Agreed wholeheartedly with practically everything in the book, except for a couple of things:
1.
Harris repeatedly laments the frequency with which he encounters well-educated, scientifically-minded, secular moral relativists, who defend the practice of repugnant rituals, such as genital mutilation. I imagine that the reason behind their inability to see eye to eye is not due to a fundamental disagreement on morality and the existence of a range of states of being that, for all practical intents and purposes, have positive and negative poles, but rather to the failure to establish a clear consensus on underlying assumptions when discussing theoretical situations.
For example, he posed the question to an acquaintance, ‘What if we found a culture that ritually blinded every third child by literally plucking out his or her eyes at birth, would you then agree that we had found a culture that was needlessly diminishing human well-being?’
To which she replied, ‘It would depend on why they were doing it.’
Harris did not respond favourably to this person’s reply. I hardly doubt that if the issue were discussed further, the two of them would be able to find common ground. Maybe the scenario flashing through her mind was that of a technologically-advanced civilization, capable of replacing ordinary human eyes with superior bionic ones. Surgical methods, performed under anaesthesia, with all the modern equipment at hand, often involve procedures that can still be crudely described as ‘plucking’ something out.
The issue that sometimes trips up conversations between thoughtful people is that one is often inclined to play the devil’s advocate, to make contrarian pronouncements and to throw open the gates of the imagination in an understandable attempt to advertise one’s creativity and open-mindedness. We naturally tend to bask in our hyper-awareness of the fact that our individual understanding is limited, and thus there exist states of which we know little, and which render us leery of passing snap judgments.
And the problem, I always find, with these ‘hypothetical scenario’-type gedankens (whether or not they’ve to do with morality), is that they’re often cloyingly predicated on limited, restrictive assumptions, and are so impoverished in detail that one struggles to find hooks upon which to hang substantial arguments. (Searle’s annoyingly pointless and irrational ‘Chinese Room’ and the ‘Throw a person onto train tracks to save many lives’ “quandary” are examples that pop insufferably to mind. Or heinously formulated essay questions along the lines of, ‘Money cannot buy happiness. Discuss.’) Their queries are phrased in such an over-simplistic, self-consciously provocative way- bleating to be construed in exactly the flavour that the poser of the question intended it, despite their lack of detailed qualification- that one cannot help but tease slightly when giving a response. We let loose with non-committal, politically saccharine replies, burnished with the sarcasm of “Let’s see whether our questioner really believes that I’m as small-minded and absurd as that.”
There must be some prevalent but oft-overlooked, rarely-discussed difference in the way individuals mull over such questions- or in the way the particular context of a discussion is able to elicit a variety of reactions. Some people respond strongly and decisively with clear-cut opinions, using commonly-cited arguments that rely on immediate acceptance of certain underlying assumptions, whereas others have a tendency to exploit their contrary streak. Empathy, playfulness, argumentativeness, and scope of the imagination are contributing factors. If there’s a wealth of literature out there on ‘What gives rise to a contrarian mindset?’, I need to get acquainted with it.
2.
'Meaning, values, morality, and the good life must relate to facts about the well-being of conscious creatures- and, in our case, must lawfully depend upon events in the world and upon states of the human brain.'
I find this an unnecessarily narrow definition- imagine that you are responsible for setting public policy that relates, for example, to nuclear proliferation. You are faced with a decision that potentially leads to one of two outcomes: all human beings are wiped off the face of the planet, as well as all life as we know it, so that only 'inert' materials such as rocks remain; or: all life is destroyed, AND the earth is obliterated, so that not even rocks remain. In either case, humans become extinct, and life as we know it vanishes. But I would argue that there still exists a moral obligation to choose the second option, which accommodates the preservation of the non-living components of our planet. Life and consciousness, and therefore meaning and morality, emerge from non-living, unconscious matter; as such, our considerations of what constitutes morality should take non-sentient beings into account. Perhaps this is so broad a definition that it is pointless for all reasonably conceivable intents and purposes. If so, I back off.
Favourite quotes:
'...morality should be considered an undeveloped branch of science.'
'...not knowing what is right- or that anything can ever be truly right- often leads secular liberals to surrender their intellectual standards and political freedoms with both hands.'
'Meaning, values, morality, and the good life must relate to facts about the well-being of conscious creatures- and, in our case, must lawfully depend upon events in the world and upon states of the human brain.'
'...the division between facts and values is intellectually unsustainable. especially from the perspective of neuroscience.'
'We have recently emerged- some of us leaping, some shuffling, others crawling- out of many dark centuries of religious bewilderment and persecution, into an age when mainstream science is still occasionally treated with overt hostility by the general public and even by governments. While few scientists living in the West now fear torture or death at the hands of religious fanatics, many will voice concerns about losing their funding if they give offense to religion, particularly in the United States. It also seems that wealthy organizations like the Templeton Foundation (whose endowment currently stands at $1.5 billion) have managed to convince scientists and science journalists to split the difference between intellectual integrity and the fantasies of a prior age.'
'...people consistently fail to distinguish between there being answers in practice and answers in principle to specific questions about the nature of reality.'
'Science is defined with reference to the goal of understanding the processes at work in the universe. Can we justify this goal scientifically? Of course not. Doe this make science itself unscientific? If so, we appear to have pulled ourselves down by our bootstraps.'
'Is there some brilliant idea that no one has thought of that would make people want to alleviate the problem of homelessness more than they want to watch television or play video games?'
'It seems to me that we already know enough about the human condition to know that killing cartoonists for blasphemy does not lead anywhere worth going on the moral landscape.'
'It is quite clear to me that given the current state of my mind- that is, given how my actions and uses of attention affect my life- I would be happier if I were less selfish. This means I would be more wisely and effectively selfish if I were less selfish. This is not a paradox.'
'Our belief in free will arises from our moment-to-moment ignorance of specific prior causes.'
'How has the ability to speak (and to read and write of late) given modern humans a greater purchase on the world?...I hope it will not seem philistine of me to suggest that our ability to create fiction has not been the driving force here.'
'It seems to me that few concepts have offered greater scope for human cruelty than the idea of an immortal soul that stands independent of all material influences, ranging from genes to economic systems.'
'...the moral stigma that still surrounds disorders of mood and cognition seems largely the result of viewing the mind as distinct from the brain.'
'...the internet has simultaneously enabled two opposing influences on belief: On the one hand, it has reduced intellectual isolation by making it more difficult for people to remain ignorant of the diversity of opnions on any given subject. But it has also allowed bad ideas to flourish- as anyone with a computer and too much time on his hands can broadcast his point of view and, often enough, find an audience. So while knowledge is open-source, ignorance is, too. It is also true that the less competent a person is in a given domain, the more he will tend to overestimate his abilities. This often produces an ugly marriage of confidence and ignorance that is very difficult to correct for. Conversely, those who are more knowledgeable about a subject tend to be acutely aware of the greater expertise of others. This creates a rather unlovely asymmetry in public discourse- one that is generally on display whenever scientists debate religious apologists.'
'...arrogance is about as common at a scientific conference as nudity.'
'In 2006, Collins published a bestselling book, The Language of God, in which he claimed to demonstrate "a consistent and profoundly satisfying harmony" between twenty-first-century science and Evangelical Christianity. The Language of God is a genuinely astonishing book. Reading this book, I was quite sure that I had witnessed an intellectual suicide. It is, however, a suicide that has gone almost entirely unacknowledged: The body yielded to the rope; the neck snapped; the breath subsided; and the corpse dangles in ghastly discomposure even now- and yet polite people everywhere continue to celebrate the great man's health.'
'It goes without saying that if a frozen waterfall can confirm the specific tenets of Christianity, anything can confirm anything. But this truth was not obvious to Collins as he "knelt in the dewy grass," and it is not obvious to him now. Nor was it obvious to the editors at Nature, which is the most important scientific publication in any language.'
'What is irrational, and irresponsible in a scientist and educator, is to make unjustified and unjustifiable claims about the structure of the universe, about the divine origin of certain books, and about the future of humanity on the basis of such experiences.'
'...the most powerful societies on earth spend their time debating issues like gay marriage when they should be focused on problems like nuclear proliferation, genocide, energy security, climate change, poverty, and failing schools.'
'...I am convinced that every appearance of terms like "metaethics," "deontology," "noncognitivism," "antirealism," "emotivism," etc., directly increases the amount of boredom in the universe.'