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The Biological Justification of Ethics: A Best-Case Scenario

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2009

Alexander Rosenberg
Affiliation:
Philosophy, University of California, Riverside

Extract

Social and behavioral scientists — that is, students of human nature — nowadays hardly ever use the term ‘human nature’. This reticence reflects both a becoming modesty about the aims of their disciplines and a healthy skepticism about whether there is any one thing really worthy of the label ‘human nature’.

For some feature of humankind to be identified as accounting for our ‘nature’, it would have to reflect some property both distinctive of our species and systematically influential enough to explain some very important aspect of our behavior. Compare: molecular structure gives the essence or the nature of water just because it explains most of its salient properties. Few students of the human sciences currently hold that there is just one or a small number of such features that can explain our actions and/or our institutions. And even among those who do, there is reluctance to label their theories as claims about ‘human nature’.

Among anthropologists and sociologists, the label seems too universal and indiscriminant to be useful. The idea that there is a single underlying character that might explain similarities threatens the differences among people and cultures that these social scientists seek to uncover. Even economists, who have explicitly attempted to parlay rational choice theory into an account of all human behavior, do not claim that the maximization of transitive preferences is ‘human nature’.

I think part of the reason that social scientists are reluctant to use ‘human nature’ is that the term has traditionally labeled a theory with normative implications as well as descriptive ones.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Social Philosophy and Policy Foundation 1990

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References

1 Hume, David, A Treatise of Human Nature, ed. Selby-Bigge, L.A. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1888)Google Scholar, bk. II; Moore, G.E., Principia Ethica (Routlege and Kegan Paul, 1907).Google Scholar

2 Wilson, E.O., On Human Nature (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978).Google ScholarPubMed

3 ibid., ch. 1; Alexander, R., Darwinism and Human Affairs (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1979).Google Scholar

4 As is explained below, natural selection cannot operate to optimize the properties of groups, as opposed to individuals. See section II.