Moral philosophers don't behave more morally

Pendulate | Ascended Posting Frenzy
 
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http://rationallyspeakingpodcast.org/show/rs139-eric-schwitzgebel-on-moral-hypocrisy-why-doesnt-knowin.html

From the transcript.

Quote
J:       Welcome to Rationally Speaking, the podcast where we explore the borderlands between reason and nonsense. I'm your host, Julia Galef, and with me today is our guest, professor Eric Schwitzgebel.
Eric is a professor of philosophy at University of California Riverside. He's the author of the books Perplexities of Consciousness and Describing Inner Experience: Proponent meets Skeptic. He's also the author of the excellent philosophy blog Splintered Mind which I've been a fan of for years.

Eric, welcome to the show.

E:   Hey. Thanks for having me on.

J:   So great to have you. 

One of the things that Eric is most famous for is his work studying the moral behavior of moral philosophers, examining the question: Do people whose job it is to study the question of how to behave morally, do those people actually behave more morally than the average person? Or than the average person in a comparative reference class, like other professors, for example?

Hopefully it's not too much of a spoiler to say: No, they don't...


...At any point, did you look at specific dimensions of morality, like specific behaviors that ethicists were doing more or less of than other people?

E:      Yeah, most of our stuff has been on that. That study established in our minds two things.
One is that there's no consensus among philosophers about how ethicists behave. That's already an interesting thing to establish. Because a lot of people seem to think it's obvious that ethicists will behave the same, or better, or worse. But it's not obvious to everyone. People give different answers when you actually ask them, without their knowing the data. The other thing it established was that one’s peers’ opinions might have some relation to reality, or they might not. 

We've got now at this point 17 different behavioral measures of different kinds of behaviors that are arguably moral. Now, there's lots of dispute about what kinds of behaviors are moral, so none of the individual measures are going to be convincing to everyone. But they tell a very consistent story across the board when you look at them all.

J:     What are some examples of individual measures?

E:   We looked at the rate at which ethics books were missing from academic libraries. That was our second study. We found that ethics books were actually more likely to be missing than comparison books in philosophy, similar in age and popularity.
 
We looked at whether ethicists and political philosophers were more likely to vote in public elections than other professors. Here we had access to publicly available voter participation data in five US states.

J:        Can you also look at whether ethicists’ self reports of voting are accurate? That seems like a separate measure.

E:        Yes, we did look at that actually. Probably our biggest study was a survey sent to the same five US states for which we had the voting data. And we asked ethicist respondents, a comparison group of non-ethicists in the same philosophy departments, and another comparison group of professors not in philosophy at the same universities. Three equal sized groups of respondents.

We contacted about a thousand respondents in total. And we got about 200 responses from each group, so a pretty good response rate.

We asked these people, in the first part of the questionnaire, their opinion about various moral issues. And then we asked them in the second part of the questionnaire to self-report their own behavior on those same issues.

Then on some of the issues like the voting issue, we also had, about the same participants, some direct measures of their behavior. So those don't rely on self-report.

Although I should say that in the interests of participant's privacy, we converted everything into de-identified codes... So we're not able to draw individual inferences about particular individuals. All the data was analyzed at the group level.

J:   Got it. And the pattern you saw overall was…?

E:   Ethicist behavior was basically identical across the board to the other groups of professors. There were some differences, but not very many, and not very strong. And overall, when you put it together, and you combine the data in various kinds of ways… It looks like there's no overall trend toward better behavior.

Although we did find, when we asked their opinions about various moral issues, that ethicists tended to have the most demanding opinions. They thought more things were morally good and morally bad, and were less likely to regard things as morally neutral, than were the other groups.

J:   They just didn't act on those principles.

E:   They didn't seem to act on those principles.

The most striking example of this was our data on vegetarianism. We didn't have any direct observational measures of this, but the self-report measures are already quite interesting.

Most of the questions in the first part of the questionnaire were set up so that we have these 9-point scales that people could respond on -- very morally bad on one end, through morally neutral in the middle, to very morally good on the other end. Then we had a bunch of prompts of types of behavior that people could then rate on these scales.

One of the types of behavior was regularly eating the meat of mammals, such as beef or pork. In response to that prompt, 60% of the ethics professors rated it somewhere on the morally bad side; 45% of the non-ethicist philosophers, and I think it was somewhere in the high teens for the non-philosophers, 17% or 19%, something like that for the non-philosophers. Big difference in moral opinion.

Then in the second part of the questionnaire, we asked, "Did you eat the meat of a mammal, such as beef or pork, at your last evening meal, not including snacks?" There we found no statistically detectable difference among the groups. Big difference in expressed normative attitude about meat eating; no detectable difference in self-reported meat eating behavior.

J:   Pretty interesting. I'm wondering whether this is a result of ethics professors not really believing their ethical conclusions, like, having come to these conclusions in the abstract? 

You know how people might say that they believe they'll go to hell if they do XYZ, but then they do XYZ. And you want to say, "I think you, on some level, don't really believe that you're going to go to hell by doing those things." I wonder if these conclusions are somewhat detached from their everyday lives.

I was reminded of this anecdote I heard back when I was in the economics department, about some famous econ professor who ... I think he was famous for a decision-making algorithm or something. And at one point in his career, he was facing a tough decision of whether or not to leave his current department for a different department. He's agonizing about this. And one of his colleagues says, "Well, Bob” -- I don't know his name, let's call him Bob -- "Bob, why don't you use your decision-making algorithm to tackle this?" And Bob says: "Oh, come on now, this is serious!"

Anyway, I'm wondering if something like that's going on. Or if you think, no, they really do believe these conclusions. They just don't care enough to act on them.

E:   I'm very much inclined to think they believe them on an intellectual level, at least. It sounds like the econ professor you're talking about regarded it a little bit like a game. When I talked to philosophy professors about things like donation to charity, which is another question we asked about, or eating meat, they have intellectual opinions that I think are ... They don't regard it just as a game. I think it's actually a pretty real moral choice. Now some of them think it's perfectly fine, and some of them think it's not, but I think they take it pretty seriously for the most part.

It'll be interesting to think about whether there's some way to measure this. My inclination is to think that they take it pretty seriously at an intellectual level, and then the trickier question is whether that penetrates their overall belief structure.

TL;DR read the title

I find this both amusing and depressing. I mean, I don't think personal hypocrisy invalidates an argument, but come on -- if you want to be an ethicist, shouldn't you actually, yknow, care about ethics?

As in more than the intellectual stimulation it gives you
Last Edit: July 31, 2015, 02:17:15 AM by Pendulate


aREALgod | Legendary Invincible!
 
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This is why philosophy is a joke. You can't take philosophers seriously because they're all hypocrites.


Release | Heroic Posting Rampage
 
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"Ornate chandeliers suspended from a vaulted ceiling lit the spacious chamber; Jack tilted his gaze overhead and noticed how far away they were.  His thoughts wove around those bright lights, like a dance of ether masses spiraling in precious unison. Why must we try to clutch desperately for the mere threads of this world when we can clasp onto a tapestry of untold magnificence beyond this plane of existence?"
Usually the ones that speak the loudest about any particular argument are the ones that adhere to the standards of their argument the least

Usually.


 
DAS B00T x2
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This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
And that's why philosophy is the hobby of fat, old, retired men with nothing to contribute to modern society in my eyes.


Pendulate | Ascended Posting Frenzy
 
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And that's why philosophy is the hobby of fat, old, retired men with nothing to contribute to modern society in my eyes.
Yeah, I used to think that too. I was wrong, though.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
This doesn't surprise me. I consider ethics probably the most important branch of philosophy (alongside epistemology), but I'm a pretty unethical person really.


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Those metrics seem kind of arbitrary.. Are there ethics books missing from the library? Did they vote? Do they recognize eating red meat as moderately unethical while still eating it?

That's not really testing their commitment to a philosophy at all.


Pendulate | Ascended Posting Frenzy
 
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Those metrics seem kind of arbitrary.. Are there ethics books missing from the library? Did they vote? Do they recognize eating red meat as moderately unethical while still eating it?

That's not really testing their commitment to a philosophy at all.
I'm not sure about the missing library books either. The question on vegetarianism was the only one of the three that could give any useful data, though giving to charity was in there somewhere as well.


 
Verbatim
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Duh.


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Not significant at all. We all know our own ability to ignore rational arguments when personal comfort is at stake. It's like yelling at people for driving cars to a meeting about global warming.


 
Verbatim
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Or eating meat, even though you know it's wrong.

It's frustrating, but it's... well, frustrating. That's all it really is, is frustrating.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Or eating meat, even though you know it's wrong.

It's frustrating, but it's... well, frustrating. That's all it really is, is frustrating.
Giving up meat is fucking hard.


 
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eh


Pendulate | Ascended Posting Frenzy
 
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Not significant at all. We all know our own ability to ignore rational arguments when personal comfort is at stake. It's like yelling at people for driving cars to a meeting about global warming.
It's surprising when your profession is all about how to be moral, though.

There's also the aspect of educating others -- most people aren't going to take you seriously if you don't practice what you preach.


 
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This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
Not significant at all. We all know our own ability to ignore rational arguments when personal comfort is at stake. It's like yelling at people for driving cars to a meeting about global warming.
It's surprising when your profession is all about how to be moral, though.

There's also the aspect of educating others -- most people aren't going to take you seriously if you don't practice what you preach.
I know way to many clergymen who drive a Benz to ever be surprised by something like this.


 
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Or eating meat, even though you know it's wrong.

It's frustrating, but it's... well, frustrating. That's all it really is, is frustrating.
Giving up meat is fucking hard.

I'd argue that it's not. It's all just in your head. It's only ever hard when you fight with it. Which means that you're not ready. When you understand something completely clear cut, and you're ready for it, then you simply move on.

It's only ever really hard when you listen more to the reasons of why you shouldn't try over why you should. In which case, you can find practically infinite reasons and excuses not to try. It's only hard if you make it hard.

That's why, when a doc says what they're sticking in you won't hurt so much, you physically have less of a painful reaction than if they tell you that it's going to be painful. Brain wiring.

What shitty ass electrician gave us the ability to hurt ourselves more if we thought about it? Dicks.


 
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This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
That's why, when a doc says what they're sticking in you won't hurt so much, you physically have less of a painful reaction than if they tell you that it's going to be painful. Brain wiring.
no bro
that just means I'm now focused on it and it's gonna hurt more


 
Sandtrap
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Rockets on my X
That's why, when a doc says what they're sticking in you won't hurt so much, you physically have less of a painful reaction than if they tell you that it's going to be painful. Brain wiring.
no bro
that just means I'm now focused on it and it's gonna hurt more

Or, likewise, they don't say a thing before they stick a needle in. Ever notice how most docs strike up conversation before jamming something in? Distractions or shifts in attention work just as well. I messed up though.

They don't say it won't be painful. They just say that it won't hurt much. But you're american though.

For all I know your docs charge you extra for stuff like that.

"Okay do you want this to hurt or no?"

"No?"

"Then for just 50 easy payments of only 10.99 you won't feel a thing!"