登陆注册
15792400000061

第61章

It is moreover a fact, which no one has explained better than Adam Smith, in his account of the growth in every individual of the virtue of self-command, that though our moral estimate of our own conduct begins by reference to the sympathy of particular individuals, our parents, schoolfellows, or others, we yet end by judging ourselves, not by reference to any one in particular so much as from an abstract idea of general approbation or the contrary, derived from our experience of particular judgments in the course of our life. This is all that is meant by "the abstract spectator," reference to whom is simply the same as reference to the supposed verdict of public opinion. If we have done anything wrong, told a lie, for example, the self-condemnation we pass on ourselves is the condemnation of public opinion, with which we identify ourselves by long force of habit; and had we never heard a lie condemned, nor known it punished, we should feel no self-condemnation whatever in telling one. We condemn it, not by reference, as Jouffroy puts it, to the feelings of John or Peter, but by reference to the feelings of the general world, which we know to be made up of people like John and Peter. There is nothing inconsistent therefore in the notion of an abstract spectator, "who has neither the prejudices of the one nor the weaknesses of the other, and who sees correctly and soundly precisely because he is abstract." The identification of this abstract spectator with conscience, is so far from being, as Jouffroy says it is, a departure from, and an abandonment of the rule of sympathy, that it is its logical and most satisfactory development. There is no reason to repeat the process by which the perception of particular approving sympathies passes into identification with the highest rules of morality and the most sacred dictates of religion. By reference to his own experience, every reader may easily test for himself the truth or falsity of Adam Smith's argument upon this subject.

It is said with truth, that to make the judgment of an impartial or abstract spectator the standard of morality is to make no security against fallibility of judgment; and that such a judgment is only efficacious where there is tolerable unanimity, but that it fails in the face of possible differences of opinion. But this objection is equally true of any ethical standard ever yet propounded in the world, whether self- interest, the greatest possible happiness, the will of the sovereign, the fitness of things, or any other principle is suggested as the ultimate test of rectitude of conduct. This part of the theory may claim, therefore, not only to be as good as any other theory, but to be in strict keeping with the vast amount of variable moral sentiment which actually exists in the world.

In further disproof of Adam Smith's theory, Jouffroy appeals to consciousness.

We are not conscious, he says, in judging of the acts of others, that we measure them by reference to our ability to sympathize with them. So far are we from doing this, that we consider it our first duty to stifle our emotions of sympathy or antipathy, in order to arrive at an impartial judgment.

As regards our own emotions, also, there is no such recourse to the sympathies of others; and even when there is, we often prefer our own judgment after all to that which we know to be the judgment of others. Consciousness therefore attests the falsity of the theory that we seek in our own sensibility the judgments we pass upon others, or that we seek in the opinions of others the principle of estimation for our own sentiments and conduct.

The truth of the fact stated in this objection may evidently be conceded, and yet the validity of the main theory be left untouched. The latter is a theory mainly of the origin of moral feelings, and of their growth; and emotions of sympathy which originally give rise to moral feelings may well disappear and be absent when long habit has once fixed them in the mind.

It is quite conceivable, for instance, that if we originally derived our moral notions of our own conduct from constant observation of the conduct of others, we might yet come to judge ourselves by a standard apparently unconnected with any reference to other people, and yet really made up of a number of forgotten judgments passed by us upon them. Children are always taught to judge them- selves by appeals to the sentiments of their parents or other relations about their conduct; and though the standard of morality, thus external at first, may in time come to be internal, and even to be more potent than when it was external, it none the more follows that recourse to such sympathy never took place because it ceases to take place or to be noticed when the moral sentiments are fully formed. In learning to read and write, an exactly analogous process may be traced. The letters which so painfully affected our consciousness at first, when we had to make constant reference to the alphabet, cease at last to affect it at all; yet the process of spelling really goes on in the mind in every word we read or write, however unconscious we may be of its operation. Habit and experience, says Adam Smith, teach us so easily and so readily to view our own interests and those of others from the standpoint of a third person, that "we are scarce sensible" of such a process at all.

Then again, the question has been raised, Is it true that sympathy with an agent or with the object of his action is a necessary antecedent to all moral approbation or the contrary?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 异界之诛天剑神

    异界之诛天剑神

    他本毫无修炼根骨,只是天下剑道圣地‘蜀山剑派’一个藏经阁打扫楼阁的门童……却因道劫降临,整个‘蜀山剑派’被道劫劈中,他葬身与道劫之中……意外重生,他发现这是一个灵气比蜀山聚灵小世界还要浓郁数十倍的世界……这是一个无比适合修炼的世界,这是一个以武为尊的世界,这是一个他梦寐以求的世界……在这个修炼法决严重缺陷的世界……而常年打扫藏经阁的他,脑海之中全部都是‘蜀山剑派’无数代积累下来的剑道经文,剑典。他知道,这一刻,他注定要崛起了……
  • 现代阴阳先生诡异录

    现代阴阳先生诡异录

    《现代阴阳先生诡异录》一书,没有任何宣传迷信的东西。若有,也是一种恐怖至极的东西:欲望。刘振明追随“爷爷”曾家明学习“曾家阴阳术”二十年。在一次做法中,曾家明意外去世。刘振明继承了爷爷的衣钵,为了生存下去,开办了一家私人侦探所。并谨遵爷爷的遗愿,着手调查《阴阳九字诀》另外六个字的下落。但是,事业没有任何波澜,日子也过得浑浑噩噩。《阴阳九字诀》更是不知在哪里。2005年,刘振明救下了被人追杀的胡丽娜,意外获知了胡家与曾家的前尘往事。从此,他的人生发生剧变.......
  • 扶丧浮世

    扶丧浮世

    无业人士林雨泽家中的墙壁在某一天突然传来急促的敲击声,而他对面的房间根本空无一人!与此同时,网上不断传播言论,称古代的一种名为“尸壁”的妖物再度降临。信或者不信,他的命运,都将在这一天发生翻天覆地的改变。不!是彻底地回归,回归本该属于他的命运轨迹。无数次重复的梦境,脑海中不断闪现的白发女人的身影,又无数次的邂逅与离别,终究他能够寻回属于自己的所有记忆吗?围绕着他身上的真实,究竟是什么?!一切,都还是未知的......
  • 战天盖地

    战天盖地

    天地不公,唯逆天改命。既然余下我孤单的隐忍,那么必踏破天,重建秩序。孤单行走于人世间,几分轮回,沧海桑田,故人早已散落。击战歌,逆九天,许我一世红颜。归混沌,冉冉世界重生。如果可以,我愿做那个院落的邻家小子。
  • 创世纪之生存游戏

    创世纪之生存游戏

    突如其来的一段魔蛊之音打翻了这片一区既往的世界!人们彷徨,迷茫,崩溃,冷血,爆发。。。。。力量,是生存下去的唯一依靠,唯有拼搏力量才会变强!新的世界,新的纪元,唯有生存下去才是正道!
  • 九月血祭之流云痕

    九月血祭之流云痕

    她是人间的神女,拥有最光明的气息,亦是千年前神秘的魔界公主,深藏不露,脾气古怪,时而脱线犯二,同一个身体里藏着三个灵魂;他是嗜血的血皇,容貌似妖似仙,眉间一点朱砂胜过万里河山。千年前她一袭白衣,风雪吹起她的发丝,一剑葬送了他的心,也埋藏了……她的情;千年后他一袭红衣,在她的怀里沉眠。他说“不论你是染月还是白初熙,你永远只能是我的!”她说:“花月夜,如果有一天,千染月回来了,你会不会忘记白初熙?”那年桃花溪下,你一袭白衣染了惊花,如今青衣竹畔,不见你容颜如画。从此明月两相望,谁知公子世无双?辗转千年,只为在人群中寻找你的身影!
  • 孤云录

    孤云录

    他,一个毫不起眼的孤儿,当亲人和爱人在他面前死去时,他没有能保护好他们。在穿越后,他,励志要用自己双手去保护自己想要保护的东西!
  • 紫蔷薇之重生守护

    紫蔷薇之重生守护

    那时,她患了癌症,检查出来时已癌症晚期;那时,他家破人亡,走投无路时他已选择死亡。两个相爱的人,因为怕连累对方而含泪分离,在海的两岸双双自杀,也许是上帝跟他们开了个玩笑,让他们在千年之前重生。这一世,他们是否能相认并且相爱?
  • 废物成才,太子妃归我啦

    废物成才,太子妃归我啦

    哇,穿越了,没想到穿越后变美了,可惜是废材
  • 侠闻仙香

    侠闻仙香

    每个人心中都有一柄剑,或灵动飘逸,或大巧不工。每个人心中都居住着一位侠客,他们惩恶扬善,仗义施为。侠义之情,每个人心中的英雄梦。本书就讲述一段多彩丰纷呈的仙侠之旅,为大家带来久违的侠骨柔情。