Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Weltbilder

In "'What Matters to Us?' Wittgenstein's Weltbild, Rock and Sand, Men and Women," Anne-Marie Søndergaard Christensen connects the certainty that "a human baby cannot look after itself" (p. 151, quoting an example from Danièle Moyal-Sharrock) to the fact that, "if we found an abandoned baby, we would take care of it until we were sure that it was in safe hands. Moreover, we would regard it as an ethical duty to care for it in this way" (p. 152). I'll come back to this below. First, though, a little more from this part of her paper:
I know that I should try to help others in need, but I do not really know anything I could refer to in order to justify this belief; at least not anything that would be more certain . This of course does not mean that I always help others in need, but my acknowledgement of this belief shows in the fact that in cases where I do not manage to or actively refrain from doing so, I feel guilty, try to provide excuses for my negligence etc. (pp. 152-153)
Comparing this with the idea of a Weltbild (roughly, all the things we take for granted, but more importantly, certainties that are not subject to testing and confirmation, and that need to be in place for investigation of knowledge claims to occur), Christensen goes on to suggest that, "the belief that we should help others in need is not an ethical judgement (at least not in most cases), but a prerequisite for such judgements..." (p. 153).

There is a lot here, and I want to try to unpack it and think it through. Or some of it, anyway. In particular I'm thinking of connections with Aristotle and with Wittgenstein's Lecture on Ethics. This, for instance:
Now let us see what we could possibly mean by the expression, "the absolutely right road." I think it would be the road which everybody on seeing it would, with logical necessity, have to go, or be ashamed for not going. And similarly the absolute good, if it is a describable state of affairs, would be one which everybody, independent of his tastes and inclinations, would necessarily bring about or feel guilty for not bringing about.
Christensen doesn't mention necessity, and she is talking about her own knowledge that she should try to help others, not claiming that everyone shares this knowledge, but there's a striking similarity, it seems to me, between what she's saying and what Wittgenstein is talking about in his lecture. Wittgenstein says that there is no absolute good in this sense, but that's precisely because of the necessity and universality that he includes and that Christensen excludes. There is, though, a kind of necessity in Christensen's example, because it involves a certainty that is beyond, or prior to, testing or confirmation. It might not be necessarily true, but it is treated as something like that. It goes without saying (at least in most cases). And this also gives it something like a kind of universality. What goes without saying for me is likely to go for a great many other people too. I don't mean this as a matter of logic. Indeed Christensen gives the example that she is a woman, and this obviously isn't true of everyone. I think Wittgenstein gives the example that his name is Ludwig Wittgenstein, and this is very far from being universal. But part of the reason why it's certain that I have two hands is that everyone (with exceptions, of course) has two hands. Similarly, what I know is not so much that I should try to help others but that one should try to help others (ceteris paribus). So it seems to me there's a connection between Christensen's On Certainty-inspired thoughts here and the Lecture on Ethics. Unfortunately, I'm not yet sure what, if anything, to make of this connection.

The other connection that occurs to me is with Aristotle. Let's go back to the abandoned baby example. Christensen is right, I think, about what we would do if we found an abandoned baby. But not everyone would respond the same way. Some would take sadistic pleasure in neglecting it. Some would neglect it out of mere thoughtlessness. Some would take care of it because they wanted to do so (in a sort of "Hey, free baby!" spirit). Some would be self-conscious about their ethical duty to help the baby, perhaps resisting a temptation to ignore it. And then others would care for it because of course that's the (only) thing to do: a baby can't look after itself. We might think of this last attitude as the result of having internalized the norms of the self-consciously ethical person. Or we might think of it as part of what it means to understand, or to know, what a baby is. Each of these different possible reactions to the situation can be thought of as revealing a different state of the character of the person involved (vicious, incontinent, etc.). I'm not sure what to do with this idea, either.

Maybe this. Each person's (ethical) river-bed is, potentially, different. For some, it goes without saying that you care for an abandoned baby if you find one. For others, it doesn't. And people for whom it does go without saying might vary with regard to the extent to which it goes without saying. The hardness of the ethical 'must', so to speak, might vary. This would affect the way that temptations might affect someone's actions, for instance. Let's say that it goes without saying for me that I would care for any baby I found until I was sure it was in safe hands. Even so, if someone kept offering me more and more money to neglect the baby, then at some point I might start to be tempted to leave it, even if I didn't give in to the temptation. Or, if I'm better than that, I could be tempted by competing ethical demands: look after the baby or rescue that drowning cat, or three cats, or a child in a burning building, or six children in a burning building, and so on. Some people might just not leave the baby, no matter what. Others, presumably, would.          

'Abandoned baby', 'drowning cat', and '$1000 to just walk away now, no questions asked' mean different things to different (kinds of) people. In one case, thing to care for, thing to care for unless there's something more urgent, and disgusting attempted bribe. In another, wailing irrelevance, miaowing irrelevance, and offer too good to refuse. Depending on one's Weltbild, the world will contain different things. This might be one way to understand Wittgenstein's claim that the world of the happy is different from that of the unhappy. It also suggests a (very promising, unless someone's already done it) non-empirical way to think about character and its place in ethics.

7 comments:

  1. I have long thought that the section on the "absolutely right road" is the most problematic bit in the whole Lecture on Ethics. Instead of being "the road which everybody on seeing it would, with logical necessity, have to go, or be ashamed for not going", wouldn't the absolutely right road be a road on which everybody always is already, whether they like it or not?

    (For the most absolute form of necessity there is, my model here is provided by the laws of everyday physics. Newton's laws of motion, for instance, are of course not laws that we "have to follow or be ashamed for not following"; instead, not following them is a contradiction in terms.)

    With respect to the "wailing irrelevance", cf. The Two Parents by Hugh MacDiarmid:

    I love my little son, and yet when he was ill
    I could not confine myself to his bedside.
    I was impatient of his squalid little needs,
    His laboured breathing and the fretful way he cried
    And longed for my wide range of interests again,
    Whereas his mother sank without another care
    To that dread level of nothing but life itself
    And stayed day and night, till he was better, there.

    Women may pretend, yet they always dismiss
    Everything but mere being just like this.


    The reason why I could never have children myself is that I know this would happen to me too, and I don't want it to happen.

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    1. Thanks Tommi for the poem.

      About W's claim in the Lecture about the absolutely right road being "the road which everybody on seeing it would, with logical necessity, have to go, or be ashamed for not going", - Do you know if anyone has ever written about it? The only thing I'm aware of is my own: https://www.academia.edu/9730377/Moral_Thought_in_Wittgenstein_Clarity_and_Changes_of_Attitude
      Footnote 40 deals with this matter:

      “There is only logical necessity” (TLP, 6.37). Moral necessity, I’m suggesting, is that necessity seen not “from within” (ibid. 4.114), but sub specie aeterni. This may partly explain why Wittgenstein says (LE, 7) that on seeing the absolutely right road, one would have to take it “with logical necessity, or be ashamed for not going”.

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    2. After long trying to recollect where I got this train of thought, I finally remembered: my compatriot Arto Tukiainen. In his "On Wittgenstein's Claim That Ethical Value Judgments Are Nonsense" (2011), he writes:

      "Wittgenstein himself connects ethics with logic when he compares absolute goodness to an absolutely right road that everyone chooses with logical necessity after having become aware of it (1965, 7). He qualifies this by saying that if we don't choose absolute goodness, we feel guilty. One might wonder how it is possible to feel guilty for not choosing absolute goodness if choosing it happens with logical necessity." (p. 105)

      "Consider once more the locution 'absolutely right road'. Since the absoluteness of a value implies that facts do not have any relation to its existence or non-existence, this phrase would have to refer to a road on which we are regardless of where we are going." (p. 107)

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    3. Thanks Tommi!

      I need to read the paper. Do you think it contains an answer to your question? I wasn't able to see an answer in the quotations you quoted. Can you help me see it?

      I take it to be an important question: How can a moral recognition create logical necessity? And perhaps also: How can shame come as a logical necessity? - How is moral necessity logical necessity? - Would you accept (some of) those formulations as formulations of your question?

      Part of the reason I think the question is important is that it is related to a question about how W in the TLP understands the transcendental (since both ethics and logic are transcendental in the TLP).

      In any case, I need to read the paper.

      Thanks again!

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    4. For me, asking my original question above leads in the same direction as it does for Tukiainen in what immediately follows the second of my quoted passages:

      "The reason for one's incapability of imagining an absolutely right road is not the insufficiency of one's powers of imagination but the conceptual impossibility of the road in question. Similarly it makes no sense to say that someone acts rightly whatever he does, because the possibility of acting rightly implies the possibility of acting wrongly. Evaluative concepts such as rightness are essentially spatial and temporal in the sense that there is always a possibility of one's not being on the right road." (p. 107)

      So it is a reductio argument against the very idea of there being an absolutely right road. But do read the paper, it's short and quite well done.

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    5. I agree with you that it leads in this direction. I have to think about this more, but perhaps, *in some sense*, W would not have objected. Ethics (here, the very idea of absolute rightness) really does lead to nonsense.

      However, I don't think it can be that simple. This is not the only direction in which it leads. This logical point can be taken as just a denial of ethics: even as making ethics seem ridiculous. And W also says that he wouldn't do that for his life. So, assuming he wasn't just gassing, the question remains: What did W mean when he said that someone who recognized the absolutely right road would take it with logical necessity?

      I need to read the paper. But if I understand, from what you are saying, Tukiainen is offering a (at least partially) dismissive reading of the lecture. There are other dismissive readings: reading that think there isn't much to learn from W in the Lecture.

      As far as I can see, however, the only reason to think he was just gassing in the lecture is b/c *we* can't find a way to read him as saying s/t significant. But the fact that *we* can't, doesn't mean that there isn't a way to be more charitable. And after all, it is Wittgenstein we are talking about.

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  2. Thanks, Tommi and Reshef. I feel as though I should reply more substantively, but I don't have anything worth adding about the absolutely right road.

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