Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part one Attachments, reasons, and desires
- Part two Strokes of havoc: the market ideal and the disintegration of lives, places, and ecosystems
- Part three Living in unity, doing your part: rationality, recognition, and reciprocity
- 5 Introduction: doing your part
- 6 The rationality of reciprocity
- 7 Normativity, recognition, and moral motivation
- 8 Citizens and workers: the argument illustrated
- Index
- Title in the series
7 - Normativity, recognition, and moral motivation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part one Attachments, reasons, and desires
- Part two Strokes of havoc: the market ideal and the disintegration of lives, places, and ecosystems
- Part three Living in unity, doing your part: rationality, recognition, and reciprocity
- 5 Introduction: doing your part
- 6 The rationality of reciprocity
- 7 Normativity, recognition, and moral motivation
- 8 Citizens and workers: the argument illustrated
- Index
- Title in the series
Summary
Behavior in the experimental games described in the last chapter cannot, then, be explained by self-interested desires alone, whether the desires are for the benefits of cooperation in later periods, or to satisfy one's taste for equity, or to avoid social or other external sanctions, or to avoid the alleged internal sanctions of shame or guilt. Nor can much cooperative behavior in the real world – the world outside the experimenters' laboratories – be explained in this way. (We'll see some examples in the next chapter.) This is not to say that sanctions are never required, for example, to deter crime; but, as H. L. A. Hart said, they are not “the normal motive for obedience” to the law, and I have argued that they cannot be the only motive sustaining cooperation.
What then is the normal motive – the motive of normally social human beings – for obeying the norm of fair reciprocity, if it is not self-interest? The short answer is that most people think it is wrong not to obey this norm – they believe they ought to obey it. But what do we mean when we say that an action is wrong, and how can a mere belief or judgment that an act is right motivate us to do it?
For the economists and other Rational Choice theorists (and some philosophers as well), there is no conceptual or internal connection between moral belief and motivation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Rationality and the Ideology of Disconnection , pp. 155 - 172Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006