Moral Judgment
One thing experience shows is that good people sometimes do bad things, and bad people sometimes do good things. For moral judgment, thats a problem. How do you decide if people are essentially good or essentially bad?
Many solve the problem by ignoring it. They dont try to make moral judgments. Does that work?
Only if you dont deal with anybody. To cooperate with people, to trade with people, to make agreements with people, or just to be friends with people, you have to be able to predict what they will do. When you decide that a partner will keep his word, or that a friend will show up as promised, you are making a moral judgment. There is no way to deal with people unless you can decide what they are likely to do.
The process is called induction discovering principles. To fix a sputtering motor, you must know its principles of operation; and to predict a mans actions, you must know his principles of operation.
Induction is done not by the number of things, but by the
nature of things. You cannot just count the bad things and the
good things people do and decide which number is bigger. You have
to find out why people do the things they do.
The best way to do this is the easiest way: ask them.
"To me, what you did looks just evil but I guess it
doesn't look that way to you, does it?"
This question will get you a full or furious
explanation of why an action was justified. The trick is to hear
it. People with subjective habits left over from childhood are so
busy trying to control the explanation that they cannot hear what
it is. To find out the nature of the explainer, you want to avoid
participating in the explanation, but simply hear what it is.
Then you can compare it to rational principles and make a
judgment.
If I do evil in spite of my principles, then it was a mistake, a
loss of nerve, a lapse. If I do evil because of my principles,
then I have bad principles. If I am willing to examine them, then
I have mistaken principles. If not, then I want bad principles,
so I am bad. But you cannot expect me to doubt my principles just
on your say-so. You must offer proof and demonstration. If I
think of you as someone who listens to what I say, then I may
complain that things keep going wrong. You'll have a chance to
point out that things go wrong when one operates on bad
principles. You'll have a chance to help me compare my principles
to rational ones, and notice the difference.
Have you ever thought it strange that communicating humans find
other communicating humans so difficult to judge? Why does all
that constant communication back and forth go for nothing?
Because of the habit of substituting will-power for reason-power.
I want you to be reasonable, so I demand that you be reasonable,
and I threaten consequences, and I generally try to impose my
will on you for your own good, of course. You rightly
resist this thrust of will. You defy me. Neither of us pays the
slightest attention to reality, which responds only to reason,
never to will.
The way to judge others is to discover their principles of
operation, and compare those principles not to your preferences,
but to the requirements of reality.