distinction is not
-primarily ethical. Here too ‘duties’ are not, in general, more useful
-or obligatory than interested actions; they are only actions which it
-is more useful to praise.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_103"><b>103.&emsp;</b>(5) A fifth conclusion, of some importance,
-in relation to Practical Ethics concerns the manner in which ‘virtues’
-are to be judged. What is meant by calling a thing a ‘virtue’?</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt that Aristotle’s definition is right, in
-the main, so far as he says that it is an ‘habitual disposition’ to
-perform certain actions: this is one of the marks by which we should
-distinguish a virtue from other things. But ‘virtue’ and ‘vice’ are
-also ethical terms: that is to say, when we use them seriously, we mean
-to convey praise by the one and dispraise by the other. And to praise
-a thing is to assert either that it is good in itself or else that it
-is a means to good. Are we then to include in our definition of virtue
-that it must be a thing good in itself?</p>
-
-<p>Now it is certain that virtues are commonly regarded as good in
-themselves. The feeling of moral approbation with which we generally
-regard them partly consists in an attribution to them of intrinsic
-value. Even a Hedonist, when he feels a moral sentiment towards
-them, is regarding them as good-in-themselves; and Virtue has been
-the chief competitor with Pleasure for the position of <i>sole</i> good.
-Nevertheless I do not think we can regard it as part of the definition
-of virtue that it should be good in itself. For the name has so far
-an independent meaning, that if in any particular case a disposition
-commonly considered virtuous were proved not to be good in itself,
-we should not think that a sufficient reason for saying that it
-<i>was</i> not a virtue but was only <i>thought</i> to be so. The test for the
-ethical connotation of virtue is the same as that for duty:<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[p. 172]</span> What should we require to
-be proved about a particular instance, in order to say that the name
-was wrongly applied to it? And the test which is thus applied both to
-virtues and duties, and considered to be final, is the question: Is it
-a means to good? If it could be shewn of any particular disposition,
-commonly considered virtuous, that it was generally harmful, we should
-at once say: Then it is not really virtuous. Accordingly a virtue may
-be defined as an habitual disposition to perform certain actions, which
-generally produce the best possible results. Nor is there any doubt as
-to the kind of actions which it is ‘virtuous’ habitually to perform.
-They are, in general, those which are duties, with this modification
-that we also include those which <i>would</i> be duties, if only it were
-possible for people in general to perform them. Accordingly with
-regard to virtues, the same conclusion holds as with regard to duties.
-If they are really virtues they must be generally good as means; nor
-do I wish to dispute that most virtues, commonly considered as such,
-as well as most duties, really are means to good. But it does not
-follow that they are a bit more useful than those dispositions and
-inclinations which lead us to perform interested actions. As duties
-from expedient actions, so virtues are distinguished from other useful
-dispositions, not by any superior utility, but by the fact that they
-are dispositions, which it is particularly useful to praise and to
-sanction, because there are strong and common temptations to neglect
-the actions to which they lead.</p>
-
-<p>Virtues, therefore, are habitual dispositions to perform actions
-which are duties, or which would be duties if a volition were
-sufficient on the part of most men to ensure their performance.
-And duties are a particular class of those actions, of which the
-performance has, at least generally, better total results than the
-omission. They are, that is to say, actions generally good as means:
-but not all such actions are duties; the name is confined to that
-particular class which it is often difficult to perform, because there
-are strong temptations to the contrary. It follows that in order to
-decide whether any particular disposition or action is a virtue or a
-duty, we must face all the difficulties enumerated in section (3) of
-this chapter.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[p. 173]</span> We
-shall not be entitled to assert that any disposition or action is a
-virtue or duty except as a result of an investigation, such as was
-there described. We must be able to prove that the disposition or
-action in question is generally better as a means than any alternatives
-possible and likely to occur; and this we shall only be able to prove
-for particular states of society: what is a virtue or a duty in one
-state of society may not be so in another.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<p id="Sec_104"><b>104.&emsp;</b>But there is another question with regard
-to virtues and duties which must be settled by intuition alone&mdash;by
-the properly guarded method which was explained in discussing Hedonism.
-This is the question whether the dispositions and actions, commonly
-regarded (rightly or not) as virtues or duties, are good in themselves;
-whether they have intrinsic value. Virtue or the exercise of virtue
-has very commonly been asserted by moralists to be either the sole
-good, or, at least, the best of goods. Indeed, so far as moralists
-have discussed the question what is good in itself at all, they have
-generally assumed that it must be either virtue or pleasure. It would
-hardly have been possible that such a gross difference of opinion
-should exist, or that it should have been assumed the discussion <i>must</i>
-be limited to two such alternatives, if the meaning of the question had
-been clearly apprehended. And we have already seen that the meaning
-of the question has hardly ever been clearly apprehended. Almost all
-ethical writers have committed the naturalistic fallacy&mdash;they
-have failed to perceive that the notion of intrinsic value is simple
-and unique; and almost all have failed, in consequence, to distinguish
-clearly between means and end&mdash;they have discussed, as if it
-were simple and unambiguous, the question, ‘What ought we to do?’
-or ‘What ought to exist now?’ without distinguishing whether the
-reason why a thing ought to be done or to exist now, is that it is
-itself possessed of intrinsic value, or that it is a means to what
-has intrinsic value. We shall, therefore, be prepared to find that
-virtue has as little claim to be considered the sole or chief good
-as pleasure; more especially after seeing that, so far as definition
-goes, to call a thing a virtue is merely to declare that it is a means
-to good. The advocates of virtue have, we shall see, this superiority
-over the Hedonists, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[p.
-174]</span> inasmuch as virtues are very complex mental facts, there
-are included in them many things which are good in themselves and good
-in a much higher degree than pleasure. The advocates of Hedonism, on
-the other hand, have the superiority that their method emphasizes the
-distinction between means and ends; although they have not apprehended
-the distinction clearly enough to perceive that the special ethical
-predicate, which they assign to pleasure as <i>not</i> being a mere means,
-must also apply to many other things.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_105"><b>105.&emsp;</b>With regard, then, to the intrinsic
-value of virtue, it may be stated broadly: (1) that the majority of
-dispositions, which we call by that name, and which really do conform
-to the definition, so far as that they are dispositions generally
-valuable as means, at least in our society, have no intrinsic value
-whatever; and (2) that no one element which is contained in the
-minority, nor even all the different elements put together, can
-without gross absurdity be regarded as the sole good. As to the second
-point it may be observed that even those who hold the view that the
-sole good is to be found in virtue, almost invariably hold other
-views contradictory of this, owing chiefly to a failure to analyse
-the meaning of ethical concepts. The most marked instance of this
-inconsistency is to be found in the common Christian conception that
-virtue, though the sole good, can yet be rewarded by something other
-than virtue. Heaven is commonly considered as the reward of virtue; and
-yet it is also commonly considered, that, in order to be such a reward,
-it must contain some element, called happiness, which is certainly not
-completely identical with the mere exercise of those virtues which it
-rewards. But if so, then something which is not virtue must be either
-good in itself or an element in what has most intrinsic value. It is
-not commonly observed that if a thing is really to be a reward, it must
-be something good in itself: it is absurd to talk of rewarding a person
-by giving him something, which is less valuable than what he already
-has or which has no value at all. Thus Kant’s view that virtue renders
-us <i>worthy</i> of happiness is in flagrant contradiction with the view,
-which he implies and which is associated with his name, that a Good
-Will is the only thing having intrinsic value. It<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_175">[p. 175]</span> does not, indeed, entitle us to make the
-charge sometimes made, that Kant is, inconsistently, an Eudaemonist or
-Hedonist: for it does not imply that happiness is the sole good. But it
-does imply that the Good Will is <i>not</i> the sole good: that a state of
-things in which we are both virtuous and happy is better in itself than
-one in which the happiness is absent.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_106"><b>106.&emsp;</b>In order, however, justly to consider the
-claims of virtue to intrinsic value, it is necessary to distinguish
-several very different mental states, all of which fall under the
-general definition that they are habitual dispositions to perform
-duties. We may thus distinguish three very different states, all of
-which are liable to be confused with one another, upon each of which
-different moral systems have laid great stress, and for each of which
-the claim has been made that it alone constitutes virtue, and, by
-implication, that it is the sole good. We may first of all distinguish
-between (<i>a</i>) that permanent characteristic of mind, which consists in
-the fact that the performance of duty has become in the strict sense
-a habit, like many of the operations performed in the putting on of
-clothes, and (<i>b</i>) that permanent characteristic, which consists in the
-fact that what may be called good motives habitually help to cause the
-performance of duties. And in the second division we may distinguish
-between the habitual tendency to be actuated by one motive, namely, the
-desire to do duty for duty’s sake, and all other motives, such as love,
-benevolence, etc. We thus get the three kinds of virtue, of which we
-are now to consider the intrinsic value.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) There is no doubt that a man’s character may be such that
-he habitually performs certain duties, without the thought ever
-occurring to him, when he wills them, either that they are duties
-or that any good will result from them. Of such a man we cannot and
-do not refuse to say that he possesses the virtue consisting in the
-disposition to perform those duties. I, for instance, am honest in
-the sense that I habitually abstain from any of the actions legally
-qualified as thieving, even where some other persons would be strongly
-tempted to commit them. It would be grossly contrary to common usage
-to deny that, for this reason, I really have the virtue of honesty:
-it is quite certain that I have an habitual disposition to perform a
-duty.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[p. 176]</span> And that as
-many people as possible should have a like disposition is, no doubt,
-of great utility: it is good as a means. Yet I may safely assert that
-neither my various performances of this duty, nor my disposition to
-perform them, have the smallest intrinsic value. It is because the
-majority of instances of virtue seem to be of this nature, that we
-may venture to assert that virtues have, in general, no intrinsic
-value whatsoever. And there seems good reason to think that the more
-generally they are of this nature the more useful they are; since
-a great economy of labour is effected when a useful action becomes
-habitual or instinctive. But to maintain that a virtue, which includes
-no more than this, is good in itself is a gross absurdity. And of
-this gross absurdity, it may be observed, the Ethics of Aristotle is
-guilty. For his definition of virtue does not exclude a disposition to
-perform actions in this way, whereas his descriptions of the particular
-virtues plainly <i>include</i> such actions: that an action, in order to
-exhibit virtue, must be done τοῦ καλοῦ ἕνεκα is a qualification which
-he allows often to drop out of sight. And, on the other hand, he seems
-certainly to regard the exercise of <i>all</i> virtues as an end in itself.
-His treatment of Ethics is indeed, in the most important points, highly
-unsystematic and confused, owing to his attempt to base it on the
-naturalistic fallacy; for strictly we should be obliged by his words
-to regard θεωρία as the <i>only</i> thing good in itself, in which case
-the goodness which he attributes to the practical virtues cannot be
-intrinsic value; while on the other hand he does not seem to regard
-it merely as utility, since he makes no attempt to shew that they are
-means to θεωρία. But there seems no doubt that on the whole he regards
-the exercise of the practical virtues as a good of the same kind as
-(<i>i.e.</i> having intrinsic value), only in a less degree than, θεωρία; so
-that he cannot avoid the charge that he recommends as having intrinsic
-value, such instances of the exercise of virtue as we are at present
-discussing&mdash;instances of a disposition to perform actions which,
-in the modern phrase, have merely an ‘external rightness.’ That he is
-right in applying the word ‘virtue’ to such a disposition cannot be
-doubted. But the protest against the view that ‘external rightness’
-is sufficient to constitute either ‘duty’ or ‘virtue’&mdash;a
-protest which is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[p. 177]</span>
-commonly, and with some justice, attributed as a merit to Christian
-morals&mdash;seems, in the main, to be a mistaken way of pointing
-out an important truth: namely, that where there is only ‘external
-rightness’ there is certainly no intrinsic value. It is commonly
-assumed (though wrongly) that to call a thing a virtue means that it
-has intrinsic value: and on this assumption the view that virtue does
-not consist in a mere disposition to do externally right actions does
-really constitute an advance in ethical truth beyond the Ethics of
-Aristotle. The inference that, if virtue includes in its meaning ‘good
-in itself,’ then Aristotle’s definition of virtue is not adequate and
-expresses a false ethical judgment, is perfectly correct: only the
-premiss that virtue does include this in its meaning is mistaken.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_107"><b>107.&emsp;</b>(<i>b</i>) A man’s character may be such that,
-when he habitually performs a particular duty, there is, in each case
-of his performance, present in his mind, a love of some intrinsically
-good consequence which he expects to produce by his action or a hatred
-of some intrinsically evil consequence which he hopes to prevent by
-it. In such a case this love or hatred will generally be part cause of
-his action, and we may then call it one of his <i>motives</i>. Where such
-a feeling as this is present habitually in the performance of duties,
-it cannot be denied that the state of the man’s mind, in performing
-it, contains something intrinsically good. Nor can it be denied that,
-where a disposition to perform duties consists in the disposition to
-be moved to them by such feelings, we call that disposition a virtue.
-Here, therefore, we have instances of virtue, the exercise of which
-really contains something that is good in itself. And, in general, we
-may say that wherever a virtue does consist in a disposition to have
-certain motives, the exercise of that virtue <i>may</i> be intrinsically
-good; although the degree of its goodness may vary indefinitely
-according to the precise nature of the motives and their objects. In
-so far, then, as Christianity tends to emphasize the importance of
-motives, of the ‘inward’ disposition with which a right action is
-done, we may say that it has done a service to Ethics. But it should
-be noticed that, when Christian Ethics, as represented by the New
-Testament, are praised for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[p.
-178]</span> this, two distinctions of the utmost importance, which they
-entirely neglect, are very commonly overlooked. In the first place the
-New Testament is largely occupied with continuing the tradition of the
-Hebrew prophets, by recommending such virtues as ‘justice’ and ‘mercy’
-as against mere ritual observances; and, in so far as it does this, it
-is recommending virtues which may be <i>merely</i> good as means, exactly
-like the Aristotelian virtues. This characteristic of its teaching must
-therefore be rigorously distinguished from that which consists in its
-enforcement of such a view as that to be angry without a cause is as
-bad as actually to commit murder. And, in the second place, though the
-New Testament does praise some things which are only good as means, and
-others which are good in themselves, it entirely fails to recognise
-this distinction. Though the state of the man who is angry may be
-really as bad in itself as that of the murderer, and so far Christ
-may be right, His language would lead us to suppose that it is <i>also</i>
-as bad in every way, that it <i>also causes</i> as much evil: and this is
-utterly false. In short, when Christian Ethics approves, it does not
-distinguish whether its approval asserts ‘This is a means to good’ or
-‘This is good in itself’; and hence it both praises things merely good
-as means, as if they were good in themselves, and things merely good in
-themselves as if they were also good as means. Moreover it should be
-noticed, that if Christian Ethics does draw attention to those elements
-in virtues which are good in themselves, it is by no means alone in
-this. The Ethics of Plato are distinguished by upholding, far more
-clearly and consistently than any other system, the view that intrinsic
-value belongs exclusively to those states of mind which consist in love
-of what is good or hatred of what is evil.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_108"><b>108.&emsp;</b>But (<i>c</i>) the Ethics of Christianity
-are distinguished from those of Plato by emphasizing the value of
-one particular motive&mdash;that which consists in the emotion
-excited by the idea, not of any intrinsically good consequences of
-the action in question, nor even of the action itself, but by that
-of its rightness. This idea of abstract ‘rightness’ and the various
-degrees of the specific emotion excited by it are what constitute the
-specifically ‘moral sentiment’ or ‘conscience.’ An action seems<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[p. 179]</span> to be most properly
-termed ‘internally right<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23"
-class="fnanchor">[23]</a>,’ solely in virtue of the fact that the agent
-has previously regarded it as right: the idea of ‘rightness’ must have
-been present to his mind, but need not necessarily have been among
-his motives. And we mean by a ‘conscientious’ man, one who, when he
-deliberates, always has this idea in his mind, and does not act until
-he believes that his action is right.</p>
-
-<p>The presence of this idea and its action as a motive certainly
-seem to have become more common objects of notice and commendation
-owing to the influence of Christianity; but it is important to observe
-that there is no ground for the view, which Kant implies, that it is
-the <i>only</i> motive which the New Testament regards as intrinsically
-valuable. There seems little doubt that when Christ tells us to ‘Love
-our neighbours as ourselves,’ He did not mean merely what Kant calls
-‘practical love‘&mdash;beneficence of which the <i>sole</i> motive is the
-idea of its rightness, or the emotion caused by that idea. Among
-the ‘inward dispositions’ of which the New Testament inculcates the
-value, there are certainly included what Kant terms mere ‘natural
-inclinations,’ such as pity, etc.</p>
-
-<p>But what are we to say of virtue, when it consists in a disposition
-to be moved to the performance of duties by this idea? It seems
-difficult to deny that the emotion excited by rightness as such has
-some intrinsic value; and still more difficult to deny that its
-presence may heighten the value of some wholes into which it enters.
-But, on the other hand, it certainly has not more value than many
-of the motives treated in our last section&mdash;emotions of love
-towards things really good in themselves. And as for Kant’s implication
-that it is the sole good<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24"
-class="fnanchor">[24]</a>, this is inconsistent with other of his own
-views. For he certainly regards it as <i>better</i> to perform the actions,
-to which he maintains that it prompts us&mdash;namely, ‘material’
-duties&mdash;than to omit them. But, if better at all, then, these
-actions must be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[p. 180]</span>
-better either in themselves or as a means. The former hypothesis would
-directly contradict the statement that this motive was <i>sole</i> good,
-and the latter is excluded by Kant himself since he maintains that
-no actions can <i>cause</i> the existence of this motive. And it may also
-be observed that the other claim which he makes for it, namely, that
-it is <i>always</i> good as a means, can also not be maintained. It is as
-certain as anything can be that very harmful actions may be done from
-conscientious motives; and that Conscience does not always tell us the
-truth about what actions are right. Nor can it be maintained even that
-it is <i>more</i> useful than many other motives. All that can be admitted
-is that it is one of the things which are generally useful.</p>
-
-<p>What more I have to say with regard to those elements in some
-virtues which are good in themselves, and with regard to their relative
-degrees of excellence, as well as the proof that all of them together
-cannot be the sole good, may be deferred to the next chapter.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_109"><b>109.&emsp;</b>The main points in this chapter, to which I
-desire to direct attention, may be summarised as follows:&mdash;(1) I
-first pointed out how the subject-matter with which it deals, namely,
-ethical judgments on conduct, involves a question, utterly different
-in kind from the two previously discussed, namely: (<i>a</i>) What is the
-nature of the predicate peculiar to Ethics? and (<i>b</i>) What kinds of
-things themselves possess this predicate? Practical Ethics asks, not
-‘What ought to be?’ but ‘What ought we to do?’; it asks what actions
-are <i>duties</i>, what actions are <i>right</i>, and what <i>wrong</i>: and all
-these questions can only be answered by shewing the relation of the
-actions in question, as <i>causes</i> or <i>necessary conditions</i>, to what is
-good in itself. The enquiries of Practical Ethics thus fall entirely
-under the <i>third</i> division of ethical questions&mdash;questions which
-ask, ‘What is good as a means?’ which is equivalent to ‘What is a
-means to good&mdash;what is cause or necessary condition of things
-good in themselves?’ (86-88). But (2) it asks this question, almost
-exclusively, with regard to actions which it is possible for most men
-to perform, if only they <i>will</i> them; and with regard to these, it does
-not ask merely, which among them will have <i>some</i><span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_181">[p. 181]</span> good or bad result, but which, among all
-the actions possible to volition at any moment, will produce the best
-<i>total</i> result. To assert that an action is a duty, is to assert that
-it is such a possible action, which will <i>always</i>, in certain known
-circumstances, produce better results than any other. It follows that
-universal propositions of which duty is predicate, so far from being
-self-evident, always require a proof, which it is beyond our present
-means of knowledge ever to give (89-92). But (3) all that Ethics has
-attempted or can attempt, is to shew that certain actions, possible by
-volition, <i>generally</i> produce better or worse total results than any
-probable alternative: and it must obviously be very difficult to shew
-this with regard to the total results even in a comparatively near
-future; whereas that what has the best results in such a near future,
-also has the best on the whole, is a point requiring an investigation
-which it has not received. If it is true, and if, accordingly, we give
-the name of ‘duty’ to actions which <i>generally</i> produce better total
-results in the near future than any possible alternative, it may be
-possible to prove that a few of the commonest rules of duty are true,
-but <i>only</i> in certain conditions of society, which may be more or less
-universally presented in history; and such a proof is only possible
-<i>in some cases</i> without a correct judgment of what things are good or
-bad in themselves&mdash;a judgment which has never yet been offered by
-ethical writers. With regard to actions of which the <i>general</i> utility
-is thus proved, the individual should <i>always</i> perform them; but in
-other cases, where rules are commonly offered, he should rather judge
-of the probable results in his particular case, guided by a correct
-conception of what things are intrinsically good or bad (93-100).
-(4) In order that any action may be shewn to be a duty, it must be
-shewn to fulfil the above conditions; but the actions commonly called
-‘duties’ do not fulfil them to any greater extent than ‘expedient’
-or ‘interested’ actions: by calling them ‘duties’ we only mean that
-they have, <i>in addition</i>, certain non-ethical predicates. Similarly by
-‘virtue’ is mainly meant a permanent disposition to perform ‘duties’
-in this restricted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[p. 182]</span>
-sense: and accordingly a virtue, if it is really a virtue, must be good
-<i>as a means</i>, in the sense that it fulfils the above conditions; but it
-is not <i>better</i> as a means than non-virtuous dispositions; it generally
-has no value in itself; and, where it has, it is far from being the
-sole good or the best of goods. Accordingly ‘virtue’ is not, as is
-commonly implied, an unique <i>ethical</i> predicate (101-109).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[p. 183]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak" title="CHAPTER VI. THE IDEAL.">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
- <p class="subh2">THE IDEAL.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p id="Sec_110"><b>110.&emsp;</b><span class="smcap">The</span> title of
-this chapter is ambiguous. When we call a state of things ‘ideal’ we
-may mean three distinct things, which have only this in common: that
-we always do mean to assert, of the state of things in question, not
-only that it is good in itself, but that it is good in itself in a much
-higher degree than many other things. The first of these meanings of
-‘ideal’ is (1) that to which the phrase ‘<i>The</i> Ideal’ is most properly
-confined. By this is meant the <i>best</i> state of things <i>conceivable</i>,
-the Summum Bonum or Absolute Good. It is in this sense that a right
-conception of Heaven would be a right conception of the Ideal: we mean
-by the Ideal a state of things which would be absolutely perfect. But
-this conception may be quite clearly distinguished from a second,
-namely, (2) that of the best <i>possible</i> state of things in this world.
-This second conception may be identified with that which has frequently
-figured in philosophy as the ‘Human Good,’ or the <i>ultimate</i> end
-towards which our action should be directed. It is in this sense that
-Utopias are said to be Ideals. The constructor of an Utopia may suppose
-many things to be possible, which are in fact impossible; but he always
-assumes that some things, at least, are rendered impossible by natural
-laws, and hence his construction differs essentially from one which may
-disregard <i>all</i> natural laws, however certainly established. At all
-events the question ‘What is the best state of things which we could
-<i>possibly</i> bring about?’ is quite distinct from the question ‘What
-would be the best state of things conceivable?’ But, thirdly, we may
-mean<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[p. 184]</span> by calling a
-state of things ‘ideal’ merely (3) that it is good in itself in a high
-degree. And it is obvious that the question what things are ‘ideal’
-in this sense is one which must be answered before we can pretend to
-settle what is the Absolute or the Human Good. It is with the Ideal,
-in this third sense, that this chapter will be principally concerned.
-Its main object is to arrive at some positive answer to the fundamental
-question of Ethics&mdash;the question: ‘What things are goods or ends
-in themselves?’ To this question we have hitherto obtained only a
-negative answer: the answer that pleasure is certainly not the <i>sole</i>
-good.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_111"><b>111.&emsp;</b>I have just said that it is upon a
-correct answer to this question that correct answers to the two other
-questions, What is the Absolute Good? and What is the Human Good? must
-depend; and, before proceeding to discuss it, it may be well to point
-out the relation which it has to these two questions.</p>
-
-<p id="Sec_111_1">(1) It is just possible that the Absolute Good may be entirely
-composed of qualities which we cannot even imagine. This is possible,
-because, though we certainly do know a great many things that are
-good-in-themselves, and good in a high degree, yet what is best does
-not necessarily contain all the good things there are. That this is so
-follows from the principle explained in Chap. I. (<a href="#Sec_18">§§&nbsp;18-22</a>), to which
-it was there proposed that the name ‘principle of organic unities’
-should be confined. This principle is that the intrinsic value of a
-whole is neither identical with nor proportional to the sum of the
-values of its parts. It follows from this that, though in order to
-obtain the greatest possible sum of values in its parts, the Ideal
-would necessarily contain all the things which have intrinsic value in
-any degree, yet the whole which contained all these parts might not be
-so valuable as some other whole, from which certain positive goods were
-omitted. But if a whole, which does not contain all positive goods, may
-yet be better than a whole which does, it follows that the best whole
-<i>may</i> be one, which contains <i>none</i> of the positive goods with which we
-are acquainted.</p>
-
-<p>It is, therefore, <i>possible</i> that we cannot discover what<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[p. 185]</span> the Ideal is. But it
-is plain that, though this possibility cannot be denied, no one can
-have any right to assert that it is realised&mdash;that the Ideal <i>is</i>
-something unimaginable. We cannot judge of the comparative values of
-things, unless the things we judge are before our minds. We cannot,
-therefore, be entitled to assert that anything, which we cannot
-imagine, would be better than some of the things which we can; although
-we are also not entitled to deny the possibility that this may be the
-case. Consequently our search for the Ideal must be limited to a search
-for that one, among all the wholes composed of elements known to us,
-which seems to be better than all the rest. We shall never be entitled
-to assert that this whole is Perfection, but we shall be entitled to
-assert that it is <i>better</i> than any other which may be presented as a
-rival.</p>
-
-<p>But, since anything which we can have any <i>reason</i> to think
-ideal must be composed of things that are known to us, it is plain
-that a comparative valuation of these must be our chief instrument
-for deciding what is ideal. The best ideal we can construct will
-be that state of things which contains the greatest number of
-things having positive value, and which contains nothing evil or
-indifferent&mdash;<i>provided</i> that the presence of none of these goods,
-or the absence of things evil or indifferent, seems to diminish the
-value of the whole. And, in fact, the chief defect of such attempts as
-have been made by philosophers to construct an Ideal&mdash;to describe
-the Kingdom of Heaven&mdash;seems to consist in the fact that they omit
-many things of very great positive value, although it is plain that
-this omission does <i>not</i> enhance the value of the whole. Where this is
-the case, it may be confidently asserted that the ideal proposed is not
-ideal. And the review of positive goods, which I am about to undertake,
-will, I hope, shew that no ideals yet proposed are satisfactory. Great
-positive goods, it will appear, are so numerous, that any whole,
-which shall contain them all, must be of vast complexity. And though
-this fact renders it difficult, or, humanly speaking, impossible, to
-decide what is The Ideal, what is the absolutely best state of things
-imaginable, it is sufficient to condemn those Ideals, which<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[p. 186]</span> are formed by omission,
-without any visible gain in consequence of such omission. Philosophers
-seem usually to have sought only for the <i>best</i> of single things;
-neglecting the fact that a whole composed of two great goods, even
-though one of these be obviously inferior to the other, may yet be
-often seen to be decidedly superior to either by itself.</p>
-
-<p>(2) On the other hand, Utopias&mdash;attempted descriptions of
-a Heaven upon Earth&mdash;commonly suffer not only from this, but
-also from the opposite defect. They are commonly constructed on the
-principle of merely omitting the great positive evils, which exist at
-present, with utterly inadequate regard to the goodness of what they
-retain: the so-called goods, to which they have regard, are, for the
-most part, things which are, at best, mere means to good&mdash;things,
-such as freedom, <i>without</i> which, possibly, nothing very good can exist
-in this world, but which are of no value in themselves and are by no
-means certain even to produce anything of value. It is, of course,
-necessary to the purpose of their authors, whose object is merely to
-construct the best that may be possible in this world, that they should
-include, in the state of things which they describe, many things, which
-are themselves indifferent, but which, according to natural laws,
-seem to be absolutely necessary for the existence of anything which
-is good. But, in fact, they are apt to include many things, of which
-the necessity is by no means apparent, under the mistaken idea that
-these things are goods-in-themselves, and not merely, here and now,
-a means to good: while, on the other hand, they also omit from their
-description great positive goods, of which the attainment seems to be
-quite as possible as many of the changes which they recommend. That
-is to say, conceptions of the Human Good commonly err, not only, like
-those of the Absolute Good, in omitting some great goods, but also by
-including things indifferent; and they both omit and include in cases
-where the limitations of natural necessity, by the consideration of
-which they are legitimately differentiated from conceptions of the
-Absolute Good, will not justify the omission and inclusion. It is, in
-fact, obvious that in order to decide correctly at what state of things
-we ought to aim, we must not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[p.
-187]</span> only consider what results it is possible for us to obtain,
-but also which, among equally possible results, will have the greatest
-value. And upon this second enquiry the comparative valuation of known
-goods has a no less important bearing than upon the investigation of
-the Absolute Good.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_112"><b>112.&emsp;</b>The method which must be employed in
-order to decide the question ‘What things have intrinsic value, and
-in what degrees?’ has already been explained in Chap. III. (§§&nbsp;<a href="#Sec_55">55</a>,
-<a href="#Sec_57">57</a>). In order to arrive at a correct decision on the first part of
-this question, it is necessary to consider what things are such that,
-if they existed <i>by themselves</i>, in absolute isolation, we should yet
-judge their existence to be good; and, in order to decide upon the
-relative <i>degrees</i> of value of different things, we must similarly
-consider what comparative value seems to attach to the isolated
-existence of each. By employing this method, we shall guard against two
-errors, which seem to have been the chief causes which have vitiated
-previous conclusions on the subject. The first of these is (1) that
-which consists in supposing that what seems absolutely necessary here
-and now, for the existence of anything good&mdash;what we cannot do
-without&mdash;is therefore good in itself. If we isolate such things,
-which are mere means to good, and suppose a world in which they alone,
-and nothing but they, existed, their intrinsic worthlessness becomes
-apparent. And, secondly, there is the more subtle error (2) which
-consists in neglecting the principle of organic unities. This error
-is committed, when it is supposed, that, if one part of a whole has
-no intrinsic value, the value of the whole must reside entirely in
-the other parts. It has, in this way, been commonly supposed, that,
-if all valuable wholes could be seen to have one and only one common
-property, the wholes must be valuable solely <i>because</i> they possess
-this property; and the illusion is greatly strengthened, if the common
-property in question seems, considered by itself, to have more value
-than the other parts of such wholes, considered by themselves. But, if
-we consider the property in question, <i>in isolation</i>, and then compare
-it with the whole, of which it forms a part, it may become easily
-apparent that, existing by itself, the property in question has not
-nearly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[p. 188]</span> so much
-value, as has the whole to which it belongs. Thus, if we compare the
-value of a certain amount of pleasure, <i>existing absolutely by itself</i>,
-with the value of certain ‘enjoyments,’ containing an equal amount of
-pleasure, it may become apparent that the ‘enjoyment’ is much better
-than the pleasure, and also, in some cases, much worse. In such a case
-it is plain that the ‘enjoyment’ does <i>not</i> owe its value <i>solely</i> to
-the pleasure it contains, although it might easily have appeared to do
-so, when we only considered the other constituents of the enjoyment,
-and seemed to see that, without the pleasure, they would have had no
-value. It is now apparent, on the contrary, that the whole ‘enjoyment’
-owes its value quite equally to the presence of the other constituents,
-<i>even though</i> it may be true that the pleasure is the only constituent
-having any value by itself. And similarly, if we are told that all
-things owe their value solely to the fact that they are ‘realisations
-of the true self,’ we may easily refute this statement, by asking
-whether the predicate that is meant by ‘realising the true self,’
-supposing that it could exist alone, would have any value whatsoever.
-Either the <i>thing</i>, which does ‘realise the true self,’ has intrinsic
-value or it has not; and if it has, then it certainly does not owe its
-value solely to the fact that it realises the true self.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_113"><b>113.&emsp;</b>If, now, we use this method of
-absolute isolation, and guard against these errors, it appears
-that the question we have to answer is far less difficult than the
-controversies of Ethics might have led us to expect. Indeed, once the
-meaning of the question is clearly understood, the answer to it, in
-its main outlines, appears to be so obvious, that it runs the risk
-of seeming to be a platitude. By far the most valuable things, which
-we know or can imagine, are certain states of consciousness, which
-may be roughly described as the pleasures of human intercourse and
-the enjoyment of beautiful objects. No one, probably, who has asked
-himself the question, has ever doubted that personal affection and
-the appreciation of what is beautiful in Art or Nature, are good in
-themselves; nor, if we consider strictly what things are worth having
-<i>purely for their own sakes</i>, does it appear probable that any one
-will think that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[p. 189]</span>
-anything else has <i>nearly</i> so great a value as the things which are
-included under these two heads. I have myself urged in Chap. III.
-(<a href="#Sec_50">§&nbsp;50</a>) that the mere existence of what is
-beautiful does appear to have <i>some</i> intrinsic value; but I regard it
-as indubitable that Prof. Sidgwick was so far right, in the view there
-discussed, that such mere existence of what is beautiful has value,
-so small as to be negligible, in comparison with that which attaches
-to the <i>consciousness</i> of beauty. This simple truth may, indeed, be
-said to be universally recognised. What has <i>not</i> been recognised is
-that it is the ultimate and fundamental truth of Moral Philosophy.
-That it is only for the sake of these things&mdash;in order that as
-much of them as possible may at some time exist&mdash;that any one can
-be justified in performing any public or private duty; that they are
-the <i>raison d’être</i> of virtue; that it is they&mdash;these complex
-wholes <i>themselves</i>, and not any constituent or characteristic of
-them&mdash;that form the rational ultimate end of human action and the
-sole criterion of social progress: these appear to be truths which have
-been generally overlooked.</p>
-
-<p>That they are truths&mdash;that personal affections and aesthetic
-enjoyments include <i>all</i> the greatest, and <i>by far</i> the greatest, goods
-we can imagine, will, I hope, appear more plainly in the course of that
-analysis of them, to which I shall now proceed. All the things, which I
-have meant to include under the above descriptions, are highly complex
-<i>organic unities</i>; and in discussing the consequences, which follow
-from this fact, and the elements of which they are composed, I may hope
-at the same time both to confirm and to define my position.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_114"><b>114.&emsp;</b>I. I propose to begin by examining what I
-have called aesthetic enjoyments, since the case of personal affections
-presents some additional complications. It is, I think, universally
-admitted that the proper appreciation of a beautiful object is a
-good thing in itself; and my question is: What are the main elements
-included in such an appreciation?</p>
-
-<p>(1) It is plain that in those instances of aesthetic appreciation,
-which we think most valuable, there is included, not merely a bare
-cognition of what is beautiful in the object, but also some kind of
-feeling or emotion. It is not sufficient that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_190">[p. 190]</span> a man should merely see the beautiful
-qualities in a picture and know that they are beautiful, in order that
-we may give his state of mind the highest praise. We require that he
-should also <i>appreciate</i> the beauty of that which he sees and which he
-knows to be beautiful&mdash;that he should feel and see <i>its beauty</i>.
-And by these expressions we certainly mean that he should have an
-appropriate emotion towards the beautiful qualities which he cognises.
-It is perhaps the case that all aesthetic emotions have some common
-quality; but it is certain that differences in the emotion seem to be
-appropriate to differences in the kind of beauty perceived: and by
-saying that different emotions are <i>appropriate</i> to different kinds of
-beauty, we mean that the whole which is formed by the consciousness of
-that kind of beauty <i>together with</i> the emotion appropriate to it, is
-better than if any other emotion had been felt in contemplating that
-particular beautiful object. Accordingly we have a large variety of
-different emotions, each of which is a necessary constituent in some
-state of consciousness which we judge to be good. All of these emotions
-are essential elements in great positive goods; they are <i>parts</i> of
-organic wholes, which have great intrinsic value. But it is important
-to observe that these wholes are organic, and that, hence, it does not
-follow that the emotion, <i>by itself</i>, would have any value whatsoever,
-nor yet that, if it were directed to a different object, the whole thus
-formed might not be positively bad. And, in fact, it seems to be the
-case that if we distinguish the emotional element, in any aesthetic
-appreciation, from the cognitive element, which accompanies it and
-is, in fact, commonly thought of as a part of the emotion; and if
-we consider what value this emotional element would have, <i>existing
-by itself</i>, we can hardly think that it has any great value, even
-if it has any at all. Whereas, if the same emotion be directed to a
-different object, if, for instance, it is felt towards an object that
-is positively ugly, the whole state of consciousness is certainly often
-positively bad in a high degree.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_115"><b>115.&emsp;</b>(2) In the last paragraph I have pointed
-out the two facts, that the presence of some emotion is necessary
-to give any very high value to a state of aesthetic appreciation,
-and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[p. 191]</span> that, on
-the other hand, this same emotion, in itself, may have little or no
-value: it follows that these emotions give to the wholes of which
-they form a part a value far greater than that which they themselves
-possess. The same is obviously true of the cognitive element which
-must be combined with these emotions in order to form these highly
-valuable wholes; and the present paragraph will attempt to define
-what is meant by this cognitive element, so far as to guard against a
-possible misunderstanding. When we talk of seeing a beautiful object,
-or, more generally, of the cognition or consciousness of a beautiful
-object, we may mean by these expressions something which forms no part
-of any valuable whole. There is an ambiguity in the use of the term
-‘object,’ which has probably been responsible for as many enormous
-errors in philosophy and psychology as any other single cause. This
-ambiguity may easily be detected by considering the proposition, which,
-though a contradiction in terms, is obviously true: That when a man
-sees a beautiful picture, he may see nothing beautiful whatever. The
-ambiguity consists in the fact that, by the ‘object’ of vision (or
-cognition), may be meant <i>either</i> the qualities actually seen <i>or</i> all
-the qualities possessed by the thing seen. Thus in our case: when it
-is said that the picture is beautiful, it is meant that it contains
-qualities which are beautiful; when it is said that the man sees the
-picture, it is meant that he sees a great number of the qualities
-contained in the picture; and when it is said that, nevertheless,
-he sees nothing beautiful, it is meant that he does <i>not</i> see those
-qualities of the picture which are beautiful. When, therefore, I speak
-of the cognition of a beautiful object, as an essential element in a
-valuable aesthetic appreciation, I must be understood to mean only the
-cognition of <i>the beautiful qualities</i> possessed by that object, and
-<i>not</i> the cognition of other qualities of the object possessing them.
-And this distinction must itself be carefully distinguished from the
-other distinction expressed above by the distinct terms ‘seeing the
-beauty of a thing’ and ‘seeing its beautiful qualities.’ By ‘seeing the
-beauty of a thing’ we commonly mean the having an emotion towards its
-beautiful qualities; whereas in the ‘seeing of its beautiful qualities’
-we do not include any emotion.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[p.
-192]</span> By the cognitive element, which is equally necessary with
-emotion to the existence of a valuable appreciation, I mean merely
-the actual cognition or consciousness of any or all of an object’s
-<i>beautiful qualities</i>&mdash;that is to say any or all of those elements
-in the object which possess any positive beauty. That such a cognitive
-element is essential to a valuable whole may be easily seen, by asking:
-What value should we attribute to the proper emotion excited by hearing
-Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, if that emotion were entirely unaccompanied
-by any consciousness, either of the notes, or of the melodic and
-harmonic relations between them? And that the mere <i>hearing</i> of
-the Symphony, even accompanied by the appropriate emotion, is not
-sufficient, may be easily seen, if we consider what would be the state
-of a man, who should hear all the notes, but should <i>not</i> be aware of
-any of those melodic and harmonic relations, which are necessary to
-constitute the smallest beautiful elements in the Symphony.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_116"><b>116.&emsp;</b>(3) Connected with the distinction just
-made between ‘object’ in the sense of the qualities actually before
-the mind, and ‘object’ in the sense of the whole thing which possesses
-the qualities actually before the mind, is another distinction of the
-utmost importance for a correct analysis of the constituents necessary
-to a valuable whole. It is commonly and rightly thought that to see
-beauty in a thing which has no beauty is in some way inferior to seeing
-beauty in that which really has it. But under this single description
-of ‘seeing beauty in that which has no beauty,’ two very different
-facts, and facts of very different value, may be included. We may mean
-<i>either</i> the attribution to an object of really beautiful qualities
-which it does not possess <i>or</i> the feeling towards qualities, which
-the object does possess but which are in reality not beautiful, an
-emotion which is appropriate only to qualities really beautiful. Both
-these facts are of very frequent occurrence; and in most instances of
-emotion both no doubt occur together: but they are obviously quite
-distinct, and the distinction is of the utmost importance for a correct
-estimate of values. The former may be called an error of judgment,
-and the latter an error of taste; but it is<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_193">[p. 193]</span> important to observe that the ‘error
-of taste’ commonly involves a false judgment <i>of value</i>; whereas the
-‘error of judgment’ is merely a false judgment <i>of fact</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Now the case which I have called an error of taste, namely, where
-the actual qualities we admire (whether possessed by the ‘object’ or
-not) are ugly, can in any case have no value, except such as may belong
-to the emotion <i>by itself</i>; and in most, if not in all, cases it is
-a considerable positive evil. In this sense, then, it is undoubtedly
-right to think that seeing beauty in a thing which has no beauty is
-inferior in value to seeing beauty where beauty really is. But the
-other case is much more difficult. In this case there is present all
-that I have hitherto mentioned as necessary to constitute a great
-positive good: there is a cognition of qualities really beautiful,
-together with an appropriate emotion towards these qualities. There
-can, therefore, be no doubt that we have here a great positive good.
-But there is present also something else; namely, a belief that these
-beautiful qualities exist, and that they exist in a certain relation to
-other things&mdash;namely, to some properties of the object to which
-we attribute these qualities: and further the object of this belief
-is false. And we may ask, with regard to the whole thus constituted,
-whether the presence of the belief, and the fact that what is believed
-is false, make any difference to its value? We thus get three different
-cases of which it is very important to determine the relative values.
-Where both the cognition of beautiful qualities and the appropriate
-emotion are present we may <i>also</i> have either, (1) a belief in the
-existence of these qualities, of which the object, <i>i.e.</i> that they
-exist, is true: or (2) a mere cognition, without belief, when it is
-(<i>a</i>) true, (<i>b</i>) false, that the object of the cognition, <i>i.e.</i> the
-beautiful qualities, exists: or (3) a belief in the existence of the
-beautiful qualities, when they do not exist. The importance of these
-cases arises from the fact that the second defines the pleasures of
-imagination, including a great part of the appreciation of those works
-of art which are <i>representative</i>; whereas the first contrasts with
-these the appreciation of what is beautiful in Nature, and the human
-affections. The third, on the other hand, is contrasted with<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[p. 194]</span> both, in that it is
-chiefly exemplified in what is called misdirected affection; and it is
-possible also that the love of God, in the case of a believer, should
-fall under this head.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_117"><b>117.&emsp;</b>Now all these three cases, as I have
-said, have something in common, namely, that, in them all, we have a
-cognition of really beautiful qualities together with an appropriate
-emotion towards those qualities. I think, therefore, it cannot be
-doubted (nor is it commonly doubted) that all three include great
-positive goods; they are all things of which we feel convinced that
-they are worth having for their own sakes. And I think that the value
-of the second, in either of its two subdivisions, is precisely the
-same as the value of the element common to all three. In other words,
-in the case of purely imaginative appreciations we have merely the
-cognition of really beautiful qualities together with the appropriate
-emotion; and the question, whether the object cognised exists or not,
-seems here, where there is no belief either in its existence or in its
-non-existence, to make absolutely no difference to the value of the
-total state. But it seems to me that the two other cases do differ in
-intrinsic value both from this one and from one another, even though
-the object cognised and the appropriate emotion should be identical in
-all three cases. I think that the additional presence of a belief in
-the reality of the object makes the total state much better, if the
-belief is true; and worse, if the belief is false. In short, where
-there is belief, in the sense in which we <i>do</i> believe in the existence
-of Nature and horses, and do <i>not</i> believe in the existence of an ideal
-landscape and unicorns, the <i>truth</i> of what is believed does make a
-great difference to the value of the organic whole. If this be the
-case, we shall have vindicated the belief that <i>knowledge</i>, in the
-ordinary sense, as distinguished on the one hand from belief in what is
-false and on the other from the mere awareness of what is true, does
-contribute towards intrinsic value&mdash;that, at least in some cases,
-its presence as a part makes a whole more valuable than it could have
-been without.</p>
-
-<p>Now I think there can be no doubt that we do judge that<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[p. 195]</span> there is a difference of
-value, such as I have indicated, between the three cases in question.
-We do think that the emotional contemplation of a natural scene,
-supposing its qualities equally beautiful, is in some way a better
-state of things than that of a painted landscape: we think that the
-world would be improved if we could substitute for the best works of
-representative art <i>real</i> objects equally beautiful. And similarly we
-regard a misdirected affection or admiration, even where the error
-involved is a mere error of judgment and not an error of taste, as
-in some way unfortunate. And further, those, at least, who have a
-strong respect for truth, are inclined to think that a merely poetical
-contemplation of the Kingdom of Heaven <i>would</i> be superior to that
-of the religious believer, <i>if</i> it were the case that the Kingdom of
-Heaven does not and will not really exist. Most persons, on a sober,
-reflective judgment, would feel some hesitation even in preferring
-the felicity of a madman, convinced that the world was ideal, to the
-condition either of a poet imagining an ideal world, or of themselves
-enjoying and appreciating the lesser goods which do and will exist:
-But, in order to assure ourselves that these judgments are really
-judgments of intrinsic value upon the question before us, and to
-satisfy ourselves that they are correct, it is necessary clearly to
-distinguish our question from two others which have a very important
-bearing upon our total judgment of the cases in question.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_118"><b>118.&emsp;</b>In the first place (<i>a</i>) it is plain that,
-where we believe, the question whether what we believe is true or
-false, will generally have a most important bearing upon the value
-of our belief <i>as a means</i>. Where we believe, we are apt to act upon
-our belief, in a way in which we do not act upon our cognition of
-the events in a novel. The truth of what we believe is, therefore,
-very important as preventing the pains of disappointment and still
-more serious consequences. And it might be thought that a misdirected
-attachment was unfortunate solely for this reason: that it leads us to
-count upon results, which the real nature of its object is not of a
-kind to ensure. So too the Love of God, where, as usual, it includes
-the belief that he will annex to certain actions consequences, either
-in this life or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[p. 196]</span>
-the next, which the course of nature gives no reason to expect, may
-lead the believer to perform actions of which the actual consequences,
-supposing no such God to exist, may be much worse than he might
-otherwise have effected: and it might be thought that this was the
-sole reason (as it is a sufficient one) why we should hesitate to
-encourage the Love of God, in the absence of any proof that he exists.
-And similarly it may be thought that the only reason why beauty in
-Nature should be held superior to an equally beautiful landscape or
-imagination, is that its existence would ensure greater permanence and
-frequency in our emotional contemplation of that beauty. It is, indeed,
-certain that the chief importance of most <i>knowledge</i>&mdash;of the
-truth of most of the things which we believe&mdash;does, in this world,
-consist in its extrinsic advantages: it is immensely valuable <i>as a
-means</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And secondly, (<i>b</i>) it may be the case that the existence of that
-which we contemplate is itself a great positive good, so that, for this
-reason alone, the state of things described by saying, that the object
-of our emotion really exists, would be intrinsically superior to that
-in which it did not. This reason for superiority is undoubtedly of
-great importance in the case of human affections, where the object of
-our admiration is the mental qualities of an admirable person; for that
-<i>two</i> such admirable persons should exist is greatly better than that
-there should be only one: and it would also discriminate the admiration
-of inanimate nature from that of its representations in art, in so far
-as we may allow a small intrinsic value to the existence of a beautiful
-object, apart from any contemplation of it. But it is to be noticed
-that this reason would not account for any difference in value between
-the cases where the truth was believed and that in which it was merely
-cognised, without either belief or disbelief. In other words, so far
-as this reason goes, the difference between the two subdivisions of
-our second class (that of imaginative contemplation) would be as great
-as between our first class and the second subdivision of our second.
-The superiority of the mere <i>cognition</i> of a beautiful object, when
-that object also happened to exist, over the same cognition when the
-object did not exist, would,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[p.
-197]</span> on this count, be as great as that of the <i>knowledge</i> of a
-beautiful object over the mere imagination of it.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_119"><b>119.&emsp;</b>These two reasons for discriminating
-between the value of the three cases we are considering, must, I say,
-be carefully distinguished from that, of which I am now questioning the
-validity, if we are to obtain a correct answer concerning this latter.
-The question I am putting is this: Whether the <i>whole</i> constituted
-by the fact that there is an emotional contemplation of a beautiful
-object, which both is believed to be and is <i>real</i>, does not derive
-some of its value from the fact that the object <i>is</i> real? I am asking
-whether the value of this whole, <i>as a whole</i>, is not greater than that
-of those which differ from it, <i>either</i> by the absence of belief, with
-or without truth, <i>or</i>, belief being present, by the mere absence of
-truth? I am not asking <i>either</i> whether it is not superior to them as
-a means (which it certainly is), <i>nor</i> whether it may not contain a
-more valuable <i>part</i>, namely, the existence of the object in question.
-My question is solely whether the existence of its object does not
-constitute an addition to the value of the whole, quite distinct from
-the addition constituted by the fact that this whole does contain a
-valuable part.</p>
-
-<p>If, now, we put this question, I cannot avoid thinking that it
-should receive an affirmative answer. We can put it clearly by
-the method of isolation; and the sole decision must rest with our
-reflective judgment upon it, as thus clearly put. We can guard against
-the bias produced by a consideration of value <i>as a means</i> by supposing
-the case of an illusion as complete and permanent as illusions in
-this world never can be. We can imagine the case of a single person,
-enjoying throughout eternity the contemplation of scenery as beautiful,
-and intercourse with persons as admirable, as can be imagined; while
-yet the whole of the objects of his cognition are absolutely unreal. I
-think we should definitely pronounce the existence of a universe, which
-consisted solely of such a person, to be <i>greatly</i> inferior in value
-to one in which the objects, in the existence of which he believes,
-did really exist just as he believes them to do; and that it would
-be thus inferior <i>not only</i> because it would lack the goods which
-consist in the existence of the objects in question, but <i>also</i><span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[p. 198]</span> merely because his
-belief would be false. That it would be inferior <i>for this reason
-alone</i> follows if we admit, what also appears to me certain, that the
-case of a person, merely imagining, without believing, the beautiful
-objects in question, would, <i>although these objects really existed</i>,
-be yet inferior to that of the person who also believed in their
-existence. For here all the additional good, which consists in the
-existence of the objects, is present, and yet there still seems to be
-a great difference in value between this case and that in which their
-existence is believed. But I think that my conclusion may perhaps be
-exhibited in a more convincing light by the following considerations.
-(1) It does not seem to me that the small degree of value which we may
-allow to the existence of beautiful inanimate objects is nearly equal
-in amount to the difference which I feel that there is between the
-appreciation (accompanied by belief) of such objects, when they really
-exist, and the purely imaginative appreciation of them when they do not
-exist. This inequality is more difficult to verify where the object
-is an admirable person, since a <i>great</i> value must be allowed to his
-existence. But yet I think it is not paradoxical to maintain that the
-superiority of reciprocal affection, where both objects are worthy and
-both exist, over an unreciprocated affection, where both are worthy
-but one does not exist, does not lie solely in the fact that, in the
-former case, we have two good things instead of one, but also in the
-fact that each is such as the other believes him to be. (2) It seems to
-me that the important contribution to value made by true belief may be
-very plainly seen in the following case. Suppose that a worthy object
-of affection does really exist and is believed to do so, but that there
-enters into the case this error of fact, that the qualities loved,
-though exactly like, are yet not the <i>same</i> which really do exist.
-This state of things is easily imagined, and I think we cannot avoid
-pronouncing that, <i>although</i> both persons here exist, it is yet not so
-satisfactory as where the very person loved and believed to exist is
-also the one which actually does exist.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_120"><b>120.&emsp;</b>If all this be so, we have, in this third
-section, added to our two former results the third result that a
-true belief in the reality of an object greatly increases the value
-of many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[p. 199]</span> valuable
-wholes. Just as in sections (1) and (2) it was maintained that
-aesthetic and affectionate emotions had little or no value apart from
-the cognition of appropriate objects, and that the cognition of these
-objects had little or no value apart from the appropriate emotion, so
-that the whole, in which both were combined, had a value greatly in
-excess of the sum of the values of its parts; so, according to this
-section, if there be added to these wholes a true belief in the reality
-of the object, the new whole thus formed has a value greatly in excess
-of the sum obtained by adding the value of the true belief, considered
-in itself, to that of our original wholes. This new case only differs
-from the former in this, that, whereas the true belief, by itself, has
-quite as little value as either of the two other constituents taken
-singly, yet they, taken together, seem to form a whole of very great
-value, whereas this is not the case with the two wholes which might be
-formed by adding the true belief to either of the others.</p>
-
-<p>The importance of the result of this section seems to lie mainly in
-two of its consequences. (1) That it affords some justification for the
-immense intrinsic value, which seems to be commonly attributed to the
-mere <i>knowledge</i> of some truths, and which was expressly attributed
-to some kinds of knowledge by Plato and Aristotle. Perfect knowledge
-has indeed competed with perfect love for the position of Ideal. If
-the results of this section are correct, it appears that knowledge,
-though having little or no value by itself, is an absolutely essential
-constituent in the highest goods, and contributes immensely to their
-value. And it appears that this function may be performed not only
-by that case of knowledge, which we have chiefly considered, namely,
-knowledge of the reality of the beautiful object cognised, but also
-by knowledge of the numerical identity of this object with that which
-really exists, and by the knowledge that the existence of that object
-is truly good. Indeed all knowledge, which is directly concerned with
-the nature of the constituents of a beautiful object, would seem
-capable of adding greatly to the value of the contemplation of that
-object, although, by itself, such knowledge would have no value at
-all.&mdash;And (2) The second important consequence, which follows from
-this section,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[p. 200]</span> is
-that the presence of true belief may, in spite of a great inferiority
-in the value of the emotion and the beauty of its object, constitute
-with them a whole equal or superior in value to wholes, in which the
-emotion and beauty are superior, but in which a true belief is wanting
-or a false belief present. In this way we may justify the attribution
-of equal or superior value to an appreciation of an inferior real
-object, as compared with the appreciation of a greatly superior object
-which is a mere creature of the imagination. Thus a just appreciation
-of nature and of real persons may maintain its equality with an equally
-just appreciation of the products of artistic imagination, in spite
-of much greater beauty in the latter. And similarly though God may
-be admitted to be a more perfect object than any actual human being,
-the love of God may yet be inferior to human love, <i>if</i> God does not
-exist.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_121"><b>121.&emsp;</b>(4) In order to complete the discussion of
-this first class of goods&mdash;goods which have an essential reference
-to <i>beautiful</i> objects&mdash;it would be necessary to attempt a
-classification and comparative valuation of all the different forms of
-beauty, a task which properly belongs to the study called Aesthetics. I
-do not, however, propose to attempt any part of this task. It must only
-be understood that I intend to include among the essential constituents
-of the goods I have been discussing, every form and variety of
-beautiful object, if only it be truly beautiful; and, <i>if</i> this be
-understood, I think it may be seen that the consensus of opinion with
-regard to what is positively beautiful and what is positively ugly, and
-even with regard to great differences in degree of beauty, is quite
-sufficient to allow us a hope that we need not greatly err in our
-judgments of good and evil. In anything which is thought beautiful by
-any considerable number of persons, there is probably <i>some</i> beautiful
-quality; and differences of opinion seem to be far more often due to
-exclusive attention, on the part of different persons, to different
-qualities in the same object, than to the positive error of supposing
-a quality that is ugly to be really beautiful. When an object, which
-some think beautiful, is denied to be so by others, the truth is
-<i>usually</i> that it lacks some beautiful quality or is deformed by<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[p. 201]</span> some ugly one, which
-engage the exclusive attention of the critics.</p>
-
-<p>I may, however, state two general principles, closely connected
-with the results of this chapter, the recognition of which would
-seem to be of great importance for the investigation of what things
-are truly beautiful. The first of these is (1) a definition of
-beauty, of what is meant by saying that a thing is truly beautiful.
-The naturalistic fallacy has been quite as commonly committed with
-regard to beauty as with regard to good: its use has introduced as
-many errors into Aesthetics as into Ethics. It has been even more
-commonly supposed that the beautiful may be <i>defined</i> as that which
-produces certain effects upon our feelings; and the conclusion which
-follows from this&mdash;namely, that judgments of taste are merely
-<i>subjective</i>&mdash;that precisely the same thing may, according to
-circumstances, be <i>both</i> beautiful <i>and</i> not beautiful&mdash;has
-very frequently been drawn. The conclusions of this chapter suggest
-a definition of beauty, which may partially explain and entirely
-remove the difficulties which have led to this error. It appears
-probable that the beautiful should be <i>defined</i> as that of which the
-admiring contemplation is good in itself. That is to say: To assert
-that a thing is beautiful is to assert that the cognition of it is
-an essential element in one of the intrinsically valuable wholes we
-have been discussing; so that the question, whether it is <i>truly</i>
-beautiful or not, depends upon the <i>objective</i> question whether the
-whole in question is or is not truly good, and does not depend upon
-the question whether it would or would not excite particular feelings
-in particular persons. This definition has the double recommendation
-that it accounts both for the apparent connection between goodness
-and beauty and for the no less apparent difference between these two
-conceptions. It appears, at first sight, to be a strange coincidence,
-that there should be two <i>different</i> objective predicates of value,
-‘good’ and ‘beautiful,’ which are nevertheless so related to one
-another that whatever is beautiful is also good. But, if our definition
-be correct, the strangeness disappears; since it leaves only one
-<i>unanalysable</i> predicate of value, namely ‘good,’ while ‘beautiful,’
-though not identical with, is to be defined by reference to this,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[p. 202]</span> being thus, at the same
-time, different from and necessarily connected with it. In short, on
-this view, to say that a thing is beautiful is to say, not indeed that
-it is <i>itself</i> good, but that it is a necessary element in something
-which is: to prove that a thing is truly beautiful is to prove that
-a whole, to which it bears a particular relation as a part, is truly
-good. And in this way we should explain the immense predominance,
-among objects commonly considered beautiful, of <i>material</i>
-objects&mdash;objects of the external senses; since these objects,
-though themselves having, as has been said, little or no intrinsic
-value, are yet essential constituents in the largest group of wholes
-which have intrinsic value. These wholes themselves may be, and are,
-also beautiful; but the comparative rarity, with which we regard them
-as themselves <i>objects</i> of contemplation, seems sufficient to explain
-the association of beauty with external objects.</p>
-
-<p>And secondly (2) it is to be observed that beautiful objects are
-themselves, for the most part, organic unities, in this sense, that
-they are wholes of great complexity, such that the contemplation of
-any part, by itself, may have no value, and yet that, unless the
-contemplation of the whole includes the contemplation of that part, it
-will lose in value. From this it follows that there can be no single
-criterion of beauty. It will never be true to say: This object owes its
-beauty <i>solely</i> to the presence of this characteristic; nor yet that:
-Wherever this characteristic is present, the object must be beautiful.
-All that can be true is that certain objects are beautiful, <i>because</i>
-they have certain characteristics, in the sense that they would not
-be beautiful <i>unless</i> they had them. And it may be possible to find
-that certain characteristics are more or less universally present in
-all beautiful objects, and are, in this sense, more or less important
-conditions of beauty. But it is important to observe that the very
-qualities, which differentiate one beautiful object from all others,
-are, if the object be truly beautiful, as <i>essential</i> to its beauty,
-as those which it has in common with ever so many others. The object
-would no more have the beauty it has, without its specific qualities,
-than without those that are generic; and the generic qualities, <i>by
-themselves</i>, would fail, as completely, to give beauty, as those which
-are specific.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_122"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[p.
-203]</span><b>122.</b> II. It will be remembered that I began this
-survey of great unmixed goods, by dividing all the greatest goods we
-know into the two classes of aesthetic enjoyments, on the one hand,
-and the pleasures of human intercourse or of personal affection, on
-the other. I postponed the consideration of the latter on the ground
-that they presented additional complications. In what this additional
-complication consists, will now be evident; and I have already been
-obliged to take account of it, in discussing the contribution to
-value made by true belief. It consists in the fact that in the case
-of personal affection, the object itself is not <i>merely</i> beautiful,
-while possessed of little or no intrinsic value, but is itself, in
-part at least, of great intrinsic value. All the constituents which we
-have found to be necessary to the most valuable aesthetic enjoyments,
-namely, appropriate emotion, cognition of truly beautiful qualities,
-and true belief, are equally necessary here; but here we have the
-additional fact that the object must be not only truly beautiful, but
-also truly good in a high degree.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident that this additional complication only occurs in so
-far as there is included in the object of personal affection some of
-the <i>mental</i> qualities of the person towards whom the affection is
-felt. And I think it may be admitted that, wherever the affection is
-most valuable, the appreciation of mental qualities must form a large
-part of it, and that the presence of this part makes the whole far more
-valuable than it could have been without it. But it seems very doubtful
-whether this appreciation, by itself, can possess as much value as the
-whole in which it is combined with an appreciation of the appropriate
-<i>corporeal</i> expression of the mental qualities in question. It is
-certain that in all actual cases of valuable affection, the bodily
-expressions of character, whether by looks, by words, or by actions,
-do form a part of the object towards which the affection is felt, and
-that the fact of their inclusion appears to heighten the value of
-the whole state. It is, indeed, very difficult to imagine what the
-cognition of mental qualities <i>alone</i>, unaccompanied by <i>any</i> corporeal
-expression, would be like; and, in so far as we succeed in making
-this abstraction, the whole considered certainly appears to have less
-value. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[p. 204]</span> therefore
-conclude that the importance of an admiration of admirable mental
-qualities lies chiefly in the immense superiority of a whole, in which
-it forms a part, to one in which it is absent, and not in any high
-degree of intrinsic value which it possesses by itself. It even appears
-to be doubtful, whether, in itself, it possesses so much value as the
-appreciation of mere corporeal beauty undoubtedly does possess; that is
-to say, whether the appreciation of what has great intrinsic value is
-so valuable as the appreciation of what is merely beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>But further if we consider the nature of admirable mental qualities,
-by themselves, it appears that a proper appreciation of them involves
-a reference to purely material beauty in yet another way. Admirable
-mental qualities do, if our previous conclusions are correct, consist
-very largely in an emotional contemplation of beautiful objects;
-and hence the appreciation of them will consist essentially in the
-contemplation of such contemplation. It is true that the most valuable
-appreciation of persons appears to be that which consists in the
-appreciation of their appreciation of other persons: but even here a
-reference to material beauty appears to be involved, <i>both</i> in respect
-of the fact that what is appreciated in the last instance may be the
-contemplation of what is merely beautiful, <i>and</i> in respect of the fact
-that the most valuable appreciation of a person appears to <i>include</i>
-an appreciation of his corporeal expression. Though, therefore, we
-may admit that the appreciation of a person’s attitude towards other
-persons, or, to take one instance, the love of love, is far the most
-valuable good we know, and far more valuable than the mere love of
-beauty, yet we can only admit this if the first be understood to
-<i>include</i> the latter, in various degrees of directness.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the question what <i>are</i> the mental qualities of which
-the cognition is essential to the value of human intercourse, it is
-plain that they include, in the first place, all those varieties of
-aesthetic appreciation, which formed our first class of goods. They
-include, therefore, a great variety of different emotions, each of
-which is appropriate to some different kind of beauty. But we must
-now add to these the whole range of emotions, which are appropriate
-to persons, and which are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[p.
-205]</span> different from those which are appropriate to mere
-corporeal beauty. It must also be remembered that just as these
-emotions have little value in themselves, and as the state of mind in
-which they exist may have its value greatly heightened, or may entirely
-lose it and become positively evil in a great degree, according as the
-cognitions accompanying the emotions are appropriate or inappropriate;
-so too the appreciation of these emotions, though it may have some
-value in itself, may yet form part of a whole which has far greater
-value or no value at all, according as it is or is not accompanied by
-a perception of the appropriateness of the emotions to their objects.
-It is obvious, therefore, that the study of what is valuable in human
-intercourse is a study of immense complexity; and that there may be
-much human intercourse which has little or no value, or is positively
-bad. Yet here too, as with the question what is beautiful, there seems
-no reason to doubt that a reflective judgment will in the main decide
-correctly both as to what are positive goods and even as to any <i>great</i>
-differences in value between these goods. In particular, it may be
-remarked that the emotions, of which the contemplation is essential
-to the greatest values, and which are also themselves appropriately
-excited by such contemplation, appear to be those which are commonly
-most highly prized under the name of affection.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_123"><b>123.&emsp;</b>I have now completed my examination into
-the nature of those great positive goods, which do not appear to
-include among their constituents anything positively evil or ugly,
-though they include much which is in itself indifferent. And I wish to
-point out certain conclusions which appear to follow, with regard to
-the nature of the Summum Bonum, or that state of things which would
-be the most perfect we can conceive. Those idealistic philosophers,
-whose views agree most closely with those here advocated, in that they
-deny pleasure to be the sole good and regard what is completely good
-as having some complexity, have usually represented a purely spiritual
-state of existence as the Ideal. Regarding matter as essentially
-imperfect, if not positively evil, they have concluded that the
-total absence of all material properties is necessary to a state of
-perfection. Now, according to what has been said, this view<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[p. 206]</span> would be correct so far
-as it asserts that any great good must be <i>mental</i>, and so far as it
-asserts that a purely material existence, <i>by itself</i>, can have little
-or no value. The superiority of the spiritual over the material has,
-in a sense, been amply vindicated. But it does not follow, from this
-superiority, that a perfect state of things must be one, from which
-all material properties are rigidly excluded: on the contrary, if our
-conclusions are correct, it would seem to be the case that a state of
-things, in which they are included, must be vastly better than any
-conceivable state in which they were absent. In order to see that this
-is so, the chief thing necessary to be considered is <i>exactly what it
-is</i> which we declare to be good when we declare that the appreciation
-of beauty in Art and Nature is so. That this appreciation <i>is</i> good,
-the philosophers in question do not for the most part deny. But, if we
-admit it, then we should remember Butler’s maxim that: Everything is
-what it is, and not another thing. I have tried to shew, and I think
-it is too evident to be disputed, that such appreciation is an organic
-unity, a complex whole; and that, in its most undoubted instances,
-part of what is included in this whole is <i>a cognition of material
-qualities</i>, and particularly of a vast variety of what are called
-<i>secondary</i> qualities. If, then, it is <i>this</i> whole, which we know to
-be good, and not another thing, then we know that material qualities,
-even though they be perfectly worthless in themselves, are yet
-essential constituents of what is far from worthless. What we know to
-be valuable is the apprehension of just these qualities, and not of any
-others; and, if we propose to subtract them from it, then what we have
-left is <i>not</i> that which we know to have value, but something else. And
-it must be noticed that this conclusion holds, even if my contention,
-that a true belief in the existence of these qualities adds to the
-value of the whole in which it is included, be disputed. We should
-then, indeed, be entitled to assert that the <i>existence</i> of a material
-world was wholly immaterial to perfection; but the fact that what we
-knew to be good was a cognition of <i>material qualities</i> (though purely
-imaginary), would still remain. It must, then, be admitted on pain of
-self-contradiction&mdash;on pain of holding that things are not what
-they are, but something else<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[p.
-207]</span>&mdash;that a world, from which material qualities were
-wholly banished, would be a world which lacked many, if not all, of
-those things, which we know most certainly to be great goods. That it
-<i>might</i> nevertheless be a far better world than one which retained
-these goods, I have already admitted (<a href="#Sec_111_1">§&nbsp;111&nbsp;(1)</a>). But in order to shew
-that any such world <i>would</i> be thus better, it would be necessary to
-shew that the retention of these things, though good in themselves,
-impaired, in a more than equal degree, the value of some whole, to
-which they might belong; and the task of shewing this has certainly
-never been attempted. Until it be performed, we are entitled to assert
-that material qualities are a necessary constituent of the Ideal;
-that, though something utterly unknown <i>might</i> be better than any
-world containing either them or any other good we know, yet we have no
-reason to suppose that anything whatever would be better than a state
-of things in which they were included. To deny and exclude matter,
-is to deny and exclude the best we know. That a thing may retain its
-value, while losing some of its qualities, is utterly untrue. All that
-is true is that the changed thing may have more value than, or as much
-value as, that of which the qualities have been lost. What I contend is
-that nothing, which we <i>know</i> to be good and which contains no material
-qualities, has such great value that we can declare it, <i>by itself</i>,
-to be superior to the whole which would be formed by the addition to
-it of an appreciation of material qualities. That a <i>purely</i> spiritual
-good may be the <i>best</i> of single things, I am not much concerned to
-dispute, although, in what has been said with regard to the nature of
-personal affection, I have given reasons for doubting it. But that by
-adding to it some appreciation of material qualities, which, though
-perhaps inferior by itself, is certainly a great positive good, we
-should obtain a greater sum of value, which no corresponding decrease
-in the value of the whole, as a whole, could counterbalance&mdash;this,
-I maintain, we have certainly no reason to doubt.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_124"><b>124.&emsp;</b>In order to complete this discussion of
-the main principles involved in the determination of intrinsic values,
-the chief remaining topics, necessary to be treated, appear to be two.
-The first of these is the nature of great intrinsic <i>evils</i>,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[p. 208]</span> including what I may call
-<i>mixed</i> evils; that is to say, those evil wholes, which nevertheless
-contain, as essential elements, something positively good or beautiful.
-And the second is the nature of what I may similarly call <i>mixed</i>
-goods; that is to say, those wholes, which, though intrinsically good
-<i>as wholes</i>, nevertheless contain, as essential elements, something
-positively evil or ugly. It will greatly facilitate this discussion,
-if I may be understood throughout to use the terms ‘beautiful’ and
-‘ugly,’ not necessarily with reference to things of the kind which
-most naturally occur to us as instances of what is beautiful and ugly,
-but in accordance with my own proposed definition of beauty. Thus I
-shall use the word ‘beautiful’ to denote that of which the admiring
-contemplation is good in itself; and ‘ugly’ to denote that of which the
-admiring contemplation is evil in itself.</p>
-
-<p>I. With regard, then, to great positive evils, I think it is evident
-that, if we take all due precautions to discover <i>precisely what</i> those
-things are, of which, <i>if they existed absolutely by themselves</i>, we
-should judge the existence to be a great evil, we shall find most of
-them to be organic unities of exactly the same nature as those which
-are the greatest positive goods. That is to say, they are cognitions of
-some object, accompanied by some emotion. Just as neither a cognition
-nor an emotion, <i>by itself</i>, appeared capable of being greatly good,
-so (with one exception), neither a cognition nor an emotion, <i>by
-itself</i>, appears capable of being greatly evil. And just as a whole
-formed of both, even without the addition of any other element,
-appeared undoubtedly capable of being a great good, so such a whole,
-<i>by itself</i>, appears capable of being a great evil. With regard to the
-<i>third</i> element, which was discussed as capable of adding greatly to
-the value of a good, namely, <i>true belief</i>, it will appear that it has
-different relations towards different kinds of evils. In some cases the
-addition of true belief to a positive evil seems to constitute a far
-worse evil; but in other cases it is not apparent that it makes any
-difference.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest positive evils may be divided into the following three
-classes.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_125"><b>125.&emsp;</b>(1) The first class consists of those
-evils, which seem always to include an enjoyment or admiring
-contemplation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[p. 209]</span>
-things which are themselves either evil or ugly. That is to say these
-evils are characterised by the fact that they include precisely the
-same emotion, which is also essential to the greatest unmixed goods,
-from which they are differentiated by the fact that this emotion is
-directed towards an inappropriate object. In so far as this emotion is
-either a slight good in itself or a slightly beautiful object, these
-evils would therefore be cases of what I have called ‘mixed’ evils;
-but, as I have already said, it seems very doubtful whether an emotion,
-completely isolated from its object, has either value or beauty: it
-certainly has not much of either. It is, however, important to observe
-that the very same emotions, which are often loosely talked of as the
-greatest or the only goods, may be essential constituents of the very
-worst wholes: that, according to the nature of the cognition which
-accompanies them, they may be conditions either of the greatest good,
-or of the greatest evil.</p>
-
-<p>In order to illustrate the nature of evils of this class, I may
-take two instances&mdash;cruelty and lasciviousness. That these are
-great intrinsic evils, we may, I think, easily assure ourselves,
-by imagining the state of a man, whose mind is solely occupied by
-either of these passions, in their worst form. If we then consider
-what judgment we should pass upon a universe which consisted <i>solely</i>
-of minds thus occupied, without the smallest hope that there would
-ever exist in it the smallest consciousness of any object other than
-those proper to these passions, or any feeling directed to any such
-object, I think we cannot avoid the conclusion that the existence
-of such a universe would be a far worse evil than the existence of
-none at all. But, if this be so, it follows that these two vicious
-states are not only, as is commonly admitted, bad as means, but also
-bad in themselves.&mdash;And that they involve in their nature that
-complication of elements, which I have called a love of what is evil or
-ugly, is, I think, no less plain. With regard to the pleasures of lust,
-the nature of the cognition, by the presence of which they are to be
-defined, is somewhat difficult to analyse. But it appears to include
-both cognitions of organic sensations and perceptions of states of the
-body, of which the enjoyment is certainly an evil in itself. So far
-as these are concerned, lasciviousness would,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_210">[p. 210]</span> then, include in its essence an admiring
-contemplation of what is ugly. But certainly one of its commonest
-ingredients, in its worst forms, is an enjoyment of the same state of
-mind in other people: and in this case it would therefore also include
-a love of what is evil. With regard to cruelty, it is easy to see that
-an enjoyment of pain in other people is essential to it; and, as we
-shall see, when we come to consider pain, this is certainly a love of
-evil: while, in so far as it also includes a delight in the bodily
-signs of agony, it would also comprehend a love of what is ugly. In
-both cases, it should be observed, the evil of the state is heightened
-not only by an increase in the evil or ugliness of the object, but also
-by an increase in the enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>It might be objected, in the case of cruelty, that our disapproval
-of it, even in the isolated case supposed, where no considerations of
-its badness as a means could influence us, may yet be really directed
-to the pain of the persons, which it takes delight in contemplating.
-This objection may be met, in the first place, by the remark that it
-entirely fails to explain the judgment, which yet, I think, no one,
-on reflection, will be able to avoid making, that even though the
-amount of pain contemplated be the same, yet the greater the delight
-in its contemplation, the worse the state of things. But it may also,
-I think, be met by notice of a fact, which we were unable to urge in
-considering the similar possibility with regard to goods&mdash;namely
-the possibility that the reason why we attribute greater value to a
-worthy affection for a <i>real</i> person, is that we take into account the
-additional good consisting in the existence of that person. We may
-I think urge, in the case of cruelty, that its intrinsic odiousness
-is equally great, whether the pain contemplated really exists or is
-purely imaginary. I, at least, am unable to distinguish that, in
-this case, the presence of <i>true belief</i> makes any difference to the
-intrinsic value of the whole considered, although it undoubtedly may
-make a great difference to its value <i>as a means</i>. And so also with
-regard to other evils of this class: I am unable to see that a true
-belief in the <i>existence</i> of their objects makes any difference in the
-degree of their positive demerits. On the other hand, the presence of
-another class of beliefs seems to make a considerable difference.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[p. 211]</span> When we enjoy what is
-evil or ugly, in spite of our knowledge that it is so, the state of
-things seems considerably worse than if we made no judgment at all as
-to the object’s value. And the same seems also, strangely enough, to be
-the case when we make a false judgment of value. When we admire what
-is ugly or evil, believing that it is beautiful and good, this belief
-seems also to enhance the intrinsic vileness of our condition. It must,
-of course, be understood that, in both these cases, the judgment in
-question is merely what I have called a judgment of taste; that is to
-say, it is concerned with the worth of the qualities actually cognised
-and not with the worth of the object, to which those qualities may be
-rightly or wrongly attributed.</p>
-
-<p>Finally it should be mentioned that evils of this class, <i>beside</i>
-that emotional element (namely enjoyment and admiration) which they
-share with great unmixed goods, appear always also to include some
-specific emotion, which does not enter in the same way into the
-constitution of any good. The presence of this specific emotion seems
-certainly to enhance the badness of the whole, though it is not plain
-that, by itself, it would be either evil or ugly.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_126"><b>126.&emsp;</b>(2) The second class of great evils are
-undoubtedly mixed evils; but I treat them next, because, in a certain
-respect, they appear to be the <i>converse</i> of the class last considered.
-Just as it is essential to this last class that they should include an
-emotion, appropriate to the cognition of what is good or beautiful,
-but directed to an inappropriate object; so to this second class it
-is essential that they should include a cognition of what is good or
-beautiful, but accompanied by an inappropriate emotion. In short, just
-as the last class may be described as cases of the love of what is evil
-or ugly, so this class may be described as cases of the hatred of what
-is good or beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to these evils it should be remarked: First, that
-the vices of hatred, envy and contempt, where these vices are evil
-in themselves, appear to be instances of them; and that they are
-frequently accompanied by evils of the first class, for example, where
-a delight is felt in the pain of a good person.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_212">[p. 212]</span> Where they are thus accompanied,
-the whole thus formed is undoubtedly worse than if either existed
-singly.</p>
-
-<p>And secondly: That in their case a true belief in the existence of
-the good or beautiful object, which is hated, does appear to enhance
-the badness of the whole, in which it is present. Undoubtedly also, as
-in our first class, the presence of a true belief as to the <i>value</i> of
-the objects contemplated, increases the evil. But, contrary to what was
-the case in our first class, a <i>false</i> judgment of value appears to
-lessen it.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_127"><b>127.&emsp;</b>(3) The third class of great positive evils
-appears to be the class of <i>pains</i>.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to these it should first be remarked that, as in the
-case of pleasure, it is not pain itself, but only the consciousness
-of pain, towards which our judgments of value are directed. Just as
-in Chap. III., it was said that pleasure, however intense, which no
-one felt, would be no good at all; so it appears that pain, however
-intense, of which there was no consciousness, would be no evil at
-all.</p>
-
-<p>It is, therefore, only the consciousness of intense pain, which can
-be maintained to be a great evil. But that this, <i>by itself</i>, may be
-a great evil, I cannot avoid thinking. The case of pain thus seems to
-differ from that of pleasure: for the mere consciousness of pleasure,
-however intense, does not, <i>by itself</i>, appear to be a <i>great</i> good,
-even if it has some slight intrinsic value. In short, pain (if we
-understand by this expression, the consciousness of pain) appears to
-be a far worse evil than pleasure is a good. But, if this be so, then
-<i>pain</i> must be admitted to be an exception from the rule which seems to
-hold both of all <i>other</i> great evils and of <i>all</i> great goods: namely
-that they are all organic unities to which <i>both</i> a cognition of an
-object <i>and</i> an emotion directed towards that object are essential.
-In the case of pain and of pain alone, it seems to be true that a
-mere cognition, by itself, may be a great evil. It is, indeed, <i>an</i>
-organic unity, since it involves both the cognition and the object,
-neither of which, by themselves, has either merit or demerit. But it
-is a less complex organic unity than any other great evil and than any
-great good, <i>both</i> in respect of the fact that it does not involve,
-<i>beside</i> the cognition, an emotion directed<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_213">[p. 213]</span> towards its object, <i>and also</i> in respect
-of the fact that the <i>object</i> may here be absolutely simple, whereas in
-most, if not all, other cases, the object itself is highly complex.</p>
-
-<p>This want of analogy between the relation of pain to intrinsic
-evil and of pleasure to intrinsic good, seems also to be exhibited
-in a second respect. Not only is it the case that consciousness of
-intense pain is, by itself, a great evil, whereas consciousness of
-intense pleasure is, by itself, no great good; but also the <i>converse</i>
-difference appears to hold of the contribution which they make to
-the value of the whole, when they are combined respectively with
-another great evil or with a great good. That is to say, the presence
-of pleasure (though not in proportion to its intensity) does appear
-to enhance the value of a whole, in which it is combined with any
-of the great unmixed goods which we have considered: it might even
-be maintained that it is <i>only</i> wholes, in which <i>some</i> pleasure is
-included, that possess any great value: it is certain, at all events,
-that the presence of pleasure makes a contribution to the value of good
-wholes greatly in excess of its own intrinsic value. On the contrary,
-if a feeling of pain be combined with any of the evil states of mind
-which we have been considering, the difference which its presence makes
-to the value of the whole, <i>as a whole</i>, seems to be rather for the
-better than the worse: in any case, the only additional evil which it
-introduces, is that which it, by itself, intrinsically constitutes.
-Thus, whereas pain is <i>in itself</i> a great evil, but makes no addition
-to the badness of a whole, in which it is combined with some other
-bad thing, except that which consists in its own intrinsic badness;
-pleasure, conversely, is not <i>in itself</i> a great good, but does make a
-great addition to the goodness of a whole in which it is combined with
-a good thing, quite apart from its own intrinsic value.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_128"><b>128.&emsp;</b>But finally, it must be insisted that
-pleasure and pain are completely analogous in this: that we cannot
-assume either that the presence of pleasure always makes a state of
-things better <i>on the whole</i>, or that the presence of pain always makes
-it worse. This is the truth which is most liable to be overlooked with
-regard to them; and it is because this is true, that the common theory,
-that pleasure is the only good and pain the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_214">[p. 214]</span> only evil, has its grossest consequences
-in misjudgments of value. Not only is the pleasantness of a state <i>not</i>
-in proportion to its intrinsic worth; it may even add positively to
-its vileness. We do not think the successful hatred of a villain the
-less vile and odious, because he takes the keenest delight in it; nor
-is there the least need, in logic, why we should think so, apart from
-an unintelligent prejudice in favour of pleasure. In fact it seems to
-be the case that wherever pleasure is added to an evil state of either
-of our first two classes, the whole thus formed is <i>always</i> worse than
-if no pleasure had been there. And similarly with regard to pain. If
-pain be added to an evil state of either of our first two classes, the
-whole thus formed is <i>always</i> better, <i>as a whole</i>, than if no pain
-had been there; though here, if the pain be too intense, since that
-is a great evil, the state may not be better <i>on the whole</i>. It is in
-this way that the theory of vindictive punishment may be vindicated.
-The infliction of pain on a person whose state of mind is bad may, if
-the pain be not too intense, create a state of things that is better
-<i>on the whole</i> than if the evil state of mind had existed unpunished.
-Whether such a state of things can ever constitute a <i>positive</i> good,
-is another question.</p>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<p id="Sec_129"><b>129.&emsp;</b>II. The consideration of this other
-question belongs properly to the second topic, which was reserved above
-for discussion namely the topic of ‘mixed’ goods. ‘Mixed’ goods were
-defined above as things, which, though positively good <i>as wholes</i>,
-nevertheless contain, as essential elements, something intrinsically
-evil or ugly. And there certainly seem to be such goods. But for the
-proper consideration of them, it is necessary to take into account
-a new distinction the distinction just expressed as being between
-the value which a thing possesses ‘<i>as a whole</i>,’ and that which it
-possesses ‘<i>on the whole</i>.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When ‘mixed’ goods were defined as things positively good <i>as
-wholes</i>, the expression was ambiguous. It was meant that they were
-positively good <i>on the whole</i>; but it must now be observed that
-the value which a thing possesses <i>on the whole</i> may be said to
-be equivalent to the sum of the value which it possesses <i>as a
-whole</i>, <i>together with</i> the intrinsic values which may belong to any
-of its parts. In fact, by the ‘value which<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_215">[p. 215]</span> a thing possesses as a whole,’ there
-may be meant two quite distinct things. There may be meant either
-(1) That value which arises solely <i>from the combination</i> of two or
-more things; or else (2) The total value formed by the addition to
-(1) of any intrinsic values which may belong to the things combined.
-The meaning of the distinction may perhaps be most easily seen by
-considering the supposed case of vindictive punishment. If it is true
-that the combined existence of two evils may yet constitute a less
-evil than would be constituted by the existence of either singly,
-it is plain that this can only be because there arises from the
-combination a positive good which is greater than the <i>difference</i>
-between the sum of the two evils and the demerit of either singly:
-this positive good would then be the value of the whole, <i>as a
-whole</i>, in sense (1). Yet if this value be not so great a good as the
-sum of the two evils is an evil, it is plain that the value of the
-whole state of things will be a positive evil; and this value is the
-value of the whole, <i>as a whole</i>, in sense (2). Whatever view may be
-taken with regard to the particular case of vindictive punishment,
-it is plain that we have here <i>two distinct things</i>, with regard to
-<i>either</i> of which a separate question may be asked in the case of
-every organic unity. The first of these two things may be expressed as
-<i>the difference</i> between the value <i>of the whole thing</i> and the sum
-of the value of its parts. And it is plain that where the parts have
-little or no intrinsic value (as in our first class of goods, §§&nbsp;<a
-href="#Sec_114">114</a>, <a href="#Sec_114">115</a>), this difference
-will be nearly or absolutely identical with the value of the whole
-thing. The distinction, therefore, only becomes important in the case
-of wholes, of which one or more parts have a great intrinsic value,
-positive or negative. The first of these cases, that of a whole, in
-which one part has a great <i>positive</i> value, is exemplified in our 2nd
-and 3rd classes of great unmixed goods (§§&nbsp;<a href="#Sec_120">120</a>,
-<a href="#Sec_122">122</a>); and similarly the Summum Bonum is a whole
-of which <i>many</i> parts have a great <i>positive</i> value. Such cases, it
-may be observed, are also very frequent and very important objects
-of Aesthetic judgment; since the essential distinction between the
-‘classical’ and the ‘romantic’ styles consists in the fact that
-the former aims at obtaining the greatest possible value<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[p. 216]</span> for the whole, <i>as a
-whole</i>, in sense (1), whereas the latter sacrifices this in order to
-obtain the greatest possible value for some <i>part</i>, which is itself
-an organic unity. It follows that we cannot declare either style to
-be necessarily superior, since an equally good result <i>on the whole</i>,
-or ‘as a whole’ in sense (2), may be obtained by either method; but
-the distinctively <i>aesthetic</i> temperament seems to be characterised by
-a tendency to prefer a good result obtained by the classical, to an
-equally good result obtained by the romantic method.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_130"><b>130.&emsp;</b>But what we have now to consider are
-cases of wholes, in which one or more parts have a great <i>negative</i>
-value&mdash;are great positive evils. And first of all, we may take
-the <i>strongest</i> cases, like that of retributive punishment, in
-which we have a whole, exclusively composed of two great positive
-evils&mdash;wickedness and pain. Can such a whole ever be positively
-good <i>on the whole</i>?</p>
-
-<p>(1) I can see no reason to think that such wholes ever are
-positively good <i>on the whole</i>. But from the fact that they may,
-nevertheless, be less evils, than either of their parts taken singly,
-it follows that they have a characteristic which is most important for
-the correct decision of practical questions. It follows that, quite
-apart from <i>consequences</i> or any value which an evil may have as a mere
-means, it may, <i>supposing</i> one evil already exists, be worth while to
-create another, since, by the mere creation of this second, there may
-be constituted a whole less bad than if the original evil had been left
-to exist by itself. And similarly, with regard to all the wholes which
-I am about to consider, it must be remembered, that, even if they are
-not goods <i>on the whole</i>, yet, where an evil already exists, as in this
-world evils do exist, the existence of the other part of these wholes
-will constitute a thing desirable <i>for its own sake</i>&mdash;that is to
-say, not merely a means to future goods, but one of the <i>ends</i> which
-must be taken into account in estimating what that best possible state
-of things is, to which every right action must be a means.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_131"><b>131.&emsp;</b>(2) But, as a matter of fact, I cannot
-avoid thinking that there are wholes, containing something positively
-evil and ugly, which are, nevertheless, great positive goods on the
-whole.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[p. 217]</span> Indeed,
-it appears to be to this class that those instances of virtue, which
-contain anything intrinsically good, chiefly belong. It need not,
-of course, be denied that there is sometimes included in a virtuous
-disposition more or less of those unmixed goods which were first
-discussed&mdash;that is to say, a real love of what is good or
-beautiful. But the typical and characteristic virtuous dispositions,
-so far as they are not mere means, seem rather to be examples of
-mixed goods. We may take as instances (<i>a</i>) Courage and Compassion,
-which seem to belong to the second of the three classes of virtues
-distinguished in our last chapter (<a href="#Sec_107">§&nbsp;107</a>);
-and (<i>b</i>) the specifically ‘moral’ sentiment, by reference
-to which the third of those three classes was defined (<a
-href="#Sec_107">§&nbsp;108</a>).</p>
-
-<p>Courage and compassion, in so far as they contain an intrinsically
-desirable state of mind, seem to involve essentially a cognition of
-something evil or ugly. In the case of courage the object of the
-cognition may be an evil of any of our three classes; in the case of
-compassion, the proper object is pain. Both these virtues, accordingly,
-must contain precisely the same cognitive element, which is also
-essential to evils of class (1); and they are differentiated from these
-by the fact that the emotion directed to these objects is, in their
-case, an emotion of the same kind which was essential to evils of class
-(2). In short, just as evils of class (2) seemed to consist in a hatred
-of what was good or beautiful, and evils of class (1) in a love of what
-was evil or ugly; so these virtues involve a <i>hatred</i> of what is evil
-or ugly. Both these virtues do, no doubt, also contain other elements,
-and, among these, each contains its specific emotion; but that their
-value does not depend solely upon these other elements, we may easily
-assure ourselves, by considering what we should think of an attitude of
-endurance or of defiant contempt toward an object intrinsically good
-or beautiful, or of the state of a man whose mind was filled with pity
-for the happiness of a worthy admiration. Yet pity for the undeserved
-sufferings of others, endurance of pain to ourselves, and a defiant
-hatred of evil dispositions in ourselves or in others, seem to be
-undoubtedly admirable in themselves; and if so, there are admirable
-things, which must be lost, if there were no cognition of evil.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[p. 218]</span>Similarly
-the specifically ‘moral’ sentiment, in all cases where it has any
-considerable intrinsic value, appears to include a hatred of evils
-of the first and second classes. It is true that the emotion is here
-excited by the idea that an action is right or wrong; and hence the
-object of the idea which excites it is generally not an intrinsic evil.
-But, as far as I can discover, the emotion with which a conscientious
-man views a real or imaginary right action, contains, as an essential
-element, the same emotion with which he views a wrong one: it seems,
-indeed, that this element is necessary to make his emotion specifically
-<i>moral</i>. And the specifically moral emotion excited by the idea of a
-wrong action, seems to me to contain essentially a more or less vague
-cognition of the kind of intrinsic evils, which are usually caused
-by wrong actions, whether they would or would not be caused by the
-particular action in question. I am, in fact, unable to distinguish, in
-its main features, the moral sentiment excited by the idea of rightness
-and wrongness, wherever it is intense, from the total state constituted
-by a cognition of something intrinsically evil together with the
-emotion of hatred directed towards it. Nor need we be surprised that
-this mental state should be the one chiefly associated with the idea
-of rightness, if we reflect on the nature of those actions which are
-most commonly recognised as duties. For by far the greater part of the
-actions, of which we commonly think as duties, are <i>negative</i>: what we
-feel to be our duty is to <i>abstain</i> from some action to which a strong
-natural impulse tempts us. And these wrong actions, in the avoidance
-of which duty consists, are usually such as produce, very immediately,
-some bad consequence in pain to others; while, in many prominent
-instances, the inclination, which prompts us to them, is itself an
-intrinsic evil, containing, as where the impulse is lust or cruelty,
-an anticipatory enjoyment of something evil or ugly. That right action
-does thus so frequently entail the suppression of some evil impulse,
-is necessary to explain the plausibility of the view that virtue
-<i>consists</i> in the control of passion by reason. Accordingly, the truth
-seems to be that, whenever a strong moral emotion is excited by the
-idea of rightness, this emotion is accompanied by a vague cognition of
-the kind of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[p. 219]</span> evils
-usually suppressed or avoided by the actions which most frequently
-occur to us as instances of duty; and that the emotion is directed
-towards this evil quality. We may, then, conclude that the specific
-moral emotion owes almost all its intrinsic value to the fact that it
-includes a cognition of evils accompanied by a hatred of them: mere
-rightness, whether truly or untruly attributed to an action, seems
-incapable of forming the object of an emotional contemplation, which
-shall be any great good.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_132"><b>132.&emsp;</b>If this be so, then we have, in many
-prominent instances of virtue, cases of a whole, greatly good in
-itself, which yet contains the cognition of something, whereof the
-existence would be a great evil: a great good is absolutely dependent
-for its value, upon its inclusion of something evil or ugly, although
-it does not owe its value <i>solely</i> to this element in it. And, in the
-case of virtues, this evil object does, in general, actually exist.
-But there seems no reason to think that, when it does exist, the whole
-state of things thus constituted is therefore the better <i>on the
-whole</i>. What seems indubitable, is only that the feeling contemplation
-of an object, whose existence <i>would</i> be a great evil, or which is
-ugly, may be essential to a valuable whole. We have another undoubted
-instance of this in the appreciation of tragedy. But, in tragedy, the
-sufferings of Lear, and the vice of Iago may be purely imaginary. And
-it seems certain that, if they really existed, the evil thus existing,
-while it must detract from the good consisting in a proper feeling
-towards them, will add no positive value to that good great enough to
-counterbalance such a loss. It does, indeed, seem that the existence
-of a true belief in the object of these mixed goods does add <i>some</i>
-value to the whole in which it is combined with them: a conscious
-compassion for real suffering seems to be better, <i>as a whole</i>, than a
-compassion for sufferings merely imaginary; and this may well be the
-case, even though the evil involved in the actual suffering makes the
-total state of things bad <i>on the whole</i>. And it certainly seems to be
-true that a <i>false</i> belief in the actual existence of its object makes
-a worse mixed good than if our state of mind were that with which we
-normally regard pure fiction. Accordingly we may<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_220">[p. 220]</span> conclude that the only mixed goods, which
-are positively good <i>on the whole</i>, are those in which the object is
-something which <i>would</i> be a great evil, if it existed, or which <i>is</i>
-ugly.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_133"><b>133.&emsp;</b>With regard, then, to those mixed goods,
-which consist in an appropriate attitude of the mind towards things
-evil or ugly, and which include among their number the greater
-part of such virtues as have any intrinsic value whatever, the
-following three conclusions seem to be those chiefly requiring to be
-emphasized:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1) There seems no reason to think that where the object is a thing
-evil in itself, which <i>actually exists</i>, the total state of things is
-ever positively <i>good on the whole</i>. The appropriate mental attitude
-towards a really existing evil contains, of course, an element which
-is absolutely identical with the same attitude towards the same evil,
-where it is purely imaginary. And this element, which is common to
-the two cases, may be a great positive good, on the whole. But there
-seems no reason to doubt that, where the evil is <i>real</i>, the amount of
-this real evil is always sufficient to reduce the total sum of value
-to a negative quantity. Accordingly we have no reason to maintain the
-paradox that an ideal world would be one in which vice and suffering
-must exist in order that it may contain the goods consisting in the
-appropriate emotion towards them. It is not a positive good that
-suffering should exist, in order that we may compassionate it; or
-wickedness, that we may hate it. There is no reason to think that any
-actual evil whatsoever would be contained in the Ideal. It follows that
-we cannot admit the actual validity of any of the arguments commonly
-used in Theodicies; no such argument succeeds in justifying the fact
-that there does exist even the smallest of the many evils which this
-world contains. The most that can be said for such arguments is that,
-when they make appeal to the principle of organic unity, their appeal
-is valid <i>in principle</i>. It <i>might</i> be the case that the existence of
-evil was necessary, not merely as a means, but analytically, to the
-existence of the greatest good. But we have no reason to think that
-this <i>is</i> the case in any instance whatsoever.</p>
-
-<p>But (2) there <i>is</i> reason to think that the cognition of
-things<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[p. 221]</span> evil or
-ugly, which are purely imaginary, is essential to the Ideal. In this
-case the burden of proof lies the other way. It cannot be doubted
-that the appreciation of tragedy is a great positive good; and it
-seems almost equally certain that the virtues of compassion, courage,
-and self-control contain such goods. And to all these the cognition
-of things which would be evil, if they existed, is analytically
-necessary. Here then we have things of which the existence must add
-value to any whole in which they are contained; nor is it possible to
-assure ourselves that any whole, from which they were omitted, would
-thereby gain more in its value <i>as a whole</i>, than it would lose by
-their omission. We have no reason to think that any whole, which did
-not contain them, would be so good <i>on the whole</i> as some whole in
-which they were obtained. The case for their inclusion in the Ideal
-is as strong as that for the inclusion of material qualities (<a
-href="#Sec_123">§&nbsp;123</a>, above). <i>Against</i> the inclusion of
-these goods nothing can be urged except a bare possibility.</p>
-
-<p>Finally (3) it is important to insist that, as was said above,
-these mixed virtues have a great practical value, in addition to that
-which they possess either in themselves or as mere means. Where evils
-do exist, as in this world they do, the fact that they are known and
-properly appreciated, constitutes a state of things having greater
-value <i>as a whole</i> even than the same appreciation of purely imaginary
-evils. This state of things, it has been said, is never positively
-good <i>on the whole</i>; but where the evil, which reduces its total value
-to a negative quantity, already unavoidably exists, to obtain the
-intrinsic value which belongs to it <i>as a whole</i> will obviously produce
-a better state of things than if the evil had existed by itself,
-quite apart from the good element in it which is identical with the
-appreciation of imaginary evils, and from any ulterior consequences
-which its existence may bring about. The case is here the same as with
-retributive punishment. Where an evil already exists, it is well that
-it should be pitied or hated or endured, according to its nature; just
-as it may be well that some evils should be punished. Of course, as in
-all practical cases, it often happens that the attainment of this good
-is incompatible with the attainment of another and a greater one. But
-it is important<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[p. 222]</span> to
-insist that we have here a real intrinsic value, which must be taken
-into account in calculating that greatest possible balance of intrinsic
-value, which it is always our duty to produce.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_134"><b>134.&emsp;</b>I have now completed such remarks as
-seemed most necessary to be made concerning intrinsic values. It
-is obvious that for the proper answering of this, the fundamental
-question of Ethics, there remains a field of investigation as wide
-and as difficult, as was assigned to Practical Ethics in my last
-chapter. There is as much to be said concerning what results are
-intrinsically good, and in what degrees, as concerning what results
-it is possible for us to bring about: both questions demand, and will
-repay, an equally patient enquiry. Many of the judgments, which I have
-made in this chapter, will, no doubt, seem unduly arbitrary: it must
-be confessed that some of the attributions of intrinsic value, which
-have seemed to me to be true, do not display that symmetry and system
-which is wont to be required of philosophers. But if this be urged as
-an objection, I may respectfully point out that it is none. We have
-no title whatever to assume that the truth on any subject-matter will
-display such symmetry as we desire to see&mdash;or (to use the common
-vague phrase) that it will possess any particular form of ‘unity.’
-To search for ‘unity’ and ‘system,’ at the expense of truth, is not,
-I take it, the proper business of philosophy, however universally it
-may have been the practice of philosophers. And that all truths about
-the Universe possess to one another all the various relations, which
-may be meant by ‘unity,’ can only be legitimately asserted, when we
-have carefully distinguished those various relations and discovered
-what those truths are. In particular, we can have no title to assert
-that ethical truths are ‘unified’ in any particular manner, except in
-virtue of an enquiry conducted by the method which I have endeavoured
-to follow and to illustrate. The study of Ethics would, no doubt,
-be far more simple, and its results far more ‘systematic,’ if, for
-instance, pain were an evil of exactly the same magnitude as pleasure
-is a good; but we have no reason whatever to assume that the Universe
-is such that ethical truths must display this kind of symmetry: no
-argument<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[p. 223]</span> against my
-conclusion, that pleasure and pain do <i>not</i> thus correspond, can have
-any weight whatever, failing a careful examination of the instances
-which have led me to form it. Nevertheless I am content that the
-results of this chapter should be taken rather as illustrating the
-method which must be pursued in answering the fundamental question
-of Ethics, and the principles which must be observed, than as giving
-the correct answer to that question. That things intrinsically good
-or bad are many and various; that most of them are ‘organic unities,’
-in the peculiar and definite sense to which I have confined the term;
-and that our only means of deciding upon their intrinsic value and
-its degree, is by carefully distinguishing exactly what the thing
-is, about which we ask the question, and then looking to see whether
-it has or has not the unique predicate ‘good’ in any of its various
-degrees: these are the conclusions, upon the truth of which I desire
-to insist. Similarly, in my last chapter, with regard to the question
-‘What ought we to do?’ I have endeavoured rather to shew exactly what
-is the meaning of the question, and what difficulties must consequently
-be faced in answering it, than to prove that any particular answers
-are true. And that these two questions, having precisely the nature
-which I have assigned to them, are <i>the</i> questions which it is the
-object of Ethics to answer, may be regarded as the main result
-of the preceding chapters. These are the questions which ethical
-philosophers have always been mainly concerned to answer, although
-they have not recognised what their question was&mdash;what predicate
-they were asserting to attach to things. The practice of asking what
-things are virtues or duties, without distinguishing what these terms
-mean; the practice of asking what ought to be here and now, without
-distinguishing whether as means or end&mdash;for its own sake or
-for that of its results; the search for one single <i>criterion</i> of
-right or wrong, without the recognition that in order to discover a
-criterion we must first know what things <i>are</i> right or wrong; and the
-neglect of the principle of ‘organic unities’&mdash;these sources of
-error have hitherto been almost universally prevalent in Ethics. The
-conscious endeavour to avoid them all, and to apply to all the ordinary
-objects of ethical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[p. 224]</span>
-judgment these two questions and these only: Has it intrinsic value?
-and Is it a means to the best possible?&mdash;this attempt, so far as
-I know, is entirely new; and its results, when compared with those
-habitual to moral philosophers, are certainly sufficiently surprising:
-that to Common Sense they will not appear so strange, I venture to
-hope and believe. It is, I think, much to be desired that the labour
-commonly devoted to answering such questions as whether certain ‘ends’
-are more or less ‘comprehensive’ or more or less ‘consistent’ with
-one another&mdash;questions, which, even if a precise meaning were
-given to them, are wholly irrelevant to the proof of any ethical
-conclusion&mdash;should be diverted to the separate investigation of
-these two clear problems.</p>
-
-
-<p id="Sec_135"><b>135.&emsp;</b>The main object of this chapter has been to
-define roughly the class of things, among which we may expect to find
-either great intrinsic goods or great intrinsic evils; and particularly
-to point out that there is a vast variety of such things, and that
-the simplest of them are, with one exception, highly complex wholes,
-composed of parts which have little or no value in themselves. All
-of them involve consciousness of an object, which is itself usually
-highly complex, and almost all involve also an emotional attitude
-towards this object; but, though they thus have certain characteristics
-in common, the vast variety of qualities in respect of which they
-differ from one another are equally essential to their value: neither
-the generic character of all, nor the specific character of each, is
-either greatly good or greatly evil by itself; they owe their value or
-demerit, in each case, to the presence of both. My discussion falls
-into three main divisions, dealing respectively (1) with unmixed goods,
-(2) with evils, and (3) with mixed goods. (1) Unmixed goods may all be
-said to consist in the love of beautiful things or of good persons:
-but the number of different goods of this kind is as great as that of
-beautiful objects, and they are also differentiated from one another
-by the different emotions appropriate to different objects. These
-goods are undoubtedly good, even where the things or persons loved are
-imaginary; but it was urged that, where the thing or person is real
-and is believed to be so, these two facts together, when combined with
-the mere<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[p. 225]</span> love of
-the qualities in question, constitute a whole which is greatly better
-than that mere love, having an additional value quite distinct from
-that which belongs to the existence of the object, where that object
-is a good person. Finally it was pointed out that the love of mental
-qualities, by themselves, does not seem to be so great a good as that
-of mental and material qualities together; and that, in any case, an
-immense number of the best things are, or include, a love of material
-qualities (113-123). (2) Great evils may be said to consist either
-(<i>a</i>) in the love of what is evil or ugly, or (<i>b</i>) in the hatred of
-what is good or beautiful, or (<i>c</i>) in the consciousness of pain.
-Thus the consciousness of pain, if it be a great evil, is the only
-exception to the rule that all great goods and great evils involve both
-a cognition and an emotion directed towards its object (124-128). (3)
-Mixed goods are those which include some element which is evil or ugly.
-They may be said to consist either in hatred of what is ugly or of
-evils of classes (<i>a</i>) and (<i>b</i>), or in compassion for pain. But where
-they include an evil, which actually exists, its demerit seems to be
-always great enough to outweigh the positive value which they possess
-(129-133).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="Index">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[p. 227]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">INDEX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Aesthetic
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>enjoyments <a href="#Page_189">189</a>-<a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
- <li>judgment <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
- <li>temperament <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Aesthetics <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-<li>Affection
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>beauty of <a href="#Page_204">204</a>-<a href="#Page_205">5</a></li>
- <li>misdirected <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
- <li>reciprocal <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-<a href="#Page_189">9</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-<a href="#Page_205">5</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Altruism <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_97">7</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li>Analytic judgments <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-<a href="#Page_34">4</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>-<a href="#Page_221">1</a></li>
-<li>Appreciation <a href="#Page_189">189</a>-<a href="#Page_190">90</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>-<a href="#Page_205">5</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-<li>Approval <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li>Approve <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-<li>Approbation <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li>Appropriate, inappropriate <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>-<a href="#Page_205">5</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>defined <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Aristotle <a href="#Page_4">4</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>definition of virtue <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
- <li>valuation of virtues <a href="#Page_176">176</a>-<a href="#Page_177">7</a></li>
- <li>valuation of knowledge <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Art
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
- <li><i>representative</i>, value of <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Autonomy <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Bad <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-<li>‘Based on’ <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-<li>Beauty
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>corporeal <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-<a href="#Page_204">4</a></li>
- <li>no criterion of <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
- <li>definition of <a href="#Page_201">201</a>-<a href="#Page_202">2</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
- <li>mental <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-<a href="#Page_205">5</a></li>
- <li>‘seeing’ of <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-<a href="#Page_191">1</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_82">2</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>-<a href="#Page_85">5</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-<a href="#Page_189">9</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>-<a href="#Page_202">2</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Being, dist. from existence <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_111">11</a></li>
-<li>Belief, value of <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-<a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>-<a href="#Page_211">11</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>-<a href="#Page_225">5</a></li>
-<li>Benevolence, Sidgwick’s ‘principle of Rational’ <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-<a href="#Page_103">3</a></li>
-<li>Bentham <a href="#Page_145">145</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>naturalistic fallacy <a href="#Page_17">17</a>-<a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li>quantity of pleasure <a href="#Page_77">77</a>-<a href="#Page_78">8</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Bradley, F. H.
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>pleasure and desire <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li>theory of judgment <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Butler, Bishop <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Casuistry <a href="#Page_4">4</a>-<a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-<li>Causal judgments
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>relation to Ethics <a href="#Page_21">21</a>-<a href="#Page_27">7</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_148">8</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Causal relations <a href="#Page_31">31</a>-<a href="#Page_33">3</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>-<a href="#Page_36">6</a></li>
-<li>Chastity <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-<li>Classical style <a href="#Page_215">215</a>-<a href="#Page_216">16</a></li>
-<li>Christ
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>on value of motives <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
- <li>on love <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Christian Ethics <a href="#Page_178">178</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>on ‘external’ rightness <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
- <li>on ‘internal’ rightness <a href="#Page_178">178</a>-<a href="#Page_179">9</a></li>
- <li>on value of motives <a href="#Page_177">177</a>-<a href="#Page_179">9</a></li>
- <li>on value of virtue <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Clifford, W. K. <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-<li>Cognition
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of evil <a href="#Page_217">217</a>-<a href="#Page_219">19</a></li>
- <li>dist. from knowledge <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
- <li>relation to will and feeling <a href="#Page_129">129</a>-<a href="#Page_130">30</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_136">6</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>-<a href="#Page_192">92</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[p. 228]</span>Commands, confused with moral laws <a href="#Page_128">128</a>-<a href="#Page_129">9</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-<li>Common sense <a href="#Page_224">224</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>on value of pleasure <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_92">2</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_95">5</a></li>
- <li>on duties <a href="#Page_156">156</a>-<a href="#Page_159">9</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Compassion <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-<li>Conduct, relation of to Ethics <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-<a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-<li>Conscience
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>defined <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
- <li>not infallible <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Conscientiousness <a href="#Page_218">218</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>defined <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
- <li>utility of <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Contempt <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-<li>Corporeal beauty <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-<a href="#Page_204">4</a></li>
-<li>Courage <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-<li>Crimes <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-<li>Criterion
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of beauty <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
- <li>evolution as <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_56">6</a></li>
- <li>of goodness <a href="#Page_137">137</a>-<a href="#Page_138">8</a></li>
- <li>pleasure as <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_92">2</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_95">5</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li>of right and wrong <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- <li>will as <a href="#Page_137">137</a>-<a href="#Page_138">8</a></li>
- <li>of truth <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Cruelty <a href="#Page_209">209</a>-<a href="#Page_211">11</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Darwin <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-<li>Definition, nature of <a href="#Page_6">6</a>-<a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>-<a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-<li>Desirable, meaning of <a href="#Page_65">65</a>-<a href="#Page_67">7</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-<li>Desire, cause and object of <a href="#Page_68">68</a>-<a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_74">4</a></li>
-<li>Duty
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>= cause of or means to good <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_25">5</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_148">8</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- <li>fuller definitions of <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-<a href="#Page_181">1</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
- <li>incapable of being known <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_150">50</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
- <li>mainly negative <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
- <li>object of <i>psychological</i>intuition <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
- <li>relations to expediency <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-<a href="#Page_170">70</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>interest <a href="#Page_170">170</a>-<a href="#Page_171">1</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
- <li>possibility <a href="#Page_150">150</a>-<a href="#Page_152">2</a></li>
- <li>rightness <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
- <li>utility <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_147">7</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-<a href="#Page_170">70</a></li>
- <li>virtue <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
- <li>will <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
- </ul></li>
- <li>not self-evident <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
- <li>self-regarding <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Egoistic Hedonism <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li>Egoism, as doctrine of end <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>contradiction of <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>-<a href="#Page_105">5</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- <li>relation to Hedonism <a href="#Page_97">97</a>-<a href="#Page_98">8</a></li>
- <li>relation to Naturalistic Hedonism <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_105">5</a></li>
- <li>Sidgwick’s ‘Rational’ <a href="#Page_98">98</a>-<a href="#Page_99">9</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-<a href="#Page_104">4</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Egoism, as doctrine of means <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_97">7</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li>Emotion
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>aesthetic <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_189">189</a>-<a href="#Page_192">92</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>-<a href="#Page_205">5</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Empirical <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-<li>Empiricism <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>-<a href="#Page_125">5</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-<li>End = effect <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-<li>End = good in itself <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>-<a href="#Page_66">6</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-<a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_95">5</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>dist. from ‘good as means’ <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-<a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_95">5</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>-<a href="#Page_107">7</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>-<a href="#Page_174">4</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- <li>‘ultimate’ <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_97">7</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
- <li>‘never justifies means’ <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>End = object of desire <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-<li>Enjoyment <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>aesthetic <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-<a href="#Page_189">9</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
- <li>of evil and ugly <a href="#Page_208">208</a>-<a href="#Page_211">11</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
- <li>sexual <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Envy <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-<li>Epistemology <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-<a href="#Page_141">1</a></li>
-<li>Ethics
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Evolutionistic <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
- <li>Metaphysical <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>-<a href="#Page_115">15</a></li>
- <li>Naturalistic <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
- <li>Practical <a href="#Page_115">115</a>-<a href="#Page_118">18</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
- <li>province of <a href="#Page_1">1</a>-<a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>-<a href="#Page_27">7</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>-<a href="#Page_146">6</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>-<a href="#Page_224">4</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Eudaemonist <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-<li>Evil <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>-<a href="#Page_214">14</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>mixed <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
- <li>positive value of <a href="#Page_216">216</a>-<a href="#Page_222">22</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Evolution <a href="#Page_46">46</a>-<a href="#Page_48">8</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-<a href="#Page_58">8</a></li>
-<li>Evolutionistic <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-<li>Existence
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>dist. from being <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_112">12</a></li>
- <li>judgments about <a href="#Page_123">123</a>-<a href="#Page_125">5</a></li>
- <li>relation to value <a href="#Page_115">115</a>-<a href="#Page_118">18</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>-<a href="#Page_122">22</a>, <span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[p. 229]</span><a href="#Page_125">125</a>-<a href="#Page_126">6</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>-<a href="#Page_199">9</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Expediency <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-<a href="#Page_170">70</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Feeling
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>supposed analogy to cognition <a href="#Page_129">129</a>-<a href="#Page_131">31</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
- <li>supposed bearing on Ethics <a href="#Page_129">129</a>-<a href="#Page_131">31</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Fiction <a href="#Page_121">121</a>-<a href="#Page_122">2</a></li>
-<li>Freedom, value of <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-<li>Freedom (of Will) <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>God <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-<a href="#Page_104">4</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>love of <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>-<a href="#Page_196">6</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Good
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>indefinable <a href="#Page_6">6</a>-<a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_111">11</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>-<a href="#Page_144">4</a></li>
- <li>= means to good <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
- <li>the Absolute <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
- <li>the Human <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
- <li>mixed and unmixed <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>-<a href="#Page_220">20</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
- <li>my own <a href="#Page_97">97</a>-<a href="#Page_99">9</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
- <li>‘private’ <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
- <li><i>the</i> <a href="#Page_8">8</a>-<a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
- <li>‘Universal’ <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
- <li>Will <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-<a href="#Page_175">5</a>, 179 <i>n.</i> <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Green, T. H. <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-<li>Guyau, M. <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Habit <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>-<a href="#Page_176">6</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-<li>Hatred <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of beautiful and good <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- <li>of evil and ugly <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Health <a href="#Page_42">42</a>-<a href="#Page_43">3</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li>Heaven <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>upon Earth <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Hedonism <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>-<a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-<a href="#Page_91">1</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>-<a href="#Page_109">9</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Egoistic <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
- <li>Ethical <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
- <li>Intuitionistic <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>-<a href="#Page_76">6</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
- <li>Naturalistic <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
- <li>Psychological <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
- <li>Universalistic <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Hegel <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-<li>Heteronomous <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-<li>Higher <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_49">9</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-<li>Hobbes <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-<li>Honesty <a href="#Page_175">175</a>-<a href="#Page_176">6</a></li>
-<li>Hypothetical laws <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Ideal
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>three meanings of <a href="#Page_183">183</a>-<a href="#Page_184">4</a></li>
- <li><i>the</i> <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_207">7</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>-<a href="#Page_221">1</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Idealistic <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li>Imagination, value of <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li>Imperative <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-<li>Industry <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li>Intention 179 <i>n.</i> <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-<li>Interest <a href="#Page_102">102</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>meaning of <a href="#Page_97">97</a>-<a href="#Page_98">8</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>-<a href="#Page_171">1</a></li>
- <li>dist. from ‘duty’ <a href="#Page_170">170</a>-<a href="#Page_171">1</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Intrinsic
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>evil <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
- <li>value <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-<a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>-<a href="#Page_177">7</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a href="#Page_216">16</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>-<a href="#Page_224">4</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Intuition
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>= proposition incapable of proof <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li>in psychological sense <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-<a href="#Page_149">9</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Intuitionism
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>in Sidgwick’s sense <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
- <li>in proper sense <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Judgment
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>error of <a href="#Page_192">192</a>-<a href="#Page_193">3</a></li>
- <li>two types of ethical <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>-<a href="#Page_27">7</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Justice <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-<li>Justify <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Kant <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>‘Copernican revolution’ <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
- <li>value of Good Will <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-<a href="#Page_175">5</a>, 179 <i>n.</i> <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- <li>value of Happiness <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-<a href="#Page_175">5</a></li>
- <li>theory of judgment <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
- <li>‘Kingdom of Ends’ <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
- <li>‘practical love’ <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
- <li>connection of ‘goodness’ with ‘will’ <a href="#Page_126">126</a>-<a href="#Page_128">8</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Knowledge
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>involves truth of object <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
- <li>involves belief <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[p. 230]</span>Lasciviousness <a href="#Page_209">209</a>-<a href="#Page_210">10</a></li>
-<li>Law
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>ethical <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
- <li>hypothetical <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
- <li>legal <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
- <li>moral <a href="#Page_126">126</a>-<a href="#Page_128">8</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
- <li>natural <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
- <li>scientific <a href="#Page_22">22</a>-<a href="#Page_23">3</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Legal <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-<li>Leibniz <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-<li>Life <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-<li>Logical
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>dependence <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-<a href="#Page_144">4</a></li>
- <li>fallacy <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-<a href="#Page_141">1</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Love
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Christ and Kant on <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
- <li>of beautiful and good <a href="#Page_177">177</a>-<a href="#Page_179">9</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
- <li>of evil and ugly <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lucian <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-<li>Lust <a href="#Page_209">209</a>-<a href="#Page_210">10</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-<li>Lying <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Mackenzie, Prof. J. S. <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></li>
-<li>Material qualities, value of <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_207">7</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-<li>Matter, value of <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_207">7</a></li>
-<li>Meaning, ‘to have no’ <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>-<a href="#Page_35">5</a></li>
-<li>Means = cause or necessary condition <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>-<a href="#Page_23">3</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>dist. from ‘part of organic whole’ <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>-<a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
- <li>goodness as, dist. from intrinsic value <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-<a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_95">5</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>-<a href="#Page_107">7</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>-<a href="#Page_174">4</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>-<a href="#Page_196">6</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>-<a href="#Page_198">8</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- <li>‘not justified by end’ <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mental
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>beauty of <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-<a href="#Page_105">5</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_207">7</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mercy <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-<li>Metaphysical <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_115">15</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-<a href="#Page_140">40</a></li>
-<li>Method
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of discovering intrinsic value <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>-<a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>-<a href="#Page_145">5</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>-<a href="#Page_186">6</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_188">8</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>-<a href="#Page_198">8</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>-<a href="#Page_207">7</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- <li>of discovering value as means <a href="#Page_22">22</a>-<a href="#Page_23">3</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-<a href="#Page_154">54</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-<a href="#Page_173">3</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mill, J. S. <a href="#Page_145">145</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Hedonism <a href="#Page_63">63</a>-<a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li>naturalistic fallacy <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_67">7</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>-<a href="#Page_73">3</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li>Psychological Hedonism <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_74">4</a></li>
- <li>quality of pleasure <a href="#Page_77">77</a>-<a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li>Utilitarianism <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_105">5</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Moral
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>approbation <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
- <li>law <a href="#Page_126">126</a>-<a href="#Page_128">8</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
- <li>obligation <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
- <li>sentiment <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>-<a href="#Page_219">19</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Motive <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>-<a href="#Page_180">80</a></li>
-<li>Murder <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>-<a href="#Page_157">7</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Natural
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>laws <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
- <li>objects and properties <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_111">11</a></li>
- <li>selection <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Natural = normal <a href="#Page_42">42</a>-<a href="#Page_44">4</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-<li>Natural = necessary <a href="#Page_44">44</a>-<a href="#Page_45">5</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-<li>Naturalism <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-<li>Naturalistic
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Ethics <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
- <li>fallacy <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>-<a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-<a href="#Page_39">9</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_67">7</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>-<a href="#Page_73">3</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
- <li>Hedonism <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Nature <a href="#Page_40">40</a>-<a href="#Page_41">1</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-<li>Nature, life according to <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-<a href="#Page_42">2</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li>Nature, value of <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li>Necessity
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>analytic <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-<a href="#Page_34">4</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
- <li>causal or natural <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>-<a href="#Page_32">2</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>New Testament <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Object
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of cognition <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
- <li>of desire <a href="#Page_68">68</a>-<a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li>natural <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_111">11</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Objective <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-<li>Obligation
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>moral <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Obligatory <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-<li id="org"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[p. 231]</span>Organic relation, unity, whole
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>common usage <a href="#Page_30">30</a>-<a href="#Page_36">6</a></li>
- <li>my own usage <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-<a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>-<a href="#Page_33">3</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Ought
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>to aim at <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_26">6</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
- <li>to do <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- <li>to be or exist <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Pain <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-<a href="#Page_214">4</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>-<a href="#Page_223">3</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-<li>Particular <a href="#Page_3">3</a>-<a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-<li>Perception <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-<li>Pessimism <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-<li>Plato
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>on Egoism <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
- <li>on goods <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
- <li>on Hedonism <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
- <li>on value of Knowledge <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
- <li>on universal truths <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Pleasure <a href="#Page_12">12</a>-<a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>consciousness of <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-<a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
- <li>as criterion <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_92">2</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li>and desire <a href="#Page_68">68</a>-<a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_74">4</a></li>
- <li>and ‘pleasures’ <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
- <li>‘quality of’ <a href="#Page_77">77</a>-<a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-<a href="#Page_54">4</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>-<a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>-<a href="#Page_72">2</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>-<a href="#Page_75">5</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-<a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-<a href="#Page_214">14</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>-<a href="#Page_223">3</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Pity <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-<li>Positive science <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-<li>Possible action <a href="#Page_150">150</a>-<a href="#Page_151">1</a></li>
-<li>Practical <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Ethics <a href="#Page_115">115</a>-<a href="#Page_118">18</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
- <li>Philosophy <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Practice <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-<li>Praise <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li>Preference <a href="#Page_77">77</a>-<a href="#Page_79">9</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li>Promises <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-<li>Property, respect of <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-<li>Propositions, types of <a href="#Page_123">123</a>-<a href="#Page_126">6</a></li>
-<li>Prove <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>-<a href="#Page_77">7</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-<li>Prudence <a href="#Page_168">168</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>‘Maxim of’ <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-<a href="#Page_104">4</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Psychological <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Hedonism <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Punishment <a href="#Page_164">164</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>retributive or vindictive <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Reason <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-<a href="#Page_144">4</a></li>
-<li>Representative art <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-<li>Reward <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-<li>Right <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_25">5</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>dist. from ‘duty’ <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
- <li>relation to expediency <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
- <li>externally <a href="#Page_176">176</a>-<a href="#Page_177">7</a></li>
- <li>internally 179 <i>n.</i> <a href="#Footnote_23">1</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Romantic style <a href="#Page_215">215</a>-<a href="#Page_216">16</a></li>
-<li>Rousseau <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Sanctions <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-<li>Secondary qualities <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li>Self-evidence <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-<li>Self-realisation <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-<li>Self-sacrifice <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-<li>Sensation <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-<li>Sensationalist <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-<li>Sidgwick, Henry <a href="#Page_145">145</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>value of beauty <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_84">4</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_87">7</a></li>
- <li>on Bentham <a href="#Page_17">17</a>-<a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li>rationality of Egoism <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
- <li>‘good’ unanalysable <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- <li>Hedonism <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_87">7</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_96">6</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>-<a href="#Page_109">9</a></li>
- <li>‘method’ of Intuitionism <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>-<a href="#Page_94">4</a></li>
- <li>value of knowledge <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
- <li>neglects principle of organic wholes <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
- <li>pleasure as criterion <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_92">2</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_95">5</a></li>
- <li>quality of pleasure <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li>value of unconscious <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-<a href="#Page_84">4</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Sins <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-<li>Spencer, Herbert <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-<li>Spinoza <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li>Spiritual, value of <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_206">6</a></li>
-<li>Summum Bonum <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li>Stoics <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-<li>Synthetic <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Taste, error of <a href="#Page_192">192</a>-<a href="#Page_193">3</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-<li>Taylor, A. E. <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-<li>Temperance <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-<li>Theodicies <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-<li>Tragedy <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[p. 232]</span>Truth
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>relation to existence <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>-<a href="#Page_125">5</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>cognition <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>-<a href="#Page_134">4</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
- <li>knowledge <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
- </ul></li>
- <li>types of <a href="#Page_111">111</a>-<a href="#Page_112">12</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>-<a href="#Page_125">5</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_86">6</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-<a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Tyndall <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Ugly <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>-<a href="#Page_211">11</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>-<a href="#Page_219">19</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-<li>Ultimate end <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_97">7</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-<li>Unity <a href="#Page_222">222</a>
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>organic, see ‘<a href="#org">Organic</a>’</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Universal
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Good <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
- <li>truths <a href="#Page_21">21</a>-<a href="#Page_23">3</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-<a href="#Page_155">5</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Universalistic Hedonism <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-<li>Useful <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li>Utilitarianism <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_107">7</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-<li>Utopias <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Value
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>intrinsic <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-<a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>-<a href="#Page_177">7</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a href="#Page_216">16</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>-<a href="#Page_224">4</a></li>
- <li>as means <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>-<a href="#Page_196">6</a></li>
- <li>negative <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Vice <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-<li>Virtue
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>definition of <a href="#Page_171">171</a>-<a href="#Page_173">3</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
- <li>three kinds of <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
- <li>mixed <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
- <li>relation to ‘duty’ <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
- <li>value of <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>-<a href="#Page_180">80</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>-<a href="#Page_182">2</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>-<a href="#Page_219">19</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>-<a href="#Page_222">2</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Volition
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>supposed coordination with cognition <a href="#Page_129">129</a>-<a href="#Page_130">30</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_136">6</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
- <li>supposed bearing on Ethics <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Whole
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>good as a <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a href="#Page_216">16</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
- <li>good on the <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a href="#Page_216">16</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
- <li>organic, see ‘Organic’</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Wickedness <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-<li>Will
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>as criterion of value <a href="#Page_137">137</a>-<a href="#Page_138">8</a></li>
- <li>relation to duty <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- <li>the Good <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-<a href="#Page_175">5</a>, 179 <i>n.</i> <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
- <li>supposed analogy to cognition <a href="#Page_129">129</a>-<a href="#Page_130">30</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_136">6</a></li>
- <li>supposed bearing on Ethics <a href="#Page_126">126</a>-<a href="#Page_127">7</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>-<a href="#Page_131">31</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_139">9</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Wrong <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="small centra mt6">PRINTED IN ENGLAND BY J. B. PEACE, M.A.<br />
-AT THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3">
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p class="large centra mt1">FOOTNOTES</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_1"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_1">[1]</a></span> ‘The Origin of the Knowledge of Right
-and Wrong.’ By Franz Brentano. English Translation by Cecil Hague.
-Constable, 1902.&mdash;I have written a review of this book, which
-will, I hope, appear in the <i>International Journal of Ethics</i> for
-October, 1903. I may refer to this review for a fuller account of my
-reasons for disagreeing with Brentano.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_2"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_2">[2]</a></span> <i>Methods of Ethics</i>, Bk.
-<small>I</small>, Chap. iii, §&nbsp;1 (6th edition).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_3"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_3">[3]</a></span> <i>Methods of Ethics</i>, Bk.
-<small>I</small>, Chap. iv, §&nbsp;1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_4"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_4">[4]</a></span> Ἔρωτες, 436-7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_5"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_5">[5]</a></span> See <i>Esquisse d’une Morale sans
-Obligation ni Sanction</i>, par M. Guyau. 4<sup>me</sup> édition. Paris:
-F. Alcan, 1896.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_6"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_6">[6]</a></span> <i>Data of Ethics</i>, Chap.
-<small>II</small>, §&nbsp;7, <i>ad fin.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_7"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_7">[7]</a></span> The italics are mine.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_8"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_8">[8]</a></span> A. E. Taylor’s <i>Problem of Conduct</i>,
-p. 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_9"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_9">[9]</a></span> My references are to the 13th
-edition, 1897.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_10"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_10">[10]</a></span> My italics.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_11"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_11">[11]</a></span> 481 <small>C</small>-487
-<small>B</small>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_12"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_12">[12]</a></span> <i>Ethical Studies</i>, p. 232.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_13"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_13">[13]</a></span> p. 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_14"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_14">[14]</a></span> p. 55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_15"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_15">[15]</a></span> pp. 56-7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_16"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_16">[16]</a></span> p. 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_17"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_17">[17]</a></span> p. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_18"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_18">[18]</a></span> <a href="#Sec_48">§&nbsp;48</a>
-<i>sup.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_19"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_19">[19]</a></span> pp. 27-30, 36.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_20"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_20">[20]</a></span> The italics are mine.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_21"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_21">[21]</a></span> Prof. J. S. Mackenzie, <i>A Manual of
-Ethics</i>, 4th ed., p. 431. The italics are mine.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_22"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_22">[22]</a></span> <i>Prolegomena to Ethics</i>, p. 178.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_23"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_23">[23]</a></span> This sense of the term must be
-carefully distinguished from that in which the agent’s intention may be
-said to be ‘right,’ if only the results he intended would have been the
-best possible.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_24"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_24">[24]</a></span> Kant, so far as I know, never
-expressly states this view, but it is implied <i>e.g.</i> in his argument
-against Heteronomy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3">
-<div class="transnote" id="tnote">
- <p class="tnotetit">Transcriber’s note</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.</li>
- <li>Original spelling was kept, but variant spellings were made consistent when a
- predominant usage was found.</li>
- <li>Blank pages have been skipped.</li>
- <li>Footnotes have been renumbered and moved to the end of the book.</li>
- </ul>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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