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volume 15, no. 4 january 2015 Non-Consequentialism Demystified Howard Nye University of Alberta David Plunkett Dartmouth College John Ku © 2015 Nye, Plunkett, & Ku This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License. <www.philosophersimprint.org/ 015004/> 1. Introduction 1 Many moral theories hold that what an agent morally ought to do is determined in part by the goodness of the outcomes of those actions currently available to her. However, some moral theories go further and claim that what an agent morally ought to do is determined sole- ly by the goodness of the outcomes of her actions. Following one standard philosophical convention, we will call this stronger thesis consequentialism. 2 It seems quite clear that bringing about good outcomes is one thing that there is moral reason to do. But why think that promot- ing the good is the only thing that morality prescribes? One way of defending this thesis is to employ substantive normative arguments, which seek to show that the plausibility of moral reasons to do other 1. This paper has benefited from many conversations and from written feed- back on many previous drafts. We would particularly like to thank Liz Ander- son, David Braddon-Mitchell, Jonathan Dancy, Stephen Darwall, Tom Dough- erty, Andy Egan, Mylan Engel, Robert L. Frazier, Allan Gibbard, Bob Goodin, Paul Hurley, Nadeem Hussain, Frank Jackson, Christine Korsgaard, Ira Lind- say, Dustin Locke, Tristram McPherson, Timothy Michael, Alastair Norcross, Doug Portmore, Peter Railton, Ryan Robinson, Tamar Schapiro, Jeff Sebo, Scott Shapiro, Michael Smith, Nic Southwood, David Velleman, Ralph Wedg- wood, Caroline West, and two anonymous readers for Philosophers’ Imprint. Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the University of Michigan, Ethics Discussion Group (June 2007), The First Annual Rocky Mountain Eth- ics Congress at the University of Colorado Boulder (August 2008), and The Twelfth Annual Oxford Graduate Conference in Philosophy at the University of Oxford (November 2008). Thanks to all those who offered us feedback during those presentations. 2. While this description may suggest that only theories that employ an impar- tial or agent-neutral kind of goodness can count as “consequentialist” in our sense, it will become clear how our arguments extend to relativized versions of consequentialism (of the kind defended by Sen 1983, Dreier 1993, Smith 2003, Louise 2004, and Portmore 2011). This use of ‘consequentialism’ does restrict its referent to “direct” or “act-consequentialist” theories, according to which the moral status of our acts is determined exclusively by the goodness of their outcomes. While these are the theories on which we will be focusing, we will also have something to say about “indirect consequentialist” theories, according to which the moral status of our acts is determined exclusively by the goodness of the outcomes of something else (like everyone’s accepting or acting on a set of rules that ranks our acts in certain ways). Imprint Philosophers’

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Page 1: Imprint - Dartmouth Collegeplunkett/non-consequentialism-demyst.pdf · philosophers’ imprint – 2 – vol. 15, no. 4 (january 2015) able for a moral theory to3 be able to explain

volume15,no.4 january2015

Non-Consequentialism

Demystified

Howard NyeUniversity of Alberta

David PlunkettDartmouth College

John Ku

© 2015 Nye,Plunkett,&KuThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License. <www.philosophersimprint.org/015004/>

1. Introduction1

Manymoraltheoriesholdthatwhatanagentmorallyoughttodoisdeterminedinpartbythegoodnessoftheoutcomesofthoseactionscurrentlyavailabletoher.However,somemoraltheoriesgofurtherandclaimthatwhatanagentmorallyoughttodoisdeterminedsole-ly by the goodness of the outcomes of her actions. Followingonestandardphilosophicalconvention,wewillcallthisstrongerthesisconsequentialism.2

It seemsquite clear thatbringing about goodoutcomes is onething that there ismoral reasontodo.Butwhy think thatpromot-ingthegoodistheonlythingthatmoralityprescribes?Onewayofdefendingthisthesisistoemploysubstantivenormativearguments,whichseektoshowthattheplausibilityofmoralreasonstodoother

1. This paper has benefited frommany conversations and fromwritten feed-backonmanypreviousdrafts.WewouldparticularlyliketothankLizAnder-son,DavidBraddon-Mitchell,JonathanDancy,StephenDarwall,TomDough-erty,AndyEgan,MylanEngel,RobertL.Frazier,AllanGibbard,BobGoodin,PaulHurley,NadeemHussain,FrankJackson,ChristineKorsgaard,IraLind-say,DustinLocke,TristramMcPherson,TimothyMichael,AlastairNorcross,Doug Portmore, Peter Railton, Ryan Robinson, Tamar Schapiro, Jeff Sebo,ScottShapiro,MichaelSmith,NicSouthwood,DavidVelleman,RalphWedg-wood,CarolineWest,and twoanonymousreaders forPhilosophers’ Imprint.EarlierversionsofthispaperwerepresentedattheUniversityofMichigan,EthicsDiscussionGroup(June2007),TheFirstAnnualRockyMountainEth-icsCongressattheUniversityofColoradoBoulder(August2008),andTheTwelfthAnnualOxfordGraduateConferenceinPhilosophyattheUniversityofOxford (November2008).Thanks toall thosewhoofferedus feedbackduringthosepresentations.

2. Whilethisdescriptionmaysuggestthatonlytheoriesthatemployanimpar-tialoragent-neutralkindofgoodnesscancountas“consequentialist”inoursense,itwillbecomeclearhowourargumentsextendtorelativizedversionsofconsequentialism(ofthekinddefendedbySen1983,Dreier1993,Smith2003,Louise2004,andPortmore2011).Thisuseof‘consequentialism’doesrestrictitsreferentto“direct”or“act-consequentialist”theories,accordingtowhichthemoralstatusofouractsisdeterminedexclusivelybythegoodnessoftheiroutcomes.Whilethesearethetheoriesonwhichwewillbefocusing,wewillalsohavesomethingtosayabout“indirectconsequentialist”theories,accordingtowhichthemoralstatusofouractsisdeterminedexclusivelybythegoodnessoftheoutcomesofsomethingelse(likeeveryone’sacceptingoractingonasetofrulesthatranksouractsincertainways).

ImprintPhilosophers’

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ableforamoraltheorytobeabletoexplainwhythereisreasonforustobemoralbyidentifyingthecontentofmoralitywithsomethingwhichgeneralfactsaboutthenatureofpracticalreasonsentailthereispracticalreasontodo.Thereseemstobeaninexorableconnectionbe-tweenthethoughtthatastateofaffairsisgoodandtheideathatthereis reason forus tobring itabout.While theremaybeotherequallyplausiblethoughtsaboutwhatthereispracticalreasontodo,liketheideathatthereisreasontopromoteone’sowninterestsorsatisfyone’sdesires,noneofthesethingscouldplausiblybeidentifiedwithwhatthereismoralreasontodo.Thus,theconsequentialistviewthatmoral-ityprescribesthatwebringaboutgoodstatesofaffairsnotonlyseemssubstantivelyplausiblebutoffersanexplanationofwhythereisrea-sontobemoral.Wewillcallthisthe“top-down”strategyofarguinginfavorofconsequentialism.5

asking“Whyshouldwetakemoralreasonstobegenuinepracticalreasons?”andthequestion‘Whybemoral?’asaskingeithertheforegoingor“Why,justbecausethemoralreasonsinfavorofdoingsomethingmorallyrequireustodoit,shouldwethinkthereisdecisivepracticalreasontodoit?”

5. Anumberofprominentadvocatesofconsequentialismemploysomeversionofthetop-downstrategy.Forexample,considerthecaseofSidgwick(1907).SinceSidgwickwasconcernednotmerelywithwhatthereismoralreasontodobutwithwhatthereispracticalreasontodo(seeBk.I,ch.iii),wecanreadhisargumentforthe“maximofBenevolence”inBk.III,ch.xiii,asholdingthat,justasitseemsself-evidentthatthereispracticalreasontoaimatone’sowngreatestgood,“thegoodofoneindividualisofnomoreimportance,fromthepointofview(ifImaysayso)oftheUniverse,thanthegoodofanyother….AndasarationalbeingIamboundtoaimatgoodgenerally…notmerelyataparticularpartofit.”So,Sidgwicksuggestsinhisconcludingchapter,ifourmoralreasons(or, inhisterminology,ourother-directedor“social”du-ties)exclusivelyfavorpromotingthe“universalGood”,practicalreasonwillendorsemoralreasons(evenifitalsothreatenstocontradictitselfbygivinganequallystrongendorsementofconflictingconsiderationsofself-interest).Similar(ifmore“instrumentalist”)argumentsaregivenbySmart(1956,353),Singer(1979,10–13and212–220),andRailton(1986,189–190and202–204).Thelogicallystrongestversionofthetop-downstrategydefendsateleologi-calconceptionofpracticalreasons[TCR],accordingtowhichallreasonstoactmustbereasonstobringaboutoutcomesthataregood(fromsomeper-spective,evenifnotfromanimpartialperspective).Forasustainedargumentalong these lines, seePortmore 2011 (althoughPortmoredoesnot puthisfavored version of TCR or consequentialism in terms of reasons to bringaboutgoodoutcomes, itwillbecomeclear fromouraccountofevaluative

thingsdoesnotwithstandreflectivescrutiny.3Manysuchargumentsbegin by observing that it is overwhelmingly plausible that therearemoralreasonstodowhatisgoodforothersandtoavoiddoingwhat isbad for them.Thesearguments concede that it is initiallyplausiblethattherearemoralreasonstodootherthings,likekeepourpromisesandrespect theautonomyofothers,evenwhenthisdoes not bring about the best overall consequences. Further, it isinitiallyplausiblethatreasonsnottoharmothersarestrongerthanreasonstobenefitthem,andthatreasonstobenefitourlovedonesarestrongerthanreasonstobenefitstrangers.Suchconsiderationsdo initially count against consequentialism. But, proponents oftheseconsequentialistargumentscontend,therearegoodreasonstodoubtthattheplausibilityofthesedistinctreasonsandweightingprinciplescanwithstandourgettingcleareraboutwhatexactlytheycouldamountto.Ifthisiscorrect,ourplausiblemoralreasonsofbe-neficenceandnon-malfeasancearebestseenasinstancesofmoralreasonstobringabouttheoverallbestoutcomes,whichexhaustthecontentofmorality.Wewillcallthisthe“bottom-up”strategyofar-guinginfavorofconsequentialism.

Asecondwayofdefendingtheconsequentialistthesis,oftenpur-suedintandemwiththebottom-upstrategy,istomaintainthatconse-quentialismenjoysakindofgeneraltheoreticaladvantagethatstems,not from the failure of non-consequentialist considerations towith-standscrutiny,butfromgeneralreflectionsonthenatureofmoralityand reasons to act.While it is controversialwhether there isneces-sarilyreasonforeveryonetobemoral,itseemsclearthatmoralityissomethingimportant,inthesensethatthereisstrongpracticalreasonformostpeopletobemoralmostofthetime.4Itthereforeseemsdesir-

3. SeeforinstanceSidgwick1907(esp.Bk.III,ch.xi,andBk.IV,ch.ii–iii);Ben-nett1966,1981,1995;Nielsen1972;Kagan1989;andNorcross2003.

4. Aswewillusethephrases,“practicalreasonstodoA”(orjust“reasonstodoA”withnofurthermodifier)areconsiderationsthatcountinfavorofdoing A inthemostgeneralnormativesense,while“moralreasonstodoA”arecon-siderationsthatcontributetoA’sdeonticstatusasmorallypermissible,right,orgoodtodo.Wecanunderstandthequestion‘Whycareaboutmorality?’as

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cannot be a sufficient justificationof it, else slaveholderswouldbejustifiedinbelievingthatskincolorhasintrinsicmoralsignificance.7

Butwhileitseemsimplausibleintheabstractthatskincolorhasintrinsicmoralrelevance,itactuallyseems—atleastattheoutsetofinquiry—plausible in theabstract that inflictingharm is intrinsicallyworsethanfailingtoprovideaidandthatsettingouttoharmsomeoneisintrinsicallyworsethanharmingherasaforeseenconsequenceofone’sconduct. Indeed, the intrinsicmoral relevanceof these factorsseems—again,attheoutsetofinquiry—nolessdirectlyplausiblethantheideathatthereisageneralmoralrequirementtobenefitothersorpromotethegood.Ofcourse,ifKagancanshowthatthedirectplausi-bilityoftheintrinsicrelevanceofthedoing/allowingandintending/foreseeingdistinctionscannotwithstandcarefulclarification,hewillhavemadeacompellingcaseagainstnon-consequentialistconstraints,andsomeofhisargumentsthat“bringouttheproblemsandunpalat-ableimplicationsofadopting”themreallydotendinthisdirection.8 ButwhyshouldweagreewiththelegitimacyofKagan’sdemandthatproponents of constraints provide an independent justification forwhyweshouldacceptthembeyondtheirdirectplausibilityeven ifthisplausibility withstands the careful clarification of their content andhow theyapply tovarious cases?Nowhere inhisbookdoesKaganprovideasimilar,direct-plausibility-independentjustificationofmor-alreasonstopromotethegood,oranyreasontodoubtthat,ifsuchajustificationcouldbeprovided,plausibility-independentjustificationsofothermoralfactorscouldbejustaseasilyprovided.9

7. SeeespeciallyKagan1989,11–15,111–127,and165–182.

8. Wehaveinmindespeciallyhisexplorationsoftheimplicationsofthedoing/allowingdistinction fordecisionmakingunder risk (87–91); thepossibil-ity that thewayswedrawthedistinctionsaregerrymandered functionsof,and thuscannot justify,our intuitionsaboutparticularcases (101–106and138–144);andtheparticulardifficultyofconstructingaplausiblestoryaboutthemoralstatusofinterruptingaidinprogress(106–111).

9. Beyond,of course, simplyprovidingsome reasons to think thatno factorsother thanpromoting the good are genuinely relevantbecause their appar-entrelevancecannotsurvivecriticalscrutiny.Butthisdoesnotsupporttheasymmetricrequirementthatwemustprovideindependentjustificationsof

In thispaperweargue thatcloserattention towhy thereare rea-sonstopromotegoodoutcomesshowsthetop-downstrategytobeunsound.Wearguethattherearereasonstopromotegoodstatesbe-cause theseare states it isfitting todesire,desiringa state involvesmotivationtopromoteit,anditisageneralconceptualtruththattherearereasonstodowhatitisfittingtobemotivatedtodo.But,wecon-tend,thereiseveryreasontothinkthatsomefittingmotivesaimsim-plyatdoingoromittingcertainthings,ratherthanpromotingcertainstatesofaffairs.Indeed,wearguethatanact’smoralstatusconsistsinthefittingnessof feelingsofobligationtoperformoravoidperform-ingit,whichmotivesareinthefirstinstancedirectedattheactratherthanthestatesitbringsabout.Thus,weargue,thesameconnectionbetweenfittingmotivesandreasonstoactthatexplainswhytherearereasonstopromotethegooddirectlyexplainswhytherearereasonstobemoral,whether or notbeingmoralconsistsinpromotingthegood.

Webelieve that theunsoundnessof the top-downstrategy is im-portant,notonlybecauseexplicitusesof thestrategyhavebeen in-fluential, but because many consequentialist arguments that looklargelybottom-upgainsomeoftheirforcebytacitlyrelyinguponthetop-downstrategy.For instance,manyofShellyKagan’s(1989)argu-mentsagainstnon-consequentialistconstraintsondoingorintendingharmseektoshowthattheycannotbeclarifiedinwaysthatcomportwiththeintuitionsofthosewhoappealtothem.6ButKagangoesontoarguethatproponentsoftheseconstraintsfaceamoreimportantproblem,namelythatofjustifyingthemorexplaining whysuchfactorsasdoingorintendingharmshouldbesoimportant.Kagandoesnotpresenttheallegedneedtoindependentlyjustifynon-consequential-istconstraintsasembodyinganygrandiosetheoryabout thenatureofpracticalreasons;hesupportsitbyarguingthatthemerefactthatamoraltheoryfitsourintuitionsaboutwhattodoinparticularcases

judgmentswhywethinkTCRandevenrelativizedconsequentialismcanberoughlyputintheseterms).

6. SeeespeciallyKagan1989,87–111and128–165.

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moral reasons against any acts save those that fail tominimize theextent towhichundesirable thingshappen in theworld. (ThekindofconcernthatNozickandSchefflerareexpressingissometimesre-ferred toas the “paradoxofdeontology”.)To takeone last example,AlastairNorcross(2003)offersseveralcompellingargumentsthatthedirectplausibilityofanintrinsicmoraldifferencebetweensomethinglikedoingandallowingharmornegativerightsagainstinterferenceandpositiverightstoaidcannotwithstandscrutiny.Buthegoesontoclaimthat,evenconcedingtheunchallengedplausibilityoftheviewthatnegativerightsareweightierthanpositiverights,“wealsoneedanexplanationof…why[negativerightsare]strongerthan[positiverights]”.10YetNorcrossdoesnotseemtothinkthatweneedanysimilarexplanationofwhywemorallyought topromote thegoodormini-mizeharm,evidentlybecauseheismystifiedbymoralreasonstodoanythingotherthanpromotethegood.

Why,then,aresomanyphilosophersmystifiedbytheideaofmoralreasonstodoanythingotherthanpromotethegood?Wethinkthatitisatacitsensethatmoralreasonstopromotethegoodaresupportedbythetop-downstrategy’sassertionthatmoralityshouldprovideuswithgenuinereasonstoact,andthatthepromotionofgoodoutcomesistheonlysufficientlymoral-lookingthingthathasacleartheoreticalpurchaseonourreasonsforaction.

Ouraiminthispaperistoshowthatthetop-downstrategyfails,butthatitismotivatedbygenuineconnectionsamongethicalevaluations,fittingmotives,andreasonstoact.Someauthorshaveheldthat theveryconceptofagoodstateofaffairsemployedbyconsequentialists

10.Norcross2003,457–458.LikeKagan,Scheffler, andmanyothers,Norcrossspeaksofanintrinsicmoraldistinctionbetweennegativeandpositiverightsashavingagreatdealof“intuitivesupport”,whichisunfortunatelyambigu-ousbetween (i)ourhaving intuitionsabout cases thatwouldbe capturedbythedistinction,and(ii)itsbeingplausibleintheabstractthatthereisanintrinsicmoral distinctionof this kind.But context suggests thatNorcrossintendsii(perhapsinadditiontoi);forinstance,heconcedestheplausibilityofaclaimthe content of whichassertstherelativepriorityoftherights,namely,“Myrightnottobepoisoneddoesseemstrongerthanmyright,ifany,tobegiventhefoodIneedtosurvive”(457).

WhatmakesKagan’s inability to find successful plausibility-inde-pendentargumentsinfavorofnon-consequentialistconstraintslookmore like an argument for consequentialism than a skeptical chal-lengetoourjustificationforholdinganymoralbeliefs?Itis,wethink,thefollowingcommonbackgroundassumption:

Mystification:Itisclearandobviousthatthereismoralreasontobringaboutthegood,butmysterioushowtherecouldbemoralreasontodoanythingelse.

We think that quite a few arguments against non-consequentialistprinciplestacitlyrelyonthemystificationassumption.PhillipPettit’s(1991)confidentpronouncementthatallmoraltheoriesmuststartbyspecifyingwhatisgoodandthenexhaustthemselvesbysayinghowweshouldrelatetothegoodwouldseementirelyquestion-beggingwereitnotthatthegoodseemedtohaveakindofunparalleledmoralrelevance.Similarly,thesuggestionofSamuelScheffler(1994,follow-ingRobertNozick1974)thatthereisan“apparentairofirrationalitysurrounding the claim that someactsare soobjectionable thatoneoughtnottoperformthemevenifthismeansthatmoreequallyweightyactsoftheverysamekindorothercomparablyobjectionableeventsensue” (82) clearly seems topresuppose the incomprehensibility of

non-consequentialistconstraintseven if their plausibility withstood scrutinybutnosimilarindependentjustificationsofmoralreasonstopromotethegood.Kagan is right that his stated aim of engagingwith non-consequentialistswhomheseesasalreadycommittedtomoralreasonstopromotethegoodrelieves him of the need to provide an independent justification of thesereasons (17–19). But he iswrong to think that the ad hominemnature ofhisargumentsentitleshimtousetheinabilityofhisopponentstoprovideplausibility-independent justifications of non-consequentialist constraintsas an argument against them without providing plausibility-independentjustificationsofmoralreasonstopromotethegood.Thisisbecause(a)thedemandforsuchjustificationsmaybeentirelyillegitimate,and(b)evenifitislegitimate,wehavenoplausibility-independentreasontothinkthatitwillbemoredifficulttogivetheseexaltedjustificationsfornon-consequentialistconstraintsthanitwillbetogivethemformoralreasonstopromotethegood,onceweseewhatonearththesejustificationsareandhowtheycanbegivenforanything.

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outcomesandnon-moralreasonsmoregenerally,likeindirectconse-quentialismandcontractualism.12

Ifourargumentissuccessful,webelievethatitremovesanimpor-tant sourceof support for consequentialism.Since,aswehave indi-cated,manybottom-upargumentsforconsequentialismseemtorelytacitlyonthetop-downstrategy,wethinkitseliminationsignificantlyweakensthebottom-upcaseforconsequentialismaswell.Attheveryleast,we think that it forces consequentialists todemonstratemoredirectlywhynon-consequentialistprinciplesareimplausiblewithout12. Whatismostcentraltoourargumentistheexistenceofthefollowingconnec-

tionsbetweenethicalcategories,fittingattitudes,andreasonstoact:

(1) If something (e. g. stateS or actA) falls under an ethical category (e. g.goodnessormoral wrongness),thenitisfittingtohaveacertainmotivationtowardsit(e. g.topromoteSoravoidperformingA),and

(2)Ifamotivation(e. g.topromoteSoravoidperformingA)isfitting,thenthereisreasontoactasitwouldmotivateustoact(e. g.toactuallypro-moteSoravoidperformingA).

Inordertoarguethattheseconnectionsexist,wedefendparticular explana-tionsastowhytheyexist,namely:

(1*)Something’sfallingunderanethicalcategory(e. g.S’sbeinggoodorA’sbeingwrong) can be analyzed as its beingfitting tohaveparticularmo-tivationally ladenattitudestowards it (likedesires thatSor feelingsofobligationnottoperformA),and

(2*)What it is for there to be reasontoperformanact(e. g. topromoteSoravoidperformingA)isfortheacttoconstituteorachievesomethingthatitisfittingtobemotivatedtodoorachieve.

Webelieve thatmuchof our argumentwould remain sound if alternativeexplanationsof (1)and (2)werecorrect—for instance, if thefittingnessofattitudeswereexplainedbytheinstantiationofethicalcategories,orthefit-tingnessofmotiveswereexplainedbyreasonstoact.Butweargueinfavorofourparticularexplanations(1*)and(2*)becausewebelievethattheyarethebestexplanationsofconnections(1)and(2),andtheexplanationsmostcon-ducivetoourargument.Innotes21,34,and52weexplainhowourargumentcouldbemadetoworkifoneweretoinsistonexplanationsofconnections(1)and(2)otherthanthosewedefend.Wearegratefultotwoanonymousreaders forPhilosophers’ Imprint forpointingoutandencouragingus todis-cusswaysinwhichourmainargumentmostcentrallydependson(1)and(2),andcanremainsoundevenif(1*)and(2*)aremistaken.

is either incoherentordevoidof the theoretically independent con-nectiontopracticalreasonspresupposedbythetop-downstrategy.11 Against these authorswe showhowconsequentialists’ talkof goodstatesis intelligible,andhowthereis indeedadeeptheoreticalcon-nectionbetween good states and reasons to act. Butwe argue that,unfortunately for the top-downstrategy,onceoneunderstandswhy thisconnectionholds,itbecomesequallyclearhowtherecanberea-sons—indeedmoral reasons—to do things other than bring aboutgoodstates.

Insection2wevindicatetheintelligibilityandnormativeforceofgoodstatesofaffairsbyanalyzingthemasstatesitisfittingtodesire,andinsection3wedefendaconceptualconnectionbetweenthefit-tingnessofamotiveandtheexistenceofreasonstoperformtheactsitmotivates.Butwhilesomeofourmotivesarestate-directed,ormotivestobringaboutcertainstatesofaffairs,wecontendthatwehaveothermotivesthatareact-directed,whichare, inthefirst instance,motivessimplytodocertainthings.Insection4weshowhow,inthesamewaythefittingnessofstate-directedmotivesgeneratesreasonstopromotethegood,thefittingnessofact-directedmotivesgeneratesreasonstodootherthingsthatmaynotpromotethegood.Moreover,weargueinsection5 thatanact’smoralstatusconsists in thefittingnessofaparticularkindofact-directedmotive,namelyafeelingofobligationtoperformoravoidperformingit.Thismeansthatthesameconnectionbetweenfittingmotives and reasons to act that explainswhy therearereasonstopromotethegoodequallyexplainstheconnectionbe-tweenanact’smoralstatusandreasons fororagainstperforming itquiteindependentlyofwhethertheactpromotesthegood.This,wecontend,demystifieshowtherecouldbemoralreasonstodoanythingotherthanpromotethegood.Weconcludeinsection6byexamininghowourargumentmaybeextendedtounderminethemotivationsforothertheoriesthatviewmoralconsiderationsassubordinatetogood

11. SeeespeciallyTaurek(1977,304–306),Foot(1985,202–209),andThomson(1994,12–14).

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Incontrast topragmaticreasons,considerations likethefact thata stateofaffairswould involvechildrenbeinghappydonot simplycountinfavorofgettingyourselftodesireit—theymakeadesireforitfittingorappropriate.Thesefittingness reasonstodesireastatethatconstituteitsbeingfittingtodesireitaretheonesthatconstituteitsgoodness.Ananalysisoftheconceptgoodstatesofaffairsintotheconcept reasons for desire should thus be in terms of fittingness,ratherthanpragmatic,reasons.15Ofcourse,iftheconceptofafitting-nessreasontodesireastatejustwasthatofaconsiderationthatbearsonwhether thestate isgood, thissortofanalysiswouldbecircular.Wethink,however,thatthedistinctionbetweenjudgmentsaboutfit-tingnessasopposedtopragmaticreasonsforattitudescanbemadesenseofwithout invokingethical concepts likegoodness.16Whileafullaccountof thedistinction isbeyondthescopeof thispaper,wethinkitcanbeusefullycharacterizedbynotingthatitischaracteristicof judgments about the existenceof pragmatic reasons tohave atti-tudesthattheyarenotcapableofdirectlyguidingusintohavingthoseattitudeswithoutfirstmotivatingustodothingstomakeitthecasethatwehavethem.Todesireanoddnumberofhairsonyourheadinresponsetothereasonsyoutakethedemon’sthreattoprovide,youmustfirstdosomething likeconditionyourself, takedrugs,orselec-tivelyattendtocertainthingswiththeaimofdevelopingthedesire.Judgmentsabout theexistenceoffittingness reasons foranattitude,however,doseemcapableofdirectlyguidingusintohavingitwithouthavingtofirstmotivateustodoanythingtogetourselvestohaveit.For instance, judgingthat it isfittingorappropriatetodesireknowl-edge for itsownsake—asyoumightconcludeuponcontemplating

reasonsto desire itatall.Butwhateverwewanttocallthem,theimportantthingistodistinguishthesekindsofreasonsfromthereasonstodesirethestatethat(allagree)areconnectedtothegoodnessofthestate..

15. In thispaper,we followonestandardconvention in the literatureandusesmallcapstodesignateconcepts.

16. Forrecentdiscussionsofattemptstomakesenseofthedistinctionwithoutin-vokingethicalcategories,see,forinstance,DanielssonandOlson2007,Lang2008,Way2012,andSchroeder2012.

assumingattheoutsetthatmoralreasonstopromotethegoodhaveauniquelyobviousrationalsanctionanddemandingthat,becausenon-consequentialistprinciplesdonotdirectustopromotethegood,wemustgiveaspecialkindofjustificationforthem.

2. Good Outcomes and Fitting Attitudes

Tounderstandwhythegoodnessofastateofaffairsguaranteestheex-istenceofreasonstobringitabout,wemustbeginbyclarifyingwhatitistojudgethatastateofaffairsisgood.Suchajudgmentdoesnotseemsimplytodescribethestate.Rather, italsoseemsto involveanormative claim that recommends thestateor speaks in its favor. Inparticular,itseemstobeaclaimtotheeffectthatthestateofaffairsisdesirable,orsuchthatweshoulddesirethatitobtains.Putintermsofreasons,itlookslikewemightanalyzethejudgmentthatstateofaffairsSisgoodasonetotheeffectthattherearesufficientreasonstodesirethatSobtains.13

Whilewethinkthatthiskindofanalysisbestcapturesthecontentandnormativeforceofjudgmentsaboutgoodstatesofaffairs,itneedsclarificationand refinement concerningboth thekind of reasons andthekind of desiresitinvolves.Beginningwiththefirstissue,thereareclearlysomekindsof reasons todesireastate thatareof thewrong kindforconstitutingitsgoodness.Suppose,forinstance,thatanevildemoncrediblythreatenstoharmyourlovedonesifyoudonotdesirethattherebeanoddnumberofhairsonyourhead.Thefactthatthedemonhasmadethisthreatseemstobeastrongpragmatic reasontodesire,oratleasttogetyourselftodesire,thatyouhaveanoddnum-berofhairs.However,thiswouldnottherebymakeitgoodthatyouhaveanoddnumberofhairs.14

13. WheresufficientreasonstohaveattitudeAarereasonsthatmakeonejusti-fied(inasensewewillclarifybelow),all-things-considered,inhavingA.Forexamplesofthisbasickindofanalysis,seeEwing1939,Gibbard1990,Ander-son1993,andScanlon1998.

14. SeeRabinowiczandRønnow-Rasmussen2004,followingCrisp2000.Some,likeGibbard(1990,36),Parfit(2001,27),Portmore(2011,59),andWay(2012)insistthatthesepragmaticreasonsto get oneselftodesiresomethingarenot

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adesireforit.18SincethefittingnessreasonsJonesshareswithSmithincludeonlybasicreasonsofbeneficencetocareaboutbothchildren,equallyunintensifiedbypersonalrelationshipstoeither,shecouldnottrulyclaimthatthisdevelopmentwasgoodintalkingtoSmith.

Judgments thatastate isgoodthusseemtobe judgments thatadesireforthestateissupportedbythefittingnessreasonsoneshareswiththegrouponemeanstobetalkingorthinkingtogetherwith.Inthinking aboutwhat she shouldwant, it is possible for the judge’sgroup to shrink toherself alone. It is alsopossible for the judge toaddressorthinkonbehalfofthewidestgroupofagentswithwhomshe sharesfittingness reasons todesire states.We think that this isthekindof context inwhich thinkingaboutbasicmoral reasonsofbeneficence—towhichallmoralityreduces,onsomeconsequential-istviews—takesplace.Tojudgeinthiscontextthatonestateisbetterthananotheristojudgethatthefittingnessreasonsoneshareswithallmoralagentsfavorpreferringit.19

Thisanalysisofjudgmentsaboutgoodstatesasjudgmentsaboutoursharedfittingnessreasonsfordesirecandefendtalkaboutmor-allygoodstatesfromthechargesofincoherenceorcontentlessnesslevelledbyTaurek,Foot,andThomson.Inaskingsomeonetoagreethatitwouldbebetteriffiveotherssurvivedinsteadofher,wearenot,asTaurek(1977,305)suggested,claimingthatsheshould,allthingsconsidered,preferthesurvivalofthefive.Wearemerelyaskinghertoagreethatthefittingnessreasonsshe shares with the five(andtherestofus)favorpreferringtheirsurvival.Moreover,toclaiminauniversal

18. Tosaythataresponseissupportedonbalancebyasetofreasonsistosaythatthereisnoalternativeresponsethatthosereasonsfavormorestrongly.

19. This contextualist account thus provides a solution to “the PartialityChal-lenge”astohowwecananalyzejudgmentsaboutgoodstatesasjudgmentsaboutfittingattitudes if Jonescan judge itfitting forher toprefer that thekidneybetransplantedintoherchildwithoutthinking(incertaincontexts)thatthisstateisbetter(Ewing1939,19,andBlanshard1961,287–288).Theso-lutionissimilartoSuikkanen’s(2009),butitismoreflexibleinthatitmakessenseofnon-relativizedevaluativejudgmentsinnon-fully-impartialcontexts,anditavoidstheobjectionsraisedbyZimmerman(2011,458–460)aboutcir-cularityandindeterminacy.

Nozick’s(1974,42–45)experiencemachine—seemslikeitcandirectlycauseyoutodesireknowledgeintrinsically.

Ifweare toanalyze judgments about a state’s goodnessas judg-ments that there are sufficientfittingness reasons todesire it, thereremainsaquestionastowhosereasonsthesearesupposedtobe.Forinstance, if both Jones’s child andSmith’s child aredyingof kidneyfailure,andthereisonlyonekidneyavailablefortransplant,itseemsfittingfor Jonestodesire thestateof itsbeingtransplanted intoherchild,butfittingforSmithtodesireanalternativestateofthekidneybeingtransplantedintoherchild.

We think that the answer as towhosefittingness reasonsone istalkingaboutwhenoneclaimsthatastateisgoodisacontextualistone,theessentialsofwhichhavebeensuggestedbyFoot(1985),Hur-ka(1987),Lewis(1989),andGibbard(1998).Clearly,whensomeonejudgesastateofaffairsgood,sheordinarilytakestheretobefitting-nessreasonsforhertodesireit;themainquestioniswhoelse’sfitting-nessreasonssheismakingacommitmentabout.17Judgmentsthatastateisgooddon’talwaysseemtocommitthejudgetothinkingthateveryonehasmostfittingnessreasontodesireit.SurelyJonescouldtrulysaytoherpartnerthattheirchild’sbeingmovedaheadofSmith’schildonthekidneywaitinglistwasagoodthingwithoutbeingcom-mittedtothinkingthatitwouldbefittingforSmithtodesireit.WhenJonesspeakstoherpartneraboutthisbeingagooddevelopment,sheseemstomeanthatthe fittingness reasons they sharesupport,onbalance,

17. Incertaincontexts,suchasthoseofgivingadvice,onemightcallstatesgoodthat onedoesnot takeoneself tohavefittingness reason todesire. For in-stance,inadvisingarivalinacompetition,onemightrefertostatesthattendtowardsherwinningas“good”,althoughonetakesittobeunfittingforonetodesirethemoneself.Onepossibilityisthat,ingivingsuchadvice,theadvisortakesonthefalsepresuppositionthatthereisreasonforhertosharetheadvi-see’saims,and,giventhis,theadvisordoesinfacttaketheretobefittingnessreasonsforhertodesirethestatesshecalls“good”.Butanotherpossibilityisthat,althoughthejudgeisalmostalwayspartoftheaudienceshemeanstobeaddressingwithtalkaboutgoodness,thisfailstobetrueinspecialcases.Sincethejudgeisclearlypartoftheaudienceinthecontextswewillbecon-sidering,itwillnotmatterforourpurposeswhichaccountiscorrect.

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Havingclarifiedthekindofreasonsinvolvedinouranalysis,wenowturntothekindofattitudethatjudgmentsofastate’sgoodnesstakethemtobereasonsfor.Wecharacterizedtheseroughlyasreasonstodesirethatthestateobtains,butthismightseemtoonarrow.Itcanbe awkward to speak of someone desiring states that currently ob-tain,thatobtainedinthepast,orthatareimpossibleforhertobringabout,althoughshecanofcoursejudge(andjudgetruly)thatcurrent,past,andinfeasiblestatesaregood.Itislessawkwardtosaythatwearegladthatcertainpastandpresentstatesobtainandthatwehope or wishthatcertaininfeasiblestateswill,andthethoughtthattheseresponsesarefittingseemstobewhatisinvolvedinthinkingthemgood.Whatbeingglad,hoping,andwishingthatastateobtainshaveincommonwithdesiringthat itdoesisthattheyare“pro-attitudes”thatinvolveanattractiontothestate,whichincludesmotivationtobringitaboutifonecan,tendenciestofinditappealingorpleasurabletothinkabout,andtendenciestodirectone’sattentiontowardsitandwaysitmightberealized.22

Whilesomephilosophersliketospeakofeverymotivationandpro-attitudeasdirectedatastateofaffairs,wedonotthinkthatthisisright.Considerthecontrastinvolvedinthefollowingpairsofattitudes:

1.wantingtoyellatsomeoneinafitofangervs.wantingittobe true thatonehasyelledathimsohedoesn’twalkalloveryou,

2.anaversiontokillingsomeonevs.anaversiontotherebeingkillingsintheworld,and

3.wantingtoexercisenowvs.wantingtheworldtobesuchthatoneexercisesnow.

A’sperspective”,whichmightberatherunclear(seee. g.Schroeder2007andPortmore 2011, 62). By taking the concept of afittingness reason tobe ex-planatorilypriortothatofagoodstate,weavoidsuchproblematicrelianceonunexplainednotionsofperspective-relativegoodness.

22. Forthissortofcharacterizationofpro-attitudes,particularlyinthecontextofdesire,seeDarwall1983,40–41;Scanlon1998,39;andPortmore2011,64–65.

contextthatstateS isgoodisnotsimplytosay,asFoot(1985,202–204)andThomson(1994,12–14)suggest,thatShassomeparticularpropertythatonethinksweshouldpromote.Itistomakeasubstan-tive claimaboutwhatpreferencesamongstatesare favoredby thefittingnessreasonsweallshare,whichcanbemeaningfullydebated.20 Withoutsuchafittingattitudeanalysis,itwouldbeunclearwhattalkaboutmorallygoodstatescouldamountto,butwiththeanalysis itbecomesclearhowthis talk isofapiecewithourother judgmentsaboutgoodstates.21

20.Wethinkmanymajordebates innormativeethicsconcernwhat theserea-sonsforpreferencesupport,includingquestionsofwhatwell-beingconsistsinorwhichstatesweshouldpreferoutofconcernforagivenindividual(Dar-wall2002);whetherweshouldsometimespreferlessergainsforsomeindi-viduals togreatergains forother individuals in thenameofequality(Tem-kin2003),priority(Parfit1997),orsufficiency(Crisp2006);andwhetherweshouldprefermore individuals toexist simplybecause therewillbemorewell-beingintheworld(Singer1979).

Thissaid,thereisawayinwhichweagreewithsomeofFoot’s(1985,204–206)argumentthatmoralreasonstopromotemorallygoodstatesmustcomefromwithin,ratherthanoutsideof,morality,andthatthismakestroubleforwhatwearecallingthetop-downstrategyofarguingforconsequentialism.But,aswewillargueinthenextsection,goodstateshaveadirectconnectiontopractical reasons,whichholds independentlyofanygeneralconnectionbetweenmoralityandpracticalreasons.Wethinkthisisexactlythesortofconnectionthatthetop-downstrategypresupposes,anditdoesnot,paceFoot,relyonanythoughtsaboutwhatwouldbemorallyvirtuous.

21. Thisisonereasonwhy,althoughitistheexistenceofaconnectionbetweenS’sgoodnessandtherebeingfittingnessreasonstodesireSthatismostcen-traltoourargument,wethinkourparticularexplanationofthisconnectionismostgermanetoourargument.Suppose,forinstance,thatfittingnessrea-sonstodesireScouldnotbeunderstoodindependentlyofS’sgoodness(say,becausewhatexplainedR’sstatusasafittingnessasopposedtoapragmaticreasontodesireSwasthatRbearsonS’sgoodness).Wecouldstillgivesome-thingliketheforegoingcontextualistaccountofjudgmentsaboutS’sgood-ness,butitwouldhavetobemorelikethefollowing:(i)thejudgmentthatSisgood,whenmadeincontextX,hasasitscontentthepropositionthatS is good relative to X,(ii)S’sbeinggoodrelativetoXentailsthatthefittingnessreasonssharedbytheagentsaddressedincontextXsupportonbalancede-siringX,and(iii)thejudgmentthatR isafittingnessreasonforagentAtodesireS istruejustincaseRbearsonS’sbeinggoodrelativetoXA,whereXA is something like “A’s perspective.”.Whilewe think thatourbasic argu-ment couldbemadeusing this alternative contextualist account, itwouldhavetotakeasbasicandunanalyzedtheideaof“goodnessrelativetoagent

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things (like take inhibition-loweringoranger-enhancingpills) inor-dertocausehimselftoyellattheassociate.

Thus,itseemsthatmotivationstobringaboutstatesplaytheroleofgeneratingmotivationstodothingsthatarerepresentedasbring-ingthemabout,whilethesemotivationstodothings(whichmayormaynotbegeneratedbymotivestobringaboutstates)playtheroleofgeneratingmotivestodomorespecificthingsthatarerepresentedaswaysofdoingthemoregeneralthing.Whilestate-directedmotivesplaytheroleofrelatingourintentionalactionstostatesoftheworld,act-directedmotivesplaytheroleofrelatingourmorespecificorlocalintentionalactionstoourmoregeneralorglobalintentionalactions.25 Consequently, we think that we can understand the distinction be-tweenact-directedandstate-directedmotivesintermsofthefollow-ingfunctionaldifferences:

Misanact-directed motivedirectedtowardsactAiffM plays the role of combining with representations that<φ-ingis(orisnot)partofawayofdoingA>26 toexplainφ-ing,27while

25. For a sustained discussion of how particular kinds of act-directed mo-tives—namelyplansorintentions—dothis,seeBratman1987.

26.Bya“representationthat<φ-ingis(orisnot)partofawayofdoingA>”,wemeansomethingabitbroaderthanarepresentationthatφ-ingactuallycon-stitutesdoingA.Forinstance,anact-directedmotivetoyellatsomeonewillmotivateyounotonlytodothingsthatyouthinkwillconstituteyelling,buttodothingslikestormingintotheroomnextdoorwhereyouthinksheislocatedinordertoyellather.Whileyoupresumablydon’trepresentstorm-ing into the roomaspartof theactof yelling itself, theway inwhich theact-directedmotivetoyellgivesrisetothismotivationseemsimportantlydif-ferentfromthewayinwhichastate-directedmotivetobringitaboutthatyouyellcangiverisetothemotivationtotakeanger-inducingpillssoastocauseyourselftoyell.WhatwehaveinmindhereissomethinglikeageneralizationofthewayanintentiontoAgivesrisetomoreparticular“intentionsinaction”,orintentionstoφandtherebydoA(asopposedtosimplythewayadesireforSgivesrisetointentionstodoA andtherebybringaboutS,evenifSisastateinvolvingone’sperformingcertainintentionalactions).Forareviewofliteratureonintentioninaction,seeWilsonandShpall2012.

27.Whilewespeakofact-directedmotivestodoAcombiningwithrepresenta-tionsthatφ-ingisawayofdoingAtoexplainφ-ing,onemightworrywhether

Intuitively,thesecondattitudeineachpairdoes takeastateofaffairs(one’shavingyelled,therebeingkillings,one’sexercisingnow)asitsobject.But thefirstattitude ineachpair looksdifferent; it seems totakeaparticularact(yelling,killingsomeone,exercising)asitsobject.

Sosaysintuition,butwhynotsimplytreatthefirstattitudeineachpairasadisguisedmotivetobringaboutastateofaffairs,like“myyell-ingathimnow”or“myexercisingnow”?23Wethinkthatstate-directedandact-directedmotivesactuallyplayratherdistinctfunctionalroles,which explain different aspects of cognition and behavior. A state-directedmotive tobring it about that onedoesA nowwill explainbothmoreandlessthananact-directedmotivetodoA.Forinstance,ameekpersonaversetoconfrontationmighthaveastrongstate-direct-edmotivetobringitaboutthatheyellsatabullytogetthebullytostopbullyinghim,butbeunabletosummonanyact-directedmotiva-tiontoyellatthebully.Insuchacasethestate-directedmotivewillnotbyitselfmotivatethemeekpersontoyell,butitwillmotivatehimtodothingsthathehopeswillcausehimtoyell,likeingestsubstancesthat he hopeswill lower his inhibitions, direct his attention to con-siderations thatmightmakehimangry,or takeanger-inducingpillsifhehasthemreadytohand.24Ontheotherhand,acustomerwhoisangrywithanonlinesalesassociatemighthaveastrongact-directedmotivetoyellattheassociatebutthinktheangerisunwarrantedandhavenostate-directedmotivetobringitaboutthatheyellsattheas-sociate.While the act-directedmotivewillmotivate yelling and thevarioussub-actionsthatthecustomertakestobewaysofyelling(likemovinghisfingersinwayshetakestobethetypingofangrymessagestheassociatewillsee—whichmightnotworkiftheInternetconnec-tionhasgonedown),itwillnotbyitselfmotivatethecustomertodo

23. SeePortmore2011,56.

24.Of course, underhappier circumstances, themeekperson’smotivation tobring it about that he yells would directly engender a motivation to yell, whichwouldmotivateyelling.Whatweillustrateisthecausalworkthatthemotivetobringitaboutthatoneyellscandoevenwhenitfailstogiverisetoamotivationtoyell (whichservesouraimof illustratingtheirdifferentfunctionalroles).

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M isastate-directed motivedirected towardsstateS iffMplaystheroleofcombiningwithrepresentationsthat<A-ingwillbringabout(orprevent)S>toexplainact-di-rectedmotivestodo(oravoiddoing)A.

Wewill call pro-attitudes that are in thefirst instanceattractions tostates,whichincludestate-directedmotivestobringthemaboutifonecan,state-directed pro-attitudes.Wewillcallpro-attitudesthatareinthefirstinstanceattractionstoperformingparticularacts,whichincludeact-directedmotivestoperformthem,act-directed pro-attitudes.

Havingclarifiedthismuch,wecanstateourproposedanalysisoftheconceptgoodstateofaffairs:

Fitting Attitude Analysis of Good States:Tojudgethatstateof affairs S is good is to judge that thefittingnessreasons one shareswith a contextually specified set ofagents,Gx, support on balance a state-directed pro-atti-tudetowardsS.28

ofbothcognitivelylesssophisticatedandcognitivelymoresophisticatedin-dividualsmaydependholisticallyonthenetworksofbeliefstheyhappentohave and be largely amatter of degree (150–155).Webelieve that similarargumentscanbemadetosupportattributionsofrepresentationsoftherel-evant kind of constitution to allmotive-capable human children and non-humananimals;wesuspectthatrepresentationsofthesortofconstitutionwehaveinmindareimplicitnotonlyinthegeneralpsychologyoflearning,butinparticularinthefunctionalrolesthathierarchicalactionschemasareinvokedtoexplain(seeforinstanceCooperandShallice2000andGraftonandHamilton2007).

WearegratefultoananonymousreaderforPhilosophers’ Imprintforraisingtheseissuesandpointingoutotherproblemswithouraccountofthedistinc-tionbetweenact-directedandstate-directedmotivesinanearlierdraft.

28.Thisanalysisleavesopenasecondwayinwhichthetruthconditionsofjudg-mentsaboutgoodstatesdependoncontext,namelyuponwhichalternativestothestatearerelevant.SupposethatoneofthreemutuallyexclusivethingsmighthappentotheJones’schild:(n)shereceivesnokidneytransplantanddiessoon,(t)shereceivesatransplantbutmusttakeanti-rejectiondrugsandmayhaveashorter-than-averagelife,or(b)amedicalbreakthroughoccurswhichrestoresherownkidneys’functioning,ensuringafullynormallife.Inacontextwhere(n)wastherelevantalternativeto(t),theJonesescouldtrulyjudgethat(t)isgood,butinacontextwhere(b)wastherelevantalternative

thisissointhecaseofbasicactions,oractionsonecanperformdirectlyandwithoutperforminganyotherintentionalaction.TheanalysiscouldbesaidtoapplytobasicactionsbecauseifAisabasicaction,thenanact-directedmotive todoA combineswith a representation that <doingA is awayofdoingA>tocauseonetodoA.While thismightappearartificial, thissortofapplicationoftheaccountmightplausiblyexplainwhyindividualsfailtoperformbasicactionsthattheywanttoperformiftheydon’tknowthattheycanperformthem(e. g.ifyouwanttomoveyourarm,whichhasbeenpara-lyzed,andunbeknownsttoyouyourbasicabilitytomoveyourarmhasjustbeenrestored,youmaynotmoveyourarm,becauseyoufailtorepresenttoyourselfthatmovingyourarmisawayofmovingyourarm).Alternatively,onemightsaythattheanalysiswegiveinthetextiscorrectsolongasAisanon-basicaction,butthatifAisabasicaction,thefunctionalroleofamotivetodoAissimplytocauseonetodoA,allonitsownandwithoutanyrepre-sentations.Eitherway,wethinkthatwewillhavenomoredifficultyaccount-ingformotivestoperformbasicactionsthanthosewhorejectact-directedmotivesandinsistthatallmotivesaremotivestobringaboutsomestateS, whichplaytheroleofcombiningwithrepresentationsthatφ-ingwillbringaboutStoexplainφ-ing.ProponentsofthisteleologicaltheoryofmotivationmusttreatmotivestobringitaboutthatyouperformbasicactionAaseither(i)combiningwitharepresentationthatyourperformingAwillbringitaboutthatyouperformA,whichmightseemartificial,or(ii)unlikeothermotivesinthattheyarecapableofcausingonetodoAallbythemselvesandwithoutanyadditionalrepresentationalstates.

Anotherworryonemighthaveaboutourclaimthatact-directedmotivestodoAcombinewithrepresentationsthatφ-ingisawayofdoingA toex-plainφ-ing is thatsuchrepresentationsmightseemtoocognitivelysophis-ticatedtobenecessary foran individual tohaveact-directedmotives(andstate-directedmotives—sinceouranalysis explains these in termsof theirtendenciestogiverisetoact-directedmotives).Younghumanchildrenandmanynon-humananimalsaresurelycapableofmotivationstodothings,buttheymightseemtolacktheconceptofoneaction’sconstitutingawayofper-forminganother.Webelieve,however,thatwefacenomoredifficultyherethanproponentsofteleologicaltheoriesofmotivation,sinceitseemsjustasproblematictoattributetheconceptofanact’scausingorbringingaboutastateofaffairstomanymotive-capablechildrenandnon-humananimals.Toexplainhowwecanattributesuchrepresentationsofconstitutionandcausa-tiontotheseindividuals,wecanarguethat(i)therepresentationsareimplicitorde re,(ii)therequiredconceptsofconstitutionandcausationneednotbeascognitivelysophisticatedasours,or(iii)weoverestimatethedifferencesbetweenourconceptualizationofconstitutionandcausationandtheirs(per-hapsbecauseweconfuseourthoughtsaboutconstitutionandcausationwithmeta-cognitive reflectionoraccess toour thoughtsaboutconstitutionandcausation). For example, Dretske (1988) argues that discriminative instru-mentalconditioninginvolvesimplicitrepresentationsoftherelevantkindofcausation(109–122),observationallearninginvolvesexplicitrepresentationsofsuchcausation(137–150),anddifferencesinthethinkingaboutcausation

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if someonewere to label as “good” precisely those stateswe thinkbad,we think shewould be perfectly intelligible as thinking themgoodsolongasshethoughtitwasfittingtodesirethesestates.Thatsaid,thisfairlystrongclaim—thatjudgmentsthatitisfittingtohavepro-attitudestowardsastateexhaust thecontentof judgmentsthatitisgood—couldactuallybeweakenedforourpurposeshere.30Allwewillrelyonbelowistheclaimthatjudgmentsabouttherelevantfittingnessreasonsareentailedbyorpartofthecontentofjudgmentsthatastateisgood.

3. Fitting Attitudes and Reasons to Act

Wehavethusarguedthattojudgeastategoodistojudgethattherearefittingnessreasonsthatonbalancefavorourhavingapro-attitudetowardsit.Sinceajudgment’struthentailsthetruthofitsanalysans,thismeansthatitisaconceptualtruththatastateofaffairsisgoodiffthere are fittingness reasons that on balance favor our having a pro-attitude towards it.31Wewill now argue that this analysis, togetherwithgeneralfactsabouttherelationshipbetweenfittingattitudesandreasonstoact,explainswhyastate’sgoodnessentailstheexistenceofreasonstobringitabout.

Thebasicideahereisthatwhatthereisreasonforustodoisdeter-minedbywhataimsthereisreasonforustohave(together,ofcourse,with descriptive facts aboutwhatwill achieve these aims), and the

30.Onemight,forinstance,thinkthatjudgmentsaboutwhat’sgoodinvolvecer-tainsubstantiveplatitudesornormativepresuppositionsaboutthesortsofthings that can count. See Foot 1959, 85, anddiscussionbyGibbard 2003,142–178.

31. Compare:ifjudgingsomeonetobeabacheloramountstojudginghimtobeamalewhoisn’tinaromanticrelationshipbutinapositiontoenterone,thenit’saconceptualtruththatsomeoneisabacheloriffhe’samalewhoisn’tinaromanticrelationshipbutinapositiontoenterone.Becauseanalysesofonekindofjudgmentintoanotherinthiswaysupportanalyticrelationshipsbe-tweenthefactsthejudgmentsrepresent,wewillslideratherfreelybetweentalkingaboutwhatitistomakeacertainkindofjudgment(“tojudgeastategoodistojudgeitfittingtohaveapro-attitudetowardsit”)andtalkingabouttheanalyticrelationshipsbetweenthefactstheyrepresent(“it’saconceptualtruththatastateisgoodiffit’sfittingtohaveapro-attitudetowardsit”).

Webelievethatthisanalysishasanumberofimportantstrengths.Thefirst is itsabilitytoexplainthediversityofconceptuallycoherent(ifoftenbadlymistaken)viewsthatpeoplecanhaveaboutwhatstatesaregood,rangingfromthejudgmentthatthepreservationofnaturalbeautyisgoodtothejudgmentthatarace’sstaying“pure”isgood.Ouranalysisexplainswhatiscommontoallsuchjudgments,namelythatthosewhomakethemthinkweshouldhavepro-attitudestowardsthestatesinquestion.Asecondstrengthofouranalysisisitsabilitytocap-turethenormativeandmotivationalforceofjudgmentsaboutwhichstatesaregood.TocallstateSgoodistorecommendSorspeakinS’sfavor,whichwethinkisbestcapturedbytheclaimthatitisfittingforustohavepro-attitudestowardsS.Theanalysisalsoexplainstheabil-ityofjudgmentsthatstatesaregoodtomotivateustopursuethemasaspecialcaseof theabilityof judgmentsthatattitudesarefittingtodirectlyguideusintohavingthem.29

Toappreciatehowcentralthesefeaturesaretojudgmentsaboutgoodoutcomes,supposethatsomeoneusedtheword‘good’tolabelall those stateswe call good, but took this to haveno significanceforwhat itwasappropriate todesireandconsequentlyhadnopro-pensitytodesirethestates inquestion.Wesuspect that thepersonwouldnotreallymeangoodwhenshesaid‘good’.Ontheotherhand,

to(t),theycouldtrulyjudgethat(t)isbad.Ouranalysisisconsistentwiththis,solongaswhichstatesitisfittingforeachagenttohavenon-comparative pro-attitudes(likedesire,gladness,andhope)towardsdependsuponwhichalternativestatesarerelevantinthecontextofjudgment.Whatispresumablyfoundationalarecontext-independentfactsaboutwhichcomparativepro-atti-tudesorpreferencesamongstatesitisfittingforeachagenttohave(e. g.theJonesesshouldprefer(b)to(t)and(t)to(n)),anditisfittingforanagenttohaveanon-comparativepro-attitudetowardsastatejustincaseitisfittingforhertopreferittotherelevantalternatives(seeGibbard1998).WearegratefultoDougPortmoreforsuggestingthisexampleandencouragingustodiscussthisissue.

29.Otherplausibleexamplesof thisgeneralpropensityof judgments thatatti-tudesarefittingincludetheabilitiesofjudgmentsthatbeliefsarewarrantedbyourevidence,thatitisappropriatetobeangryatsomeone,andthatweshould (in a non-pragmatic sense) intend to do certain things to directlygenerate thosebeliefs, feelingsofanger,and intentions(seeGibbard1990,36–76;andScanlon1998,18–22).

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fitting tobemovedtobring S aboutwhenonecanwithoutactuallycountinginfavorofbringing S aboutwhenonecan.32

Itisintuitivethatwhatthereisreasontodoisdeterminedbywhataimsthereisreasontohave.Wethinkthatthebesttheoreticalexpla-nationofMAPisthat,becausepracticalreasoninggovernsouractionsbymeansofgoverningourmotives,theprocessofdeterminingwhataimstohave—andthuswhattodo—isessentiallyaprocessofdeter-miningwhatintrinsicmotivestohave.AsMichaelBratman(1987,54)has suggested, becauseourpractical reasoning controls our actionsbycontrollingourintentionstoperformthem,reasonstoperformanactionjustarereasonstointendtoperformit(forarelatedidea,seeScanlon1998,20–21).ButitmustbeclarifiedthatreasonstodoAareidenticaltofittingnessreasonstointendtodoA.AsKavka’s(1983)toxinpuzzleillustrates,merelypragmaticreasonstointendtodosomething(likethereasontointend—orgetoneselftointend—todrinkatoxinconstitutedbythefactthatareliablemind-readerwillpayyouifyouintendthis)neednotbereasonstoactuallydoit.

Moreover, in lightof the role intentionsplay in realizing theob-jectsofourdesiresandotherpro-attitudes,therearesimilarreasonstothinkthat,becausereasonultimatelygovernsourintentionsbygov-erningtheseattitudes,thefittingnessofintentionsisitselfdeterminedbythefittingnessoftheseothermotives.AsBratmanargues,theroleofintentionsisnottosupplyanutterlynewsourceofmotivationthatconflictswith themotives involved inourpro- (and con-) attitudes(likedesiresforstatesofaffairs),buttohelpcognitivelylimitedagentslikeusrealizetheobjectsofthesemotivesovertime.Thisroleofin-tentionsentailsthattheirnormativeassessmentmustbetiedcloselytothatofthepro-attitudestheyserve.

AlthoughBratmanoftenspeaksasthoughpracticalreasoningmustsimply take our intrinsic pro-attitudes as given, it seems clear that

32.WCPandMAPcloselyresembleJohnSkorupski’sprinciplesFDFandFDD,theconjunctionofwhichhereferredtoasthe“Feeling/DispositionPrinci-ple”(1999,38,63,131,and174n24)andmorerecentlyasthe“BridgePrinciple”(2010,265–267).

questionofwhataims there is reason tohave is identical to thatofwhatitisfittingtobemotivatedtodo.Sincepro-attitudeslikedesiringorhopingthatstateSobtainsinvolvemotivationtobringSabout(ifonecan),thefittingnessoftheseattitudesentailsthefittingnessofthismotivation,whichentailstheexistenceofreasonstobringSabout(ifonecan).

Thefirstpartofthisconnectionbetweenfittingattitudesandrea-sonstoactcanbestatedasa

Warrant Composition Principle [WCP]:LetPbeapsychicstate that involves psychic statePʹ as an essential com-ponent.IfRisafittingnessreasontobeinP,thenRisafittingnessreasontobeinPʹ.

WCPsimplystatesthatifthereisreasontobeinapsychicstate,thennecessarily there is reason to be in all that the state essentially in-volves.Forinstance,ifoneacknowledgesourclaimthatpartofwhatitistodesireorhopethatSobtainsistobemotivatedtobringSaboutifonecan,itwouldseemincoherenttoholdthataconsideration(likeS’sinvolvinghappychildren)countsinfavorofhopingordesiringthatS obtainsbutdoesnotcountinfavorofbeingmotivatedtobringSaboutifonecan.Sincehavingthemotivationissimplypartofwhatitistohave thepro-attitude, a consideration cannotmake thepro-attitudefittingwithoutmakingthemotivationfittingaswell.

The secondpartof this connectionbetweenfittingattitudesandreasonstoactistherelationshipbetweenwhatitisfittingtobemoti-vatedtodoandwhatthereisreasontodo,whichwestateasa

Motivations-Actions Principle [MAP]: Let φ-ing be an ac-tion. If R is a fittingness reason to be motivated to φ, then R is a reason to actually φ.

JustastheconsiderationthatSwouldmakechildrenhappycan’tmakeitfittingtodesireSwithoutmakingitfittingtobemovedtobringS aboutwhenonecan,sotooitseemsthisconsiderationcan’tmakeit

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ItisimportanttoclarifythatneitherMAPnorthisexplanationofitmakeswhat there is reason forus tododependentuponwhatat-titudesormotivesweactuallyhappentohave.Theideaisthatwhatthereisreasonforanagenttodoiswhatwouldservetheobjectsoffittingintrinsicmotives,bywhichwemeantheintrinsicmotivesthatitwould be fitting forhertohave,whether she has them or not.Onthisview,ifaconsideration(likeapolicy’sbenefittingtheworse-off)isafittingnessreasonforanagenttobemotivatedtodosomething(likevoteforthepolicyifshecan),thenitisareasonfortheagenttodothisregardlessofwhethersheeverhasorcomestohaveanyactualmotivationtodoit.35

mightinsist,forinstance,thatwecannotdistinguishbetweenfittingnessandnon-fittingnessreasonsformotivationsandintentionswithoutappealingtofactsaboutwhichconsiderationsarereasonstoperformtheactsthatthesemotivesandintentionswouldinclineustoperform.WhilewethinkthatourbasicargumentcouldbemadeusingthisalternativeexplanationofMAP,itmightnotfitaswellwithourclaimsabouttherelationshipbetweenfittingmotivesandethicalcategories,orourclaimstobegivingadeeperexplana-tionof the connectionbetweenethical categoriesand reasons toact.Onecouldnotholdthatwhatthereisreasontodobyitselfexplainsthefitting-nessofallmotivationalattitudes,sincebothfittingandunfittingmotivationalattitudes(e.g.wantingSoutoffittingcareforsomeoneandwantingSoutofunfittingaestheticappreciationforS)caninclineustoperformthesameacts.Onemighthold that something’s instantiatinganethical category (likeS’sbeinggood)jointlyexplainsthefittingnessofpro-orcon-attitudestowardsit(likedesiresforS)andreasonstoactincertainways(liketobringaboutS).Wethinkthatwecouldstillusethisaccounttoarguethattheconnectionbetweengoodstatesandreasonstoactshouldbeseenasaspecialcaseoftheconnectionbetweenethicalcategories,fittingmotives,andreasonstoact.Butitwouldweakenthesenseinwhichwewouldbeexplaining—asopposedtoappealingto—therelationshipbetweenethicalcategoriesandreasonstoact.Inpartbecauseofthis,therewouldseemtobemoreroomonthissortof“jointexplanation”picturetoholdthatastate’sgoodnessexplainsboththefittingnessofdesiresforitandreasonstobringitabout,buttodenythattheinstantiationofotherethicalcategoriesexplainsreasonstoactinadditiontothefittingnessofcertainmotivationalstates.

35. Thepointoftheappealstohowactionsandintentionsaregovernedbyrea-sonissimplytoestablishthat,because(intheabsenceofsomethinggoingwrong—aswhenwedotherightthingforthewrongreasons)wecanonlyrespondtogenuinenormativereasonstoactandintendbyourmotivesfirstrespondingtotheseconsiderations,fittingnessreasonstobemotivatedtodosomethingarefittingnessreasonstointendtodoitandpracticalreasonsto

we can assess them as reasonable or unreasonable by determiningthroughphilosophicalreasoningwhethertheyarefittingorunfitting.33

Moreover,aswehaveseen,itischaracteristicofthesefittingnessas-sessments that they directly guide our attitudes. For instance, onemightstartoutwithamuchstrongerintrinsicdesireforone’sco-na-tionalstobebenefittedbut,asaresultofreflectiononjustwhatco-na-tionalityamountsto,cometoregardthispreferenceasarbitrary.Thisjudgmentthatone’spreferenceisunfittingtendsdirectlytochangeit,andtoalterone’s intentions fromservingtheoldaimofbenefittingone’sco-nationalsmoretoservingthenewaimofbenefittingaliensjustasmuch.

Thus, because reason governs motives other than intentionsthroughdeterminationsoftheirfittingness,andintentionsaresimplyameansofachievingtheobjectsofthesemotives,fittingnessreasonsfor intention are identical tofittingness reasons for theseothermo-tives.Theroleof intentions isprimarily toenableus tosettle inad-vancewhatfuturecoursesofactionwillbestachievetheendsthatitisfittingtobemostmotivatedtoachieve,andtopickfromamongthemanycoursesofactionthatoftenhaveequallygoodprospectsofdo-ingthis.Togetherwiththeaboveobservationthatreasongovernsouractionsthroughdeterminationsofthefittingnessoftheintentionsthatleadustoperformthem,thisentailsthat,becausereasonultimatelygovernsourintentionsandactionsbydeterminingthefittingnessofthemotivestheyseektoserve,fittingnessreasonstobemotivatedtodosomethingareidenticaltofittingnessreasonstointendtodoitandpracticalreasonstodoit.34

33.WhileBratmanoftenspeaksasthoughourintrinsicdesiresorpro-attitudesarethemselvesnormativereasonsforintentionandaction,hemakesitclearthatheactuallywishestoremainneutralbetweenthisviewandtheviewthatourintrinsicdesirescanbeassessedasreasonableorunreasonable(1987,22).

34.Aswiththeconnectionbetweenastate’sgoodnessandthefittingnessofpro-attitudestowardsit,whatismostcentraltoourargumentistheexistenceoftheconnectionassertedbyWCPandMAPbetweenthefittingnessofmotiva-tionalattitudesandreasonstoact,ratherthanourparticularexplanationofwhytheseprinciplesarecorrect.Supposewewerewrongaboutthefitting-nessofmotivationalstatesbeingexplanatorilypriortoreasonstoact.One

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4. Rejecting the Teleological Conception of Practical Reasons

Recallthatthetop-downstrategyofarguingforconsequentialismcon-tendsthatmoralityshouldgiveusreasonstoact,thatthereclearlyarereasonstobringaboutgoodstatesofaffairs,butthatitisunclearhowtherecouldbereasonstodoanythingelsethatlooksmoral.Wehavesofarofferedanexplanationoftheclearreasonstobringaboutthegood thatmotivate the top-downstrategyasa special instanceof ageneralconnectionbetweenfittingattitudesandreasonstoactastheywouldmotivateus.Butinthissectionandthenextwewillunderminethetop-downstrategybyshowinghowthissamegeneralconnectionbetweenfittingattitudesandreasonstoactmakesitequallyclearhowtherecouldbereasons—andindeedmoralreasons—todothingsoth-erthanpromotethegood.

Thelogicallystrongestversionofthetop-downstrategyholdsthatmoralreasonstoactmustbereasonstobringaboutgoodoutcomesbecauseall reasonstoactarereasonstobringaboutgoodoutcomes.This view that all practical reasonsmust be reasons to bring aboutgoodoutcomesisknownasthe teleological conception of practical reasons [TCR].Ofcourse,itcertainlyseemsthattherearereasonsforeachofustodothingslikeavoidourownpainorhelpourownchildrenthatarenotproportionatetothebadnessofourpainorourchildren’sdis-tressassessed from an impartial perspective.Thatis,althoughtheremightseemtobestrongerreasonstoavoidourpainandhelpourchildrenthan toalleviate thepainandhelp thechildrenofothers,wecouldnot trulysay to thoseothers thatourpainorourchildren’sdistressisworsethantheirs.But,aswehaveseen,incontexts(liketalkingtoourpartners)whereourinterlocutorsshareourfittingnessreasonstohaveastrongeraversiontoourpainorourchildren’sdistressthantothatofothers,itseemsthatwecantrulyclaimthatdevelopmentsthatmitigatetheformerarebetterthanthosethatmitigatethelatter.

TCR can thus accommodatepractical reasons todo things otherthanpromotetheimpartialgoodbyholdingthatthepracticalreasonsthereare foranagent toactmustbe reasons topromoteoutcomes

Having thus argued in favor of our fitting attitude analysis of goodstates,WCP,andMAP,wecanusethemtogivethefollowingexplana-tionofwhy,ifastateofaffairsisgood,thereisreasontobringitabout:

1.Ifstateofaffairs S isgood,thentherearefittingnessreasonsforustohaveapro-attitudetowards S [fromthefittingat-titudeanalysisofgoodstates].

2. If therearefittingness reasons forus tohaveapro-attitudetowardsS, then therearefittingness reasons forus tobemotivatedtobring S aboutifwecan36[fromWCPandthefactthatpro-attitudestowardsSessentiallyinvolvemotiva-tiontobring S aboutifonecan].

3.IftherearefittingnessreasonsforustobemotivatedtobringSaboutifwecan,thentherearereasonstobring S aboutifwecan[fromMAP].

∴If S isgood,thentherearereasonstobring S aboutifwecan.

doit.TheunderlyingideaisthatifRisagenuinenormativereasonforustorespondinwayW,and(absentsomethinggoingwrong)wecanonlyhaveW inresponsetoRbyhaving(andbecausewehave)W*inresponsetoR,thenRisareasontoW*,anditsstatusassuchexplainsitsstatusasareasontoW.

36.Atleastsolongasitwouldstillbefittingtohaveapro-attitudetowardsSifyouactuallybroughtSabout.Perhapsitisconceptuallycoherenttothinkthattherearestatesthatwouldnotbefitpro-attitudesifyoudidanythingtobringthemabout.Onemight think itfitting todesire the existenceof anaturalenvironment,butthatitwouldbeunfittingtodesireitsexistenceifitweredamaged and then restored, on account of its losing its naturalness. Evenhere,therewouldbecaseswhereyoucouldbringabouttheenvironment’sexistencewithoutdestroyingitsstatusasfittinglydesired—e.g.byprevent-ingothers fromdestroying it or just refraining fromdestroying it yourself.Alternatively,onemightthinkitfittingtodesiresomestate,butthatitwouldbewrongtotrytobringitabout,andconsequentlythatitwouldbeunfittingtohaveapro-attitude towards it (quaproductofwrongdoing)once itwasbroughtabout.Evenhere,wearenotsurewhetherweshouldsaythattherewouldbenoreasontobringaboutthestate,orwhethertherewouldstillbesomereasontodoso,whichissimplyoutweighedbythefeaturesthatwouldmakeitcompletelyunfittingtohavepro-attitudestowardsitonceitexisted.

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Wethink,moreover,thatmanyoftheattitudeswecommonlyhaveinvolve intrinsicact-directedmotives.Consideremotions likeanger,guilt,shame,admiration,contempt,grief,andaestheticappreciation.Plausibly, these emotions essentially involve, respectively, intrinsicmotivationtopunishorholdtheobjectofourangeraccountable,in-trinsicmotivationtomakeamendsfortheobjectofourguilt,intrinsicmotivationtowithdrawandremovetheobjectofourshame,intrinsicmotivationtoemulatetheobjectofouradmiration, intrinsicmotiva-tiontoavoidandbehaveunliketheobjectofourcontempt,intrinsicmotivationtohonortheobjectofourgrief,andintrinsicmotivationtoengagewith(e. g.tocreate,perform,watch,orlistento)theobjectofourappreciation.37

These attitudes that involve intrinsic act-directedmotivations of-tenseemfittingorappropriate,andthereisnoreasonintheabstracttobeanymoreskepticalthattheyaresometimesfittingthanthereistobeskepticalthatstate-directedpro-attitudesaresometimesfitting.38 Whentheseattitudesarefitting,thesametwoprinciplesthatexplainwhytherearereasonstobringaboutgoodstatesofaffairswillentailthatthereareintrinsicreasonstoactastheymotivateus,quiteinde-pendentlyofwhetherourdoingsowillbringaboutgoodstates.Sincetheseattitudesessentiallyinvolveintrinsicact-directedmotives,WCPentailsthatanyfittingnessreasontohavethemisequallyafittingnessreasontohavetheact-directedmotivestheyinvolve.Moreover,MAPimpliesthatthesefittingnessreasonstohavetheintrinsicact-directedmotivesareactuallyintrinsicreasonstoperform(oravoidperforming)theactstheyaredirectedtowards(oragainst).

37. SeeforinstanceGibbard1990,Anderson1993,Velleman2002,andDarwall2002,2006.

38. Itwould,moreover,beself-defeatingforteleologiststorejecttheideaoffit-tingnessreasonsandacknowledgeonlypragmaticreasonsforattitudes.Thisisbecausetheirownaccountoftherelationshipbetweenreasonsforstate-directedmotives and reasons to actmust be in termsof fittingness ratherthanpragmaticreasonsformotives(elsethepragmaticreasontointrinsicallydesire that your lovedonesbeharmedconstitutedbyademon’s threat toharmthemunlessyouformthisintrinsicdesirewouldcount—absurdly—asanintrinsicreasontoactuallyharmthem).

thatshecantrulyjudgegood.Aswehaveseeninthelasttwosections,whatdeterminesbothwhatstatesanagentcanjudgegoodandherreasonstopromotesuchstatesarethefittingnessreasonsthereareforhertohavepro-attitudestowardsthem.SotheclearestwaytoputTCRisasthethesisthatallreasonsforanagenttoactarereasonsforhertobringaboutstatesofaffairsthattherearefittingnessreasonsforhertohavepro-attitudestowards.

PerhapsthemostnaturalwayofmotivatingTCRistoargue,aswehaveinsupportofMAP,thatreasonstoactarereasonstobringabouttheobjectsoffittingmotives,andthentosimplyassumethatallmo-tives(andthusallmotivesthatcanbefitting)arestate-directed.ThusDouglasPortmoreclaims,“Ifouractionsarethemeansbywhichweaffectthewaytheworldgoes,andifourintentionalactionsnecessar-ilyaimatmakingtheworldgoacertainway,thenitisonlynaturaltosupposethatwhatwehavemostreasontodoisdeterminedbywhichwaywehavemostreasontowanttheworldtogo”(2011,56).Inclaim-ingthat“ourintentionalactionsnecessarilyaimatmakingtheworldgoacertainway”,Portmoreseemstobeassumingthatallmotivesonwhichweactaimatbringingaboutcertainstatesofaffairs.

WehavearguedthatPortmoreisrightthatintentionalactionsaimatachievingtheobjectsofourmotives,andthatwhatwehavemostreasontodo isdeterminedbywhatwehavemostreasontobemo-tivated to do. Butwehave also argued that Portmore’s apparent as-sumptionthatallmotivesaimatstatesofaffairsismistaken.Wesup-poseonecould,asPortmoresays,“intendtorunmerelyforthesakeofbringingitaboutthatoneruns”(2011,56).Butthatwouldbebizarre.Incaseswhereyourunjustbecauseyoufeellikerunning,youhaveanact-directed intrinsicmotive to run,andyou formanact-directedintentiontodothis.Ordinarily,youdonotseektomakeit thecasethattheworldcontainsinstancesofyourrunning(orinstancesofyourrunningnow)unlessyouhaveulteriorreasonstoensurethis(likeyourbeingpaidforhowmuchrunningtimeyoulog)andyoufindyourselfwithoutanyact-directedmotivationtorun.

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act.Buttheexistenceandfittingnessofpro-attitudestowardsstatesofaffairsinwhichweactasfittingact-directedmotiveswouldinclineus(e. g.inwhichwemakeamendstoourrivalorattendhisfuneral)are ex-plained by, and thus cannot supplantthefittingnessoftheseact-directedmotivesandthebasicact-directedreasonstheygenerate.39

PortmorehasarguedthatTCRshouldbeacceptedbecauseitprovidesamaximallyplausibleandunifiedaccountoftherelationshipbetweenwhichoutcomeswehavemost reason toprefer andwhich actswehavemost reason toperform.Thereclearlyaresome cases inwhichthereismorereasonforustoperformactaithanactajbecausethereismorefittingnessreasonforustoprefertheoutcomeofai(callthisoi)totheoutcomeofaj(callthisoj).Forinstance,ourstrongerreasonstoin-vestinamutualfundthatwilldeliverahigherreturnthanitsalterna-tivesclearlystemfromourstrongerreasonstoprefertheoutcomeofinvestinginthefirsttothatofinvestinginthesecond.Thereareother

39. InresponsetoAnderson’s“expressivetheory”ofpracticalreasonsthatoneshould act only in ways that adequately express one’s rational attitudes(which bears close similarities to our explanation of the relationship be-tweenfittingmotivesandreasonstoact),Portmore(2011,80)correctlyob-servesthattheteleologistcanpointtodesiresforstates(likethatofone’scurrent actions adequately expressingone’s rational attitudes) thatwouldmotivatethesameactsasAnderson’stheory.Moreover,itisplausiblethatthesedesires arefitting. ButPortmore seemsquitewrong to suggest thatthefittingnessofdesiresforthesestatesexplainsourreasonstoactasourfittingact-directedmotivesdictate.Ourreasonstoactasfittingact-directedmotivesdictatearenomoreinneedofthefittingnessofadesirethatweactasourfittingmotivesdirect thanour reasons toactasfittingstate-directed motives(e. g.topromotesomeone’shappiness)areinneedofthefittingnessofthisgeneraldesire.InbothcasestheconnectionbetweenthefittingnessofthemotiveandthereasonstoactoutofitareexplainedbyWCPandMAPdirectly,andwithouttheneedofthefittingnessofsomegeneraldesiretoactasthereisreasontoact(i. e.toactasfittingmotivesdirect).Thefittingnessofadesiretopromotesomeone’shappiness[DH]andthestate-directedrea-sonsitgeneratestopromoteherhappiness(togetherwiththefactthatitisfittingtodesirethatwefeelanddowhatisreasonable)explainandarenotexplainedbythefittingnessofdesiringthestateofaffairsinwhichoneactsonDH.Intheexactsameway,thefittingnessofanact-directedmotivationtomake amends [MA] and the act-directed reasons it generates tomakeamendsexplainandarenotexplainedbythefittingnessofdesiringthestateofaffairsinwhichoneactsonMA.

Forinstance,suppose(asseemsplausible)thatthefactthatyourconducthasharmedsomeonemakesforthefittingnessoffeeling(i. e.isafittingnessreasontofeel)guiltforwhatyouhavedone.Sinceguiltessentiallyinvolvesintrinsicmotivationtomakeamends,WCPentailsthatthisfactisequallyafittingnessreasontobeintrinsicallymotivat-edtomakeamends,andMAPentailsthatthisfittingnessreasontobeintrinsicallymotivatedtomakeamendsisactuallyanintrinsicreasontomakeamendsforwhatyouhavedone.Similarly,supposethefactthatapaintingwould lookacertainwayorapieceofmusicwouldsoundacertainwaymakes for thefittingnessofaestheticallyappre-ciating thepotentialpaintingormusic. Sinceaesthetic appreciationessentiallyinvolvesintrinsicmotivationtoengagewithitsobject(forinstanceby composingorperforming it),WCPentails that this factisequallyafittingnessreasontobeintrinsicallymotivatedtoengagewiththepaintingormusic,andgiventhis,MAPentails that it isanintrinsicreasontoactuallyengagewiththepaintingormusic(e. g.toactuallycomposeorperformit).Theseact-directed reasonstoactasfit-tingintrinsicact-directedmotivesdictateneednomoresanctionfromfittingstate-directedmotivesthanstate-directed reasonstoactasfittingintrinsicstate-directedmotives(likethattopromotesomeone’shappi-ness)dictateneedsanctionfromfittingact-directedmotives.

Ofcoursetherearetimeswhenweacknowledgethatanact-direct-edmotivewouldbefitting,butfindourselveswithout it.Wemightfeelnoguiltforhavingharmedourrivalorfeelnogriefathispassing,yetrecognizethatitwouldbefittingtofeelsomesuchguiltorgrief.Inthesecasesitisnatural,anditseemsfitting,forustodesirethestateofourhavingtheseact-directedmotivesoratleastthatofourrespond-ingtotheact-directedreasonsconstitutedbythefactors(e. g.thatwehaveharmedourrivalorthathehaspassedaway)thatmakefortheirfittingness.Moreover,incasesinwhichwehaveandactfromwhatweregardasfittingact-directedmotives,itisnaturalandevidentlyfittingtobegladthatwehaveandactfromthem.Thisisaspecialcaseofthegeneralfactthatitisnaturalandevidentlyfittingtohavepro-attitudestowardsourfeelingandactingasitisfittingandreasonabletofeeland

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Incaseswhereallreasonstoperformaiandajarestate-directed,(FM)willtaketheparticularform

(FP)onehasmorefittingnessreasontopreferoioveroj.

Incaseswheresomereasonstoperformaiorajareact-directed,theinstanceof(FM)thatexplains(RA)willnottaketheform(FP),butitwillexplain(RA)justaswell.OurexplanationthusgoesdeeperthanTCR’s.Bydrawingonconsiderationsofhowpracticalreasoninggov-ernsmotivation,intention,andaction,itexplainswhy it isthatfittingstate-directedpreferencesaccountforourpracticalreasonswhentheydo. But this same explanation also explainswhy fitting state-direct-edmotives do not—although their fitting act-directed counterpartsdo—accountforourpracticalreasonsinothercases.40

40.We think that this constitutes adirect response to thebroadunificationistargumentPortmore(2011,81–82)givesin§3.4.4,“IndefenseofTCRonthewhole”.In§3.4.1–3hegivesamorespecificunificationistargument.Thisar-gumentfirstdefendsthebiconditionalthatonehasmorereasontoperformaithanajiffonehasmorereasontopreferoitooj.ItthenarguesthatTCR’sexplanationofthebiconditional(thatgreaterreasonstopreferoitoojalwaysexplaingreaterreasonstoperformaioveraj)issuperiortoitsthreepossiblerivals.First,itcan’tbethatgreaterreasonstoperformaioverajalwaysexplaingreater reasons topreferoi tooj,becausesomecases (e. g. themutual fundcase)don’tfit thispattern.Second,Portmoreargues that itwouldbeunac-ceptablydisunifiedtoholdthatsometimesgreaterreasonstopreferoi tooj explaingreaterreasonstoperformaioverajbutsometimesviceversa.Third,Portmorearguesthathecan’tseehowtherecouldbesomethirdfactorthatalwayssimultaneouslyexplainsbothgreaterreasonstoperformaioverajandgreaterreasonstopreferoioveroj.

We strongly suspect that Portmore’s biconditional is false. If you couldsavefiveindividualsbykillingone(say,bypushingtheoneintothepathofatrolleyabouttokillthefive),weareinclinedtothinkthatyoushouldmorestronglypreferthatthefivelive,morestronglypreferthattheoneispushed,andthusmorestronglypreferthatyoupushhim,eventhoughyoushouldnotpushhim.Itmightseemstrangeatfirsttothinkthatweshouldhopethatwewillactasweshouldnotact.Butitisactuallyafamiliarphenomenonthatweshouldhopethatwewillhavemotivesthatitisunfittingtohave(e. g.unwar-rantedanger towardsone if that is theonlywaytopreventanevildemonfromkillingfive).If,aswehaveargued,whatthereisreasontodojustisamatterofwhatitisfittingtobemotivatedtodo,itshouldbenomoresurpris-ingforittobereasonabletohopethatwewilldowhatitisunreasonabletodo(e. g.unreasonablykilloneindividualifthatistheonlywaytosavefive).Whileitisplausiblethatweshouldintrinsicallyvalueouractingreasonably,

caseswhereourreasonstoperformaioverajdonotseemtostemfromourreasonstopreferoitooj.Forinstance,whenbreakingapromisetodo A willbringaboutslightlygreaterbenefitsthandoingA,themerefactthatwehavepromisedtodo A canseemtobeastrongerintrinsicreasoninfavorofdoingAthantheadditionalbenefitsarereasonstoomitA.Hereourapparentlystrongerreasonstokeepthepromisedonotseemtobegeneratedbyreasonstopreferthestateinwhichwekeepit;ratherourreasonstopreferthisstateseemtobegeneratedbythefactthatitinvolvesourdoingwhatthereisgreaterreasonforustodo.But,Portmoreargues,proponentsofTCRcanre-describeourap-parentintrinsicreasonstokeeppromisesasreasonstobringaboutthestateofaffairsinwhichwekeepourpromises(orourcurrentprom-ises),andholdthatthesereasonsdostemfromourreasonstopreferthestateofourkeepingourpromises.Althoughthismayconflictwithinitialappearances,Portmorearguesthatweshouldacceptitbecauseit provides amoreunified account of the relationshipbetweenourreasonsforpreferenceandourreasonsforaction.

But our account of the relationship between fittingmotives andreasonstoactoffersapictureofhowreasonsforpreferencerelatetoreasonsforactionthatisjustasunifiedasTCR’sassertionthatallrea-sonstoactareexplainedbyourreasonstoprefertheiroutcomes.WCPandMAPofferasystematicconceptualaccountofhowthefittingnessofmotivesexplainstheexistenceofreasonstoactastheywouldmoti-vateus.Becausefittingintrinsicmotivescomeintwovarieties—state-directedandact-directed—thisunifiedexplanationentailsthattherewill be intrinsic state-directed reasons corresponding to the formerandintrinsicact-directedreasonscorrespondingtothelatter.Onthisview,whenever

(RA)onehasmorereasontoperformaithantoperformaj ,

thisisbecause

(FM)onehasmorefittingness reason tobemotivated to per-formaithantoperformaj.

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functionthatmakesthestrengthofherpreferenceforeachgambleafunctionofthestrengthofherpreferenceforitspossibleoutcomes.42 Thebasicideaofhowtomakerationaldecisionsunderconditionsofriskistoperformtheact(orpickfromamongthesetofacts)withthehighestexpectedutility,whichisobtainedbymultiplyingone’sdegreeofpreferenceforeachoftheact’spossibleoutcomesbytheprobabilitythattheoutcomewillobtainifoneperformstheact.43

Since decision theorizing is donewith such heavily teleologicallanguage,onemightbetemptedtothinkthatourbasicprinciplesforhowtomakerationaldecisionswouldhavetobeabandonedorsub-stantiallyrevisedifTCRwererejected.Butwethinkthisisanillusion.Oneway to understanddecision theory is as a theory ofwhat it isreasonabletodoinlightofone’sevidence,assuming thatone’saimsand expectations are reasonable.Another (perhapsmore common)wayistounderstanditasatheoryofwhattodogivenone’saimsandexpectationsifoneistoretainakindofminimal,instrumentalratio-nality.44Eitherway,thetheoryshouldbeentirelynon-committalastothekindsofaimsit isreasonabletohave,andinparticularwhethertheyarestate-directedoract-directed.

Apart fromcommon labelling conventions,wedonot think thatthere isanything in the frameworkof standarddecision theory thatsupports the assumption that the decision maker’s ultimate aims,whicharetakenasgivenorassumedtobereasonable,mustbestate-directed as opposed to act-directed motives. What the frameworkdoesisunderstandactsasgambles{(S1, D1),(S2, D2),…,(Sn, Dn)}thatassociateeachstateof theworldSiwith themotivationally relevant

42. ThemainclassicresultsareduetoRamsey1926,vonNeumannandMorgen-stern1944,andSavage1954.

43. Thisprinciplehasbeenputinteleologicaltermssinceitsfirstclearformula-tionbyArnauldandNicole: “Inorder to judgeofwhatweought todo inordertoobtainagoodandtoavoidanevil, it isnecessarytoconsidernotonlythegoodandevilinthemselves,butalsotheprobabilityoftheirhappen-ingandnothappening,andtoregardgeometricallytheproportionwhichallthesethingshave,takentogether”(1662,367).

44. SeeDarwall1983,Broome1991,Gibbard1998,andJoyce1999.

SomemaythinkthatTCRreceivessupport fromdecisiontheory,orthetheoryofhowitisrationaltopursuegivenaimsinlightofgivenexpectationsabout statesof theworld.41Thebasicquestionofdeci-siontheoryisusuallyputasoneofhowtochoosefromasetofactsthatcanberepresentedasfunctionsfrompossiblestatesoftheworldtooutcomesthatthedecisionmakervalues,orgamblesoftheform{(S1, O1), (S2, O2),…, (Sn, On)},whichassociateeachpossible stateof theworldSiwithanoutcomeOithatwillobtainiftheactisperformedandSi obtains. If thedecisionmaker’spreferencesamonggamblesobeycertain rationality constraints, they can be represented by a utility

thevalueofthis,evenfromourownperspectives,shouldbeabsolutelytrivialcomparedtothatofsomeone’slife(letalonefourlives).Tolookmorefondlyuponone’sfollowingthedictatesofreasonthanuponone(orcertainlyfour)other individuals’ survivingwouldbemonstrouslynarcissistic. (The exam-plesPortmoreusestosupportthebiconditionalappearill-chosen;ashead-mits[115n76],itispre-theoreticallyplausiblethatoneshouldmorestronglypreferone’schildrenlivingthanstrangersliving,andtheKantianideathatoneshouldnotlietoamurderertosavehisvictimsisdistractinglyabsurd.)

Still, ifPortmore’sbiconditionaldid turnout tobe true,webelieveouraccount would give, as he demands, a principled “explanation as to whysometimesreasonsforactingareexplanatorilypriorandothertimesreasonsfordesiringareexplanatorilyprior”(2011,81).Ourexplanationofhowact-directed reasons for actionexplain thefittingnessofpro-attitudes towardsthestateofouractingonthemdoesrelyuponthesubstantiveviewthatitisfittingtopreferstatesinwhichonedoeswhatonehasmostreasontodo.BecausetheproponentofTCRdoesnotseemtoneedsuchanadditionalsub-stantiveviewtoexplainPortmore’sbiconditional,therewouldbeacasethatTCR’sexplanationissimpler.ButthissimplicitywouldhavetobeweighedagainstTCR’scosts.Wehavearguedthattherearegoodfunctionalistreasonstobelievethatwehaveact-directedasopposedtomerelystate-directedmo-tivesandgoodnormative reasons to think that theyare sometimesfitting.Wehavealsoarguedthattheveryprinciples(WCPandMAP)thatvindicatewhattruththere is inTCR’sorderofexplanationentail that thefittingnessof act-directedmotives generates act-directed practical reasons.Moreover,thereareseriousworriesaboutthenarcissisticcharacterofsomeagent-rela-tivereasonswhentheyarecastasstate-directed.Againstallthis,wedonotbelievethatthegreatersimplicityofTCRwouldbemuchofabenefit.

41. For instance, Pettit assumes that the plausibility of non-consequentialistviewscanbedispelledbythefollowingdecision-theoreticreasoning:“Ifoneoptionhas[betterpossibleoutcomesthanallalternativeoptions]suchthatitrepresentsabettergamblethan[thosealternatives]…,thensurelythatisthebestoptionformetotake”(1991,239).

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plausibilityofstandarddecisiontheoryinnowaycountsagainsttheexistenceofirreduciblyact-directedpracticalreasons.46

5. Practical Reasons to Be Moral, Whether or Not Morality Promotes the Good

Wehavethusarguedthatthesameprinciplesthatexplainwhytherearereasonstopromotegoodoutcomes,oractasfittingstate-motivesdictate,equallyexplainhowtherecanbereasonstodootherthings,whichfittingact-directedmotivesdictate.This issufficient todefeatthelogicallystrongestversionofthetop-downstrategyofarguingforconsequentialism,whichholds,on thebasisofTCR, thatmoral rea-sonsmustbereasonstopromotegoodoutcomesbecauseallpracticalreasonsare reasons topromotegoodoutcomes.Ourexplanationofhowreasonstoactasfittingact-directedmotivesdictatearegenerated

46.We take this to be a slightlymore detailed explanation ofwhy, asHurley(1997, 123–124) claims, act-directed goals are consistent with a maximiz-ingconceptionofpractical rationality.Onecould summarize theplausiblegeneralmaximizingprincipleasinstructingustoperformtheactsthathavethegreatestexpecteddegreeofsupportbyreasons(ifweassumeouraimsare reasonable); or thegreatest expectationof realizing theobjectsofourintrinsicmotives,weightedby their strengths (if formulatedas aprinciplethat takesour aims as “given”). It is important to clarify that themaximiz-ingprinciplesounderstooddoesnotsaythatweshouldeachhaveonlyoneintrinsicsuper-aimtodosomethinglike“maximizetheexpectedreasonormotivesupportofmyactions”.Anact’sdegreeofexpectedreasonssupportisnotsomenewthingthatagentsaresupposedtocareaboutoverandabovethefittingaimsthatitcanbeexpectedtoachieve;itissimplyasummaryofhowitisrationaltotradeofftheact’sexpectationsofachievingthosefittingaimsinlightoftheirimportanceanditslikelihoodofachievingthem.

Wetakeoneofthemainlessonsoftheconsequentializingprojectofau-thors like Portmore to be that, if sufficient relativization is allowed in thedescriptionsofstatesofaffairs,foranysetofaimsthatincludesintrinsicact-directedmotives,thereisasetofpurelystate-directedintrinsicaimsthatwillmotivate the same conduct in the same circumstances. The reasonwhy itmatterswhetheranorderingofgamblesrepresentsintrinsicmotivesthatareact-directedorpurelystate-directedisthatthestate-directedmotivesmaynotbeasfittingastheact-directedones.Forexample,aswewillsuggestbelow,itseemsplausiblethatitisfittingtofeelmorestronglyobligatednottokillsomeonethantopreventfiveothersfromdying.Butitseemsunfittinglynar-cissistictomorestronglydesireastateofaffairsinwhichfivedieandyoukillnoonethanastateinwhichonlyonediesandyoukillsomeone.

descriptionDithatwillbetrueoftheactifSiobtains.Incaseswhereallone’sintrinsicmotivesfororagainstperformingtheactarestate-directed, these act-descriptionswill include only the outcomes thattheactwillbringabout if thestateobtains.But incaseswhereonehasintrinsicact-directedmotivesthatmight(dependingonthestateoftheworld)favorordisfavortheact,thesedescriptionswillincludepropertiesoftheact(likeis a keeping of a promise, is a killing of an inno-cent)otherthantheoutcomesitbringsabout.Wecanthusunderstandthe standard results of decision theory as tellingus that if thedeci-sionmaker’schoicesamongacts(i. e.gambles)obeycertainrationalityconstraints,theycanberepresentedwitha“utilityfunction”thatrep-resentsthestrengthofhermotivationstoperformvariousacts,wherethestrengthofhermotivationstoperformanactwhenitspropertiesareuncertainisafunctionofthestrengthsofhermotivationstoper-formitifitspropertieswereknownwithcertainty.45Wethinkthatthisframeworkactuallyenablesustoseemoreclearlytheplausibleideaembodiedintheprincipleofmaximizingexpectedutility,namely:themoreaverseyouare(orshouldbe)toperforminganactwithcertainproperties,thelesswillingyoushouldbetoperformanactifthereisarisk that itwillhavethoseproperties,andthegreater theexpecta-tionyouwillneedofitshavingpropertiesthat(should)inclineyoutoperformitinorderforittoberationalforyoutotakethisrisk.Sincethisistheprinciplethatmakesthestandardtheoryofrationaldecisionmakingplausible,anditappliesjustaseasilytocaseswheresomeofthedecisionmaker’sultimateaimsareact-directed,wethinkthatthe

45. Notethat,underconditionsofrisk,therepresentationswithwhichtheagent’sact-directedandstate-directedmotiveswillbecombiningtoexplainactsandact-directedmotiveswillbe degrees of belief or credencethatactswillbepartsofwaysofperformingotheractsandthatactswillbringaboutstatesofaffairs.Onethereforeshouldnottakeouraccountsofact-directedandstate-directedmotivesinsection2toberestrictedtorepresentationsthatareflat-outbeliefs,or to thesortsofexplanationsofactionsandact-directedmotives thatareproducedbythemotivescombiningwithflat-outbeliefs.

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bereasonstoperformitthatarebothpracticalanddistinctivelymoral.Thatsaid,wewillshowinthenextsectionhowouraccountofmoralreasonscanhelpdefendtheplausibilityofnon-consequentialistmoralreasons,forinstanceagainstconcernsaboutnarcissism.

Justas there isawidediversityof states thatpeoplecancoherentlyjudgetobegood,thereisawidediversityofactsthatpeoplecanco-herently—ifinmanycasesquitefalsely—judgetobemorallywrongoropposedbymoralreasons.Theseincludesuchplausiblywrongfulactsas inflictingharms,defectingincollectiveactionproblems,andfailingtorespectautonomy,butalsoallmannerofapparentlymiscel-laneousacts,includingsexualpractices,druguse,swearing,“playingGod”,andsoon(quiteindependent,inmanycases,oftheirperceivedconsequences).

We think that theonly thing thatunifies thecontentofall thesejudgments is that thosewhomake them think thatwe should feelobligatednot toperformtheacts inquestion.Feelingsofobligationare,asRichardBrandt(1959,117–118)observed,whatyouhavewhenyouseesomeoneintroubleandfeellikeyou“justcan’t”leaveher.J.S.Mill(1863)describedthefeelingasan“internalsanctionofduty…afeelinginourownmind…attendantonviolationofduty,whichinproperlycultivatedmoralnaturesrises,inthemoreseriouscases,intoshrinking from it as an impossibility”, and “amass of feelingwhichmustbebrokenthroughinordertodowhatviolatesourstandardofright”.Thephenomenologyoffeelingobligatednottodosomethingissimilartothatoffeelingguiltforhavingdoneit,butwhereasguiltisretrospective,feelingobligatednottodosomethinginvolvesakindofprospectiveguilt-tingedaversiontodoingit.48

48. Itisimportant,however,toemphasizethatfeelingobligatednottodosome-thinginvolvesanaversiontodoing it,nottotheprospectoffeelingguiltforhavingdoneit.Ifyousawsomeoneinneedofhelpbuthadonhandapillthatwouldpreventyoufromfeelingguiltforfailingtohelpher,yourfeelingthatyou“justcan’t”leaveher(unlikeanaversiontofeelingguilt)wouldmotivateyoutohelpherandgeneratenomotivationatalltotakethepill.

One might worry that feeling obligated not to do something involvesjudgingthatitwouldbewrongtodoit,inwhichcaseitwouldbecircularto

inthesamewayasreasonstopromotegoodoutcomesshoulddemys-tifyhow therecouldbepractical reasons todoanythingother thanpromotegoodoutcomes.

Butjustbecausetherecanbepracticalreasonstoactasfittingact-directedmotivesdictatedoesn’tmeanthattherearemoralreasonstodoso.Manyact-directedreasons,liketorunforthesakeofrunningortoperformorcreateanartwork,seemtohavelittletodowithmorality.OurargumentagainstTCRthusleavesopenaversionofthetop-downstrategy which maintains that, although there may be act-directedpracticalreasons,theycannotbemoralreasons.Aproponentofthistop-downargumentforconsequentialismmightholdthattobemoral,areasonmustbesufficientlyselfless,disinterested,orimpartial,andthattheonlypracticalreasonsthathavethesepropertiesarereasonstobringaboutimpartiallygoodoutcomes,orstatesthatitisfittingforallmoralagentstohavepro-attitudestowards.47

In this sectionweargue that this logicallyweakerversionof thetop-downstrategyisalsounsound.Weshowhowthesamekindsofconsiderationsthatsupportunderstandingastate’sstatusasgoodintermsofthefittingnessofpro-attitudestowardsitsupportunderstand-inganact’smoralstatusintermsofthefittingnessoffeelingobligatedtoperformoravoidperformingit.But,giventheprinciplesconnectingfittingmotivestopracticalreasonsthatwedefendedinsection3,thissupports adirect connectionbetweenan act’smoral status and rea-sonsfororagainstperformingit,whichholdsquiteindependentlyofwhethertheactpromotesthegood.Ouraccountofmoralreasonsislogicallyconsistentwiththeconsequentialistviewthatallmoralrea-sonsarereasonstopromotethegood.Ourprimaryaiminthissectionissimplytoextendourargumentagainstthetop-downstrategytothelogicallyweakervarietybyshowingthatwedonotneedtheideaofanact’spromotingtheimpartialgoodtomakesenseofhowtherecan

47. AlthoughmostconsequentialistsseemtoembraceTCR,theideathatlegiti-matelymoral reasonsmust favorpromoting those stateswe shouldpreferfromanimpartialperspectiveplaysacentralroleintheargumentsforconse-quentialismofsuchauthorsasR.M.Hare(1963,ch.6–7),Singer(1979,10–13),andRailton(1986,189–190).

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Thissupportsthefollowinganalysesofourconceptsofmoralrea-sonsandmoralwrongness:

Fitting Attitude Analysis of Moral Reasons: To judgethatRisamoralreasonforagentXtoφistojudgethatRisafittingnessreasonforXtofeelobligatedtoφ,and

Fitting Attitude Analysis of Moral Wrongness:TojudgethatitismorallywrongforXtoψistojudgethatitis,onbalance,fittingforXtofeelobligatednottoψ.50

50.Ofcourse,wecanthinkitperfectlyfittingforsomeonetoexperiencenofeel-ingsofobligationtorefrainfromdoingthingswethinkwrongifsheisalreadysufficientlymotivatednot todothem. Inmostcaseswewouldneverevenconsiderdoingthingsthatwouldkillothers,andifwedo,careforthoseoth-ersandfearofpunishmentarealmostalwayssufficientdeterrents.Althoughwethinkitwouldbewrongforustokillinsuchcases,wesurelydonotthinkitinappropriatethatweexperiencenofeelingsofobligationtorefrainfromdoingso.Moreover,thereisasenseinwhichwecanthinkitfittingonbal-ancetofeelobligatedtodothingsthatwedonotthinkitwrongtofailtodo.Itseemsperfectlyfittingforsomeonewhogoesaboveandbeyondwhatmoral-ityrequires—say,bygettingkilledtosaveayoungerstrangerfromdeath—tofeelobligatedtodowhatshedoes.

Toclarifyourproposal,itisimportanttonotefirstthattalkoffeelingemo-tions,liketalkofdesiringorpreferring,isambiguousbetweenanoccurrentandadispositional sense.Occurrent feelings andpreferences exert causalpressureonone’sbehavior at themoment, and (at least typically) involvephenomenalexperiences,whiledispositionalfeelingsandpreferencesmere-lyhavethedispositiontobecomeoccurrentincertaincircumstances.Thusonecandispositionally feelobligatednot topushone’s friendsoutofwin-dowsinthesamewayonecandispositionallyfeelangeratone’sfatherevenwhileoneisenjoyinghiscompanyandexperiencingnonegativeemotions.Second,itisimportanttonotethataresponse’sbeing“fittingonbalance”isambiguousbetween (i) the response’sbeingmandatory, in that there isnoalternativeresponsethatisasstronglysupportedbyfittingnessreasons,or(ii)theresponse’sbeingjustified,inthatthereisnoalternativeresponsethatismorestronglysupportedbyfittingnessreasons.

Inmoredetail,then,ourproposalisthattothinkitmorallywrongforXtoψistothinkthatitismandatoryforXtohaveatleastadispositionalfeelingofobligationnottoψ(andmandatoryforXtohaveanoccurrentfeelingofob-ligationnottoψ onlyifXisnotalreadysufficientlymotivatednottoψ).Thesenseinwhichonecanjudgeit“fittingonbalance”forXtofeelobligatedtoφ whenonetakesX’sφ-ingtobesupererogatoryisthatonethinksX’sfeelingofobligationisjustifiedbutnotmandatory.

Thus,forreasonssimilartothosethatfavoranalyzingjudgmentsthat states are good as judgments about the fittingness of pro-atti-tudes towards them,we think that thecontentandnormative forceof judgments that acts arewrongor opposedbymoral reasons arebestcapturedbyanalyzingthemasjudgmentsaboutthefittingnessof feelingobligatednot to perform them. For instance,what seemsdistinctiveaboutviewingthefactthatdoing A willsavesomeone’slifeasamoral reasontodo A isone’stakingthisconsiderationtocountinfavoroffeelingobligatedtodoA.49Similarly,whatseemsdistinctiveaboutthinkingthatthefactthatdoing A wouldkillsomeonemakesitmorallywrongorforbidden(asopposedtojustunreasonable)todo A seemstobeone’stakingthisconsiderationtomakeit,onbalance,fit-tingforyoutofeelobligatednottodoA.

trytoexplainjudgmentsaboutwrongnessintermsofjudgmentsaboutthefittingnessoffeelingsofobligation.Butthefactthatwecanrecalcitrantlyfeelobligatednottodothingsthatwejudgeperfectlypermissibleseemstoshowthat the feelingneednot involvethe judgment.For instance,agaypersonraisedinahomophobicculturemightbefullyconfidentthatitispermissibletohavesexualrelationshipswithpeopleofthesamesex,butstillhavelinger-ingfeelingsofobligationnottodoso.(Thisisaninstanceofthegeneralob-jectionfromrecalcitrantemotionstothe“judgmentalist”viewthatemotionsinvolveethicalorevaluativejudgments—seeGibbard1990andD’ArmsandJacobson2003.)

49. Thebestalternativeproposalaboutwhatisdistinctiveaboutviewingthisasamoralreasonispresumablythatit involvesone’stakingittobeareasonthatonehassimplybecauseone’sactwillpromotethewell-beingofthein-dividualinquestion.Butitissurelycoherenttothinkthattherearedistinctlymoralreasonstodothingsotherthanpromotewell-being:withsomeplau-sibilityonecanthinkthereareintrinsicmoralreasonstorespectautonomyandkeeppromises,andweknowonly toowellwhatsomeone is thinkingwhenshetakestheallegedfactthatanactis“unnatural”,“againsttradition”,or“againstGod’swill”asanintrinsicmoralreasonagainstdoingit.Moreover,althoughmanyofusaredecentenoughtoacceptasubstantiveprincipleofbeneficenceaccordingtowhichthereisintrinsicmoralreasontopromotethewell-beingofeveryindividualcapableofwell-being,itis,sadly,coherenttothinkotherwise.Theviewthatthereareindividualswhosewell-beingthereisnointrinsicmoralreasontopromote(althoughperhapsstillsomeintrinsicnon-moralreasontopromote)hasbeencoherentlyentertained,forinstance,bysomewhotakeexaltedviewsofthemoralrelevanceofsuchfactorsasret-ribution,autonomy,promise-keeping,supernaturalwills,andgroup-loyalty.

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Giventhesefittingattitudeanalysesofmoralconcepts,theexactsameconnectionbetweenfittingmotivesandreasonstoact thatexplainswhytherearereasonstopromotethegoodequallyexplainsadirectconceptualconnectionbetweenanact’smoralstatusandtheexistenceofpracticalreasonsfororagainstperformingit.Thereisthusnoneedfor the link betweenmorality and practical reasons to bemediatedby the linkbetweengoodoutcomesandpractical reasons, and con-sequentlynoneedformoralconsiderationstobereasonstopromotethegoodinorderforustoseehowtheycanbegenuinereasonstoact.Sinceajudgment’struthentailsthetruthofitsanalysans,itis,accord-ingtoourfittingattitudeanalysesofmoraljudgments,aconceptualtruththat(i)R isamoralreasonforXtoφiffR isafittingnessreasonforXtofeelobligatedtoφ,and(ii)X’sψ-ingismorallywrongiffitis fittingforXtofeelobligatednottoψ.52Since,aswenoted,feelingob-ligatedtoφ essentiallyinvolvesmotivationtoφ(andfeelingobligated

problems. Inmorerecentwork,Gibbard(2008)hasproposedtodoessen-tiallythesamething.

52. Aswiththeconnectionbetweengoodstatesandfittingpro-attitudes,whatismostcentraltoourargumentistheexistenceoftheseconnectionsbetweenanact’smoralstatusandfittingnessreasonstofeelobligatedtoperformoravoidperformingit,ratherthantheparticularexplanationofthisconnectionpro-videdbyourfittingattitudeanalysesofmoraljudgments.Wedobelievethatourbasicargumentcouldbemadetoworkwithanalternativeexplanationofthisconnection,forinstancethatwhatmakesaconsiderationafittingnessasopposedtoanon-fittingnessreasontofeelobligatedtoφisthatitisinfactamoralreasontoφ.Wesuspect,however,thatsuchanexplanationofthecon-nectionbetweenmoralityandfittingattitudesmightbemorenaturallypairedwithanexplanationofMAPaccordingtowhichanact’smoralstatusjointlyexplainsboth(a)thefittingnessoffeelingsofobligationtoperformoravoidperformingit,and(b)theexistenceofpracticalreasonstoperformoravoidperformingit.Forreasonsweobservedinnote34,thispurportedexplanationofMAPwouldseemtogiveopponentsofourargumentmoreroomtoholdthatanact’smoralstatusdetermines(a)withoutnecessarilydetermining(b).Becausewesuspect thatourfittingattitudeanalysisofacts’moralstatusesis theexplanationoftheconnectionbetweenmoralityandfittingattitudesthatismostnaturallypairedwithourexplanationofMAP,wesuspectthatitwillbetheleastvulnerabletoopponents’attemptstoarguethatMAPholdsinthecaseoffittingmotivestobringaboutstatesbutfailstoholdinthecaseoffittingfeelingsofobligationtodothingsthatmaynotbringaboutstatestowardswhichitisfittingtohavepro-attitudes.

Justasjudgmentsaboutthegoodnessofstateshavethecentralnor-mative feature of guiding pro-attitudes towards them, moral judg-mentsseemtohavethecentralnormativepropertyofguidingfeelingsofobligation.Thesefittingattitudeanalysesofmoraljudgmentscanexplaintheirabilitytogeneratemotivationtoactoutoffeelingsofob-ligationasaspecialcaseoftheabilityofjudgmentsthatattitudesarefittingtodirectlyguideusintohavingthem.

Toappreciate thecentralityof thisattitude-guiding roleofmoraljudgments,supposethatsomeoneweretolabelas“morallywrong”allthosethingswewouldcallmorallywrong,buttookthistohavenosig-nificanceforwhatitwasappropriatetofeelobligatedtodoandconse-quentlyhadnopropensitytofeelobligatednottoperformtheactsinquestion.Itseemsthatby‘morallywrong’shewouldnotreallymeanmorallywrong.Ontheotherhand,ifsomeoneweretolabelas“mor-allywrong” precisely those thingswe think permissible, shewouldstillseemperfectlyintelligibleasthinkingthatthosethingsaremor-allywrongsolongasshethoughtitwasfittingtofeelobligatednottoperformthem.Thatsaid,asinthecaseofourfittingattitudeanalysisofgoodstates,wewillnot relyon thisstrongclaimthat judgmentsabout thefittingnessof feelingsofobligationexhaust thecontentofmoraljudgments.Allwerequireistheclaimthatjudgmentsabouttheexistenceoffittingnessreasonsforfeelingsofobligationareentailedbyorpart ofthecontentofmoraljudgments.51

51. ThisanalysisofmoralconceptsisdefendedatgreaterlengthbyNye(2009).Therehavebeenpreviousproposalsabouthowtoanalyzemoraljudgmentsasjudgmentsaboutthefittingnessofcertainattitudes,mostnotablythepro-posalofGibbard(1990,44–45,126–150).Gibbardbeganbyanalyzingjudg-mentsthatX’sψ-ingismorallyblameworthyasjudgmentsthatitisfittingforX tofeelguiltforψ-ingandfittingforotherstofeelangeratXforψ-ing.Gibbardthenproposed thatweanalyze judgments thatX’sψ-ing ismorallywrongas judgments thatX’sψ-ingwouldbemorallyblameworthyabsentexcuse.Whileweagree that there isa conceptual connectionbetweenwrongnessandblameworthiness,Gibbard’s1990analysisoffersnowayofinterpretingconflicting normative judgments about excuses, and does not explain therole of normative judgments in guiding prospective behavior.We believethatadoptingtheanalysisofmoralwrongnessdefendedbyNye(2009)to-getherwithGibbard’sanalysisofmoralblameworthinesscanovercomethese

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isnotinpain.AbsentspecialobligationstoeitherLeslieorGertrude,thereisnostrongerreasontofeelobligatedtobring it about thatLes-lie isnot inpainthantobring it about thatGertrudeisnot inpain.53 ButitisplausiblethatthefactthatyouractwillcauseLesliepainisastrongerreasontofeelobligatednot to perform itthanyourreasonstofeelobligatedtobringitaboutthatGertrudeisnotinpain.Iftheonlyway tobring itabout thatGertrude is sparedequalorevenslightlygreaterpainistoinflictsignificantpainonLeslie,itisplausiblethatyoushouldstillfeelmoststronglyobligatednottoinflictpainonLes-lie.Iftheseplausiblethoughtsaretrue,theconnectionbetweenfittingattitudesandreasons toactentails that,allelseheldequal, there isstrongeract-directedpracticalreasonagainstinflictingpainonothersthansimplybringingitaboutthatothersarenotinpain.

Infact,itfollowsfromthefittingattitudeanalysesofmoralconceptsthat,inacertainsense,allmoralreasonsareactuallyact-directed.Allfeelingsofobligationarefeelingsofobligationtoperformoromitacts, andessentially involvemotivations to perform or omit them, so theirfittingnessalwaysmakesforpracticalreasonsthatareinsomesenseact-directed.Itistruethatonecanfeelobligatedtoperformanactin virtueofitshavingthepropertyofbringingaboutacertainstateofaf-fairs.Plausibly,therearebasicmoralreasonsofbeneficencethatcountinfavoroffeelingobligatedtoperformactssimplyinvirtueoftheirbringingaboutthewell-beingofothers.Butthesereasonsarestillfun-damentally act-directed, in that theyultimatelyderive fromthefitting-nessofattitudestowardsacts,eventhoughtheyareintrinsicreasonstobringaboutstatessimplybecauseofwhatthosestatesinvolve.54

53.Moreover, there doesnot seem to be any stronger intrinsic reason to feelobligatedtobringitabout thatthereislesspain-inflictingintheworld,lesspain-inflictingdonebyoneself,or lesspain-inflictingdonebyoneselfnow.Aswewillexplainbelow,thesesuggestionsseemmuchmorevulnerabletochargesofobjectionablenarcissismthantheideathatthereisstrongerintrin-sicreasontofeelobligatednotto inflictpain.

54. Inthesameway,instrumentalreasonstoperformactssoastobringaboutgoodstatesofaffairsmaybefundamentally state-directed,inthattheyultimate-lyderivefromthefittingnessofattitudestowardsstates,eventhoughtheyarereasonstoperformacts.Indeed,evenintrinsicreasonstoperformactscould

nottoψ essentiallyinvolvesmotivationnottoψ),itfollowsfrom(i)and(ii)togetherwiththeWarrantCompositionPrinciplethat(i′)ifR isamoralreasontoφ,thenRisafittingnessreasontobemotivatedtoφ, and (ii′) ifψ-ing ismorallywrong, then it isfitting tobemoti-vatednottoψ.Moreover,itfollowsfrom(i′)and(ii′)togetherwiththeMotivations-ActionsPrinciplethat(i*)ifRisamoralreasontoφ,thenRisagenuinepracticalreasontoφ,and(ii*)ifψ-ingismorallywrong,thentherearegenuinepracticalreasonsnottoψ.

Forinstance,suppose(asseemsoverwhelminglyplausible)thatthefactthatanactwillcausesomeonepainisanintrinsicmoralreasonnottoperformit—which,absentfactorslikeitspreventingevenmoreegregiousharmstoothers,willmakeitwrongtoperformit.Giventhefittingattitudeanalysesofmoralconcepts,thisentailsthatthefactthatanactwillcausesomeonepainisareasontofeelintrinsicallyobligat-ednottoperformtheact(i. e.tofeelobligatednottoperformtheactsimplyonaccountofitsbeingacausingofherpain)—which,absentother factors,willmake it,onbalance,fitting tohave this feelingofobligation.Sincefeelingintrinsicallyobligatednottocausesomeonepaininvolvesintrinsicmotivationnottocauseherpain,WCPentailsthatthefactthatyouractwouldcausesomeonepainisequallyafit-tingness reason tobe intrinsicallymotivatednot toperform theact.Finally,MAPentailsthatthisfittingnessreasontobeintrinsicallymo-tivatednottocauseherpainisactuallyanintrinsicpracticalreasonnottocauseherpain.

Thus,thereisnoneedtothinkthatamoralreasonagainstdoingsomethingmustbeareasonagainstbringingaboutasub-optimalout-comeinordertoseehowitcanbeagenuinepracticalreasonagainstdoingit.Themerefactthattheconsiderationcountsmorallyagainstanactdirectlyentails that it isafittingness reason to feelobligatednottodoit,whichentailsthatitisapracticalreasonagainstdoingit.There is no reason in the abstractwhy these reasons cannot be en-tirelyact-directed:itisplausibletothinkthatthefactthatyouractwillcauseLesliepainisareasontofeelobligatednot to perform that act,asopposedtosimplyareasontofeelobligatedtobringitaboutthatshe

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anact’smoralstatusandreasonsfororagainstperformingit,whichholdsquiteindependentlyofwhethermoralitydirectsustopromotethegood.Soonceweunderstandwhygoodstatesareconnectedtopracticalreasons,wecanseethatmoralityhastheexactsamekindofdirecttheoreticalconnectiontopracticalreasons,anddoesnotneedtoborrowitspracticalforcefromgoodstatesbyprescribingthatwepromotethem.

Ifourargumentissound,webelievethatitunderminesthecasefor preferring relativized versions of consequentialism like Port-more’s to non-consequentialism, as this case relies almost exclu-sivelyontheteleologicalconceptionofpracticalreasons.Moreover,wethinkourexplanationofhowmoralitycouldgiveusentirelyact- directed practical reasons helps us understand the strength of thecase forpreferringnon-consequentialism to relativizedconsequen-tialism.Therelativizedconsequentialistmusthold thatwearenotallowed,forinstance,toperformonemurdertopreventfivemurders,becauseitisfittingforustopreferthestateofournotmurderingtothestateoffourmorelivesbeingsaved.Whileitseemsappropriatetobesomewhatspeciallyconcernedaboutone’sownmoralcharac-ter,itseemsmonstrouslynarcissistictolookmorefondlyuponthestate of not being amurderer oneself thanon the survival of fourindividuals.Thenon-consequentialist,unlike the relativizedconse-quentialist,canholdthatitisfittingtovaluethesurvivaloffourin-dividualsmorethanone’sownmoralpurity,butthatwhatstatesitisfittingtovaluedoesn’talwayssettlewhattodo.Wearesimplynotpermittedtosavethefivebyperformingamurderourselves,becauseit isfittingto feelmuchmorestronglyobligatednot tokill thantomerelyfailtosave.This,webelieve,isamuchmoreplausiblewayofunderstandingagent-centeredconstraints.

Asweindicatedabove,thereisstillabottom-upcasetobemadeagainst the initialplausibilityofnon-consequentialist ideas,soevenifwe are successful in dispatching the top-down strategy, impartial

Sowhateverconsiderationsturnouttobemoralreasons,theyareconceptuallyguaranteedtobefittingnessreasonstofeelobligatedtoperformoromitacts,andconsequentlygenuinepracticalreasonstoperformoromitthem.Aswehaveseen,thesepracticalreasonsgener-atedbythefittingnessofact-directedmotivesarejustasbasicas,andneednosanctionfrom,thestate-directedreasonsgeneratedbythefit-tingnessofstate-directedmotiveswhichconstitutethegoodnessandbadnessofstatesofaffairs.Soevenifwerejecttheconsequentialistthesisthatallmoralreasonsmustbereasonstopromotethegood,itshouldbejustasclearwhythereispracticalreasontobemoralaswhythereispracticalreasontopromotethegood.This,webelieve,shoulddemystifynotonlyhowtherecanbegenuinepracticalreasontodothingsotherthanpromotegoodoutcomes,buthowsomeoftheserea-sonscanbegenuinelymoral.

6. Conclusion

We have thus argued that, because there is nomystery about howtherecouldbereasonstodothingsotherthanpromotethegoodthatarebothpracticalandmoral,thetop-downstrategyofarguingforcon-sequentialism fails. The deep theoretical connection between goodstates and reasons topromote them is a special instanceof amoregeneralconnectionbetweenfittingattitudesandreasonstoactastheywouldmotivateus.Anotherinstanceofthisconnectionisthatbetween

bestate-directed,iftheywereultimatelygeneratedbytheintrinsicdesirabil-ityofthestateoftheirbeingperformed(thisisessentiallyhowproponentsof relativized consequentialism portray reasons to observe agent-centeredconstraints).RisanintrinsicreasontorespondinwayW(e. g.todesirethatLeslieisnotinpain,bringitaboutthatsheisnotinpain,feelobligatednottocauseherpain,oromitcausingherpain)ifRcountsinfavorofWsimplyinvirtueofdescribingwhatW’sobject is initself(e. g.Leslie’snotbeinginpainortheactofcausingherpain)andindependentofthisobject’srelationtoanythingelse.Butthe“simplyinvirtue”hereindicatesonlythatthereisnofurthernormative factorthatmakesitthecasethatRcountsinfavorofW.ItisconsistentwithR’sbeinganintrinsicreasontoWthatthereissomefurtherconceptual explanationofhowRcomestocountinfavorofW,suchasbyR’scountinginthefirstinstanceinfavoroffeelingobligatedtodowhateverwillbringaboutthestateofLeslie’snotbeinginpain,and(givenWCPandMAP)R’sconsequentlycountinginfavorofbringingitaboutthatsheisnotinpain.

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bythefactthateveryonewould(atleastundertherightconditions)havestrongestnon-moralreasonstoagreetotheiradoption.57

Ifwearerightaboutmorality’sdirectconnection topractical rea-sons,itmakesnomoresensetotakethispragmaticdesignstanceto-wardswhatshouldcountasmorallyrightthanitwouldtotakeitto-wardswhatshouldcountasnon-morallygoodorreasonable.Wehaveargued thatnon-moral considerations aregenuinepractical reasonsbecause theymake for thefittingnessofnon-moralmotives.But,aswehaveargued,moralreasonsareconsiderationsthatmakeforthefittingnessoffeelingsofobligation,whichareguaranteedtobepracti-calreasonsbythesamegeneralconnectionbetweenfittingmotivesandreasonstoact.ToparaphraseFrankena(1963,98),itwouldgivemorality toodespotic a role in our practical lives to insist that non-moralmotivescanbefittingonlyiftheyare“madefor”orachievewhatthereismoralreasontoachieve.Butifwearerightthatthefittingnessofmoralmotivesisjustasdirectlyconnectedtopracticalreasonsasthatofournon-moralmotives,itseemstogivemoralitytooservilearoletoinsist(asFrankenaevidentlydid)thatmoralmotivesarefittingonlyiftheyare“madefor”orachievewhatthereisnon-moralreasontoachieve.

57. SeeHarsanyi1953;Brandt1988;Gibbard2008,parts II–III;andParfit2011,ch. 15–17.Of course, there are versions of contractualismwhichhold thatmoralprinciplesarejustifiedjustincasenoonecouldreasonablyrejectthem,wheremoralconsiderationscandeterminewhatitisreasonabletoreject.AsMcGinn1999,Kamm2002,andHooker2002argue,Scanlon1998slipsintosuchaview inderiving substantivemoral conclusions fromhisversionofcontractualism,andRawls1971(esp.sec.4)seemedtoslipintosuchaviewinecumenicallymotivatingtheveilofignoranceasanepistemicdeviceforpurgingourselvesofbiases.But,asMcGinn,Kamm,Hooker,andParfitnote,bypresupposingthemoralreasonsthedeviceofagreementissupposedtoexplain,theseversionsofcontractualismmakethedeviceredundantandsuf-ferfromviciouscircularity.

Becausethedesignstancesofindirectconsequentialismandcontractual-ismaresosimilar,itisnotsurprisingthatsomanyindirectconsequentialistshavesupportedtheirviewsbyappealingtocontractualistideas.Indeed,con-siderationsofferedbyGibbard2008andPogge 1995 strongly suggest thatanygenuinelynon-redundantversionofcontractualismwillbeaformofin-directconsequentialism.

consequentialismwillnotbeleftunmotivated.55But,asweexplained,manyargumentsthatseemlargelybottom-uptacitlyrelyonthetop-downstrategyindemandingaspecialkindofjustificationformoralreasonsthatdonotdirectustopromotethegood.Assuch,wethinkthe elimination of the top-down strategy significantly weakens theoverallcaseforconsequentialism.Butthemostsalutaryeffectofourargumentonthecaseforimpartialconsequentialismmightbetoforceitsproponentstodistillthepotentiallypowerfulbottom-upelementsfromtheunsuccessfultop-downones,andtoexplainmoreclearlywhyweshouldthinktheplausibilityofnon-consequentialistideascannotsurvivereflectivescrutiny.

Finally,wethinkthatourargumenthasthepotentialtounderminetheoriesotherthandirectconsequentialismthatrelyontheideathat,inordertobepracticallyrelevant,moralitymustachieveendsthatwehavenon-moralreasonstocareabout.Althoughindirectconsequen-tialistsdonotthinkmoralrequirementsmustdirectustopromotethegood,theystilltakea“designstance”towardsmoralitybyholdingthat,inordertobejustified,asystemofmoralrequirementsmustpromotethegoodmorethananyothersystemsocietycouldadopt.56

Non-redundant forms of contractualism take a similar designstancetowardsmoralitybyholdingthatmoralprinciplesarejustified

55. These non-consequentialist ideas are exactly the ones relativized conse-quentialists seek to preserve by “consequentializing” them, so their beingundermined would support impartial consequentialism over both non-consequentialism and relativized consequentialism.While Portmore (2011,103–111)providesinteresting“bottom-up”argumentsagainstcertain(“victim-focused”)versionsofnon-consequentialism,heexplicitlyacknowledgesthatthattheseargumentsdonotworkagainstallversionsofnon-consequential-ism.Ourpointinthelastparagraphsuggests,moreover,thatifyouwanttobe“agent-focused”aboutagent-centeredconstraints,itisbettertotreatthemasact-directedconsiderationsthatmakeitfittingforagentstobemoremo-tivatedtoomitcertainactsthanasstate-directedconsiderationsthatmakeitfittingforagentstobemore“concernedabout”theirperformingthem.

56.SeeforinstanceBrandt1967(esp.114)andHooker2000(esp.ch.1).

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