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The MORAL SENSE
The MORAL SENSE

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Author: James Q. Wilson
Publisher: Free Press
Category: Book

List Price: $22.95  (54.03 RON)
Buy New: $20.65  (48.61 RON)
You Save: $2.30  (5.41 RON) (10%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 76043

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 336
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.8

ISBN: 0684833328
Dewey Decimal Number: 171.2
EAN: 9780684833323
ASIN: 0684833328

Publication Date: November 6, 1997
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Customer Reviews:
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1 out of 5 stars Nonsense   June 17, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

The questions I had when checking this book out from the library were as follows: 'How much is my personal moral sense skewed into good or evil by my experiences and how I interpret them?' and 'What can heal a damaged moral sense (unhappy childhood) or destroy a strong moral sense?' and 'What is the relationship between intelligence and moral sense?'

My questions were not answered by this volume.

A distinction between tolerance (you put up with something because you have to) and acceptance (you have no objections to a practice) is not made. On page seven moral relativism is equated with refusing to condemn strange customs in a foreign society. Wilson makes no distinction between tolerating a practice that you have no influence or control over vs. accepting it. I tolerate clubs catering to smokers (I hate smoking); it doesn't mean I am a smoking advocate, as Mr. Wilson implies. I recognize other people have a right to smoke, just not around me.

No mention of Ayn Rand's objectivism; on p234 it is called 'vainglorious' without being named. As the modern answer to relativism, it says, things do have values, and some (like my life) are more valuable than others (like a corrupt regime's whims). Objectivism also restates and simplifies Wilson's entire argument with foundational premises and structured conclusions. Wilson uses Christian family values, post modern relativism, emotional psychology, variants on Darwinism, and social/cultural norms as his reasoning tools. The empirical evidence is documented psychological studies, widely open to interpretation, and presented without [supporting] context. (Floating abstractions.)

Part one entitled "Sentiments" involved the wonders of altruism. Mob justice, social networks, and self interest get nods. Altruism is expanded around throughout the entire book in various guises (fairness, duty, self-control, behaviorism), rather than a simple 'charity is a personal choice.' Instead of asking 'why do we choose this?' Wilson documents (and interprets) behavior that shows moral choices being made in specific (controlled) instances. Selfishness is equated with evil.

Part two, "Sources" explores from where the moral sense is instilled, (Social groups, families, bonding), but no *new* analysis is made on methodology. Baumrind's parenting studies (pp150-1) are cited. A pointless chapter on gender is followed by historical Western philosophy lessons (not relevant as fundamental human nature doesn't change between societies or centuries).

Part three, 'Character,' finally asks about moral universals (premises). 'We are human' is the only one. More philosophy reaffirming the author's Western Christian 'modern' world view -- "Believing individuals are everything, rights are trumps, and morality is relative (to time and place), such thinkers design laws... that leave nothing between the state and individual save choices, contracts and entitlements. Fourth grade children being taught condom use is only one of the more perverse of the results(p250)." Book ends with an extended metaphor on light.

Apparently morality can't be objective and intelligent, it can only be relative in modern society. Otherwise, it's vainglorious and not fitting for individuals. What tripe!



5 out of 5 stars Convincing us that we are not simply self- interested beings living in a world in which all is morally relative   June 5, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Two major pieces of conventional - wisdom are undermined in the present work. The first is that we are all merely selfish creatures who act only out of considerations of our own self- interest. The second is that there is no objective morality and that no action can be taken to have a real moral value- but rather that all is simply ' relative'.
James Q. Wilson presents in this work a general theory which explains and justifies our 'moral sense'. He does this in part through his reading of eighteenth - century Enlightenment moralists, Adam Smith, Frances Hutcheson, David Hume but also through his reading of Darwinian evolution.
Primarily however he examines in ordinary clear language cases and examples from our everyday life and experience , and through them helps establish that the 'moral sense' is present in most of us.
He opens his work with a chapter on the Moral Sense, those dispositions which enable us to intuit what is right and wrong. He then considers four sentiments central to the Moral Sense- Sympathy, Fairness, Self- Control and Duty. In writing for instance of Sympathy he shows how this ability to feel for and understand others is a much approved and commendable quality. And how there are clear cases of Sympathy which cannot simply be classified as manipulations for self- interest. He considers too how Sympathy may inform heroic action, as in the most dramatic case of a soldier giving his life for his fellows.
Wilson discourses in his third section the Sources of the Moral Sense. His chapters here are 'Social Animals' ' Families' 'Gender' 'The Universal Aspiration'. He concentrates on how the close- ties within the family are one of the strong sources of Morality , and how those ties are extended to reach out to wider and wider parts of humanity.
His final chapter is on 'The Moral Sense and Human Character'.
Wilson throughout supplies a very large number of examples and cases which he reads in a moderate, intelligent interpretative tone.
There is a quiet convincingness in the whole feel of the work.
It is as if 'common sense' were restoring to us a sense of ourselves our possible goodness and dignity which modern Sociology, Psychology and Anthropology may have deprived of us.
A key book for understanding ourselves and how we might be better human beings in a better world.



4 out of 5 stars Comprehensive Moral Theory and Application   August 13, 2005
 7 out of 8 found this review helpful

This is an important book. If one has only one book to read on morality and ethics, I cannot recommend a better book than Wilson's "The Moral Sense." It's the first and, to my knowledge, the only, book that is a thoroughly modern, naturalistic, and intuitionist theory of ethics to date. The book begins with the challenge facing modern readers: Do we accept the total relativism of Rorty and other pragmatic academics who argue there is no moral sense whatsoever, or do we accept the polar opposite that only revealed religion or Kant's and Benthan's absolutist maxims give us a moral sense?

According to Wilson, both extremes are to be avoided by conciliating the theory of moral sentiments advanced by David Hume, Francis Hutcheson, and especially Adam Smith in the 18th century with the theory of evolution advanced by Charles Darwin a century later. Wilson arrives at a thoroughly modern conception of human nature and what it means to have a natural moral sense without prescriptive religion or deontological maxims to guide us. It is a wonderfully entertaining and highly thought provoking book to read on what can sometimes be a dull subject.

Obviously, modern moral developments have not all been positive. As Wilson observes, we've come to our senses about equality, fairness, and empathy towards others, but we may have left behind self-control and duty to others. I think he's absolutely on target. Unless and until we recognize that morality is not divinely-instituted, but rather empirically established by who we are by nature, and yes a Darwinian nature, then our moral sense will be always miss its target. All four: (1) Fairness, (2) empathy, (3) self-control, and (4) duty must operate concurrently for our morality to be balanced. Wilson's diagnosis of modernity is that they are imbalanced: We've largely omitted self-control and duty from our moral sense and become a tad bit self-absorbed (although recent developments may suggest otherwise).

The first-third of the book rehearses the theory of moral sentiments and the applicable theory from evolution to establish the four "impulses" or "intuitions" of morality: Fairness, empathy, self-control, and duty. Notice these are universal, naturally-endowed impulses, not religious or philosophical maxims or prescriptions. We "intuit" these concepts, and from their application with our experience of family, friends, and society, we develop character. This interaction thusly develops a "conscience" to guide us. This is the substance of the second-third of the book. The last-third of the book explains how conscience (i.e., habituated character) forms affiliations, rights, and responsibilities. Here the author's adds his insights and applies them to a few case examples.

The book is not flawless, but it is the most comprehensive, modern, and naturalistic book on ethics to appear in a single volume. That's a mighty claim, but I think it holds despite my criticism. I have two: (a) Wilson tends to be disorganized to the point of distraction; key concepts almost become ancillary. It's a problem of organization that could have been avoided by a matter of style. (b) The second criticism is a kind of sloppiness occurs in the final section: Besides trying to "humanize" his theory excessively, many of his personal reflections are too time-bound to be perennially relevant. These flaws would not be so egregious if the third section kept to a simple summary of key concepts; but instead of a simple summary Wilson addles between a summary and ruminations. Because the third section is perhaps the most expansive, these criticisms are all the more glaring.

For these reasons, I think the reader would be well-served to precede this book with Matt Ridley's "The Origins of Virtue," even though they cover some of the same territory. Ridley is a much more disciplined and focused author, whereas Wilson has a more expansive and developed sense of a intuitionist morality. If one can't read both - and if the reader is careful to focus on the key concepts rather than the supporting evidence and ancillary reflections - then this book is the one to get. Extreme relativism and extreme religiosity are no longer necessarily appropriate for an intuitional moral disposition. Moral balance, based on the four intuitions, are sufficient and necessary for a virtuous life.



5 out of 5 stars Perspective from a 15-year-old   August 7, 2005
 4 out of 7 found this review helpful

I'm junior in high school and have been exploring options of carrer choice since I'll be going to college in two years. I'm very interested in the human mind and psychology and socialogy, so I thought I would like this book. It's very interesting and thought-provoking. I would reccomend this book to anyone interested in human interaction.


4 out of 5 stars A good mix of data and theory!   April 30, 2002
 13 out of 18 found this review helpful

yEven criminals believe in morality, at least as they grow older. . . . When asked, at aged thirty-two, weather they would be yvery angryy if their son or daughter committed a criminal offence, over three-fourths of those men who had themselves been convicted of a crime (and often several crimes) answered yes. Even the most hardened criminalsythose with at least eight convictionsyagreed. They may not be very good fathers, but they donyt want their sons or daughters to be very bad children.y (11)

This is quite an interesting book. It focuses on the moral sense, an idea whose heyday was coeval with the Scottish Enlightenment and the American Revolution. The central thesis of the book is that there is we have a moral sense, a sense that certain things are right and that certain things are wrong. Wilson observes that his book differs from other research in that ymany conducting this search have looked in the wrong places for the wrong things because they have sought for universal rules rather than universal dispositions.y (225) This is not so much a quest for absolute laws, as C. S. Lewis did in yAbolition of Man,y and in yMere Christianity,y but it is a rather psychological-heavy inductive study ob what people actually do and say.

The book is divided in to three sections. After the overview chapter, Wilson covers different aspects of our Sentiments, focusing on Sympathy, Fairness, Self-Control, and Duty. These four areas provide a grind in which our feelings of morality are properly expressed. I found the chapter on Sympathy quite interesting, since Sympathy is the lynchpin of Adam Smithys landmark yTheory of Moral Sentiments.y We in essence see ourselves projection into the life and situation of other suffering persons. Moreover, we head the voice of ythe man within the breasty who urges us on to good actions, which Lincoln called ythe better angels of our nature.y

The second half of the book is a study of the sources of these feeling of rightness and wrongness. The four chapters are yThe Social Animal,y families, Gender, and the Universal Aspiration. He makes the case for much of our sense of morality is rooted in evolutionary biology. Darwin will always select in favor of the people who are pro family, since that is how we will survive fitly. Moreover, we have this yherd instincty which binds us together into cities, poli, and bodies politic. In fact, the greatest realization that came to me was that we nee morals precisely because there are other people with whom we have to deal with, work with, and to ultimately love!

The last part is one chapter long, and it focuses on the moral sense and character. Wilson makers the point that we cannot yprovey in a positivistic sense that there are moral standards or laws out there any better than we can prove Platonic forms. However, people do act as if there are moral standards, and the idea of morality itself is evidence.

Mr. Wilson has a soft, quite and gentle voice and tone that could double for a relaxation tape. I have heard him in person, and must say that it like the announcers at a golf match or an announcer on National Public Radio. This works to his advantage, since many of his ideas are quite controversial. This book is perfect for discussion, and ponderous thought. Now all we need is more research along these line to sharpen our picture of the moral sense.

I mentioned that the book is rather psychosocial heavy. Let me amend that by saying that there is a substantial amount of psychological data, but no psychobabble. Moreover, Mr. Wilson liberally quotes from Aristotleys yNichomachian Ethicsy and his yPolitics,y so we have a healthy mix of both the old and the new in this book. It is quite refreshing to see someone bridge the ages, and bridge the gap between philosophy and practice, and theory and data.

The main question that vexes me is that you could not tell the difference between a people who does not have a moral sense and one who ignores his or her moral sense. The outward behavior would be the same. The only clue that we have is the lie detector, which measures biological reactions to lies. We may tell lies, but our body knows that we are lying. (106-107)

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