Virtue ethics is committed to this claim:
- A choice of A is wrong if and only if a person who had the relevant virtues explanatorily prior to having chosen A and was in these circumstances would not have chosen A.
But (1) implies this generalization:
- A person who has the relevant virtues explanatorily prior to a choice never chooses wrongly.
In my previous post I argued that Aristotelian Jews and Christians should deny (2), and hence (1).
Additionally, I think naturalists should deny (1). For we live in a fundamentally indeterministic world given quantum mechanics. If a virtuous person were placed in a position of choosing between aiding and insulting a stranger, there will always be a tiny probability of their choosing to insult the stranger. We shouldn’t say that they wouldn’t insult the stranger, only that they would be very unlikely to do so (this is inspired by Alan Hajek’s argument against counterfactuals).
And (2) itself is dubious, unless we have such a high standard of virtue that very few people have virtues. For in our messy chaotic world, very little is at 100%. Rare exceptions should be expected when human behavior is involved.
(Perhaps a dualist virtue ethicist who does not accept the Hebrew Scriptures could accept (1) and (2), holding that a virtuous soul makes the choices and is not subject to the indeterminacy of quantum mechanics and the chaos of the world.)
There is a natural way out of the above arguments, and that it so to change (1) to a probabilistic claim:
- A choice of A is wrong if and only if a person who had the relevant virtues explanatorily prior to having chosen A and was in these circumstances would be very unlikely to have chosen A.
But (3) is false. Suppose that Alice is a virtuous person who has a choice to help exactly one of a million strangers. Whichever stranger she chooses to help, she does no wrong. But it is mathematically guaranteed that there is at least one stranger such that her chance of helping them is at most one in a million (for if pn is her chance of helping stranger number n, then p1 + ... + p1000000 ≤ 1, since she cannot help more than one; given that 0 ≤ pn for all n, it follows mathematically that for some n we have pn ≤ 1/1000000). So her helping a particular such stranger is very unlikely to be chosen, but isn’t wrong.
Or for a less weighty case, suppose I say something perfectly morally innocent to start off a conversation. Yet it is very unlikely that a virtuous person would have said so. Why? Because there are so very many perfectly morally innocent ways to start off a conversation, it is very unlikely that they would have chosen the same one I did.
Your error is to think that because it is unlikely, it is wrong, it can be but not necessarily. All cat have 4 legs, but whatever has 4 legs is not a cat...
ReplyDeleteYes it is unlikely, but this is still virtuous.