Again,upontheassumptionthat’moral’isequivalentto’felicific,’wegetageneralruleentitledtooverrideanyindividualtastesorfancies,suchasMillsupposestobemeantbythe’MoralSense。’Theruleisderivedfromtheinterestsofall,andgivesanultimate’objectivecriterion。’
J。S。Mill,describinghisfather’ssystem,observesthattheteachingofsuchamanwasnotlikelytoerron’thesideoflaxityorindulgence。’131Itcertainlydidnot。And,infact,hiscriterion,howeverobtained,hadinhiseyesthecertaintyofascientificlaw。Thisorthatisrightassurelyasthisorthatfoodiswholesome。Mytastehasnothingtodowithit。And,moreover,thecriterioncertainlygivesamoralground。IfIknowthatanyconductwillproducemorehappinessthanmiserythatisamoralreasonforadoptingit。A’moralsense’whichshouldberadicallyinconsistentwiththatcriterion,whichshouldordermetoinflictsufferingassuffering,orwithoutsomeulteriorreason,wouldbecertainlyatfault。Mackintoshindeedwouldhaveagreedtothis,though,ifMillwasright,attheexpenseofconsistency。
Mill,however,deducesfromhiscriteriondoctrineswhichinvolvearemarkableparadox。Themodeinwhichheisledtothemischaracteristicofthewholemethod。Mill,likeBentham,putsmoralityuponthesameplanewithlaw。Conductisinfluencedeitherbythe’communityinitsconjunctcapacity’——thatis,bylaw;
orby’individualsintheirindividualcapacity’——thatis,bymorality。132Thesanctionofone,wemayinfer,isforce;oftheother,approvalanddisapproval。WiththiswemusttakeanotherBenthamitedoctrine,ofwhichIhavealreadyspoken。133’Mr。Benthamdemonstrated,’saysMill,’thatthemoralityofanactdoesnotdependuponthemotive,’and,further,thatit’isaltogetherdependentontheintention。’134Uponthisheconstantlyinsists。Mackintosh’sviewthatvirtuedependsuponmotivewillbe’scornedbyeverymanwhohasanyknowledgeofthephilosophyofthehumanmind……Thevirtuedoesnotdependuponthemotive。Thereisnobadmotive。Everymotiveisthedesireofgood;totheagenthimselfortosomeoneelse。’135Hegivesananalysisofactiontoputthepointbeyonddoubt。Actionsupposesa’motive,’a’volition,’andan’externalact’ormuscularcontraction。Sofarthereisnothingmoral。
Butthenanacthasconsequences,goodorbad,tohumanbeings,whichconstituteitsutility。Tomakeitmoral,theagentmustanticipate’beneficialconsequences,’
andmusthavenoreasontoanticipateabalanceofevilconsequences。Intentionmeansthecalculationofconsequences,andwithoutthatcalculationtherecanbenomorality。136Hencethemoralityisequivalenttoa’convictionofthegeneralutility’oftheaction。137’Allthis,’
heconcludes,’issettledbyuniversalconsent。Itisvain,therefore,tothinkofdisputingit。’Onemay,however,askwhatitmeans。Ihavealreadyobservedthattheviewofthenon-moralcharacterofmotivewasanaturalcorollaryfromthepurelylegalpointofview。Imustnowconsidertheresultsofapplyingitunreservedlyintheinappropriatesphereofethics。
Inthefirstplace,thedenialofanymoralqualityinmotiveseemstobeinconsistentwithMill’sownprinciples。TheUtilitarian,accordingtohim,holdsthatthemorallawisessentiallythestatementthatcertainconductproducesgeneralhappiness。
If,then,weask,Whoisagoodman?wefirstreplythatheisamanwhoseconductproduceshappiness。Anotherconclusionisobviouslynecessary,andisimpliedinMill’sstatementthatthe’intention’isessentialtomorality。Theman,thatis,mustforeseethathisconductwillproducehappiness。The’calculation’ispreciselywhatmakesanactionmoralaswellasaccidentallyuseful。Inotherwords,themanisgoodtowhomtheknowledgethatanactwillproducehappinessisthesamethingasacommandtoperformtheact。The’intention’couldnotaffectconductwithoutthecorrespondingmotive,andMillcanattimesrecognisetheobviousconsequence。
The’physicallaw’meaningthelawenforcedbyphysicalcoercion,hesaysincidentally,has’extrinsic’sanctions;138themorallawisdifferent,becauseitsanctionsgoodactionsfortheirgoodness。’Moralapproval’mustthereforeincludeapprovalofcharacter。Aman,tobemoral,mustbeonewhodoesusefulthingssimplybecausetheyareuseful。Hemustthen,itwouldseem,beatleastbenevolent。Thesamethingisimpliedbythedoctrineof’intention’or’calculation。’Anactionmaybeusefulorthereversewithoutbeingmoralwhentheconsequencesareunknowntotheagent。Tomakeitmoralhemustknowtheconsequences——forotherwiseheismerelyactingatrandom;andtheforeseenconsequencesconstitutethe’intention。’TothisMilladdsthathemusthavetakenintoaccounttheconsequenceswhich’mighthavebeenforeseen。’139Otherwiseweshouldhavetoexcuseamanbecausehehadneglectedtocalculate,whereastocalculateistheveryessenceofvirtue。Amanwhofiredagundownacrowdedstreetwouldnotbeexcusablebecausehehadnotthoughtoftheresult。He’ought’tohavethoughtofit。Thequestionofmoralapprovalofanygivenactionturnsuponthesequestions。Didamanforeseeevilconsequencesanddisregardthem?Heisthencruel。Didheneglecttoconsiderthem?Heisthenculpablycareless,thoughnotactuallymalignant。Weretheconsequencesaltogetherbeyondthepowersofreasonablecalculation?
Thenhemaybeblameless,thewholemoralquestion,therefore,dependsuponthecharacterindicated;thatis,uponthemotiveswhichinduceamantocalculateconsequencesandwhichdeterminehisconductwhenthecalculationismade。
Thetruthis,Ithink,anditischaracteristicofMill’smodesofanalysis,thatheismakinganimpossibleabstraction。Heisseparatingpartsofasingleprocessandtreatingthemasindependent。Ifactionsarebadbecausetheyhavebadconsequences,motivesarebadbecausetheyarecausesofbadactions。Youcannotsuppresstheeffectwithoutsuppressingthecause,andthereforethecauseofthecause。Millrelieschieflyupononeargument,thesameconductwillproducethesameconsequenceswhateverthemotives。Thatisundeniable。ItisthesametomewhetherIamburntbecausethepersecutorlovesmysoulorbecausehehatesmeasarebeltohisauthority。Butwhenisconduct’thesame’?Ifweclassifyactsasthelegislatorhastoclassifythemby’external’or’objective’relations,weputtogetherthemanwhoishonestsolelyfromfearofthegallowsandthemanwhoishonestfromhatredofstealing。Solongasbothactalike,the’consequences’totheirneighboursarealike。Neitherislegallypunishable。Butifactsareclassifiedbytheirmotives,oneisarogueandtheothervirtuous;anditisonlythenthatthequestionofmoralityproperlyarises。Inthatcase,itisidletoseparatethequestionofmotiveandconsequences,becausethecharacterdeterminesthemotiveandthereforetheaction。NobodyshouldhaveseenthismoreclearlythanMillasagood’determinist。’Conductandcharacterarerelatedastheconvexandconcaveofthecurve;conductissimplythemanifestationofcharacter,andtoseparatethemisabsurd。
Whydidhenotseethis?
Forreasons,Ithink,whichillustratehiswholemethod。Fromascientificpointofview,theethicalproblemraisesthewidequestions,Whatarethemoralsentiments?and,Whatfunctionsdotheydischargeinregardtothesocietyortoitsindividualmembers?Wemightholdthatmoralityisjustifiedby’utility’inthesensethatthemoralrulesandthecharacterwhichtheyindicateareessentialtothewelfareoftheraceoritsindividualconstituents。ButtoMillthispropositionisinterpretedasidenticalwiththepropositionthatconductmustbeestimatedbyits’consequences。’
Wearetoconsidernottheactionitself,butitseffects;andtheeffectsareclearlyindependentofthemotivewhenoncetheactionhasbeendone。
Wemaythereforegetacalculusof’utility’:generalrulesstatingwhatactionswillbeusefulconsideredabstractedlyfromtheirmotives。Themethod,again,mightbeplausibleifwecouldfurtherassumethatallmenwerethesameanddifferedonlyinexternalcircumstances。ThatisthepointofviewtowhichMill,likeBentham,isalwaysmoreorlessconsciouslyinclining。Themoralandthepositivelawareequallyenforcedby’sanctions’;
bysomethingnotdependentuponthemanhimself,andwhichheisinclinedtosupposewilloperateequallyuponallmen。Suchlanguagecouldbejustifiableonlyofanaverageanduniform’man,’akindofconstantunit,whosevaryingbehaviourmustalwaysbeexplainedbydifferenceincircumstance。Wehavesufficientlyseentheresultselsewhere,andinthisethicaldoctrinetheyareespeciallymanifest。
Mackintoshrecognisedthefactthatmoralityisessentiallyafunctionofcharacter。Millcannotfullyadmitthat,becausehevirtuallyassumesallcharactertobethesame。Regardingmoralityassomethingco-ordinatewithlaw,hedoesnotperceivethattheverypossibilityoflawimpliesthemoralinstincts,whichcorrespondtotheconstitutionofcharacter,andbelongtoasphereunderlying,notonthesameplanewith,thelegislativesphere。Theyarethesourceofallorder;notthemselvestheproductoftheorder。Itisimpossibletodeducethem,therefore,fromtheorganisationwhichpresupposesthem。Now,inonedirection,Mill’stheoryleads,ashissonremarked,nottolaxitybuttoexcessivestrictness。The’criterion’islaiddownabsolutely。The’moralsense’isrejectedbecauseitmeansanautocraticfaculty,entitledtooverridethecriterionbyitsownauthority。Toappealto’motives’istoallowtheindividualtomakehisownfeelingtheultimatetestofrightandwrong。IfwefollowMillinthiswearenotreallyassumingthemoralneutralityofmotiveortheindifference,butanimpossibleprofessionofcharacter。Menarenotgovernedbyabstractprinciplesbutbytheirpassionsandaffections。Theemotions,asMackintoshrightlysaid,cannotberesolvedintothemerelogic。Utilitymaygivethetruecriterionofmorality,butitdoesnotfollowthattheperceptionofutilityisimpliedinmoralconduct。Themotivesaregoodwhichinfactproduceusefulconduct,thoughtheagentdoesnotcontemplatetheabstractprinciple。Itisimpossiblethatmenshouldbemovedsimplybyadesireforthe’greatesthappinessofthegreatestnumber。’Whatdoesandalwaysmustguidemenistheirpersonalrelationtothelittlecirclewhichtheyactuallyinfluence。Thegoodmanisthemansoconstitutedthathewillspontaneouslyfulfilhisduties。
Themorallaw,thatis,willbealsothelawofhischaracterandconduct。
Themotherisgoodbecauseshelovesherchild,notbecausesheseesthatcareofherchildisdictatedbythegeneralmaximofutility。The’utility’
ofcharactermeansthefitnessoftheagenttobeanefficientmemberofthesocialstructuretowhichhebelongs。InparticularcasesthismayleadtosuchproblemsasthatofFletcherofSaltoun。Hissenseofhonourandhisgeneralbenevolence,thoughbothuseful,mightcomeintocollision;
andthemostdifficultofallquestionsofcasuistryarisefromsuchconflictsbetweenprivateandpublicaffections。Millisjustifiedinholdingthatasenseofhonourcannotgiveanultimateandautocraticdecision。Undersomepretextorother,weshallhavetoasktheUtilitarianquestionwhetheronthewholeitmaynotbecausingmoremiserythanthevirtuousactionisworth。Butthatonlymeansthatthecharactermustbesobalancedastogivedueweighttoeachmotive;notthatwecanabstractfromcharacteraltogether,asthoughhumanbeingscouldbemerecolourlessanduniformatoms,embodyingabstractformulae。
MillisfollowingBentham,andonlybringsoutmoreclearlythepsychologicalassumptions。Aman,hesays,actsfromthe’samemotive’whetherhestealsfiveshillingsorearnsitbyaday’slabour。Themotive,inthissense,regardsonlyoneconsequence,whereasthe’intention’regardsall。The’motive,’thatis,isonlyoneofthemotivesorapartofthecharacter,andthiswayofspeakingisoneoftheawkwardresultsofturning’motives’into’things。’
TheobviousansweristhatwhichMillhimselfmakestoMackintosh。MackintoshandButler,hethinks,personifyparticular’appetites。’140itisnotreallythe’conscience’whichdecides,buttheman。Thatisquitetrue,andsimilarlyitisthewholemanwhostealsorworks,notthe’personified’
motive;anditisaccordinglyfromthewholecharacterthatwejudge。Wehavetoconsidertherelationoftheloveoffiveshillingstotheotherqualitiesofindustryandhonesty。ThesameviewappearsinMill’scharacteristicdislikeof’sentimentalism。’WishingtoattackMackintosh’srhetoricaboutthedelightofvirtuousfeeling,heforoncequotesanoveltoillustratethispoint。WhenParsonAdamsdefinedcharityasa’generousdispositiontorelievethedistressed,’PeterPounceapproved;’itis,asyousay,adisposition,anddoesnotsomuchconsistintheactasinthedispositiontodoit。’141When,therefore,Mackintoshsaysthathefindsitdifficulttoseparatethevirtuefromtheact,Millrepliesthatnothingiseasier。Thevirtueis’intheactanditsconsequences’;thefeelingamereremovableaddition。ApparentlyhewouldholdthatthegoodSamaritanandthePhariseehadthesamefeeling,thoughitpromptedonetorelievethesuffererandtheothertorelievehimselfofthesightofthesufferer。
Theyhad,ofcourse,afeelingincommon,butafeelingwhichproduceddiametricallyoppositeeffects,becauseenteringintototallydifferentcombinations。
第44章