Why Sam Harris is Wrong - A Critique of Sam Harris' "The Moral Landscape" (in 2020) | Summary and Q&A
TL;DR
Harris conflates morality and well-being, causing issues; morality is a form of discourse, not absolute truth.
Key Insights
- 💁 Morality is a form of communication that often burdens legal processes unnecessarily with moral judgment.
- 🪩 Harris's secular moral reasoning mirrors religious absolutism, causing confusion and inconsistency.
- 👋 Wittgenstein's distinction between relative and absolute "good" underscores the fallacy in Harris's approach.
- 👮 Law stabilizes expectations in society without moralizing actions, showcasing the efficacy of amoral regulation.
Transcript
you mentioned the definition of moralities kind of problematic in the moral landscape in the book so can you tell me about this um yes i think what the book does it conflates two things on the one hand um really one major intention of harry's is is to point out that there are moral truths and that there is something like a universal morality that i... Read More
Questions & Answers
Q: How does Harris conflate morality and well-being in "The Moral Landscape"?
Harris equates moral truths with scientific truths, combining universal morality and well-being, thereby creating confusion and logical errors.
Q: What is the difference between relative and absolute notions of "good" according to Wittgenstein?
Wittgenstein distinguishes between relative "good" concerning specifics like tasks and absolute "good" unrelated to any specific criterion, highlighting the error in conflating the two, as Harris does.
Q: Why is Harris critiqued for his utilitarian calculus approach to morality?
Harris's utilitarian calculus fails to consider the limitations of relative well-being assessments and mistakenly assumes an absolute moral truth that can be optimized, a flawed approach to morality.
Q: How does Harris's approach to morality relate to his critique of religion?
While Harris effectively critiques religious fundamentalism, his moralizing approach replicates religious tendencies, signaling a need for better discernment in his moral theory.
Summary & Key Takeaways
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Harris's book 'The Moral Landscape' combines moral truths and scientific truths causing confusion.
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Wittgenstein's distinction between relative and absolute "good" highlights the confusion Harris creates.
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Understanding morality as communication, not absolute truth, provides a new perspective.