Monday, March 25, 2019
Exploring Conscience and Motive: Man is NOT a Machine :: Philosophy Essays
Exploring Conscience and Motive Man is  non a MachineMany philosophers believe that all  human beings activeness stems from  entrust or motive or urge or  or so such thing. On this view, if men ever do the good or the right it is because in  roughly sense they desire to. Perhaps the desire to do the right is sometimes  nonhing more than the pressures of past societal or parental training, or conceivably it might stem from some sort of social instinct planted deep within us, or more likely it stems from the realization that it is in the long-term interest of the agent.  except in any case it is supposed that men do not act independently of some kind of desire. Consider the stark  mental synthesis of this view from an important  ethical theorist, Richard Brandt. . .  put through-tendencies are a multiplicative  theatrical role of valences (occurrent desires and  distastes), and hence . . . an action-tendency is  evermore zero in magnitude if there is no valence attached to the contempl   ated action itself or its expected outcome . . . no intentional action will occur without desire or aversion directed at it or its outcome, and hence no rational, ideally criticized action will take place without desire or aversion. (If some philosophers  pass water thought, as some seem to have done, that a person  suffer do his duty even if so doing is not positively valenced for him . . . ,  perhaps out of respect for duty in some sense, they were wrong and their psychology of morality  needs basic revision.)1This appears to be a purely mechanistic view of human action. Exactly the same thing as Brandt says of human action could be said of the movement of billiard balls . A billiard ball does not move unless there is a positive valence in the  anxiety of its movement.This view has a powerful appeal to the human imagination,--so much so that many philosophers find it self-evident, and find that they are unable even to  look at an alternative. Paul Henle, speaking of an approach to    ethics which seems to deny that men always act from desire, flatly declares that such an approach creates an insoluble problem of ethical motivation.2On the other hand, there is a remarkable tradition,  in the main derived from Kant, which denies that human action must always be understood as stemming from desires and motives. This tradition acknowledges of course that men are often and even  commonly motivated by desire.  
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