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Ethical Implications of the Dual Process Theory

[email protected]

1. Ethical judgements are explained by a dual-process theory, which distinguishes faster from slower processes.

2. Faster processes are unreliable in unfamiliar* situations.

3. Therefore, we should not rely on faster process in unfamiliar* situations.

4. When philosophers rely on not-justified-inferentially premises, they are relying on faster processes.

5. We have reason to suspect that the moral scenarios and principles philosophers consider are unfamiliar situations.

6. Therefore, not-justified-inferentially premises about particular moral scenarios, and debatable principles, cannot be used in ethical arguments where the aim is knowledge.

negative: object to objections to consequentialism

positive : support for consequentialism

positive case not good: especially if our aux hypothesis isn’t even consequentialist

1. Slow processes are consequentialist.

2. Slow is better than fast when there is disagreement.

Therefore:

3. Consequentialism is true

(I think Greene writes this somewhere) : often better to trust the fast processes, especially in familiar situations. (Reason can take you to some quite wild places.)
> ‘my point is simply that act consequentialism should get points for > not chasing intuitions and that some of its competitors [...] should lose points for doing so. > Note that the > present argument also casts doubt on theories that, rather than chasing > intuitions with codifying principles, simply allow our intuitions roam free. > Likewise, it casts doubt on theories that purport to derive from first > principles, but that are in fact intuition chasing—that is, theories that > are actually attempts to get from first principles to the intuitively > right answers rather than attempts to get from first principles to wherever > those principles happen to lead. (And, if you’re like me, you suspect that > this covers most, if not all, of act consequentialism’s competition.)’ > (Greene, 2014, p. 725)

(not one of Greene’s arguments)

negative: object to objections to consequentialism

positive : support for consequentialism

another try

1. ‘Most, if not all, of act consequentialism’s competition’ relies on premises that are not-justified-inferentially

2. Consequentialism does not rely on any such premises

Therefore:

3. Consequentialism is true

compare Greene (2014, p. 725)

> ‘my point is simply that act consequentialism should get points for > not chasing intuitions and that some of its competitors [...] should lose points for doing so. > Note that the > present argument also casts doubt on theories that, rather than chasing > intuitions with codifying principles, simply allow our intuitions roam free. > Likewise, it casts doubt on theories that purport to derive from first > principles, but that are in fact intuition chasing—that is, theories that > are actually attempts to get from first principles to the intuitively > right answers rather than attempts to get from first principles to wherever > those principles happen to lead. (And, if you’re like me, you suspect that > this covers most, if not all, of act consequentialism’s competition.)’ > (Greene, 2014, p. 725)

negative: object to objections to consequentialism

positive : support for consequentialism

another try
I do not find an argument that works. This does not mean that there is not one.

‘the chief weapons of opponents of utilitarianism have been examples intended to show that the dictates of utilitarianism clash with moral intuitions that we all share’

(Singer, 2005, p. 343)

Against Consequentialism

Many spontaneously judge that we should not Drop.

Therefore:

We should not Drop.

Consequentialism* implies we should Drop.

Therefore:

Consequentialism* is wrong.

Drop

_Drop_

Mary [...] notices an empty boxcar rolling out of control. [...] anyone it hits will die. [...] If Mary does nothing, the boxcar will hit the five people on the track. If Mary pulls a lever it will release the bottom of the footbridge and [...] one person will fall onto the track, where the boxcar will hit the one person, slow down because of the one person, and not hit the five people farther down the track.

Pulling the lever is: [extremely morally good:::neither good nor bad:::extremely morally bad]

This is what Singer and Greene, by quite different arguments, aim to show is wrong.

negative: object to objections to consequentialism

positive : support for consequentialism