In The Sovereignty of Good, Iris Murdoch sketches her neo-Platonic account of the moral life in contrast with the thin moral philosophy of the British empiricists and authenticity-obsessed European existentialism. In the first essay, “The Idea of Perfection,” Murdoch takes aim at what she claims is the dominant behaviorist, existentialist, and utilitarian portrait of the self that she finds implausible for empirical, philosophical, and moral reasons (9). That is to say, Murdoch objects to the behaviorist notion that the only real type of action is publicly observable, the existentialist idea that the self is insubstantial and located entirely in an omnipotent and solitary will, and the utilitarian notion that morality is concerned exclusively with public acts (8-9). Positively stated, Murdoch claims that the moral life is not merely external, but internal, and that the non-observable action that takes place within our minds—in how we view the world and what we choose to pay attention to—is a crucial aspect of morality. In the post-metaphysical, empiricist philosophical milieu Murdoch operated in at Oxford, this kind of view was (and is) controversial. Philosophers had exerted immense intellectual labor to debunk an essentialist view of human selfhood from which human action flowed in an inward to outward direction, and while Murdoch was sympathetic to many of their conclusions, she considered their theories of action ill-suited to morality.
Murdoch strives to show the problem with an exclusively volitional account of human selfhood coupled with an externalist view of action with the famous example of M and D. In brief, M, a mother, is rather contemptuous of her son’s new wife, D, but in all observable respects treats her kindly, such that no one would know except M of her disdain for D. Over time, and due to sustained attention toward D, M’s vision of D alters—M realizes that she failed to see D for who she really is, and D’s once-contemptible qualities become virtues in the eyes of M. In this example, which in its mundanity is entirely relatable, M’s external behavior remains the same, while her internal attitude toward D evolves over time, a shift which is noticeable to M alone. Murdoch tries to understand this shift from the existentialist-behaviorist perspective she criticizes. On this view, because it identifies volition entirely with external actions and denies the possibility of inner action, M cannot have made a real private decision when she deliberately reflected on her attitude toward D; because, on this view, there is only outward activity, there is only outward moral activity, and inward activity is “merely the shadow of this cast back into the mind” (21). Murdoch finds this account extremely implausible: M, in this example, has been morally active, which “is what we want to say and to be philosophically permitted to say” (19). When it comes to moral activity, at least, we need to be able to make sense of inner moral action, and if this is a real possibility, then the will cannot be entirely associated with observable outward behavior; it needs to be connected with our inner lives.
In contrast to the behaviorist-existentialist portrait of human selfhood, Murdoch offers a more complex account of human subjectivity that stresses its historical, moral, and non-reducible internal aspects. On this account, the moral life is not characterized by particularized instances of radical freedom in which one must choose how to act, one way or another; rather, morality is a question of orientation and attention, which provide the backdrop to and motivation for moral action. Freedom, for Murdoch, therefore has less to do with the ability to have done otherwise in any specific instance, and more to do with how one chooses to see the world and what one pays attention to. “I can only choose within the world I can see,” Murdoch explains, “in the moral sense of ‘see’ which implies that clear vision is the result of . . . moral effort” (35-6). Elsewhere, she writes that “freedom is not strictly the exercise of the will, but rather the experience of accurate vision which, when this becomes appropriate, occasions action. It is what lies behind and in between actions and prompts them that is important, and it is this area which should be purified” (65). Whereas Kant understands freedom as manifest in discrete actions prompted by the will determined by the moral law, Murdoch understands freedom as continuously operative in the temporally distended attempt to see an object clearly, for what it really is. While both Kant and Murdoch insist that freedom is central to the moral life, it is not, as Kant would have it, “switched on and off in between the occurrence of explicit moral choices,” but rather the work of a lifetime (36).
For Murdoch, just as freedom in attention provides the backdrop for volitional moral action in discrete instances, it also liberates us from states of illusion, the most potent of which concern our self-centered fantasies. In fact, clearly influenced by Plato, Murdoch claims that freedom from fantasy attained by sustained attention is the ultimate task of the moral life. Murdoch was not a Christian, but, with the help of Freud, whom she says “presents us with . . . a realistic and detailed picture of the fallen man,” effectively naturalizes the Fall in her description of untutored human nature (50). That is, Murdoch thinks that we are naturally and inexorably self-centered, a conclusion which seems to her “true on the [empirical] evidence, whenever and wherever we look at [humans], in spite of a very small number of apparent exceptions” (76). We humans relentless look after ourselves; we love to daydream; we are reluctant to face unpleasant realities; our love is typically an assertion and expression of ourselves rather than other-oriented; we constantly seek consolation; and our consciousness of the world is like “a cloud of more or less fantastic reverie” meant to protect our psyches from pain (77). Consequently, “the fat, relentless ego” is the enemy of the moral life, which consists in an endless effort to pierce the self-preoccupied and illusory veil with which we have concealed the world (51). To be moral, we need to look beyond ourselves and our concerns toward an external object of contemplation or attention. While Murdoch certainly seeks to defend the validity of internal moral action, the solution to “the fat, relentless ego” cannot on her view lie within ourselves.
In many respects, Murdoch understands the problem of morality in traditional Christian terms, and her solution to this problem likewise echoes the traditional Christian response. Whereas, in Christianity, the external locus of contemplation needed to be liberated from sinfulness is God, for Murdoch, the external object of attention needed to be freed from selfishness is the Good, which she explicitly models after the Christian Neoplatonic conception of God. On the one hand, Murdoch concurs with G. E. Moore that the Good is undefinable, not because, as Moore insists, it is a simple property we intuit in a variety of intrinsically valuable entities, but because the Good participates in “the infinite elusive character of reality” and hence always lies beyond our capacity to know it (41, 61). On the other hand, unlike Moore, Murdoch thinks there is more to be said about the Good: like God, the Good is one, perfect, transcendent, non-representable, and a necessarily real object of attention (54). It is “the focus of attention when an intent to be virtuous coexists (as it perhaps always does) with some unclarity of vision.” It is that which, when we contemplate it, reveals to us individuals as they really are (68). It refers to “a perfection which is perhaps never exemplified in the world we know . . . and which carries with it the ideas of hierarchy and transcendence,” while at the same time is embodied in knowable particulars in the world. Finally, it is an ideal toward which we strive, but which, because of human nature, we can never fully attain (90-1). In short, like Plato, Murdoch thinks that the Good, while real, nevertheless transcends knowable reality, which it in turn illuminates in the radiance of truth. Contemplation of the Good therefore pulls us up and out of the cave of self-centered fantasies and helps us to see others and ourselves more truly. If Murdoch were to propose a moral mantra, it would be to “look out, not in, to know the truth.” From this orientation away from ourselves toward what transcends our petty illusions, moral action necessarily flows.
While all this seems rather abstract, Murdoch, like the Christian Neoplatonists, understands that the moral life is ultimately a practical affair and explores several techniques to help us orient ourselves toward the transcendent reality of the Good. Murdoch first takes a cue from Christianity to query whether prayer, which she conceives as “simply an attention to God which is a form of love,” can be translated into a non-theistic philosophical practice. Admittedly, she leaves this question open—there is no model here for philosophical prayer—but concedes that “it does seem that prayer can actually induce a better quality of consciousness” and can stimulate moral action “which would not otherwise be available” (81).
Murdoch has much more to say about the Platonic notion that love of beauty in both nature and art is a vehicle toward contemplation of the Good. Nature, she explains, allows us to “clear our minds of selfish care”: one sees a kestrel, and suddenly one’s own concerns are set aside to behold such a splendid creature (82). “A self-directed enjoyment of nature seems to me . . . forced,” Murdoch writes. We take selfless pleasure “in the sheer alien pointless independent existence of animals, birds, stones and trees.” But Murdoch is especially fond of art. Great art, she insists, is “a perfection of form which invites unpossessive contemplation and resists absorption into the selfish dream life of the consciousness” (83). Because, unlike nature, it is a human product, it reveals more about the human condition, in both representational and non-representational ways; the pointlessness of art is for Murdoch especially instructive in this sense, since excellent art is both absolutely pointless yet supremely important, just like moral virtue. Murdoch even calls art a “sacrament,” by which she means (I think) that beautiful art communicates its beauty to us: when we come to love beauty in art, we in some sense participate in the Good (83).
Finally, Murdoch proposes that the intellectual disciplines can help orient us toward the Good. “Intellectual disciplines are moral disciplines,” she asserts, insofar as they typically presuppose virtues like justice, accuracy, truthfulness, humility, the ability to sustain clear vision, and even passion without sentiment or self (87-8). She offers as an example the attempt to learn Russian, which necessitates respect toward an authoritative structure that transcends oneself, sustained attention, love, and honesty about what one does not know. In sum, Murdoch concludes that the enjoyment of art and nature and the pursuit of intellectual disciplines help us to “unself,” to view the world with clarity and justice, and to love the truth, each of which helps us to perceive and orient ourselves toward the Good.
The Sovereignty of Good presents an attractive version of the moral life, one that bucks several trends in contemporary philosophy and rehabilitates a seductive Platonism. Whether its claims can survive sustained philosophical criticism is another question. While one cannot assess Murdoch’s views fairly without her Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals, it suffices to say that in The Sovereignty of Good, she does not systematically defend her metaethical position so much as sketch its basic outline. To be sure, she does not simply represent Platonism—the Good for Murdoch is not a form, but embodied in particular individuals (she is closer to Aristotle on this score); Murdoch stresses the importance of literature as a means of orientation toward the Good, whereas Plato famously expels the poets from Callipolis; and Murdoch’s conception of the human self is more complex (i.e. Freudian) than Plato’s, to cite just a few differences. At the same time, she does not, as far as I can tell, justify her conception of the Good so much as offer it as a potentially credible alternative to the thin moral existentialism she criticizes. In short, more must be said about the Good as a transcendent reality in our post-metaphysical and postmodern era. Still, Murdoch’s critique of the behaviorist-existential model of human selfhood hits the mark, and her emphasis on the moral importance of attention appropriately corrects for an exclusively volitional, neo-Kantian portrait of the moral subject.