Tag: essay

Draft Essay: Filial Obligations — Revisiting the Friendship Theory

Most of us agree that we have some special duties to our parents, and these duties seem weightier than what we owe to our friends. We might have a duty to pay our parent’s medical bills, but we do not have the same duty to pay our friend’s medical bills; such a friend would be acting from generosity and supererogation, or beyond the call of duty. But why do we owe these things to our parents? You might say that you owe it to them because they sacrificed just as much in raising you, or you might point to the special relationship you have with you parents. Following this intuition, there have been three main suggested theories of filial duty: the Debt Theory, the Gratitude Theory, and the Friendship Theory. Recently, Simon Keller (2006) proposed a Special Goods Theory, stating that our filial duties arise from parents and children being able to provide “special goods” to one another – that is, goods which can be provided only by child or parent. Brynn Welch (2012) identified some counterintuitive cases in Keller’s theory, and added some amendments which resulted in the Gratitude for Special Goods Theory.

However, both of these “special goods” theories, along with their predecessors, have the issue of being too stringent. On these views, filial duties are “weighty,” they demand much, and interfere with our plans and projects; in other words, these theories suggest that they “override almost everything else” (Welch, 726). This issue requires a closer look into the nature of these filial duties, which consequently requires a closer look at their structure and motivation. Diane Jeske (2001) offers a unique perspective of how the reasons behind intimate relationships can be “objective” and “agent-relative” by using an analogy to one’s relation to one’s future self. This paper will use Jeske’s concepts to supplement the Friendship Theory with the “weightiness” of filial duties. On this new model of the Friendship Theory, filial duties are analogous to duties of friendship, and therefore less weighty; however, the intuition that filial duties ought to be more stringent are captured by reducing them to projects (I call this the “familial project”). Although projects are within the domain of permission and supererogation,[1] the intuition that filial duties ought to be more stringent is not undercut if, following Jeske, we see this “familial project” as  “objective” and “agent-relative,” which are “weightier” than other projects. This model captures our normative intuition of filial duties within the Friendship Theory, making this theory tenable and comprehensive.

Debt Theory, Gratitude Theory, and Friendship Theory

Before looking at the Special Goods theory and the Gratitude for Special Goods theory, I will quickly gloss over the other competing theories prominent in the literature. My exposition of these other theories is only aimed at providing context for the contemporary “special goods” theories.  Starting with the Debt Theory, it claims that parent-child relation is analogous[2] to the creditor-debtor relation. Parents provide various resources, like financial support, time or effort to rearing a child. The debt theory says that all of these goods provided by a parent are on credit, and that the child is in debt to the parent which they must repay. In essence, filial duties are the child’s duties to pay their debts back to their parents.

Filial duties, however, seem to be different from a duty to repay a debt in several ways. First, filial duties do not look like they can be “discharged, once and for all.” (Keller, 256) Imagine if a parent’s services were reduced to a monetary amount, say, one-million-dollars; it seems wrong to think that a child can pay one-million-dollars to this parent and be released from any subsequent familial duties. Second, filial duties do not have the same proportionality concerns as duties of debt might have. That is, “you may have been a healthy and angelic child, undemanding and a delight to nurture,” (Keller, 256) but that does not mean you have weaker filial duties, whereas on the Debt Theory you might have a smaller debt.[3] Third, filial duties are sensitive to the relationship itself. The parent-child relationship can be affected by some irreconcilable differences, and this can leave the child with fewer filial duties, whereas duties of debt would be insensitive to these changes in the relationship. By and large, duties of debt do not seem to be adequately analogous to filial duties.  

The Gratitude Theory claims that “to fulfill your filial duties is to perform appropriate acts of gratitude in response to the good things your parents have done for you” (Keller, 257). The Gratitude Theory meets the proportionality concerns of the debt theory because gratitude is less strict about proportionality. If somebody saved your life, duties of gratitude do not demand you to be their personal servant or take a bullet for them.  The duty of gratitude might be satisfied by something as small as a nice dinner or at least something proportionally smaller than the price of one’s life. The gratitude theory seems much more plausible than the debt theory so far.

The criticism with the gratitude theory is that it, too, fails to capture our intuitions of filial duties. First, there is a similar proportionality concern with the gratitude theory. Gratitude might be lax in its demands to reciprocate proportionally, but it still asks to give gratitude in some proportional manner. Again, if filial duties were analogous to duties of gratitude, they would demand less if you were “undemanding and a delight to nurture,” and demand more if you were a little hell-raiser. This seems counterintuitive to notions of filial duties because filial duties are thought to be indifferent to these proportionality concerns. Second, filial duties are “ongoing and open-ended, and can be very demanding,” (Keller, 260) whereas duties of gratitude are not. The general thought here is that gratitude fails to capture the weight of the demands of familial duties. If a parent fell deathly ill, filial duties might demand that the child invest significant amounts of time and money for their parents, even more than what is demanded by the duties of gratitude. In contrasts, duties of gratitude might be discharged with a card, a bottle of wine, or whatever, and one might be subsequently released from the duty; however, filial duties seem to go on for a lifetime, and cannot be discharged and released. Again, duties of gratitude are not analogous to filial duties.

The Friendship Theory claims that filial duties are analogous to duties of friendship. Friendships are aimed at sustaining an ongoing relationship rather than meeting duties of debt or gratitude. This view meets the proportionality concerns because friendships do not require strict reciprocity. It would be odd to think that friends keep a record of every benefit bestowed on one another; in fact, this would be the sign of a bad friendship. Friendships rather have the general positive duty to care for the well-being of one another. By and large, Friendship Theory is more tenable than the Gratitude Theory and the Debt Theory.

The Friendship Theory seems like the most plausible account of filial duties. But again, there are reasons to think that the analogy fails. Like families, friendships can have fallouts and disagreements which change their respective duties. However, families are more demanding in that reasons which affect friendship duties do not apply with familial duties. For instance, paying the medical bills of a parent appears to be a duty whereas paying the medical bill of a friend appears not to be a duty. Friendship duties are less demanding and do not seem to be completely analogous to filial duties.

Special Goods Theory and the Gratitude for Special Goods Theory

Keller’s Special Goods theory does away with analogies altogether. According to Keller, filial duties should be understood on “its own distinctive terms” (Keller, 265). The other theories fail because the family relationship is a different kind of relationship than the friendship or debtor-creditor relation. The family relationship is unique and gives rise to its own sui generis duties. The idea here is there are unique (“special”) goods and needs which can only be provided and satisfied by reciprocity between parent and child. This is not to be confused with generic goods, like your mother cooking you dinner or helping your mother move furniture. A special good, for instance, can be a parent’s “sense of continuity and transcendence, a feeling that they will, in some respect, persist beyond their own deaths” (Keller, 267).[4] Another is a child’s “special value in having a parent from whom to seek advice” (Keller, 267). A less starry-eyed example is the comfort of having someone who is “committed to ensuring that your needs and interests will be met.” (Keller, 267) A child then has filial duties because the parent-child relationship bestows special goods to them and they have duties within that relationship to bestow special goods to their parents.

It looks like this theory does better than its alternatives. It can explain why filial duties are “ongoing and open-ended” because parents will have special needs as long as they are alive. It explains the proportionality concern by making it irrelevant; that is, as long as the conditions of a good (on the “special goods” picture) family are met, the aim becomes providing special goods without tally, like the Friendship Theory. It can also explain the demands of filial duties and why they cannot be easily escaped. If the aim of filial duties is to provide special goods, then it does not matter how great the special needs are; moreover, terminating the relationship does not change the duties arising from these special needs.

However, Welch raises problematic cases for the Special Goods theory. An “elderly woman suffering from dementia requires medical care, and she has a wealthy daughter who can provide such care for her” (Welch, 728). According to the Special Goods theory, the daughter has no duty to care for the mother since the mother cannot reciprocate the contributions of special goods with the daughter.  Welch’s complaint is that Keller’s view “cannot offer a reasonable, theoretical limit to filial obligations” (Welch, 728). Another problem case, “the Abandonment Case,” (Welch, 727) is of a mother who selfishly abandons her daughter and is reunited to now provide her daughter with special goods. Here, the daughter seems to have filial duties to this negligent mother. It seems counterintuitive to say that the daughter owes less in the first case than the second.

Welch offers an alternative hybrid theory to settle these issues with the Special Goods Theory: the Gratitude for Special Goods Theory. This theory stipulates the value of providing special goods in the past, and further adds the following new condition to the Special Goods theory: “expressing gratitude by meeting the parent’s needs would not undermine the mutual respect on which moral relationships are based” (Welch, 730). Applied to the Abandonment Case, it releases the daughter from her duties to the mother because an expression of gratitude would violate the new clause.

A criticism Welch must deal with is that filial duties are too weighty and demand too much from us. Filial duties may ask us to devote unreasonable amounts of effort to our parents. A move to deal with this problem is to argue that excessive self-sacrifice is a failure of self-respect. Perhaps we want to say that some “serious”[5] projects take priority over filial duties. Keller writes that “the child’s duties to provide special goods to the parent should not be such as seriously to impede the child’s ability to live a good life” (Keller, 269). But little argument is provided for this, and we can think of problem cases, for instance, where a child makes various serious projects to escape filial duties. Where does this leave the force of filial duties? Surely some serious projects ought to be put aside for filial duties, but which ones? It seems there is some worry to one’s autonomy if we purport that the push of filial duties override all other endeavors. The rest of this paper will explore this issue.

“Familial Project” Theory

It seems counterintuitive to say that all instances of serious projects are precluded by filial duties to provide special goods, as “special goods” theories suggest. Perhaps familial duties really should override everything else, and it might be an entirely western view which places undue importance on individualism. This seems farfetched, as autonomy is generally very important to us. Or perhaps one might want to endorse some perfectionist account of the value of being a virtuous person outweighing the value of personal projects – this, however, seems equally unconvincing. On the other hand, to allow serious projects to take priority over filial duties may be a serious precedence to set, and may undercut the force of filial duties. This is an issue from the Friendship Theory, namely, that it fails to reflect the robust nature of familial duties. Friendships can change, grow apart and the duties of friendship correspondingly fade, but filial duties are not like that – filial duties appear to be more robust in the sense that they more resilient to change and have stronger demands.

The Friendship Theory may not match our intuition of filial duties, but perhaps it is too early to jettison this theory altogether. There is a worry that familial duties are not acquired voluntarily. Nobody chooses to be in a family yet everybody has filial duties thrust upon them, and these filial duties can affect choices, plans, and projects, and (ipso facto) impede autonomy. Duties of friendship, on the other hand, seem to be voluntarily taken when one voluntarily enters into the relationship. This might be further motivation for taking the Friendship Theory, but we need an explanation of its counterintuitive results if it is to be a comprehensive theory. Before sketching this new Friendship Theory, we must first explicate some concepts offered by Jeske.

Jeske analyzes the reasons for entering and maintaining friendships, and recognizes two sets of distinctions: “subjective” and “objective,” and “agent-relative” and “agent-neutral.” First, subjective reasons are reasons for an agent to desire (or to bring about) a state of affairs, whereas objective reasons are agent neutral. (Jeske, 330) Subjective reasons are thought of as “agent-relative,” meaning one’s reasons (per se) for promoting a state of affairs are not reasons for anybody else. My liking for a particular chair, for instance, might be subjective agent-relative because my reason for liking it are not reasons for you to like it. In contrast, objective reasons are thought of as “agent-neutral,” meaning they are reasons for everyone; to go back to the illustration, perhaps there is a chair with universally appealing features, like perfect lumbar support. Jeske suggests that the reasons for friendships are unique because they are “objective” and “agent-relative.”

What does it mean for a reason to be objective and agent-relative? Jeske uses a parallel case to illustrate. She relates the relationship one has to one’s future self as a case of objective agent-relative reasons. Private projects have reference to a particular agent, and one’s self in the distant future will have private projects that differ from one’s present self. One’s present projects are subjective agent-relative, but it would not be appropriate to call the projects of one’s future self “subjective,” because subjectivity is defined by current values. (Jeske, 342) Reasons one has to one’s future self are objective agent-relative reasons, and can be analogous to reasons of intimacy. Taking into account the subjective agent-relative reasons of a friend in one’s deliberative process is to treat them as objective because they belong to your friend and not yourself. As it follows, reasons can be both objective and agent relative.

Jeske’s picture offers a richer foundation to reply to the criticism of the Friendship Theory. My view is not committed to Jeske’s overall view of friendships and duties; rather I borrow her distinctions, particularly objective agent-relativity. To reiterate the issue at hand, the main objection to the friendship theory is that it does not match our intuitions of filial duties. Filial duties seem more stringent than duties of friendship; again, duties of friendship can be released on laxer grounds than filial duties, and duties of friendship seem to be less demanding. Let us begin by distilling our notions of filial duties from our duties of friendship, demarcating the duties of friendship from the(sui generis) filial duties. Let us further generalize duties of friendship to something along the lines of “to care for each other’s well-being,” and call everything else (the weightiness, the robustness, the stringency, etc.) “mere familial duties.” My suggestion is that “mere familial duties” are to be understood as an objective agent-relative “familial project,” although projects are commonly understood to be subject and agent-relative. This of course makes filial duties not duties at all; rather, they are within the realm of permissions. This leaves only the duties of friendship to be duties proper, meaning they are objective and agent-neutral. Let us take a closer look at this view.

To begin, it may be helpful to clarify the features of a “project.” Projects have a feature of intentionality, meaning there is some goal or aim which generates actions; moreover, this goal can be open-ended and subject to change. For instance, a private project of mine could be to become a better philosopher, and this leads me to read more philosophy. There is no “end” to becoming a better philosopher, and it is entirely possible for me to change this goal to becoming a better philosopher of religion. Goals or aims direct action in prudential ways, and can generate pro tanto rules or constraints. If my aim was to train to win a marathon, it might generate rules which are prudent to follow, such as running ten miles every day; however, perhaps if I only have time to run five miles today, I would feel disappointment or compunction. Projects can also be shared among people – for example, when a community comes together to raise money for a cause. Again, failure of prudential actions is met with a feeling of guilt, not in moral failure but a failure to bring about better results.

The familial project is a project of shared narrative. The aim is to preserve the family unit and foster its continuation. Let me explain this without appealing to neo-Darwinian principles or some collectivistic normative theory.[6] I think this is where the Special Goods Theory can help. “Special” goods, previously distinguished from “generic” goods, are particular to family members having special needs. There is a mutual understanding that special needs can only be satisfied within the family unit. With this mutual understanding, a common project is formed to meet these needs through the shared project. With this project, there are prudential rules to follow, and these are the “mere familial duties” which are conflated with duties of friendship. Due to the diversity of special needs, the family unit must be sustained and preserved. One might begin with a special need of a parent with wisdom and knowledge, then a special need to be taken care of, and a further special need to have some continuity after death through children or grandchildren.

The familial project is properly understood as objective and agent-relative, and not subjective and agent-relative. The shared project is agent-relative in that it only applies to the particular members of a family, yet it is objective because the familial project is not a project contrived by me. There is an element of externality to the familial project because I am merely a subscriber to the project and not the provider. Private projects are subjective because they are built around what I value. There is a sense in which I similarly value the familial project, but this seems incidental because other private projects often conflict with the familial project.[7]

When projects conflict, we assess the motivation for subscribing to projects and see how important they are to us. This weighing of the options and subscribing to projects is within the realm of permissions and has no (ceteris paribus) moral bearing. Again, thinking of a daughter who chooses to travel the world rather than help with her mother’s medical bills, it seems the daughter is callous and doing something wrong. But one must keep in mind that weighing the options is difficult; there is still a realm of regret, doubt, and compunction. On this view, she has no strict duty to choose the option of helping her sick mother, and her choosing to do so would be beyond the call of duty. This might be a novel case since the daughter’s private project of travelling the world seems obviously outweighed by her familial project, but more serious cases may shed light on the importance of having the freedom to choose between projects.

The motivation for taking this view is that on the “special goods” theories filial duties seem stringent enough to violate one’s autonomy. Familial duties can preclude other projects that are genuinely important to us and living a good life. Arguments from self-respect, which say that being concerned only about meeting familial needs violates respect to oneself, leave room for problem cases where self-respect is not violated but familial duties ask us to sacrifice important projects. This is the motivation for casting off familial duties and reframing them as mere projects. Weighing projects leaves room for autonomy. The familial project is also important to add to the picture because the friendship theory seems too lax. Duties of friendship alone are often not enough to motivate certain actions.

It is possible to make a further ambitious claim that is not an essential piece of my argument, but might suggest another motivation for taking this view. Jeske suggests at the end of her paper that “a mark of moral reasons” (Jeske, 345) is the fact that they are objective rather than subjective. Since on this view, the familial project is objective, it may suggest that they have a quasi-ethical role in affecting our actions. This might sound like a case of “having your cake and eating it too,” as this might fall into the pitfalls of the other theories of filial duties and violate autonomy; however, we still have the choice of subscribing to the familial project, whereas we would not have the choice to take on filial duties on the other theories. In any case, this is just a complementary motivation for my argument, and its only use would be to give more weight to familial projects when they conflict with private projects.

Theories preceding the “special goods” theories have been counterintuitive to our notions of filial duties in one way or another. The “special goods” theories, however, have the issue of being too weighty and plausibly restricting autonomy. The Friendship Theory’s fault was that it was not stringent enough, but we can build a model which contains the intuitions of mere familial duties within the familial project. My suggested theory amounts to a return to the Friendship Theory and while explaining away the counterintuitive aspects. This is more than just a descriptive account of how to settle the autonomy worry. It makes the stronger claim that other theories of filial duties are mistaken in their normative grounding. Filial duties proper are analogous to the mere duties of friendship.

Sources

Jeske, Diane. (2001) “Friendship and Reasons of Intimacy.” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 63, No. 2, 329-346.

Keller, Simon. (2006) “Four Theories of Filial Duty.” The Philosophy Quarterly, Vol. 56, No. 223, 254-274.

Welch, Brynn F. (2012) “A Theory of Filial Obligations.” Social Theory and Practice, Vol 38, No. 4, 717-737.


[1] This claim might be contentious to some, but nothing of importance hinges on my narrow use of “projects.” 

[2] By “analogous,” I mean that they give rise to the same duties; I do not mean that they are the same type or kind of relationship.

[3] In response to the proportionality concern, some have tried to propose an “insurance theory,” which says that investments from the parent can yield duties indifferent to the proportionality of good bestowed by the parent. This theory fails for the same reasons: filial duties are not analogous to exchanging goods and services.

[4] The idea here is that parents (qua existential beings) gain some solace in their legacy through their child. Keller is not completely clear on the “specialness” of special goods, but there seem to be plausible examples of goods only attained by the relationship between children and parents (or vice versa). (Although, in principle, “special goods” relations can be instantiated in friendships and romantic relationships.

[5] “Serious” interests are not “basic” enough to impede on a good life, but not trivial (“peripheral”) enough that it is obviously outweighed by duty.

[6] I do not want to be committed to some innate need to protect the family unit or some culturally relative zealous value of the family unit.

[7] The ontology of the familial project is not a concern here.

Draft Essay: A Challenge to the Proper Basicality of Theism

Alvin Plantinga purports a “reformed epistemology” in his paper Is Belief in God Properly Basic? He says the modern foundationalist’s formulation of the criterion for proper basicality (viz. self-evident, incorrigible, or evident to the senses) fails because it is “self-referentially incoherent.” He then says that one does not need a criterion for proper basicality to rationally or justifiably believe that something is properly basic. This is met with two objections: groundlessness or gratuitousness, and arbitrariness. Plantinga answers these objections by saying that rather than appealing to a criterion, we can use an inductive approach of using a relevant set of examples. He then applies all this to theistic belief. I argue that this approach cannot be applied to theism because one cannot arrive at a rational relevant set of examples. More specifically, Platinga’s principle of “relevance” fails to account for contradictory examples, which consequently makes belief in God arbitrary.

Plantinga begins by contextualizing his thesis. He says that those who object to theism and those who affirm theism both do so on the basis of evidence. This evidentialist approach is based upon classical foundationalism, which says some propositions are properly basic, while others are based on evidence tracing back to propositions that are properly basic. Properly basic beliefs are beliefs which are not based on another belief; conversely, beliefs that are not properly basic are accepted on the basis of evidence. Evidentialists think theists violate normative standards of rationality by believing in the existence of God without sufficient evidence. If a belief is irrational – that is, not based on evidence – then it should be rejected. Moreover, evidentialists minimally think that God is not a properly basic belief. Plantinga argues the contrary, namely, he argues that belief God is properly basic.

Plantinga also rejects the modern foundationalist approach[1]. He tells us that the modern foundationalist’s criterion for proper basicality is “self-referentially incoherent.” Their criterion is as such: “For any proposition A and person S, A is properly basic for S if and only if A is incorrigible for S or self-evident to S.” In essence, Plantinga says that the criterion itself fails to meet its own criterion.

In refining his views, Plantinga deals with two objections to the claim that belief in God is properly basic: groundlessness (or gratuitousness), and arbitrariness. First, basic beliefs are not groundless because there is some “circumstance or condition that confers justification.” For instance, for perceptual judgements, there are conditions that justify taking a judgement as basic – for example, in seeing a tree, the condition would include the characteristics of that tree being “appeared to” in a certain fashion. It has a “characteristic sort of experience” which acts as a “grounds” for justification.  Similarly, we may have the same grounds, the same justifying conditions for belief in God – to name a few, “guilt, gratitude, danger, a sense of God’s presense, a sense that he speaks, perception of various parts of the universe.” These do not amount to the belief in God’s existence, but merely belief in propositions such as, “God is speaking to me,” or, “God forgives me,” which ipso facto entail God’s existence.

The next objection Plantinga deals with is arbitrariness. The objection is as follows: because the reformed epistemologist rejects the criteria for proper basicality, she is committed to supposing anything can be properly basic. Plantinga argues that it is possible to eliminate arbitrary and meaningless basic beliefs without a criterion. Consider, again, the basic belief from the perceptual judgement, “I see a tree”.  There must be a way to eliminate, without a criterion, the prima facie basic belief: “I am hallucinating that I am seeing a tree.”

For Plantinga, the proper way to arrive at a criterion for proper basicality, that is not self-referentially incoherent, is by induction; or in other word, it must be “argued to and tested by a relevant set of examples.” For instance, perhaps we have the “grounds” for justifying the preceding events as properly basic: “I remember waking up this morning,” “I remember walking to the park,” and “the park ranger is telling me to watch out for trees.” These examples can give us a framework for properly basicality which we may use to inductively infer the proper basicality of the proposition, “I see a tree,” and dismiss the proposition, “I am hallucinating that I am seeing a tree.” Reformed thinkers, Plantings says, can hold that “certain propositions are not properly basic in certain conditions.” He adds that not “everyone will agree on the examples.” In the case of theistic belief, the “Christian community is responsible to its set of examples.” Granted, the theist would need to discern the “neighbourhood” of conditions which justify and ground belief in God, and demarcate such beliefs from irrational beliefs (like the existence of the Great Pumpkin).

Plantinga suggests that the relevant set of examples to justify a properly basic belief in God is derived from a Calvinistic sensus divinitatis. This is a “sense of divinity” which is akin to perception in that it is a faculty that can sense the divine; specifically, “God has implanted us to see his hand in the world around us.” As such, the “grounds,” or conditions for justifying the proposition “God is hearing my prayers” is the sensus divinitatis. In effect, we can gather similar instances to give us an inductive framework for properly basicality, and we can subsequently apply this framework to eliminate irrational propositions, like “there exists a Great Pumpkin.” Plantinga admits that one may object to the notion of an ingrained sensus divinitatis; yet, this irrelevant because what is in question is how rational the theist is in her belief in God, and she would readily attest to the notion of sensus divinitatis. In other words, the set of relevant examples regarding the “grounds” for justification may differ between the theist and the atheist, but they are both rational in their respective beliefs so long as they have proper “grounds.”

However, the issue is that propositions like “God is hearing my prayers” cannot be distinguished from the proposition “I merely have the feeling that God hears my prayers.” They entail two contradictory propositions: “God exists,” and, minimally, “I do not know if God exists.” Even if one accepts the sensus divinitatis as a “grounds” for justification, one cannot determine which proposition is more salient since all of the relevant sets of examples have the same issue. For whatever example is used – whether it is a sense of forgiveness or a sense of guilt – a contradictory example can be thought of which stipulates that one has the mere feeling of the sensus divinitatis. As such, it is not possible to come up with an inductive framework for proper basicality with satisfactory examples to eliminate irrational propositions, like “there exists a Great Pumpkin,” as not properly basic.

I have attempted to give an adequate account of Plantinga’s views. For the most part, I did not attack Plantinga’s general method; rather, I challenged Plantinga’s application of the sensus divinitatis to his inductive approach. To be charitable, perhaps the sensus divinitatis can somehow distinguish between the two contradictory propositions. But this seems highly ad hoc. Anywhere the sensus divinitatis goes wrong, it can be attributed to human fallibility. This may be a satisfactory explanation for the theist who has a first-hand account of the sensus divinitatis, just as it may be sensible for somebody with clairvoyant powers to maintain that information from their clairvoyant faculty is properly basic – of course, there is a way to verify the accuracy of one’s clairvoyant powers, and no way to verify one’s sensus divinitatis. In any case, somebody without direct access to such faculties would rightly question its warrant as rational grounds for belief.

Source

Plantinga, Alvin. “Is Belief in God Properly Basic?” (1981) Nous 15: 41-52


[1] Modern foundationalism is a subset of classical foundationalism – the other, according to Plantinga, being “ancient and medieval foundationalism.”

Draft Essay: Self-Defense and Agent-Relative Permission

Judith Jarvis Thomson paper, “Self-Defense,” offers a general criterion for when it is permissible to kill in self-defense. She argues that somebody who violates “your rights that they not kill you, therefore lack rights that you not kill them.” (302) She further offers three types of cases where killing in self-defense is impermissible – the common factor being the innocent bystander. These impermissibility cases preclude agent-relative permissions, which, this paper argues, is done on faulty grounds. Thomson’s model cannot overlook the explanatory power of agent-relative permissions, and her explanation does not give a satisfactory reason to jettison the idea.

Thomson finds three cases where one is permitted to kill in self-defense; notably, they all involve an offender’s violation to one’s right to life. First, there is the case of the villainous aggressor (283) – for instance, somebody who would like to kill you by running you over with a truck. Second, there is the case of the innocent aggressor (284) – here, some drug made an innocent person go mad to the point of running you over with a truck. Finally, there is the case of an innocent threat (287) – the illustration here is a villain rolling a fat man, who will crush you upon impact, down a hill. All these cases threaten our right to life, but there are some stipulations noted by Thomson.

Thomson refines her view further in a number of ways. First, self-defense also captures cases of “grave bodily harm” (286). In such cases, the action taken may only be minimal – for instance, a punch on the shoulder would not merit killing the attacker. However, action do not have to be strictly proportionate; in other words, I am permitted use more force than is threatened against me, say, in cases of rape or grievous bodily harm. (286) Second, there is an asymmetry with violent aggressor cases in that violent aggressors relinquish their self-defense rights with respect to their victim; in other words, violent aggressors may not reciprocate their victims defensive action. Third, a third party may intervene on behalf of the victim but not on behalf of the aggressor or threat. There is something different about villainous aggressor cases verses the innocent aggressor cases and the innocent threat cases[1], but the status of the aggressor (i.e. the fault) does no “moral work” (286). Rather, it is in virtue of the fact that there is a threat to the right to life that self-defense is permitted.

She then outlines three cases where it is “impermissible for you to kill a person in defense of your life.” (289) First, the “Substitution-of-a-Bystander cases” (289) are situations where an innocent bystander is put in harm’s way in place of you. Second, the “Use-of-a-Bystander cases” (290), similar to Kant’s second maxim, are situations where an innocent bystander is used harmfully for the price of your safety. Third, the “Riding-Roughshod-over-a-Bystander cases” (290) are situations where the harm of an innocent bystander has a close causal connection with your safety. She is strict insofar as the impermissibility of killing in these cases and further rejects “agent-relative permissions.” (307)

The general thought of agent-relative permission is that subjects are permitted to care more about their own good over the good of others. Accordingly, if I were to care more about my life than some bystander’s life, then I am permitted to kill an innocent bystander in each of Thomson’s three cases. Agent-relative permission seems more convincing and intuitive when combined with self-referential altruism[2]. If we could sacrifice the life of an innocent person to save our child, surely we would and think it permissible to do so. Thomson pushes back on the general claim by arguing that we lack an “across-the-board agent-relative permission,” (307) which she supports with the scenario of choosing either starving to death or eating a baby (agent-relative permissions would permit us to eat the baby). The idea is that agent-relative permissions permit too much. Maybe agent-relative permissions work with talk of trolleys and killing faceless bystanders, but it might be committed to too much if it permits cannibalism and infanticide.

However, our moral intuitions can be clouded by biases, and it might be the case that agent-relative permission accurately reflects our moral intuitions but is met with cases which appeal to our bias nature. For a moment, let us grant that agent-relative permission allows us to kill an innocent bystander to save ourselves. If this is true, should the method of death matter to us? How about the characteristics of the bystander? Perhaps a slow, painful death of the bystander puts more pain and evil in the world; perhaps if the bystander was the Archbishop of Cambrai, agent-relative permission may not be enough save us[3]. With respect to eating babies so we do not starve to death, I do not any inherent reason to object to cannibalism in a life or death scenario; however, one might object to infanticide in virtue of some maximizing principle insofar as picking the younger life over the older life. Indeed, if one were committed to this type of consequentialism, agent-relative permission would not permit us to eat the baby to save ourselves. Yet, one does not have to be committed to valuing babies over anybody else, or find infanticide inherently more wrong than any other killing. So Thomson’s argument against agent-relative permissions seems to be an emotional appeal.

Perhaps Thomson was instead appealing to our basic intuition that the mere fact of intending the death of a bystander, as agent-relative permission seems to imply, is unacceptable.  However, on Thomson’s picture, “It is irrelevant to the question whether X may do alpha what intentions X would do alpha with if he she did it.” (294) Still, there might be good reason to reject agent-relative permission by simply stating that Thomson’s model is more powerful and has no room for it. This is feasible. It might be said that agent-relative permission subsumes the crux of her theory – namely, what is relevant for self-defense is only that somebody violating your right to life loses their right that you not kill them. Moreover, her distinctive cases on impermissible self-defense seem untenable given agent-relative permission. Is Thomson’s model mutually exclusive with agent-relative permission?

There may be a way to salvage Thomson’s theory while accepting agent-relative permission. Let us make a distinction between what is permissible and what is “merely excusable.” (285) Permissible actions are morally neutral, whereas a merely excusable action implies some moral failing but does not carry blame.[4] All things considered, Thomson’s idea of permissible killing in self-defense by virtue of one’s right to life still carries the same weight. What are weakened are Thomson’s cases of impermissible killing in self-defense, where impermissibility, which entails moral failing and blame, becomes merely excusable by virtue of agent-relative permission. Still, the force of her argument stands, along with agent-relative permissions.

Agent-relative permissions seem too close to our general moral intuitions to be overlooked. Moreover, although Thomson’s model of self-defense seems convincing, her reasons for rejecting agent-relative permissions seem superficial and unsatisfactory. This paper suggests that agent-relative permissions must be held, and that they can be mapped onto Thomson’s model given distinctions of what are permissible and what are merely excusable.


[1] Thomson leaves open the asymmetrical proportionality with respect to a threat being innocent versus a threat being villainous.

[2] I do not see any obvious problems with extending agent-relative permissions to self-referential altruism, but the argument does not depend on this point.

[3] There is a certain tacit threshold to agent-relative permission where we are permitted to care about our own good only slightly more than the good of others.

[4] For instance, crimes committed under duress are still blameworthy yet they are excused because they were committed while unlawful coerced.

Draft Essay: A Critique of “Permissions To Do Less Than the Best: A Moving Band”

Thomas Hurka and Esther Shubert (henceforth, “the authors”) offer an interesting account of permissions. The authors’ starting point is that it can be a “primitive truth that you are permitted [to pursue your own happiness].” (6) They then construct a system of ratios for a “band of permissions” to favor one’s own happiness (and freely sacrifice one’s own happiness). This paper argues that the authors’ model has an issue with self-respect and enforceable duties. By straying away from the “reason-based” accounts, the band of permissions account has tensions between moral agents who act permissibly; in other words, it is untenable within a moral community. This issue points to an underlying problem with the authors’ starting point of permissions rather than duties.

The authors begin by outlining the deficiencies in the “reason-based” accounts of agent-favoring permissions. The authors say that we generally have permissions to care more about ourselves, and the “reason-based” account says that these permissions come from a clash between “moral reasons to promote the good of all people impartially” (2) and “prudential reasons to care disproportionately about your own [good].” (2) Derek Parfit’s nuanced “reason-based” account suggests it is sometimes obvious which choice to take when impartial and partial concerns clash – for instance, “if you can give either one unit of happiness to yourself or a thousand units to another, your impersonal reason outweighs your personal one and you should prefer the thousand.” (3) However, it is not clear when the clash is smaller, like “one [unit of happiness] for yourself and six, four, or three for another.” (4) These uncertain areas, according to Parfit, are the basis for agent-favoring permissions.

The authors push back on this sort of “reason-based” account. They suggest that this approach is “misguided” (5) because the permission is derived from “more basic normative factors that aren’t themselves permissions but count positively in favour of an act.” (5) The “reason-based” accounts begin with duties, what we “ought” to do (ceteris paribus), and try to outline what we are permitted (or “may”) do.  The authors set their primitive truths as permissions (ceteris paribus) rather than constraints or duties. Parfit’s “reason-based” account starts with clashing duties and has areas of permissions where the clashing duties cannot be outweighed one way or the other. The authors find this “recherché” view counterintuitive.

Let us take a closer look at this critique. It seems right to say that Parfit’s account has the wrong rationale. It gives a sort of explanatory account of permissions which derives from some “underivative truths” (6) about duties; the authors, however, give a normative explanation which gives a justification of permissions from the outset. The aim is to justify permissions without appealing to duties (or uncertainty of weighing some duties with another), although these permissions can be “weighed against the impartial duty and in some cases will lose to it.” (5) This approach appears to capture our common sense morality and gives us a working “band of permissions.”

The idea of a “band of permissions” is supposed to demarcate just how much is permitted for “agent-favoring choices” and “agent-sacrificing choices.” (13) Reduced to units of happiness, the authors propose a ratio scheme to track agent-favoring and agent-sacrificing choices. For example, an agent-favoring ratio would be choosing one unit of happiness for yourself instead of choosing five units of happiness for another person. An interesting feature of the authors’ view is that it has room for agent-sacrificing permissions. The importance of this feature is evident when considering choices involving intimates – for instance, a husband might want to choose one unit of happiness for his wife instead of five units of happiness for himself. In essence, there is a ratio scale and a “band of permissions” designating which range of ratios is permitted. There are other various interesting aspects of this “band” theory, but only a grasp of the general idea is needed for the rest of this paper.

Let us return to the original motivation for this band theory, namely as a better alternative to “reason-based” accounts. There seems to be an issue that arises with the band theory when it is practiced within a community of other moral agents. Specifically, tensions arise when moral agents have differing bands of permission. Here I explore two instances of such tensions: areas of self-respect and areas of enforcement.

Self-respect is closely tied with agent-sacrificing permissions. In brief, self-respect is thought of as a duty to the self that encompasses things like integrity and dignity. To illustrate, a husband who constantly aims at pleasing his wife over any of his own aims to the point of undermining his own projects, needs, and general happiness can be said to be violating self-respect – for instance, (say) when he is not busy earning money to shower his wife with gifts, he spends the rest of his time washing his wife’s feet with his tears. Where does this fit on the “band” theory? It would seem that a case of self-disrespect is beyond the band of permission for agent-sacrificing. But suppose the husband believes that his band of agent-sacrificing permission extends much longer and that his actions are within the band of permissions; then, it appears his self-disrespect is merely a case of relatively extreme self-sacrifice. Luckily, the authors provide stipulations for self-respecting agent-sacrificing. They say that one must “have the following beliefs: that you’re only permitted to prefer another’s lesser happiness but have no duty to do so; that you’re also permitted to prefer your own lesser happiness, and even to do so to a greater extend; and that your mix of permissions and duties is exactly the same as everyone else’s.” (19) The final clause is of particular importance, but we will return to it after flushing out a similar tension with the authors’ model.

Now looking at the enforcement of duties, it seems that one might sometimes have a duty to enforce the duties of other moral agents. For example, you might have a duty to enforce the duty of not killing innocent people, say, if you had sniper scoped on me and I was on a murderous rampage at the local daycare. On the “band” picture, some have suggested that there are certain thresholds for enforceable duties – for instance, if I chose to favor one unit of happiness instead of a million units for somebody else.[1] With this in mind, we ask the following question: is the threshold identical for everybody? If it is not, we run into some issues. What would be over the threshold for enforcement for one person could plausibly be under the threshold for enforcement for another. It is unclear who is wrong in this picture; there is some disharmony with taking such a view. There is moreover a less ambitious point to be made. Even without talk of thresholds, what is one person’s duty can be considered a permission on another person’s account. There appears to be no unity within this “band” picture.

Both of these areas of tension, self-respect and enforced duties, point at the issue with having band of permission that is subjectively derived. There is no objectively correct band of permission to compare and judge moral choices with. Let us now return to the authors’ suggestion that the “your mix of permissions and duties is exactly the same as everyone else’s.” (19) Perhaps this means that human psychology is such that we have a univocal moral intuition so all of our bands and ratios are identical. This would solve tension; however, this seems rather ad hoc and unfeasible. It would be fair to say that there is some general form that the band of permissions takes, but tensions would arise unless they were completely identical – really, the devil is in the details. Two self-proclaimed morally ideal agents would likely question at least some of each other’s choices. By and large, permissions seem to be fairly controversial, or at least not univocal.

Perhaps the authors want to suggest that there is some band of permission that is objectively correct. This approach however seems to be a case of having your cake and eating it too. The authors jettisoned the “reason-based” account which may have this feature of objectivity. When duties are primitive, they can be appealed to as an objective criterion to analyze permissions. Take Parfit’s view for example: moral agents would not have different permissions because they have the same criterion (i.e. duties that cannot be weighed). The authors rightly point out that even Parfit’s view is not completely satisfying with respect to resolving conflicting views on permissions. That is, perhaps Parfit’s criterion for permission is equally vague since epistemic reasons are not as strong as “there being, metaphysically, completely determinate truths…” (4) The authors’ picture does not include a robust band of permission to model after or use to adjudicate what is and what is not within the band of permission.

This paper cannot offer any substantive revisions to the authors’ model, but there might be some grounds for questioning the authors’ shift of starting with permissions as a primitive truth. One peculiar aspect is how the authors’ define the nature of permission. The authors suggest that “the concepts of ought and permissions are interdefinable.” (6) It seems right to say that permissions and duties (or “oughts”) should make reference to each other if they are to be coherently defined, but the authors’ conception of permission seems too ambitious. The authors say that the strength of a permission is “its tendency to determine a normative outcome,” (7) but this makes the domain of permissions too big. Such normative outcomes can involve morally trivial cases, such as choosing the color of one’s shoes. It seems morally trivial cases do not enter at all into the calculus of the band of permissions – they are irrelevant and do not require further analysis in this manner. If duties and permissions are “interdefinable,” then permissions should be limited to morally significant choices.

As such, a slightly more refined view of permissions undercuts some of the motivation for thinking permissions should be taken as a primitive truth. On the authors’ view, a “reason-based” account seems to ground some cases, like the choice of shoe color, in a convoluted calculus of duties and derived permissions. Yet, understanding that these morally trivial cases do not enter the picture, the “reason-based” accounts seem at least more elegant than what the authors’ see it to be. Nevertheless, this new outlook carries the assumption that there is a different class of morally trivial choices which do not enter the discussion of “ought and permissions,” but this seems relatively uncontentious.

The “band” theory seems to have some issues that the “reason-based” accounts do not. The main issue that is that it creates tensions between moral agents who act permissibly, and such tensions include self-respect and enforced duties. The fundamental issue is that jettisoning the “reason-based” account also took away any objective criterion to compare bands of permission. This might be a reason to reconsider taking permissions as a foundational primitive truth.

Source

Hurka, Thomas and Schubert, Esther. ‘Permissions to Do Less Than the Best: A Moving Band’, Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics 2 (2012): 1-27.


[1] This is not too convincing to me. Would we have a duty to make sure that all the billionaires in the world donate to charity?

Draft Essay: Another Look at the Voluntarist Challenge

It seems normal to think that we have certain special obligations to those we are close to, and sometimes these obligations might be stronger than our general moral duties. They might lead us to make tough decisions, like Euthyphro deciding to testify against his murderous father. At the least, the law reflects our sympathies towards special obligations; spousal privilege, for instance, prevents spouses from condemning each other in court.  Nevertheless, these special obligations can be burdensome as it sometimes forces us to make such ultimatums between moral duties and relationships. Some (“voluntarists”) have suggested that this burden is unfair if they are not voluntarily taken; after all, this might interfere with our freedom to choose how we live our lives. Some, like Diane Jeske, insist that we in one way or another consent to special obligations. Others, like Samuel Scheffler, are insouciant to this problem; still others, like R. Jay Wallace, also bite the bullet, but are more sympathetic to the tensions and find clever ways around them. This paper argues that there is indeed an issue, and that the attempts at resolving this issue have been unsatisfactory. The most important feature of autonomy is letting us choose our means of achieving a good life; with this in mind, the freedom to cast off the burdens of special obligations is the crux of meeting the autonomy worry. I suggest a reconciliatory approach, focusing on terminating conditions, to resolve the qualms with special (“sui generis”) obligations and the voluntarist’s worry about autonomy.

It is important to distinguish “natural duties” and “special obligations” because some argue that they are different kinds of rules, whereas others want to say special obligations are a mere species of natural duties.[1] Natural duties are broadly understood as moral rules which apply and are owed to everybody. To illustrate, some may argue for the natural duty to report murderers to the police. This natural duty would apply to everyone, so if someone was in a position to report a murderer, they ought to; moreover, such a duty is understood to be owed to everyone; one would owe it to another in virtue of being human that they do not danger others by letting murders run rampant. This is contrasted with special obligations which are owed “to some limited class of persons.” (Jeske, 529) If I make a promise with you to meet you at the café, my obligation to keep my promise and to meet you is not in virtue of you being human; rather, it is in virtue of the promiser-promisee relation, which limits my obligations to the class of persons containing only you. A different sort of special obligation is between relations with intimates: mainly, friends and family. These sorts of special obligations can be more pressing and sometimes ask us to go against natural duties: perhaps Euthyphro has a special obligation to his father that he does not report his father for murder. Familial-based special obligations seem particularly different from promise-based special obligations because we do not voluntarily enter into familial relations as we do with promise relations.[2]

            In comes the voluntarist challenge. The thesis, according to Jeske, is that “the only way that we can acquire special obligations is through some voluntary action (or actions), a voluntary action (or actions) which we know or ought to know signals the assumption of obligations…” (Jeske, 532) Voluntary actions may well be tacit or subtle, but I leave that an open question (it is an in-house debate for voluntarists). What the force of the voluntarist challenge is that there is some consent to accepting conditions. For instance, a promise to meet you at the café comes with the stipulation that you do so if you make the promise. Voluntarists have issues with special obligations, which are not voluntarily accepted. 

            There is a concern from voluntarists about the state of autonomy within the bounds of special obligations. Familial relations are often thought to be a source of special obligations, that is, acting above and beyond what natural duties require; however, familial relations are not voluntarily entered into. These non-voluntary special obligations can get in the bearer’s ways insofar as “space to develop projects and plans and to sustain their personal commitments.” (Jeske, 537) For instance, a child might have a special obligation to take care of their elderly parent, which is an investment of time and resources that the child could direct to themselves; accordingly, it is unfair that the child has this burden without having voluntarily committing themselves to the (special obligation generating) familial relationship. Simmons contributes to this conversation by pointing out that “institutional obligations” (like institutions of family) only have force when they are “freely promised,” (Simmons, 28) so perhaps there is some voluntary aspect of the parent-to-child relation; but those imposed, like the child-to-parent relation, “have no moral force at all.” (Simmons, 28) Voluntarists further challenge special obligations by pointing to how non-voluntary special obligations limit autonomy.

            A strategy to meet the voluntarist challenge is what Jeske calls the “deflationary response” (Jeske, 533). The idea here is that since familial-based special obligations are not explicitly voluntary (i.e. fail the voluntarist challenge), they must not be special obligations but natural duties. Notably, most voluntarists concede to the non-voluntary nature of natural duties. (Simmons, 29-30) Perhaps our obligations to family are not in virtue of familial relations (which would make them special obligations), but families are special cases where we can exercise this general natural duty owed to everyone. Perhaps the proximity or roles within a family give us better opportunities to exercise our natural duty of charity. This is the approach of some reductionists – to “reduce” special obligations to more general natural duties.

Let us now, pulling from Sam Scheffler, outline the basic features of non-reductionism, and what can be said about the voluntarist challenge. We often speak of special obligations (“responsibilities”) by pointing to the relationship rather than some voluntary action, or in Scheffler’s words, “by citing the nature of our relationship to that person” rather than some “specific interaction.” (Scheffler, 189) To have a “special, valued relationship,” that is not “purely instrumental,” means that I “regard the person with whom I have the relationship as capable of making additional claims on me, beyond those that people in general can make.” (Scheffler, 196) They provide “presumptively decisive reasons for actions” (Scheffler, 196). These reasons are more basic (i.e. primitive or intuitive to normative practice) than any reasons arising from interactions. [3] Additional duties may subsequently arise in virtue of interactions (whatever agreed upon normative governing conditions), but they are grounded first and foremost in the relationship. For instance, non-reductive special obligations can be present when first meeting your spouse, but reductive special obligations (e.g. not to have any other partners) may arise from a promise to marry.

Scheffler offers seven conditions under his non-reductionist picture which relationships give us special obligations. These seven conditions are necessary for non-reductionism.[4] First, a relationship must be attributed with some “noninstrumental” value – in other words, an end in itself, which excludes the possibility of valuing a relationship noninstrumentally for some instrumental advantage (i.e. “reflexively instrumental”). (Sheffler, 198) Second, relationships must be “socially salient,” so the mere fact that “you happen to have the same number of letters in your last name as John Travolta” does not count as a relationship in this sense. (Scheffler, 198) Third, valuing relationships “means valuing the relation of each of us to the other.” (Scheffler, 199) Fourth, special obligations may be stronger or weaker depending on how much one values the relationship, and may be correspondingly outweighed by other considerations. (Scheffler, 199) Fifth, “the nonreductionist principle states a sufficient condition for special responsibilities, not a necessary condition,” so there is room for reductionistic special obligations (like promises). (Scheffler, 199) Sixth, it is possible that people have special obligations when they think they do not, and it is also possible that people do not have special obligations when they think they do. (Scheffler, 199) Seventh, reasons to value relationships can skew which relationships are actually valued because reasons for valuing relationships can affect conceptions of special obligations. (Sheffler, 200) These conditions outline the basic features of a non-reductionist picture.

The argument Scheffler offers for this sort of non-reductionism is that human beings value “our relations with each other,” and this valuing of relationships “is to see it as a source of reasons for action of a distinctive kind.” (Scheffler, 200) This argument is based on a sort of teleological premise. It says that a dimension of human psychology is aimed at interpersonal relationships and that this is an essential part of being human. “It seems that whenever people value an interpersonal relationship they are apt to see it as a source of values.” (Scheffler, 190) In brief, our need for relationships affects the way we make choices, and this can be appropriately construed as special obligations.

Scheffler pushes back on the idea that special obligations arise from “discrete interactions” (Scheffler, 190) within relationships, like promises or mutual benefit, which might satisfy the voluntarist challenge. Most voluntarists are not against the idea of special obligations per se but against the idea of non-reductionistic (non-voluntary) special obligations.[5]  Scheffler poses the voluntarist challenge as one as special obligations being “unfair” and “burdensome” for those who did “nothing voluntary to incur them.” (Scheffler, 192) This “requires a version of reductionism with respect to such responsibilities [or special obligations].” (Scheffler, 195) Again, a reductionist view of special obligations may satisfy the voluntarist challenge since they would be reduced to natural duties, but Scheffler is a staunch non-reductionist.[6]

Burdensome non-voluntary special obligations again give rise to the voluntarist’s worry about autonomy. Scheffler frames the problem as one having to do with our “social identities.” (Scheffler, 203) This includes “the extent that we choose our roles and relations, and decide how much significance they shall have in our lives, we shape our own identities.” (Scheffler, 203) The autonomy worry is this: “if our relations to other people can generate responsibilities to those people independently of our choices, then to that extent, the significance of our social relations is not up to us to determine” (Scheffler, 203) The ability to determine our social identities seems like something we do not want to give up. If the burdens of non-voluntary special obligations undercuts our autonomy in this manner, then it may be an unreasonable view to hold.

Scheffler responds by saying that “it is clear that the capacity to determine one’s identity has its limits.” (204) Scheffler bites the bullet and says that it is just a brute fact that we cannot have absolute autonomy. Many factors which are integral in shaping our identities are not our choice. Just imagine being born in a different geographical area, with a different socio-economic status, and a different social milieu – it is not hard to imagine that we would be entirely different people with different ideologies, histories, or whatever constitutes our identities. Moreover, Scheffler responds, natural duties “apply to us whether or not we have agreed to them.” (Scheffler, 202) Voluntarists have been vociferous about special obligations being voluntary else they be reduced to natural duties, yet natural duties are not themselves voluntary either. They seem to take natural duties as a primitive truth, and surely any justification given for natural duties can be paralleled as a justification for special obligations. The reductionist approach simply appeals to the non-voluntary nature of natural duties, but what specifically justifies the non-voluntary nature of natural duties? Why have natural duties as a starting point and put the onus on special obligations? After all, says Scheffler, “No claims at all arise from relations that are degrading or demeaning, or which serve to undermine rather than to enhance human flourishing.” (Scheffler, 205)

R. J. Wallace is equally unconvinced by the reductionist approach (to special obligations) to meet the voluntarist challenge. Indeed, it is possible to reduce special obligations to natural duties of “reliance and trust,” (Wallace, 177) “vulnerability,” (Wallace, 178) or “reciprocity and gratitude,” (Wallace, 178) but this may not be the best explanation. Wallace is convinced by Sheffler’s thought that “we could have complete voluntary control over all important features of our identity and social connections.” (181)[7]

Wallace frames the worry about autonomy as one about “control.” (Wallace, 180) Wallace agrees with Scheffler that “complete voluntary control” might be a fantasy, but we still want “to be able to define for oneself the terms of one’s relationships to those whom one loves.” Wallace is a little more sympathetic to the autonomy worry than Scheffler. “If relationships of love are partly constituted by sui generis requirements, it would appear that there is little scope for the adult participants in them to negotiate the terms of those relationships for themselves.” Wallace calls non-reductionistic obligations “sui generis” obligations; in other words, obligations of an entirely different kind than natural duties. A robust set of sui generis obligations (“requirements”) push a crude set of obligations on our relationships. The issue for Wallace is the autonomy to shape the nuances of the dynamics of our various relationships.

Wallace’s response to the argument from autonomy: “it is partly up to individuals to determine for themselves the exact contours of the obligations they fall under in so far as they participate with each other in relationships of love.” [8] (Wallace, 189) His contention is that having space to shape some of the “contours” of our obligations is sufficient to preserve autonomy. He continues: “Relationships of love have a reflexive aspect, being constituted in part by the conceptions that are shared by the parties to them; this gives those parties scope for autonomous self-determination within the context of relationships that are nevertheless sources of sui generis obligation.”[9] (Wallace, 189) Negotiation must be “a process of mutual accommodation,” (Wallace, 190) so escaping duties on a whim thereby is not possible. Nevertheless, the contouring is supposed to save autonomy.

Jeske has different way of meeting the autonomy worry. She pushes the intimacy criterion which suggests that “continued participation” (Jeske, 540) is a necessary condition for special obligation generating relationships. Such relationships are maintained through a “mutual character,” (Jeske, 541) where the relationship becomes a shared project (e.g. interests, goals, history, reciprocity), and such “genuine intimacy cannot be coerced.” (Jeske, 541) Since it cannot be coerced, and we are always consenting to the relationship, autonomy is preserved. [10]

Let us further clarify how the autonomy worry is being met with a distinction of voluntaristic reductionism and non-voluntaristic reductionism. The voluntaristic reductionist meets the autonomy worry by reducing special obligations to features which arise from voluntary interactions. This approach says that autonomy is preserved because there is always some sort of consent to relations which give rise to special obligations. This is similar to Jeske’s approach.[11] In contrast, there is non-voluntaristic reductionism (what Jeske calls the “deflationary response”) which says that special obligations can be collapsed into more general natural duties. The voluntarist accepts the non-voluntary nature of natural duties, so there is no worry with special obligations if they derive from natural duties.

Wallace approach is to pushes back on non-voluntaristic reductionism. “What theoretical economies are achieved by reducing duties of love to more generic moral obligations, given the standing of love relationships as independent domains of non-derivative normativity?” (Wallace, 188) He is committed to a non-reductive account of sui generis obligations, and he admits that such a view, on the face of it, has a worry with autonomy. Rather than ignoring it (like Scheffler), he deals with this worry by saying that our contouring is enough to settle our worries.

Something about Jeske’s view does not seem to reflect normative practice. Let us take a closer look at her “intimacy” criterion. According to Jeske, the terminating conditions for a relationship should also be based on intimacy. A lack of intimacy excuses us from special obligations. This seems save autonomy, but at the cost of undermining the force of special obligations since intimacy is a mutual practice. If one arbitrarily ceases in maintaining intimacy and flippantly drops a relationship, it might be bad that one drop a relationship that promotes flourishing and satisfies human social need, but it would ultimately be a permitted act (there is no natural or special duty against this). The nature of intimacy seems entirely arbitrary. This is also what makes it attractive – arbitrariness, being the arbiter of our choice, is a feature of autonomy. 

Moreover, Jeske seems unsympathetic to the pull of having relationships. There is some sense in which even harmful relationships satisfy our intrinsic need (as social creatures) for relationships. Her view of relationships seems slightly crude in that relationships are only of value if there is intimacy (i.e. reasons to continue the relationship). For instance, an abusive relationship would have absolutely no value on Jeske’s view. On the other hand, on Scheffler’s view, perhaps it has some value in the mere fact that it is a relationship (this is not to say that this value is not significantly outweighed by the abusive nature of this relationship). It seems like relationships are merely instrumental to promoting mutual flourishing and not itself a non-instrumental end.[12] Jeske’s account preserves autonomy at the cost of ignoring an essential part of human psychology (that we value relationships). This cost makes her view untenable.

Nevertheless, the take away from Jeske’s approach is that the force of the autonomy worry is a matter of consent to duties. Wallace’s suggestion, that shaping the contours of a relationship satisfies autonomy, does not address the main issue of burdensome obligations which were not consented to. I also think Wallace agrees that this is an issue, and that he thinks it wrong to ignore it as Scheffler does. Jeske deals with this bigger issue at the cost of ignoring normative practices (i.e. sui generis obligations); in contrast, Wallace captures these normative practices without addressing the bigger issue, the “real” force of the autonomy worry.

Before looking at a possible way to reconcile these issues, let us take a close look at the worry with autonomy. First, I think there is a challenge with the autonomy of personal projects. Sui generis obligations often get in the way of our own personal projects, but this seems like a less of an issue, and we can bite the bullet like Scheffler. After all, we would have to abandon natural duties too because an amoral outlook is much better for pursuing a projects. Second, I think there is a challenge with the autonomy of being a good moral agent. This might be the bigger concern because it is a part of our normative practice that we value being good moral agents, but if sui generis obligations ask us to go against this, we might feel it is a heavy burden to our autonomy. It might come down to a value theory conflict of the good of relationships and the good of being a good moral agent. A sufficient condition for autonomy is allowing one to choose between the goods necessary for flourishing.

This view of autonomy is fairly intuitive. When pressed to give a list of things one values the most, people will come up with a wide variety of things (e.g. cars, clothes, family, love, etc.). Nevertheless, I think they can be narrowed down to a few fundamental categories of goods. These are non-instrumental goods – for instance, chocolate might be an instrumental good insofar as achieving the non-instrumental good of pleasure. It is an open question what the exhaustive list of non-instrumental goods consists in, but two things that (I think) would appear on everybody’s list are relationships and virtue (i.e. being a good moral agent).[13] Such goods are essential for a good life and promoting Eudaimonia (i.e. flourishing). It is not clear how one ought to order these eudaimonistic goods; still, how one orders these goods affects (ipso facto) how one acts, and these choices culminate to what sort of life one lives. This autonomy to order one’s eudaimonistic goods is what must be protected.

Wallace’s account fails in this respect. Wallace follows Scheffler in saying that special obligations may be outweighed by natural duties, but this impartial calculus leaves no room to exercise autonomy. Let’s go back to the Euthyphro father’s example. Suppose an essential feature of the father-son relationship is that there is a sui generis obligation not to report one another if one commits murder. If natural duties outweigh this sui generis obligation, then he must turn his father in. This impartial calculus leaves no room for Euthyphro’s autonomy. What if he valued the goods of relationships and placed them ordinally higher than the goods of virtue? This seems burdensome and restricts his autonomy.

I nonetheless admit that certain smaller cases can be covered by Wallace’s contouring view. That is, the “weak” special obligations (negotiated governing normative conditions of a relationship) might also serve as terminating conditions when they remain neutral to the “strong” special obligations. For instance, perhaps turning one’s father in to the authorities violates “strong” special obligations, so suppose one does not turn him into the authorities. The father being a murderer may nevertheless violate “weak” special obligations in that there was some agreement made that they’d be morally upstanding characters. By violating the “weak” special obligations, there would be grounds for terminating the relationship. Still, this does not address the burden of going against natural duties to turn murderers into the authority; this, I think, is a significant challenge to autonomy. 

My suggestion is that we take a closer look at terminating conditions. The aim is a picture with sui generis obligations which also manages to give us sufficient autonomy. Perhaps even when the calculus obviously weighs on the side of natural duties (Euthyphro turning his father in), we may permissibly choose to side with sui generis obligations. Our justification would be on the basis placing higher value on the eudaimonistic value of relationships (rather than virtue). After all, our choices should be construed teleologically in terms of eudaimonstic goods. Here, we have the freedom to order our eudaimonstic goods and act accordingly.

On this picture, it was Euthyphro’s choice to turn in his father. I think Scheffler’s approach is right to include non-reductive sui generis obligations; however, I think Wallace is right in his sympathies to the voluntarist’s worry about autonomy, but his approach was not sufficient to save autonomy. Jeske’s approach dealt with the worry in the right kind of way, but at the cost of ignoring an essential part of human psychology – namely, the need for relations. My suggestion of terminating conditions proposes a way of sufficiently preserving autonomy while acknowledging the features of human psychology. It takes a eudaimonistic approach and argues that the core of autonomy is the ability to choose how one lives a good life, which stems from the ability to choose eudaimonistic goods. I further suggest that the conflicts with special obligations and natural duties can be framed within a value theory context; in essence, a conflict between the ordering of the eudaimonstic value of relationships and the value of virtue. By and large, this is one non-reductionistic reply to the voluntarist challenge.

Sources

Diane Jeske, “Families, Friends, and Special Obligations”

Samuel Scheffler, “Relationships and Responsibilities”

A. John Simmons,”External Justifications and Institutional Roles”

R. J. Wallace, “The Duties of Love”


[1] The distinction between “duties” and “obligations” is a subtle and important one, but it has no significance in this paper and can be used interchangeably.

[2] Friendship relations do not have this problem and meet the voluntarist challenge; according to Jeske, they are voluntary “mutual project” (539)

[3] As outlined by Scheffler’s fifth condition. (Scheffler, 199)

[4] This paper will henceforth use this as the model for non-reductionism.

[5] Generally, special obligations arising from promise relations satisfy the voluntarist challenge.

[6] A second issue (neutral to the voluntarist challenge) to special obligations is that it may “confer unfair advantages on their bearers.” (Scheffler, 192) This goes back to the example of not turning your murderous father in to the authorities, and your father doing the same for you. It also hints at the tension between natural duties and special obligations, especially if natural duties ask us to be impartial.

[7] Wallace further adds that “reductionism promises to liberate the realm of loving relationships from the shackles of normative constraints.” (Wallace, 181) If we have certain natural duties already (like trust, vulnerability, or reciprocity) then adding more duties (non-reductionistic sui generis duties) seem to be excessive. He mentions the “phenomenology of agency within the relationship of love,” (Wallace, 182) suggesting our experience of love is such that our actions “out of a sense of duty or obligation.” (Wallace, 182) This would result in an “excessively ‘moralized’ conception of relationships of love.” (Wallace, 182)

[8] E.g. sexual fidelity between life partners

[9] Sui generis obligations meaning obligations arising from (and which we can appeal to) the “specialness” of certain relationships.

[10] It is important to note that this is a diachronic model for continuing conditions; in other words, intimacy is not “chosen in a single discrete act,” (Jeske, 541) like a promise or contract. As such, special obligations which we did not consent to, like some familial relations, can be terminated on the grounds of intimacy, thus further preserving autonomy.

[11] Although, she does not in principle have to deny sui generis special obligations.

[12] Perhaps there is a way to interpret Jeske’s intimacy view as sui generis, but this approach seems rather ad hoc. Perhaps she would be satisfied with Wallace’s model, but this is an open question

[13] Other things might include knowledge, pleasure, or fulfillment, but the idea is that there is some general category of eudaimonistic goods. This is an expansion of Scheffler’s thought that we all value relationships.