ABSTRACT

Scientific naturalism--basing beliefs on empirical evidence--has now triumphed in every field of inquiry except moral philosophy. There it is still thought appropriate to cite otherworldly standards known by divine revelation or moral intuition. In Grounded Ethics Max Hocutt argues that, since there is no transcendent reality on which to base the claims of ethics, normative truth must be sought in the desires of individuals and the conventions of societies.

Hocutt begins with an empiricist analysis of normative judgments. Following B.F. Skinner, he asserts that we call good what reinforces our desires, and that we call right or just what we desire to reinforce. Consequently, desire is the immediate measure of both goodness and justice. Acknowledging that goodness is relative to individual preferences, and justice is relative to social norms, Hocutt denies that goodness is a matter of personal opinion and that every society's institutions are as good as every other's. Instead, he says, the conduct of individuals and the customs of societies must ultimately be evaluated by how well they serve biologically based needs. These must be discovered empirically, because they cannot be known a priori.

In support of this analysis, Hocutt challenges rationalist belief, that normative concepts cannot be defined in empirical terms because they are rooted in divine law or ideals of pure reason. Against this view, Hocutt argues that if the moral law exists only as an ideal, it is not binding in the same sense as the empirically known laws and moralities of actual societies. He also points out that rationalist intuitions are best understood as expressions of animal instinct, socially conditioned prejudice, and personal preference. In addition, he offers extensive critiques of major philosophers, both ancient and modern, who hold contrary views.

All of this is meant to show that there is no escaping the empirical: A sensible ethics must be built on observable facts; it cannot be pulled from a vague but pious rationalist sky. Hocutt's demonstration of this thesis will interest philosophers, behavioral biologists, sociologists and ethicists.

chapter 1|20 pages

Abstract *

part I|138 pages

An Empiricist Moral Theory

chapter 2|24 pages

What One Ought to Do

chapter 3|22 pages

Reasons as Causes

chapter 4|22 pages

Why Reasons are Personal

chapter 5|22 pages

How to Make Moral Judgments

chapter 6|22 pages

The Good as Reinforcing

chapter 7|24 pages

Rules of Morality

part II|136 pages

A Critique of Rationalist Moral Theory

chapter 8|24 pages

Rationalist Moral Philosophy

An Acid Portrait

chapter 9|20 pages

Sidgwick’s Method

chapter 10|22 pages

Platonic Semantic Theory

chapter 11|22 pages

Enacting Rectitude

chapter 12|24 pages

The Myth of the Moral Law

chapter 13|22 pages

Kant on Practical Reason

part III|46 pages

Applications and Implications

chapter 14|22 pages

Must Relativists Tolerate Evil?

chapter 15|22 pages

Rights: Literal and Proleptic