Is morality something that we had to make up? Or can there an
objective basis for morality in a meaningless, purposeless, and non-moral
world, which accidentally sprang into existence and doesn’t care a whit about
us? Instead, if we make it up, isn’t morality arbitrary, make-believe, and
evolving to satisfy the tastes of society?
Instead, I’d like to suggest that, as there are the laws of
science, there are also moral laws, which emanate from the mind of their
Creator. Therefore, they are wise, benign, and objective, a virtual love letter
from our Creator.
In contrast, in his essay “Fact and Value,” objectivist Leonard Peikoff argued that there are
objective moral principles or laws (“oughts”) embedded in the physical reality the facts of this
cosmos:
- As Ayn Rand states the point in “The Objectivist Ethics”: “Knowledge, for any conscious organism, is the means of survival; to a living consciousness, every ‘is‘ implies an ‘ought.’” (http://www.peikoff.com/essays_and_articles/fact-and-value/)
According to Peikoff, every fact also contains a moral truth
or mandate. But how it is that “every ‘is‘ implies an ‘ought?’” A car can place
no demand on us that it “ought” to be driven. Nor can an apple demand that it
“ought” to be eaten. Instead, it seems that the “is” and the “ought” occupy separate,
although adjacent, realities.
Ordinarily, they do, but Peikoff unites them by introducing
his own “ought,” the overriding necessity of human self-preservation, to
connect the non-moral “is” (facts) to the moral “ought,” as the basis for
objective ethics. Consequently, Peikoff makes the fact of the sun or
antibiotics into a moral imperative:
- Every fact of reality which we discover has, directly or indirectly, an implication for man’s self-preservation [the basis for all other “oughts”] and thus for his proper course of action. In relation to the goal of staying alive, the fact [of our preservation] demands specific kinds of actions and prohibits others; i.e., it entails a definite set of evaluations. For instance, sunlight is a fact of metaphysical reality; but once its effects are discovered by man and integrated to his goals, a long series of evaluations follows: the sun is a good thing.
The fact of sunlight then becomes an objective moral good
because it is necessary for the most basic moral good – the preservation of the
human-self. However, it is important to observe that Peikoff’s Objectivism is
not ultimately based upon the facts, but upon an arbitrary and non-objective “ought”
or value – the preservation of the self. The facts are then called into service of his
“ought” – “man’s self-preservation.” Consequently, “the sun is a good thing.”
Why? Because it serves our “ought” of “self-preservation!”
But from where did this “ought” of “self-preservation” come?
Not from the facts! The facts of existence and of science are silent about
human priority or exceptionalism. They say nothing of a human value, which is
supposed to exceed the value of termites, mosquitos, bacteria, or hogs. (The
concept of value requires us to question – “Valuable to whom?” Certainly to
humans we are valuable, but this is just a subjective assessment. Instead, the
idea of ultimate value is a religious idea, which comes from God). Instead, in
order to salvage “The Objectivist Ethics,” Peikoff is forced to inject his own
subjective value of “man’s self-preservation.” (If the hog could speak, he’d
speak of “swine preservation.”) However, this makes his entire moral system subjective. All of the facts are coerced
into serving his own value of “man’s self-preservation.”
From this analysis, it seems that “Objectivists” are un-objectively
chauvinistic about the primacy of human survival and well-being. In a valueless
world, what could possibly make us more valuable than bacteria, against which
we use antibiotics, apart from our own make-believe, subjective, and evolving
values?
Many criteria, like our intelligence, creativity, and
sentience, have been offered to objectively value us above cows and mosquitoes.
However, this is nothing more than merely passing the problem elsewhere. Why
should our intelligence make us more valuable, and according to whose
assessment? And what gives our assessments an objective footing?
Besides, we cannot apply any of these standards
consistently. For example, if it is our intelligence that makes us more
valuable than swine, then none of us humans can be equal. Instead, the more
intelligent human becomes more valuable than those less intelligent and less
educated. Few of us want such a world.
Without an all-wise, just, loving, and forgiving creator God,
ethics are left in shambles. We are therefore left wondering why God is so
quickly dismissed. Perhaps we are so terrified of being judged by Him that it becomes
more comfortable to simply deny His existence.
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