Tag: Philosophy

The Role of God in Self-Control and Endurance

Patient self-control. Restraint.  It’s often externalized to focus on one’s relationship with others, but here I want to focus on one’s relationship with oneself. Our relationship with ourselves is confusing and a possibly unhelpful metaphor. But the point I want to drive home is that we need forbearance for making decisions that pull us in every way, and it needs to go beyond just being disciplined.

Forbearance is closely related to temperance. One of the classical virtues (the others being prudence, justice, and fortitude).  It looks at abstinence or moderation. We need to withdraw and reframe from certain activities, and it’s important to discern what exactly to avoid and for what reasons. Take fidelity to purity as an example, primarily, avoiding lust. It can seem primal and morph our very reasoning or decision-making faculties. Youth and hormones can be very powerful. We might think we have a right to act on it. That it’s natural and how the body ought to function. The countless rationalizations to act in one way to tip the scales. It takes a special kind of patience and discernment to decide to pull back on our desires.

Self-control is something that I struggle with. I grew up in a generation of distraction and easy fixes. Technology constantly wears down and trains distraction. It’s important to stay focused in order to stay self-controlled. Being self-controlled is something like a muscle. It takes a lot of practice to exercise this level of discipline. Little by little, the smaller decisions put us on the right track to make better bigger decisions. That’s why it’s important to exercise forbearance in even the little decisions and be wary of it. A kind of mind-muscle connection, but a mind-virtue connection. Like a mind-muscle connection, we can be extra mindful of a certain experience and focus on how our mind is affecting virtues just as we might focus on how the mind is affecting our muscles. The analogy is useful because we build our souls and virtues through small acts. The action of repetitions of lifting can strengthen muscles. Acting virtuously can similarly strengthen our souls. We have to practice our virtues.  Age is not a good indicator. We need to regulate every part of ourselves. We do have limits and our self-control can be depleted. We also have our will and have a part in regulating our own actions. This free will cut directly into what makes us human. It’s a profound question of who we are yet it can be as trivial as grabbing a marshmallow when we shouldn’t.

We need more than mental fortitude to endure the trials of life, but we can’t do it by ourselves. We need God. In fact, the less we rely on ourselves, the easier it gets. It’s easy to get overwhelmed. When we do, we have to rely on God; it’s not about digging deeper within ourselves, it’s about letting go and trusting God. Through prayer and meditation on God’s presence. Through the Lord’s perspective, we can work with joy and trust that it pleases our Father. There will be things we must endure—this is an inevitability. We should embrace the discomfort as a good. An opportunity to grow, like a baby learning to walk. I can think of no better metaphor for endurance than a marathon runner. The pain is clear. The goal is clear. It takes mental fortitude to keep pressing on when your body is in pain. But when the pain isn’t physical, and the pain is mental, it becomes strangely different and difficult. The barriers in our minds seem unbreakable.

It is important to identify the times of endurance. A transition into something better. It helps us rely that much more on God. The cycle of life rarely has us enduring pain all the time. There a periods of pain and periods of rest, and our Lord promised us no burden that we cannot overcome. Like a wise coach, we will never have more weight than we can handle. We will receive just enough to grow. With God, we are in a safe environment. We can grow in endurance–mentally, spiritually, and physically. We forget the mental and spiritual, and I have a hunch that they’re just as intimately linked as the mind and the body; the same goes for the body and the spirit. The mind can grow in discipline and focus, and this can translate into spiritual virtues of increased patience and love. Caring for our body can make it easier to be more loving and patient, just as exercise can be good for the body.

There is a Korean word that’s difficult to translate: “Han.” It’s a feeling of internalized sorrow or resentment, and it goes hand-in-hand with longsuffering. Patience in spite of troubles. It’s difficult to endure the discomfort. Especially if you feel some sort of entitlement from being comfortable for a long time. This is why a tough life can be good. This is why it’s difficult for a rich man to pass through the gates of heaven. We can only walk into the fire. Without being melodramatic, the crucible shapes us and changes us into something stronger. Suffering doesn’t necessarily lead to something better. But it’s so often that the road to growth is a rough road. We are unworthy servants. We have only done our duty. We aren’t entitled to comfort and every second of comfort is a blessing. We need to shift our attitude to that of a servant: humility. We are unworthy of even the work we are entrusted with, so we should be grateful for the opportunity to do this work. Courage through tough times or discomfort. It’s a part of faith. By trusting in God fully, we have no backup plan. We go forward into the valley of the shadow of death having faith that God will be with us. How trivial is everything compared to that? Our daily trials are meager in comparison.

Still, it’s all about reference points. A splinter can be incredibly painful and the end of the world for a child, yet a warrior faces a spear to the side without fear. We need to grow, but God is patient with us. He will not give us more than we can handle. We must be deliberate in our courage and why we have courage. The tough times and pain are a part of life, but it’s also a part of God’s will. We have courage in God. It’s an act of faith to have courage. The courage to be. We should have fortitude through our desire to be with Christ yet also serve his people. We must have courage through all the pain and adversity of life. We must be brave despite inflictions. It can be what makes Christians the strongest breed.

I can’t figure out the relationship between psychology and virtue, especially with respect to responsibility. What is really within our control that we should be responsible for? The addict might have little self-control, but discrete decisions within their control led them there. Fortunately, we don’t have to figure out this mystery to keep trying our best to build our self-control. The effort and striving are effort. The father is pleased with the effort despite whatever natural limits we might have. We need strength greater than us. We need God. He gives us more power and control, and we need to exercise self-control to serve him. We must give up control. Give it all up to God. For true freedom, we need to give up control.

Draft Abstract: Metaethics and Partiality

Anscombe’s rejection of the concepts of “moral obligation and moral duty,” in the absence of a divine lawgiver, shows a concern about the presumption that ethical standards are normative; that is, the idea that ethical standards seem to command or make claims on us, which then seems unjustified without some legitimate commander. Moral realists – like Prichard, Moore, or Ross – attempt to argue for the existence of intrinsically normative obligations and duties without appealing to a commander, yet it inevitably relies on an appeal to some sort of intuition and fails to address Anscombe’s worry.  Simon Keller’s Partiality (2013) presents a novel strategy to justify obligations and duties we have to intimates, like our friends and family; specifically, he appeals to the “phenomenology of partiality,” or our direct experience of intimates, which commands us to perform certain actions. I argue that an appeal to the phenomenology of partiality is epistemically similar to an appeal to a divine lawgiver, and that our experiences of partiality and partial obligations (or duties) provide examples of standards with legitimate normative force. The phenomenology of partiality, just like the appeal to a divine lawgiver, can justify their claims as, what Alvin Plantinga calls, “a properly basic belief” – such beliefs are primitive, like the belief in other minds or the belief in the existence of the external world. I further argue that the strategy of appealing to the phenomenology of partiality is categorically distinct from the moral realist’s appeal to intuition in that it meets different epistemic standards. My claim is that the appeal to the phenomenology of partiality, just like the appeal to the divine lawgiver, purports a higher epistemic standard than the moral realist’s rational intuition. The upshot is a justification of the normative force of obligations and duties which parallels the divine lawgiver.

Dangers of the “red pill”

First, it relies on a facile understanding of evolutionary psychology. The references to alphas and betas and how primitive species behaved in order to explain current social phenomenon of dating culture and female behavior: it’s too simplistic. The analogy can be made here is to homeopathic medicine having a too simplistic understanding of pathology. I could explain women wanting a financial stable partner in terms of primitive species relying on the alpha male for food and shelter in the same way I could explain pancreatic cancer in terms of my chi being out of line. Both explanations are unfalsifiable, ad hoc, and have little explanatory power; yet they have intuitive appeal because it fits with a narrative (viz. red pills: a misogynistic one; homeopathic medicine: a pseudo-scientific one).

Second, the narrative of the red pill is misogynistic. This is a term thrown around and poorly defined, but the general idea is the denigration of women. What is puzzling about the Red Pill is that it treats men as the victim. This obviously resonates with young men who have been rejected or feel an entitlement to the attention of women. In other words, the Red Pill victim mentality assumes that there is a shift in the natural order of power and men ought to be in a higher position than women. The resentment and envy originate from a place of perceived injustice: women seem to have it easy in society and dominate men. Using the flawed story above, the Red Pill approach reinforces this narrative and a story about women’s place in society.

Third, it’s a bad self-help approach. It takes victims and claims to empower them with knowledge. It seeks to guide its members to succeed in the narrative they concoct. It takes vulnerable people – full of resentment, anger, and ignorance – and it spoon-feeds them an answer they want: it’s not your fault, it’s society’s fault, it’s women’s fault… It’s a twisted sense of empowerment and community akin to cults.

Draft Abstract: Partiality and Regret

We sometimes explain away regrets by framing them as character shaping experiences. For instance, “If I never did drugs, I would never be who I am now – the strong, independent persons who beat a drug addiction.” Underlying this idea is the thought that the person we would be is not the person we are now, and that we prefer the person we are now. Some psychologists explain this phenomenon as a form of rationalization or a product of the cognitive dissonance of regret; in this explanation, there is a negative connotation of self-deception or delusion. This does not have to be the case. An alternative explanation is that we show partiality towards our current selves just as we show partiality towards our friends and family members. On an objective, impersonal view – like the psychologist’s – it is irrational to prefer our imperfect (regretful) selves over our (counterfactual) ideal selves, just as it is irrational to prefer our friends and family members over strangers. This analogy can be strengthened by looking at the justification of our partiality towards family members and making further connections to our partiality towards our current selves.

Draft Abstract: The Duty of a Stranger’s Deathbed Request

Imagine you are the only witness to a stranger’s last moments, and, just before passing away, the stranger asks that you scatter her ashes in some inconvenient location. Do you have a moral duty to this stranger? You have no relation to this stranger and you did not agree to accept any prior posthumous requests, so it is unfair for you to be burdened with this moral task. Moreover, it fails to compare to any duties of aid or rescue, like assisting with a flat tire or saving a drowning child, since there is nobody (alive) who benefits from the actions. Still, we feel a compulsion similar to a duty towards fulfilling this stranger’s final request – perhaps it is compassion, empathy, or some belief in the supernatural. I argue that we do not have any moral duty to such requests. These cases lack any grounds of consent or reasons for fidelity, which suggests that our compulsions to act are not based on any actual moral duty. I argue that these compulsions can be based on imaginary duties, like a saint’s “duty” (more accurately, supererogation) to devote all of our resources to charity, or a white supremacist’s “duty” (more accurately, moral ignorance) to promote racial supremacy. I further argue that such deathbed requests are instances of moral blackmail, and are thereby morally indecent in nature.

Draft Abstract: borders and genetically modified mosquitoes

A recent class of public health initiatives has the morally questionable consequence of crossing borders; more specifically, they are initiated by one state but have significant resultant impacts on neighboring states. One clear case of this is genetically modified mosquitoes: mosquitoes are difficult to contain within state boundaries and often crossover whereby associated risks are thrust upon neighboring states. While nuances of laws and international policies are crucial considerations, this paper explores the underlying ethical considerations relevant to such classes of border-crossing public health initiatives. I begin with an explication of what makes these initiatives intuitively wrong at the individual level, and I identify three key moral violations: violations of property rights, exposure to harm, and lack of consent. I then capture these issues under the general umbrella of justifying paternalistic actions and take states as moral agents responsible for complying with certain moral obligations. The following question arises: if neighboring states do not agree to the initiatives, are there good reasons of proceed regardless? I appeal to existing analogues in public health as the standard for moral legitimacy and distill their structure of justification. First, there is a structurally “cosmopolitan” justification which appeals to the positive consequence for the global community. Second, there is a “perfectionist” justification which appeals to the goods bestowed upon the dissenting state. Third, there is a “free-rider” type of justification which frames dissent as morally wrong. I argue that border-crossing initiatives are at least consistent with the moral justification of recent public health initiatives insofar permitting certain sorts of paternalistic actions. I then suggest a defensible fourth way of justifying such initiatives by making appeal to a state’s obligations to its own citizens.

Can romance help with depression?

How might a romantic relationship help with depression? Here are some early caveats: I’m a layman when it comes to mental illnesses and there are gaps in my argument that might be supported or refuted by empirical studies. Nevertheless, my aim here is to connect some contemporary methodologies of treating mental illness with notions of romantic relationships which adhere to these methodologies. I don’t have a particularly nuanced picture of what entails a romantic relationship, so I appeal to a general notion which features are flushed out through its therapeutic effects. A trivial example would be this: community is generally thought to be important in the recovery of depression; here, a romantic relationship facilitates recovery by having the feature of being interpersonal. I want to outline some more significant features of romantic relationships that aid in recovery which are exclusive to romantic relationships. Then I want to deal with one stream of objections: that even in the most ideal romantic relationship, mental illnesses is exasperated and incompatible with the normative ideas of what constitutes a romantic relationship.

So what sort of contemporary methodologies treat mental illness which aligns with my thesis of the therapeutic benefits of romantic relationships (in a non-trivial way)? The narrative focused method, or the “narrative view.” This contrasts what is often called the “medical view,” which treats patients as a set of symptoms or pathologies which need to be cured or treated. The narrative approach is supposed to be more humanizing for patients and their relationships with their mental health provider. This, it is argued, is a more effective approach to reaching goals for patients; that is, goals such as hope, happiness, or living a life worth living (elsewhere, there are more specific explications of these goals).

There is a subtle pessimism about the” medical view” which is essential to the “narrative view.” The “narrative view” says that pathologies like depression cannot be treated with anti-depressants like an infection can be treated with antibiotics. Even if various symptoms of depression are suppressed by medication, it doesn’t necessarily mean that the goals for the patient are met. For instance, an anti-depressant might treat a patient’s insomnia, melancholy, and anxiety; however, the patient might not break unhealthy habits or know how to adjust to live a life worth living.

Now moving on to how romantic relationships might fit into the “narrative view.” There is an issue within the “narrative view” method between patient and provider. The role of the mental health provider is something like that of a guide: they use their expertise to direct the patient towards a meaningful goal. On the patient’s end, they are supposed to internalize these directives and execute them in order to manage their disease. However, despite whatever trust, rapport, or relationship the patient has to the provider, there is a barrier in receiving and internalizing the provider’s directives.

This is where romantic relationships, I suggest, might help. I want to make clear that I’m making a descriptive claim here; I’m not suggesting that one ought to find a relationship when faced with issues of mental health.

Draft Abstract: Moral Blackmail

Simon Keller’s argument for moral blackmail might, at best, come down to cases of emotional blackmail; at worst, they are just added motives to be a morally good person.

If I leave a note at your door telling you that I’m leaving for vacation and that if you do not feed my dog, then my dog will die and it will be on your conscience. Clearly what I am doing is wrong, but is it a case of “moral” blackmail? Keller seems to think so because I am manipulating the circumstances so that you are faced with the guilt of a starved dog if you do not comply with my desired end. But is the “guilt” in this scenario appropriately a consequence of a moral failure? It seems more supererogatory than a moral duty; as such, the appropriate feeling should then be something like “compunction.”

Keller places his argument in the context of fiduciary duties, but we can find general examples: for instance, the cashier asking if you would like to donate one dollar to charity. This sort of charity might be a nice thing to do, but it is beyond what morality demands of us; still, we might feel a bit bad if we do not donate. Again, whether it is a case of some internal conflict of thinking ourselves as charitable, it is still a case of emotional manipulation – that is, the consequence of not donating is a negative feeling of compunction.

However, what if I left a note telling you that you must take care of my ill grandmother because nobody else is around to take care of her in my absence? I think cases like this one indeed point to a moral duty, but it cannot be called “blackmail.” What I am doing here is reinforcing a duty you already have with added reasons to act morally. I do not want to say that I am morally in the clear for leaving you that note – clearly I am manipulating you. However, you already would have had strong reasons to take care of my ill grandmother since you always have the duty to rescue or aid somebody in immediate danger. For example, we would not call it “moral blackmail” when I tell my child that if he is mean to his sister then Santa will bring him a lump of coal. If Keller’s cases of moral blackmail are cases where there is a real moral duty, and if blackmail cannot entail cases where you would have had good reason to act the way I want you to, then Keller’s cases of moral blackmail are not legitimate cases of blackmail.

Now, this argument relies on counterfactual claims of what you would have done, and maybe the mere fact that I altered your choice structure is enough for a legitimate case of moral blackmail. That is, by leaving you the letter, you then are confronted with a moral dilemma of taking care of my grandma or ignoring the letter and letting her die; however, if I never gave you the letter, you would not be presented with the dilemma. In line with my previous argument, my giving you the letter presents you with a moral problem and the possibility to be immoral – the operative question is then this: Does me putting you in a circumstance to possibly be immoral constitute a case of moral blackmail?

I obviously do not think so, and I think parallel cases show why.  Imagine I bound you up, put you in a truck, and dropped you off in front of a drowning child; in this case (assuming you can swim) you have a duty to rescue this child. The fact that I kidnapped you and that it is a rotten thing for me to do is no excuse for you not to rescue the drowning child. If you reject your moral duty and choose not to rescue the child, then I do not harm you additionally because I put you in that circumstance. I may manipulate you, coerce you, harm you, but I do not blackmail you.

Draft Abstract: Nationalism, Borders, and Partiality

Nationalism is often associated with morally repugnant behaviors of partiality, like prejudice, selfishness, or bias. Some have taken a deflationary approach to nationalism by tracing it to tribal psychology, and further contend that nationalism is not only groundless but harmful as well. These approaches to nationalism are not fruitful. Nationalism should be conceived as a moral phenomenon and analyzed as such. While many features of nationalism are morally wrong, there appear to be some virtues associated with nationalism. One such virtue of nationalism is the desire for the success and flourishing of one’s own nation, which can be compared more generally to virtuous partial behavior like a parent’s special concern for their child. Although impartiality is crucial to moral thinking – especially in ideas of equality, fairness, or justice – many contemporary commentators have noted that this often leads to an unwarranted emphasis on impartiality which similarly results in an absurd picture of morality.

In this paper, I begin by establishing the argument that partial moral obligations are tied to the necessary conditions of wellbeing, like personal integrity and identity, and further argue that this link to wellbeing is structurally analogous to the way impartial moral obligations establishes its special normativity. Moral reasons have (or we commonly think they have) a special normative force that overrides other practical reasons; hence, I argue that impartiality is conflated with “overridingness,” and this fallacy can be traced back to our faith that the virtues of impartiality always result in promoting wellbeing. So, if wellbeing is some clue to morally right actions, and if partiality sometimes promotes wellbeing better than impartiality, then sometimes partiality is the morally right action. With this criterion of the virtues of partiality, I identify structural analogues in nationalism which allows us to distinguish the right forms of nationalism from the right forms of nationalism. Nationalism seems to give us reasons for partiality, and, to go a step further, it gives a modest defense for favoring co-nationals over non-nationals.

I end by arguing that the resulting conception of special conational obligations implies at least minimal national borders. Some try to moderate the degrees of nationalism and subsequently fit them into impartial demands by investigating how the right to be nationalistic stacks up with other universal human rights. This paper suggests a slightly more ambitious route. It seems if we accept that we have special obligations to co-nationals, a corollary would be that there is a boundary to distinguish how we treat co-nationals differently from strangers. In a minimal sense, this is a border (whether it is a closed border or open border is a different discussion). Drawing from the works of Jeff McMahan and Thomas Hurka, we can establish a more robust moral justification against open borders arguments based on the universal right to free movement (cf. Joseph Carens). The picture of wellbeing associated with partiality can be cashed out in terms of the “goods” of (1) a shared history, (2) shared culture, (3) and the conditions of local and individual flourishing. These goods are tied to wellbeing and cannot be attained without nations or within a cosmopolitan community.

Draft Essay: Nationalism, Special Obligations, and Borders

Nationalism consists of various beliefs on the “normative significance of nations and nationality.” (p. 108) They are often beliefs about the success and flourishing of one’s own nation. Some have taken a deflationary approach to nationalism by tracing it to tribal psychology, and further contend that nationalism is not only groundless but harmful as well. These approaches to nationalism are not fruitful. Nationalism should be conceived as a moral phenomenon and analyzed as such. Nationalism seems to give us reasons for partiality, and to go a step further, nationalism gives a distinct source of special obligations.[1] I explore the grounds for partiality and how they might become duties to favor conationals[2] over strangers (non-nationals). I do this by mainly drawing from the works of Jeff McMahan and Thomas Hurka. The first step is to explore the grounds for partiality towards conationals, and this involved identifying what the demands of impartiality are. [3] We can take a reductive approach or non-reductive approach to meeting the demands of impartiality, and I argue that the non-reductive approach offers robust grounding to mount special obligations owed to conationals (rather than mere permissions). I end by arguing that the resulting conception of special conational obligations implies at least minimal national borders.

Before diving into a discussion on nationalism, we must first deal with the worry that nationalism is not a concept worth looking at. The suggestion is that perhaps nationalism is a contrived and contingent phenomenon which we may shed; indeed, if it is harmful, perhaps we ought to shed. Jonathan Glover tracks the primitive psychology behind nationalism to primal tribes. Tribes can be thought of as pure or ideal archetypes of a nation: they have clear boundaries, have a single ethnic group, have a common language, and have shared beliefs. (p. 13) They have a Darwinian function of increasing kin fitness and propagating one’s genes. (p. 15) Nations now veer away from this ideal due to contingent modern circumstances of blurred boundaries and an emerging pluralism. Some have traced modern nations to eighteenth century European industrialism and capitalism (or related forms of colonialism). (p. 13) Charles Taylor tells a story of how nationalism arose from traditional elites resisting modernization, which threatens to disempower them and cut at their “dignity.” (p. 44-46) Modernization collapses the early hierarchical system of elites and redistributes the power among the citizens. (p. 36) In response, elites “force a new categorical identity to be the bearer of the sought-for dignity,” (p. 45-46) through attachments to a particular national culture. Some argue Taylor’s story is too extravagant and overly complicated. Will Kymlicka jettisons the talk of dignity and instead argues that modern nationalism results from the simple desire to live and work with people sharing one’s culture (i.e. language, beliefs, ethnicities, etc.). (p. 63) We may deflate nationalism to various historical contingencies which emerge from our primitive psychology.

The worry arises: if nationalism is merely a contingent phenomenon resulting from a more basic tribal psychology, then why should we care about it? Putting cosmopolitan arguments to the side, nationalism seems prima facie harmful when we look back on history. Glover suggests that nationalism is a sort of necessary evil. Tribalism is a necessary part of our psychology, and nationalism is a natural expression of our tribal psychology. (p. 25) Nationalism, as a proper expression of tribalism, can be a positive force to promote flourishing. (p. 19) Where it goes wrong is when bad leaders use our ingrained tribalism for their own malicious benefit (like Machiavellian leaders). Still, Glover is reticent to commit himself fully to the positive benefits of nationalism (qua ideal tribalism); rather, he claims that global humanism ought to trump nationalism everytime. (p. 29) Walter Feinberg takes a different approach from Glover, and finds the dismissal of nationalism as an “anachronistic remnant of tribal morality” (p. 67) completely wrong. Nationalism is distinct in kind from tribalism, and, “whatever its origins,” it is a distinct phenomenon developed “in response to economic, cultural, and social conditions that are unique to modern life.” (p. 67) I think this is right. The force of whatever tribal psychology we may possess does not appear to be necessarily connected to notions of nationalism – rather, we may tread cautiously with the knowledge that tribal psychology may cause us to favor some people for the wrong kinds of reasons. This essay will proceed with the assumption that nationalism is a phenomenon that is morally ambiguous, thus, morally interesting.

Let me start by stipulating what we will mean here when we talk about “nationalism.” The typical view, held by “universal” nationalists, says that everybody is entitled to value their own nation; whereas the less commonly view, held by “particular” nationalists, says that only they are entitled to value their own nation. The particularist views, according to McMahan, stems from an account of morality as just “a set of norms that evolve within and govern the various fundamental human relations.” (p. 118) Authors, like David Miller, argue that morality arises within communities – “moral selves are embedded” – and this necessarily leads to a distinction between members and outsiders. (p. 140) This particularist starting point is attractive insofar as it does away with many of the worries accompanying the universalist views, but the particularist lends itself to even more troublesome issues.  One stark issue is that it undercuts the idea of universal morality, and this seems counterintuitive to our general ideas of commonsense morality. As such, to avoid such concerns and narrow the scope of our discussion, this essay will proceed with the universalist’s version of nationalism.

The moral issue with nationalism is that it is essentially partial. If morality demands that we treat all persons with equal concern and nobody is counted with more concern, then nationalism seems to be prima facie incompatible with impartiality. We can approach this worry in a couple of ways. One: we can work on our notion of impartiality to ease its demands on us, and subsequently make room for nationalism. Some trace the strictness moral impartiality to the “Enlightenment” (p. 140), and this strict notion of impartiality may not reflect what morality is supposed to be. Two: we can accept whatever strict version of impartiality and instead work with our notion of partiality in nationalism. If we can conceptualize the partiality as conforming to impartial demands, then nationalism can be compatible with impartiality. Here, notions of partiality are couched within the demands of impartiality. Third: we can keep strict impartiality and stand our ground with conceptions of nationalism in that we do not try to make it conform to the demands of impartiality. Instead, we may take nationalism for what it is, and take impartiality for what it is, and argue that sometimes the demands on nationalism trump the demands of impartiality. As the rhetoric suggests, I will be arguing in favor of the third approach. In any case, we need a thorough explication of “impartiality,” as well as the relevant moral pieces of nationalism. 

Let us begin with the general, more intuitive arguments. Adhering to the strict demands of impartiality – namely, treating everybody the same and not favoring anybody over anyone else – seems to lead to a dull, robotic social life. There are virtues to being partial; in the context of nationalism, for instance, partiality leads to virtues of loyalty, commitment, and self-sacrifice. (p.111) These cannot be bad, right? Of course, the staunch impartialist might respond that these virtues of partiality come at the cost of attributing lesser worth to outsiders.[4] Then, the argument goes, impartial “morality must respect and reflect our nature as persons,” (p. 111) This does not have to be an argument about psychological facts and our inability instantiate strict impartialism. Rather, I take the argument to be that whatever universal morality there is, it does not demand that we make such significant sacrifices (e.g. special relations, personal projects, etc.) in the name of morality. But what exactly are the moral demands of impartiality?

We can distinguish two levels of impartiality: formal and substantive. (p.116) Let me draw out this distinction with an illustration.  Take a moral rule like, “Parents should care more about their child than other children.” This rule is formally impartial, but it is not substantively impartial. Substantively, this rule is not impartial because the content of the rule is just that parents ought to be partial (and, plainly, not impartial) towards their children. Substantive impartiality is at “the level at which principles are implemented in action.” (p. 117) Formally, this rule does not favor one particular group or person, but it still preserves some notion of partiality.[5] Perhaps formal impartiality is what we want out of moral impartiality; in other words, perhaps the strictness of substantive impartiality is not what morality demands of us. On the other hand, perhaps some principles (if we are committed to them) of equal concern and respect always demand substantive impartiality. The question now becomes one of strictness: does moral impartiality demand merely formal impartiality, or the stricter substantive impartiality?

There are different answers to which conception of impartiality we must commit ourselves to. These answers are typically informed by how we justify the grounds for partiality in our notions of nationalism.  The arguments for grounding partiality take two forms: reductive and non-reductive.[6] What is meant by “reductive” is that justifications of partiality are “reduced to” some impartial rule. The aim is to find something about nationalism which can be linked to a general principle (typically, formally impartial).[7] The non-reductive approach does not try to find this link; rather, it tries to find its own robust justification for why it is equally or more important than impartial principles.

Most reductive grounds for partiality try to make sense of partiality within the constraints of mere formal impartiality. Arguments of this sort take the form of instrumental goods which can be traced back to a formally impartial moral rule. Hurka terms these sorts of arguments, “cultural perfectionist,” (p. 141) (others call them “flourishing” or “instrumental” arguments) and they say that culture is necessary for our flourishing. McMahan notes that nationalism promotes the “well-being” (p. 116) of those involved, so we can sufficiently justify principles such as, “each person should be loyal and partial to his or her own nation.” (p. 117) “Well-being” entails benefits from being a part of a nation, such as the language used to think and speak, the environment to cultivate intellectual capacities, the values which give life purpose, the structure to foster relationship, and so forth.[8] (p. 130) These can be traced back to something like a general duty of gratitude or debt to one’s nation.[9]

The non-reductive approach requires a stronger justification because it must provide reasons for subverting impartiality. Accordingly, the focus here is on intrinsic goods, or goods in themselves. First, relationships, particularlu familial relationships, seem to be the paradigm case for justified partiality. This argument could take a reductive, instrumental form; however, McMahan seems to convincingly close this avenue: “The suggestion that parents ought to cultivate strong dispositions to favour their own children because this arrangement is more conducive to the general happiness than the alternatives is a grotesque caricature of the sources of parental obligation.” (p. 115)[10] Reducing familial obligations to our general moral duties seems plainly wrong, and it seems more like an ad hoc maneuver to save impartiality. If there is something intrinsically good to familial relations that are pursued as an end in itself – and, as such, familial relations are justifiably partial – then perhaps conational relations may be justified in the same way.

Are conational relations similar enough to familial relations? There is one crucial piece missing from conational relations: intimacy. I live thousands of kilometers away from some of my fellow Canadians, I know nothing about them other than the fact that they are Canadian, and I probably will never meet them in my lifetime. This leaves us with a very thin notion of “relation” to work with. McMahan notes the “commonalities” among conationals, like “language, ethnicity, religion, culture, custom,” (p. 124) but then questions if these commonalities have moral significance. McMahan notes that the morally significant commonalities are ones of shared values, ideals, commitments, and sometimes even interest. (p. 125) Hurka responds by saying that these relations would give rise to special duties of (something like) admiration, but these duties would not be “special” in the proper sense because somebody from another nation could admire these same qualities. So, for example, if we based our partiality towards conationals on the fact that we have a common value of freedom and equality, then we would have similar grounds for partiality to any other nation who values freedom and equality. The “specialness” comes from the fact that they are discretely among conationals, and we need some grounds to distinguish only conationals and nobody else. Again, in the case of familial relations, we may plausibly point to intimacy as the distinctive grounds for generating (special) familial obligations. McMahan makes a further concession: even if we grant that we have warranted reasons for partiality for special relationships, this does not mean we have special duties rather than mere permission for special treatment of conationals. We need further reasons for duties rather than permissions.

Let us now take stock of what we are looking for in a non-reductive justification of partiality. First, it must revolve around relations between conationals that are morally significant.[11] Second, the moral significance must be discretely conational, and it must not include anybody else. Third, it must be sufficient to generate special duties, and not mere permissions. Let us make things easier and understand the last condition minimally: a sufficient condition to generate special duties consists in having reasons to favor the beneficence of a special party over non-special parties.

Hurka seems to suggest one such approach to justify partiality non-reductively. He investigates the constituents of intimacy by taking a closer look at relationships of love. To love your wife, he writes, is to love her “as an individual.” (p. 150) This individuating condition is shared history. Your wife, for instance, can have pretty brown eyes, but other women can have just as pretty brown eyes; however, no other woman can have the shared history of unique memories between you and your wife. Shared history is the core of intimacy, although there are various other contingent aspects which supplement accounts of intimacy. Conationals also share a history, and these may similarly be grounds for justified partiality. For example, in the 1960s, Canadians created a national health care system that “provides high-quality medical care to all citizens.” (p.153) Hurka asks the right question: “If certain people have a shared history of doing good, what determines the degree of partiality that is justified between them?” (p. 153) He addresses this question by outlining two criteria: first, the degree to which the people’s history is shared or involved interactions between them; second, the amount of good their interaction produced. (p. 153) Familial relations, and other relations of love and intimacy, score fairly high on both criteria. Conational relations score low on the first criteria, but high on the second (e.g. good of Canadian health care). This seems like a plausible justification for national partiality.

Hurka’s account seems to do well insofar as we are looking for. A “good” shared history seems to do the job of McMahan’s “commonalities” in that it ties conationals together in morally relevant ways, but it does a better job of demarcating conationals from strangers. Still, it is unclear how we tie into the historical narrative. Does my mere citizenship in a state mean that I have ties to that nation’s historical narrative? Moreover, how do we end up with duties rather than permissions? Hurka states that the special duties generated between conationals are not grand, but would I have the same duty to (say) a lifelong citizen of Canada as I would to somebody who became a Canadian citizen yesterday?

We can address question of the link from a citizen to historical narrative of the nation with a theory of social membership. Anybody who carries a particular tie to a nation’s history must be sufficiently integrated into the narrative of that nation, and I think this is done by being a social member of that nation. Social membership is a precondition for nationalism. Joseph Carens (2013) suggests two considerations for social membership: “residence and length of stay.” (p. 164) This is a good starting point, but Carens’ aim is more practical, and considers the institutional factors of being “relevant, objective, and easy to measure.” (p. 165) We need more principled reasons; namely, non-instrumental reasons for social membership. Taylor points out an instance of this in that people taking social membership as an end in itself want their culture and society to flourish long after their own deaths, just like a parent wanting their children to flourish after they pass away. A precise, principled outline of social membership is difficult to define because there will be countless counterexamples which need patching. I want to suggest adding McMahan’s morally significant “commonalities” – namely, things like shared values, ideals, and commitments. Remember that the problem with generating partiality from these commonalities was that it could not distinguish between nations with shared commonalities. But now we have stable grounding in shared history. We can now use commonalities, instead, as a principled criteria to distinguish who carries shared historical ties, and consequently who we owe special conational duties to.

It seems if we accept that we have special duties to conationals, a corollary would be that there is a boundary to distinguish how we treat conationals differently from strangers. In a minimal sense, this is a border (whether it is a closed border or open border is a different discussion). What I want to do now is examine this implication of a minimal border. If the conclusion of a minimal border is untenable, then we seem to have a reductio argument against the idea of special duties to conationals. This is a rich topic, particularly in debates between statists and cosmopolitans. I want to leave these discussions aside and focus briefly on just the topic of consistency between the principles of justice and the idea of national borders.  

David Miller (2008) frames the issue as “two conflicting intuition” between inequalities between people living in different places and the responsibilities of nations within their own borders. (p. 385) The basic sketch of his solution is to sketch a more refined theory of (global) justice to incorporate both the intuitions of universal human rights and “fair terms of interaction between independent political communities.” (p. 383) He distinguishes justice as having comparative and non-comparative requirements. (p. 392) In essence, comparative requirements have to do with the gap between rich and poor, whereas the non-comparative requirements have to do with an absolute condition of living “minimally decent lives.” (p. 394) Miller argues that the comparative requirement only applies “among people who already stand in a certain relationship to each, and especially among those who are fellow-citizens of a nation-state.” (p. 394) The idea is that global justice does not demand that we need to close the gap between rich and poor on a global scale. In effect, the principles of justice are not incompatible with the inequalities caused by national borders. [12] This is all very fast, but I merely want to show that there is no strict logical contradiction with justice and borders, and this can be accomplished with one plausible account (and I think Miller’s account is more than plausible).

By and large, what we end with is a very modest conception of special duties to conationals, and this implies an equally modest notion of national borders. To reflect back, it is inappropriate to think of our reasons to show special, partial treatment to conationals as something required by our general moral duties. Nationalism is a moral phenomenon which gives rise to distinctive, sui generis, special duties. This gives us a solid foundation to mount the idea of minimal national borders.

Sources

Abizadeh, Arash. (2010) “Democratic Legitimacy and State Coercion: A Reply to David Miller. Political Theory: 38 (1).

Blake, Michael. (2001) “Distributive Justice, State Coercion, and Autonomy.” Philosophy and Public Affairs: 30 (3).

Carens, Joseph. (2013) “The Ethic of Immigration.” New York: Oxford University Press.

McKim, Robert, and Jeff McMahan. (1997) “The Morality of Nationalism.” New York: Oxford University Press.[13]

Miller, David. (2010) “Why Immigration Controls Are Not Coercive: A Reply to Arasha Abizadeh” Political Theory: 38 (1).

Miller, David. (2008) “National responsibility and global justice.” Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy: 11 (4).


[1] I use “obligations” and “duties” interchangeably.

[2] I use “conationals” instead of “compatriots” to exclude the connotation of polity.

[3] When I mention “impartiality,” I mean morally relevant forms of impartiality. Moreover, I mean morality in a loose sense to encompass what some may designate as merely political or pragmatic considerations.

[4] Even if we assign the same amount of (say) respect to all, the strict impartialist will have qualms with treating some more with more beneficence than others.

[5] A rule, then, that fails to be formally impartial might be something like, “Daniel should care more about Canadians than Koreans.” Note that this maps onto the universalist-particularist distinction; that is, universalists nationalism is compatible with formal impartiality. (p. 117)

[6] Different authors use different terminological distinctions to flush out the distinction I am trying to make. I do not think that the terms make much of a difference here as long as they capture the general idea of demarcating the grounds for partiality.

[7] Some try to moderate the degrees of nationalism and subsequently fit them into impartial demands. These attempts try to cash out the particular right to be nationalistic, and investigate how the right to be nationalistic stacks up with other universal human rights.

[8] McMahan adds the idea of “complex identification” (p. 121-122), which entails further modes of identity from a range of groups (e.g. family, community, employee, etc.). This is meant to supplement nationalism as life-enriching by capturing more groups which add to the cumulative weight of “well-being.”

[9] Note that “general” duties are both formally and substantively impartial. These general duties can provide a further justification for merely formal duties (and justify jettisoning substantive impartiality). We may have reasons for having special duties (e.g. instrumental value), and one of these reasons might be to follow a general duty (e.g. gratitude).

[10] McMahan adds that this is not say that these special obligations are morally primitive. They can be analyzed in terms of genetic connection, voluntary assumption of responsibility, and so forth.

[11] This goes to Feinberg’s point: “The question is not simply, Why nationalism?’ It is why nationalism rather than something else…” (p. 68) Racial partiality is condemned as “arbitrary, illegitimate, and pernicious form of discrimination.” (p. 111) Racial relations fail to have morally significant commonalities. Biological markers are not morally significant, and races do not have commonalities of value. Moreover, perverse or evil shared values cannot be counted as morally significant (along with trivial ones).

[12] Some have retorted with the suggestion that national borders are only justified by those subject to the coercive force of the borders, which include those outside the borders. Michael Blake (2001) holds that the “coercive network of state governance” (p. 258) only applies to citizens. (Blake has the same style of argument as Miller, but his argument rests on the notion of the “principle of autonomy” and he takes the existence of national borders as a matter of fact.) Arash Abizadeh (2010), drawing from a conception of autonomy and self-determination from Joseph Raz, says that borders pose coercive force on the autonomy of those outside the borders. Miller (2010) responds effectively to this challenge by drawing a distinction between “coercion” and “prevention,” where prevention does not undermine autonomy.

[13] I used the following sources from this book: Jonathan Glober’s “Nations, Identity, and Conflict,” Charles Taylor’s “Nationalism and Modernity,” Will Kymlicka’s “The Sources of Nationalism: Commentary on Taylor,” Walter Feinberg’s “Nationalism in a Comparative Mode: A Response to Charles Taylor,” Jeff McMahan’s “The Limits of National Partiality,” and Thomas Hurka’s “The Justification of National Partiality.”