LLOYD REINHARDT'S PAPER DELIVERED
ON SATURDAY 19 MAY, 2007, AT THE FORUM
"TRUTH AND A GOOD LIFE"

Lloyd
Reinhardt speaking at the Forum
Photo:
Trish Davies
Truth and a Good Life
'Count
no man happy until he is dead.' So says Aristotle, quoting Solon,
one of the wise men of ancient Athens, and agreeing with him.
Even death may be too soon if Aristotle is right - and I think
he is - that happiness is not a short or even a long term state
of mind, not something that belongs in a list with a burst of
elation, a pang of sorrow, a twinge of pain, a bout of giddiness,
and the like. It also is not a longer term feeling of well-being
such as alcohol, marijuana, and other substances can induce.
A
happy life is not one where pleasant states of mind overbalance
unpleasant ones. There are pleasant states of mind to be had
through anticipating things you are going to do or undergo later
on. Think of how enjoyable it can be to plan an overseas holiday.
Such states of mind are sometimes illusory in that upon engaging
in the activity or the passivity, frustration, disappointment
and boredom overtake you. An unhappy life could be one in which
far less time was spent feeling frustrated, disappointed and
bored than was spent in pleasing anticipation. Or a life could
be full of pleasant remembrances, nostalgic delights occupying
most of one's time in the otherwise dismal atmosphere of a prison
cell, the new tyrant having ended your pleasing days of ruling
and living luxuriously.
Aristotle's word that we translate as 'happy' was 'eudaimon',
and Greek thinkers had a lot to say about eudaimonia. Some recent
writers prefer to translate the Greek word as 'flourishing'
or 'well-being'. Others stick with 'happiness' and ask us to
notice the meaning of 'happy' in 'happy outcome' or 'happy ending'
or in a phrase such as 'these happy isles' to speak of Britain
in its glory. That meaning is the thing to keep in mind when
you think about what living a good life is supposed to be.
The infelicity of 'happy' as the word we want is also indicated
by this: When we imagine a human life entirely free of fear,
of sorrow, of grief, utterly devoid of distress or suffering,
are we not imagining a shallow life? I am not suggesting that
it is a good thing to let suffering thrive, to see to it that
poverty, sickness and hunger enhance the lives of the lower
orders. In that connection, Simone Weil's words are apt: 'In
the social realm it is our duty to eliminate as much suffering
as we can; there will always be enough left over for the elect'.
Aristotle and Plato both held that a necessary condition of
living a flourishing life, of eudaimonia, was that it had to
be a just life, an ethical life. Plato had a striking notion
of being just as achieving harmony of the soul. We can get the
word 'soul' out of the idea by speaking, in post-Christian terms,
of being decent, getting your act together and having your priorities
right. I don't myself mind talk of the soul so long as it does
not mean a substantial item, a thing which can exist without
a body. Simone Weil is helpful here too. She speaks of the soul
in terms of harm that can be done to the life of a human being
without injury to the body.
Plato and Aristotle, despite their agreement about the necessity
of decency for a good life, disagreed about the sufficiency
of it. Roughly speaking, Aristotle thought that happiness, eudaimonia,
was vulnerable to the vicissitudes of fortune. No matter how
good a person you might be, the world could still crap on you.
Plato knew perfectly well that the world could crap on the just
man, but he thought that could do no harm. The crap could not
blight or diminish the excellence of the life of a just man.
The harmony of the soul persists no matter how discordant the
surroundings happen to be. Plato also argued, perhaps because
he so much hoped that, in the long run, the unjust would get
their come-uppance. The 20th Century was blessed with a man
who held Plato's view. A leading principle of Groucho Marxism
is a pithy expression of Plato's ethics: 'Time wounds all heels'.
I am sure many of you have heard of the fallacy of deducing
what ought to be the case from what is the case. Groucho here
indulges in the converse fallacy, deducing from what ought to
be the case that, eventually at least, it will be. He derives
'is' from 'ought'.
So
far I have wanted to bring out how reflection on living well,
being happy, flourishing, leads to some idea of judging or evaluating
the life of a person. And the opening remark 'Count no man happy
until he is dead' suggests that such an evaluative conception
is not a subjective matter; the person whose life is evaluated
is not the only one to make such an evaluation. It is possible
for the person whose life is under consideration to get it wrong,
to suffer from error. A good deal needs to be said about the
source of such errors, how much it is a matter of illusion or
delusion, of self-deception, of willful avoidance of knowledge,
victimization by deceit, etc
The main thing Aristotle and Solon had in mind was the possibility
of events occurring after someone's death that bear on any judgment
to be made about his or her life. Central concerns and ambitions
in someone's life may be well be on track at death, but suffer
derailment afterward. It may be as clear cut as an earthquake
killing a man's entire family at his graveside. Surely, in such
a case, we can pity the person, perhaps with the words: 'The
poor sonofabitch'. Of course someone may react differently,
saying 'Well, he doesn't know and won't find out, no need for
pity.' If we think differently on this we are having a more
or less serious evaluative, even I would say, ethical disagreement.
Maybe it is more like an aesthetic disagreement. I don't really
care exactly what sort of disagreement it is. It is not, no
matter how you think of it, that one of us is making sense,
the other failing to.
I want to focus on is one strand in the conceptual fabric we
find here. I want to focus on beliefs of great importance to
a person, beliefs central to his or her grip on who he or she
is and what his or her life amounts to. How much does it matter
if such beliefs are false? A way to filter out the relevant
beliefs from others, many of which are sure to be false, is
to ask whether and to what extent, a person would be devastated
by finding out the truth. By devastation I mean what can lead
people to think of their lives no longer making sense, no longer
seeming worthwhile, drained of meaning. I shall also consider
the question of the extent to which, if at all, we should disabuse
others of such false beliefs if we are placed to do so. What
it is to be so placed is itself of interest. Whose business
is it? Surely not just that of anybody who knows the relevant
truth. That will also involve the issue of how important truth,
in the aspect of truthfulness to others, is. That is a nice
topic in its own right, though I don't think anybody anymore
holds the medieval Christian view, and the view of Immanuel
Kant, that lying is never justified.
So
there are two questions. First, can not knowing insulate a person
from harm, exempt his or her life from being a proper object
of pity? Is it right to say that what you don't know doesn't
hurt you even if it is something that had you known it, would
have devastated you? Second, what is appropriate if you are
placed in a position to inform someone of what will devastate
him and refraining from doing so will itself be a refusal of
truthfulness on your part? Reflection here not about the nature
of truth or about the ludicrous idea that there is no such thing
as truth I am taking truth for granted and asking about how
much and why it matters.
In
his drama The Wild Duck, Henrik Ibsen, provides an instance
where we readily judge that it would have been better to leave
others with false beliefs, in particular beliefs about the relations
a man's wife had to a powerful benefactor of hers and his, before
and perhaps during the marriage. A child's paternity is rendered
uncertain by revelations a friend of the husband is determined
to make. The friend is zealous about openness and honesty in
marriage. It is all a disaster; the daughter, 14 years old,
an attractive and loving child, kills herself out of an induced
need to prove she loves her father via a sacrifice of something
precious to her The zealous has urged the girl to kill a cherished
wild duck that is kept in the attic. The girl applies the advice,
but not to the duck, shooting herself in the way she is told
to shoot the duck, one bullet in just the right spot on her
breast. .
In
this play, one cannot say that the man and his family are flourishing;
they are not doing very well and he is as asinine in his way
as his zealous friend is in his. There is no doubt that, as
one of the likeable characters in the play, a Dr. Relling, says,
it would have been better to leave them as they were. Relling
thinks that it is generally better to leave people with their
lies; he speaks of helping people to construct or hold on to
lies that enable them carry on.
Still
we do have here a case of truth being devastating, or received
as devastating by the self-dramatizing father. A feature of
the play is that the main victim of the destructive force of
truth is the child, who is not mired in false belief. She is
devoted to her father, or the man who may not be, but may be,
her father. But he cruelly rejects her when he learns he is
probably not her father. The mother is uncertain and, 15 years
having passed with her as a caring and dutiful wife and mother,
she cannot see why it matters. Few are those who not stand on
her side.
I
do not think that we can say of Hjalmer, the father, anything
like 'poor fellow', something more like 'silly clod' comes to
mind. He is not really a victim of deceit, though it is true
that his wife was not completely open with him. The only character
to be pitied is the child. With Hjalmer, we are, or I am, disposed
to deplore his agonies over not being a biological father when
he has been quite a good father to the child and she a devoted
and charming child. Anyway, we do not have here a case of a
life's worth or happiness blighted by illusion or delusion.
Hjalmer's discovery of the truth about his benefactor and his
wife and his doubt about his paternity do not blight a good
life; at most a somewhat shabby life has removed from its brightest
patch, the attractive, lively and devoted daughter, Hedvig.
We
certainly get a case here for saying 'What they don't know is
not hurting them'. And for saying that Hjalmer with his false
belief, which was somewhat the product of avoidance of evidence,
would have been better off, lived a happier life, without the
intrusion of his friend's zealousness Dr. Relling's therapy
of letting people live with their falsehoods, with their lies
as he puts is, is vindicated.
I
now have to resort to my own, perhaps perverse, aptitude for
fiction for further cases. There are two.
Here
is one scenario: George, a very successful salesman, is on his
deathbed at the relatively early age of 60. His wife Mabel and
best friend, Fred are at his side, each holding one of George's
hands. George is dying in a glow of warm conviction and remembrance
of the loyalty of these two, the most important people in his
life. Tender farewells are exchanged and George expires. Fred
and Mabel look across to each lustfully, shovel George out of
the bed, and proceed to vigorous humping in the deathbed, a
corpse sprawled in the centre of the room. We learn from their
talk that, whenever possible - and George was, after all, a
traveling salesman - they have indulged in these orgiastic delights,
for 30 hears.
The
words that come to mind as I envisage the scene and attend to
the crumpled body on the floor those I have used earlier: 'The
poor sonofabitch'. If George is not an appropriate object of
pity, I do not understand what pity is. But as I said earlier,
if you are inclined to withhold pity in the light of the thought
that George never knew of the duplicity of Mabel and Fred and
was generally pleased his work and life, then you and I are
having some kind of ethical disagreement. I agree with Thomas
Nagel who says that it is hard to see how it can be that knowing
something could be harmful, as devastating as some things can
be, and yet be harmless if unknown.
Maybe
our disagreement belongs to ethics somewhat indirectly. If you
think no harm has been done because Fred and Mabel succeeded
in hiding their disloyalty, mustn't you think that they were
not acting wrongly or badly. A strict utilitarian must, I think,
hold that since their disloyalty did not, in fact, cause George
to suffer, Fred and Mabel did no wrong. Maybe their haste in
having at it in the deathbed is a kind of disrespect for the
dead, but their pleasure might easily outweigh that, if such
things can be weighed against each other. Strict utilitarianism
has anyway to stretch to deplore disrespect for the dead.
Here is my second story: Giovanni is a dying. He is a prosperous
and respected Sicilian winegrower. His prosperity was much helped
by his two sons who emigrated to New York many years ago. Giovanni
worked hard when the boys were young to get them educated and
gain admission to Harvard, where they both studied law and joined
large corporations in NYC. The sons visited Sicily frequently
and invested in their father's winery, which prospered. Giovanni
took in his best friend and neighbour, Luigi, as a partner,
absorbing Luigi's smaller, adjacent winery. The partners have
been fortunate to avoid the imprecations of the Mafia, and their
winery has flourished as has their friendship.
The
sons and their families are expected soon for a final visit,
Luigi having telephoned with the sad news of impending death
some weeks ago. Giovanni is so fragile that his doctor forbids
him a telephone on his sickbed. Luigi has assured him that he
will take any calls and contact the sons again if they do not
arrive as expected. They do not, and Luigi pursues the matter.
What he learns is appalling. The sons, while indeed having studied
at Harvard, were enticed into being lawyers for the Mafia, eventually
into occasional assassinations of public officials and businessmen
who were threats to Mafia operations. One of the inducements
to getting entangled with the Mafia was assurance that their
father's business in Sicily would never be touched.
Luigi
uncovers all this along with the devastating news that the sons
will almost certainly be sentenced to death in the electric
chair, their crimes having finally caught up with them. Giovanni
is sure that Luigi has looked into the tardiness of the sons
and when Luigi next visits the sickbed, about to be a deathbed,
Giovanni asks him what is happening, why are the sons not here
to bid farewell to their father?. It is, after all, their great
success in America and their generosity to him and their own
flourishing lives that have done so much to make his own life
worthwhile, especially given how much he worked and sacrificed
early in his life to set them on a hopeful path..
Luigi is aware of all this and aware that another thing in Giovanni's
life, and his own, has been their friendship and trusting partnership.
No joy or sorrow, no elation or frustration, no satisfaction
or disappointment, no problem or plight or crisis was ever anything
but shared or communicated between them. Luigi knows it will
devastate Giovanni to learn about his sons, especially their
impending executions. But Giovanni has asked him what is happening.
Luigi has no doubt that if Giovanni realizes or finds out that
he is being lied to by Luigi, that will itself have some devastating
force. He has to decide whether or not to lie to his dying friend.
I have no good idea as to how to finish the story. One thing
I am sure of, though, is that, whether Giovanni learns the truth
or not, I could not say that he had a good or a happy or a flourishing
life.. The prospering of his winery was, unbeknownst to him,
fostered by crime. He is surely as proper an object of pity
as was George in my earlier tale. As for Luigi, well, I would
not like to be in his shoes.. I do not see how he can avoid
doing something he will find it hard to live with.
I have given cases where it makes sense to pity a person and
to evaluate a life more or less negatively, in spite of the
person involved being ignorant of or deceived about the relevant
facts. So it can be that a life fails to be a happy one, a flourishing
life, despite the likelihood that the one who lives the life
would think of it as a good life. But can I generalize? Can
I maintain that for any life, the falsehood, illusoriness or
even delusiveness of deeply important beliefs, despite the falsehood
never being revealed, is a blight on that life, a basis for
pitying the person embedded in falsehood.
If the generalization is legitimate, then any of us who are
atheists seem to be required to take pity on, say, the life
of Johann Sebastian Bach. Back was a devout Christian who regarded
his genius as god-given and his outpouring of divine music as
done for and inspired by the glory of God. Mozart too speaks
of his duty to exercise his gift to the utmost in the vocation
God has chosen for him.
An acquaintance, an eminent scientist, unhesitatingly said we
should pity Bach and Mozart and thought their lives diminished
by their religious beliefs. But others have suggested that in
cases like Bach and Mozart, their astounding creativity might
well have depended on their faith and might dry up if faith
were lost. One friend said that, if, as is most unlikely, inducing
religious belief in a person would unleash great works of art,
he would probably be willing to foster the illusion if it could
be done.
A further problem for is that it must be uncertain whether disabusing
someone religious of their faith will devastate them or liberate
them. At the very least, genuine religious belief, which must
be among the important, identity constituting beliefs presents
a problem I have not yet worked my way through. I think that
part of the problem is that very many of the things seriously
religious people say, even though, grammatically, they are statements
purporting to be true, admit of symbolic and metaphorical meaning;
much religious talk is interpretable as expressing things atheists
need not dispute. Even so, a crunch eventually comes if you
stick to it - and your religious interlocutor will stick to
it with you - a crunch where something has to be said as a claim
to truth but which turns out to be unintelligible, nonsense.
That is why the early Christian, Tertullian, came out with:
"I believe because it is absurd' as well as 'I must though
it is impossible.' Tertullian was attacking Marcion - a man
flayed alive for heresy - who had said that the incarnation
was impossible, the crucifixion an illusion. Marcion had several
arguments, but the really good one was that incarnation required
God to undergo change and, since God's properties are eternal,
this is absurd. Tertullian helped to do in Marcion, but Tertullian
himself eventually was also declared a heretic.
So
absurdity, not mere falsehood, gets into the picture with the
religion. . Maybe there is truth in the idea that without religion,
human beings, or anyway some of them, would be unspeakably horrible.
Of course, plenty of religious people are unspeakably horrible..
I like Mary McCarthy's remark: 'Only those who are already very
good can afford to become religious; with the others, it makes
them worse.'
I conclude with a fantasy . The fantasy was introduced into
philosophy by the late Robert Nozick. Nozick postulates the
Experience Machine. It works this way: I am offered the prospect
of having my brain removed and placed in a vat, connected to
a computer which can manipulate my brain so that all will seem
to me in all respects as it would if I really were doing and
suffering whatever can be done and suffered.. I can make as
many requests as I like about what I will undergo once envatting
has taken place. And I am assured that I will be oblivious of
the proposal having been made and of my decision to accept..
I can have a flawless simulacrum of the life I would like most
to lead from now on, or it can start earlier so that my decision
to study philosophy and my accumulated intellectual muddles
can be excised in favour of a more useful past education. I
can have an MBA instead of a philosophy degree. I can include
as much as I like in the way of fine wining and dining, glorious
lovemaking, political, business, academic or artistic success,
etc., etc. The program will see to it that I do become diseased
from my sybaritic new life style.
Offered
this prospect and trusting the science, what reasons might there
be for refusing. Well, I know here and now that it will all
be unreal, only a marvelously coherent hallucination, virtual
reality in spades. I might reject the offer just because of
that, which would mean that truth and proper contact with reality
mean a lot to me.. For I will not know then, will not even suspect,
what I know here and now, that it will not be real life.
A
different reason for refusal might be that I should, for my
friends and loved ones, have vanished from the earth and let
them all down. The scientists might meet this worry by assuring
me that all those I care about and who care about me will be
convincingly told that I have died in a plan crash, where no
bodies have been recovered. So what they don't know won't hurt
them, though they will be hurt by what they come to believe,
they will grieve, I will have seriously deceived them and they
will live their lives in false belief about me and their relationship
to me. In a way, I shall be betraying them. They shall have
been betrayed, but never know.
If
I do recognize this as a reason for rejecting the offer, I shall
be firmly showing that I do not accept the idea that what they
don't know won't hurt them
My forthcoming illusion will be so grand that simulacra of my
friends and my relations to them can be included. So again,
while I know now, as I ponder my decision, that my future will
be an illusion, I won't know then. I know now that I will be
letting down my friends but there will none of that once the
scientists get to work with their vat and my brain.
This thought experiment is bizarre and fantastical. But it does
seem to be a clever device for provoking thought about whether
and how much why truth matters. I used it in ethics and metaphysics
classes for years. I didn't keep records, but shows of hands
indicated that some were attracted to the proposal, others averse.
A colleague of mine, years before the idea of the experience
machine got abroad, once asked, during lecturing on Descartes's
dream and his demon if any of her students would prefer dreaming
to being awake. One said he would and, asked why, answered 'You
meet a better class of people in your dreams'. That adolescent,
at least, would surely have taken up the offer to become a brain
in a vat.
I won't bother to take up the obvious and popular skeptical
ploy, which asks how we can possibly know that we aren't right
now brains in vats. It may help just a little with that to be
confident that you would not have accepted the offer.
-
Lloyd Reinhardt is a former Senior
Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Sydney