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William Godwin and the Defence of Impartialist Ethics1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 January 2009
Extract
Impartialism in ethics has been said to be the common ground shared by both Kantian and utilitarian approaches to ethics. Lawrence Blum describes this common ground as follows:
Both views identify morality with a perspective of impartiality, impersonality, objectivity and universality. Both views imply the ‘ubiquity of impartiality” – that our commitments and projects derive their legitimacy only by reference to this impartial perspective.
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Footnotes
The research on which this essay is based was supported by a grant from the Australian Research Council. We thank Justin Oakley for helpful comments.
References
2 Blum, Lawrence, ‘Iris Murdoch and the Domain of the Moral”, Philosophical Studies, 1 (1986), 344.Google Scholar Blum notes that the term ‘impartialism” derives from Darwall, Stephen's Impartial Reason, Ithaca, 1983Google Scholar, although Darwall applies it only to Kantianism.
3 See Murdoch, Iris, The Sovereignty of Good, London, 1970Google Scholar; Williams, Bernard, ‘A Critique of Utilitarianism”, Utilitarianism For and Against, ed. Smart, J. J. C. and Williams, Bernard, Cambridge, 1973Google Scholar; Stocker, Michael, ‘The Schizophrenia of Modern Ethical Theories”, The Journal of Philosophy, lxxvi (1976), 453–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Blum, Lawrence, Friendship, Altruism and Morality, London, 1980Google Scholar; Mackie, J. L., Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong, Harmondsworth, 1977, p. 132Google Scholar; Gilligan, Carol, In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women's Development, Cambridge, Mass., 1982Google Scholar; Noddings, Nel, Caring: A Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral Education, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1986Google Scholar; Nagel, Tom, The View from Nowhere, New York, 1986.Google Scholar The importance of Murdoch's work for the contemporary debate is emphasized by Blum in the work referred to in note 2, above.
4 Hazlitt, William, The Spirit of the Age (1825), Oxford, 1954, pp. 19–20Google Scholar, as cited by St Glair, William, The Godwins and the Shelleys: The Biography of a Family, London, 1989, p. 91.Google Scholar
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7 Ibid.
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10 Ibid., pp. 44–5.
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22 Godwin, William, St Leon: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century, p. viiiGoogle Scholar, quoted in Godwin, William, Thoughts Occasioned by the Perusal of Dr Parr's Spital Sermon, pp. 314–5.Google Scholar
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27 Ibid., p. 4.
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32 Dickens, Charles, Bleak House, (1853, London), ch. 4.Google Scholar (We owe this reference to Christina Hoff Sommers: ‘Filial Morality”, Women and Moral Theory, ed. Kittay, Eva Feder and Meyers, Diana T., Totowa, NJ, 1987, p. 72.)Google Scholar
33 Gilman, Charlotte Perkins ‘The Unnatural Mother”, The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader, ed. Lane, Ann J., New York, 1980, p. 65Google Scholar; first published in The Forerunner, 11 1916, pp. 281–5.Google Scholar We thank Erin McKenna for drawing our attention to this story.
34 A Spital Sermon, pp. 33–4.Google Scholar
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38 Thoughts, pp. 27–8 (M 316–17).Google Scholar
39 Ibid., pp. 32–4 (M 321–3). Godwin's argument that I am entitled to give more attention to my child because ‘I best understand his character and his wants” can be found later in Sidgwick, , pp. 432–4Google Scholar, and in Jackson, Frank, ‘Decision-Theoretic Consequentialism and the Nearest and Dearest Objection”, Ethics, ci (1991), 461–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar; see especially 474–5.
40 Stocker, , 459Google Scholar; the example of Smith's visit is on 462.
41 Sidgwick, , p. 413.Google Scholar In ‘Utilitarian Morality and the Personal Point of View”, Journal of Philosophy, lxxxiii (1986), 417–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 421n. 13, David Brink employs this distinction in his defence of utilitarianism, meets objections to it, and provides references to several other statements of the same point. The earliest of these – Joseph Butler's Fifteen Sermons (see Sermon XII, § iv, par. 31) – precedes Godwin, having been first published in 1726. See also Jackson, 465ff.
42 Railton, Peter, ‘Alienation, Consequentialism and the Demands of Morality”, Philosophy and Public Affairs, xiii (1984), 153.Google Scholar The example of John is to be found on 135, and of Juan on 150.
43 Thoughts, p. 41 (M 330).Google Scholar
44 For a selection of key articles in the modern debate on act- and rule-utilitarianism, see Contemporary Utilitarianism, ed. Bayles, Michael, New York, 1968Google Scholar, or Consequentialism, ed. Pettit, Philip, Aldershot, 1993Google Scholar, Pt. IV. See also Lyons, David, Forms and Limits of Utilitarianism, Oxford, 1965CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Hare, , Moral Thinking.Google Scholar Godwin was not, however, the first to point to the distinction between judging on the basis of the utility of each act, and judging on the basis of conformity to a rule or habit that is itself productive of utility. For a discussion of earlier comments along similar lines by David Hume and Richard Price, see Harrison, Jonathan, ‘Utilitarianism, Universalisation and Our Duty to Be Just”, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, liii (1952–1953), 105–34Google Scholar; reprinted in Contemporary Utilitarianism, Bayles.
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48 That view could, for example, be taken of Samuel Scheffler's attempt to reconcile consequentialism and partiality in The Rejection of Consequentialism, Oxford, 1982Google Scholar, or of Peter Railton's ‘sophisticated consequentialism”, defended in his ‘Alienation, Consequentialism, and the Demands of Morality”. For recent discussion of the issue of consequentialism and personal relationships, see Badhwar, Neera Kapur, ‘Why it is wrong to be always guided by the best: consequentialism and friendship”, Ethics, ci (1991), 483–504Google Scholar; see also Friendship: A Philosophical Reader, ed. Badhwar, Neera Kapur, Ithaca, 1993CrossRefGoogle Scholar, especially the editor's introduction at pp. 28–32.
49 Thoughts, p. 46 (M 336).Google Scholar
50 Monro, , ‘Archbishop Féneleon”, 171Google Scholar; also in Monro, D. H., Godwin's Moral Philosophy, London, 1953, p. 33.Google Scholar
51 The novel is Caleb Williams, or Things as they are; the significance of its sub-title is pointed out by Monro, ‘Archbishop Féneleon”, 167.Google Scholar
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