This
array of alternatives raises the question of which moral theories count
as consequentialist (as opposed to deontological), and why. In actual
usage, the term ’consequentialism‘ seems to be used as a family
resemblance term to refer to any descendant of classic utilitarianism
that remains close enough to its ancestor in the important respects. Of
course, different philosophers see different respects as the important
ones. Hence, there is no agreement on which theories count as
consequentialist under this definition.
To
resolve this vagueness, we need to determine which of the various
claims of classic utilitarianism are essential to consequentialism. One
claim seems clearly necessary. Any consequentialist theory must accept
the claim that I labeled ‘consequentialism’, namely, that certain
normative properties depend only on consequences. If that claim is
dropped, the theory ceases to be consequentialist.
It
is less clear whether that claim by itself is sufficient to make a
theory consequentialist. Several philosophers assert that a moral theory
should not be classified as consequentialist unless it is agent-neutral
(McNaughton and Rawling 1991, Howard-Snyder 1994, Pettit 1997). This
narrower definition is motivated by the fact that many self-styled
critics of consequentialism argue against agent-neutrality.
Other
philosophers prefer a broader definition that does not require a moral
theory to be agent-neutral in order to be consequentialist (Bennett
1989; Broome 1991, 5-6; and Skorupski 1995). Criticisms of
agent-neutrality can then be understood as directed against one part of
classic utilitarianism that need not be adopted by every moral theory
that is consequentialist. Moreover, they argue, the narrower definition
conflates independent claims and obscures a crucial commonality between
agent-neutral consequentialism and other moral theories that focus
exclusively on consequences, such as moral egoism and recent self-styled
consequentialists who allow agent-relativity into their theories of
value (Sen 1982, Broome 1991, Portmore 2001, 2003).
A
definition solely in terms of consequences might seem too broad,
because it includes absurd theories such as the theory that an act is
morally right if it increases the number of goats in Texas. Of course,
such theories are implausible. Still, it is not implausible to call them
consequentialist, since they do look only at consequences. The
implausibility of one version of consequentialism does not make
consequentialism implausible in general, since other versions of
consequentialism still might be plausible.
Besides,
anyone who wants to pick out a smaller set of moral theories that
excludes this absurd theory may talk about evaluative consequentialism,
which is the claim that moral rightness depends only on the value of the
consequences. Then those who want to talk about the even smaller group
of moral theories that accepts both evaluative consequentialism and
agent-neutrality may describe them as agent-neutral evaluative
consequentialism. If anyone still insists on calling these smaller
groups of theories by the simple name, ‘consequentialism’, this narrower
usage will not affect any substantive issue.
What
matters is only that we get clear about exactly which claims are at
stake when someone supports or criticizes what they call
“consequentialism”. Then we can ask whether each objection really
refutes that particular claim.
No comments:
Post a Comment