Morality As A Mental State

INTRODUCTION

Moral values, rules, principles, and judgements are often thought of as beliefs or as true beliefs. Those who hold them to be true beliefs also annex to them a warrant or a justification (from the “real world”). Yet, it is far more reasonable to conceive of morality (ethics) as a state of mind, a mental state. It entails belief, but not necessarily true belief, or justification. As a mental state, morality cannot admit the “world” (right and wrong, evidence, goals, or results) into its logical formal definition. The world is never part of the definition of a mental state.

Another way of looking at it, though, is that morality cannot be defined in terms of goals and results - because these goals and results ARE morality itself. Such a definition would be tautological.

There is no guarantee that we know when we are in a certain mental state. Morality is no exception.

An analysis based on the schemata and arguments proposed by Timothy Williamson follows.

Moral Mental State - A Synopsis

Morality is the mental state that comprises a series of attitudes to propositions. There are four classes of moral propositions: “It is wrong to…”, “It is right to…”, (You should) do this…”, “(You should) not do this…”. The most common moral state of mind is: one adheres to p. Adhering to p has a non-trivial analysis in the more basic terms of (a component of) believing and (a component of) knowing, to be conceptually and metaphysically analysed later. Its conceptual status is questionable because we need to decompose it to obtain the necessary and sufficient conditions for its possession (Peacocke, 1992). It may be a complex (secondary) concept.

See here for a more detailed analysis.

Adhering to proposition p is not merely believing that p and knowing that p but also that something should be so, if and only if p (moral law).

Morality is not a factive attitude. One believes p to be true - but knows p to be contingently true (dependent on epoch, place, and culture). Since knowing is a factive attitude, the truth it relates to is the contingently true nature of moral propositions.

Morality relates objects to moral propositions and it is a mental state (for every p, having a moral mental relation to p is a mental state).

Adhering to p entails believing p (involves the mental state of belief). In other words, one cannot adhere without believing. Being in a moral mental state is both necessary and sufficient for adhering to p. Since no “truth” is involved - there is no non-mental component of adhering to p.

Adhering to p is a conjunction with each of the conjuncts (believing p and knowing p) a necessary condition - and the conjunction is necessary and sufficient for adhering to p.

One doesn’t always know if one adheres to p. Many moral rules are generated “on the fly”, as a reaction to circumstances and moral dilemmas. It is possible to adhere to p falsely (and behave differently when faced with the harsh test of reality). A sceptic would say that for any moral proposition p - one is in the position to know that one doesn’t believe p. Admittedly, it is possible for a moral agent to adhere to p without being in the position to know that one adheres to p, as we illustrated above. One can also fail to adhere to p without knowing that one fails to adhere to p. As Williamson says “transparency (to be in the position to know one’s mental state) is false”. Naturally, one knows one’s mental state better than one knows other people’s. There is an observational asymmetry involved. We have non-observational (privileged) access to our mental state and observational access to other people’s mental states. Thus, we can say that we know our morality non-observationally (directly) - while we are only able to observe other people’s morality.

One believes moral propositions and knows moral propositions. Whether the belief itself is rational or not, is debatable. But the moral mental state strongly imitates rational belief (which relies on reasoning). In other words, the moral mental state masquerades as a factive attitude, though it is not. The confusion arises from the normative nature of knowing and being rational. Normative elements exist in belief attributions, too, but, for some reason, are considered “outside the realm of belief”. Belief, for instance, entails the grasping of mental content, its rational processing and manipulation, defeasible reaction to new information.

We will not go here into the distinction offered by Williamson between “believing truly” (not a mental state, according to him) and “believing”. Suffice it to say that adhering to p is a mental state, metaphysically speaking - and that “adheres to p” is a (complex or secondary) mental concept. The structure of adheres to p is such that the non-mental concepts are the content clause of the attitude ascription and, thus do not render the concept thus expressed non-mental: adheres to (right and wrong, evidence, goals, or results).

Williamson’s Mental State Operator calculus is applied.

Origin is essential when we strive to fully understand the relations between adhering that p and other moral concepts (right, wrong, justified, etc.). To be in the moral state requires the adoption of specific paths, causes, and behaviour modes. Moral justification and moral judgement are such paths.

Knowing, Believing and their Conjunction

We said above that:

“Adhering to p is a conjunction with each of the conjuncts (believing p and knowing p) a necessary condition - and the conjunction is necessary and sufficient for adhering to p.”

Williamson suggests that one believes p if and only if one has an attitude to proposition p indiscriminable from knowing p. Another idea is that to believe p is to treat p as if one knew p. Thus, knowing is central to believing though by no means does it account for the entire spectrum of belief (example: someone who chooses to believe in God even though he doesn’t know if God exists). Knowledge does determine what is and is not appropriate to believe, though (”standard of appropriateness”). Evidence helps justify belief.

But knowing as a mental state is possible without having a concept of knowing. One can treat propositions in the same way one treats propositions that one knows - even if one lacks concept of knowing. It is possible (and practical) to rely on a proposition as a premise if one has a factive propositional attitude to it. In other words, to treat the proposition as though it is known and then to believe in it.

As Williamson says, “believing is a kind of a botched knowing”. Knowledge is the aim of belief, its goal.

About The Author

Sam Vaknin is the author of “Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited” and the editor of mental health categories in The Open Directory, Suite101, and searcheurope.com.

His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com

Frequently asked questions regarding narcissism: http://samvak.tripod.com/faq1.html

Narcissistic Personality Disorder on Suite101: http://www.suite101.com/welcome.cfm/npd

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Negative vs Positive The Ever-existing Battle In Your Mind

WE ARE ALL THINKING ALL OF THE TIME.

Can you believe that our thoughts never leave us.

Wow!

Silly thoughts, hungry thoughts, angry thoughts, melancholy thoughts, happy thoughts; that’s a bunch of emotions that has a significant impact on our lives. Physically, emotionally, it’s all there.

Every thought is connected to our body to create a response. Example: imagine a hot summer day. There is absolutely no breeze. You are sitting on a rock in the middle of your yard. Smell the earth, the heat. HEAR the crickets doing their thing. The sun is hot on your body. In your hand, you have an ice cold drink. You are thirsty. Put the glass to your lips. Drink. AHHHHHH. Wasn’t that nice? Were you there with me?

Thoughts influence our emotions. Try this other exercise. Think of something that makes you happy. Anything. Now think of something that you hate doing and that makes you feel miserable. Okay. Back to something that makes you smile. See. Thoughts rule our emotions instantly. Change your thoughts to happy thoughts and your emotions will change.

Well then, where do negative thoughts come into play? If you start telling yourself several times a day that you are an idiot, incompetent person what do you think you will act like? YOU WILL ACT LIKE an idiotic, incompetent person. It’s powerful stuff.

Positive thinking produce positive results likewise negative thoughts will have a negative impact on your life.

WHICH one do you choose?

Lynne D.
Team of Motivational Central
www.motivationalcentral.com

A mind stretched to a new idea, never goes back to its
original dimensions. - Oliver Wendell Holmes

Yesterday is not ours to recover,
but tomorrow is ours to win or lose. - Lyndon B. Johnson

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Unleash the Powers of Your Mind and Attain Your Heart’s Desires.

Before we begin, let me first ask you a simple question.
Don’t worry. This won’t bend your mind nor twist your brain.
It’s a no-brainer, actually. Ok, here goes: What do Superman,
Spiderman, Batman and the Incredible Hulk have in common?

See, it’s easy, right? Yes, they all have supernatural powers
- special abilities that make them supreme, invincible and
indestructible, and which cause them to be recognized as
superheroes. They use these special powers to do good things
to people and defeat evil entities.

But, unfortunately, they are not real. They are only works
of man’s creative imagination. They don’t exist in the real
world.

Now, let us try to add another one in the list; this time,
a real person, say you, me, your teacher, next-door neighbor,
or simply anyone who exists in this world. The list would now
be like this: Superman, Spiderman, Batman, the Incredible
Hulk, and you.

Again, same question: What could be the common factor among
those in the list? Remember, it includes you now. So before
answering, you might ask another question first. Is there
really something we all possess?

Indeed, there is.

Even changing the last entry to me, your teacher, next-door
neighbor, or whoever real person you may think of, still
there will always be something common between a superhero
and a real person like you and me, and that is power.

As real people in the real world, we can never possess any
of these supernatural physical powers. What we have is the
power to mold our personality, to shape our future, to
create our destiny, and to determine who and what we are -
a power greater than any other supernatural powers, a power
that builds reality and not mere imagination, a power which
everyone possesses and can make him a hero in his own ways.
This is the power of the mind.

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