If a community descends into immorality, then it will suffer
the consequences.
Coming from me, that should be nearly axiomatic since
morality is substantially concerned with what benefits and avoiding what harms
people generally within a community. Consequently, a community that abandons
morality, by definition, is a community that foregoes certain benefits and
suffers harms.
In other words, this is not a rant that says that we must
condemn homosexuality because of the harms that come from abandoning morality.
Homosexuality is not immoral – it is of no threat to the well-being of a
community.
On the other hand, dishonesty, deception, and intellectual
recklessness are immoral. To the degree that a community abandons its love of
truth and standards of intellectual integrity and responsibility, it will
suffer the consequences.
It is in the abandonment of the love of truth and standards
of intellectual integrity that I see the greatest causes of future harm. A
politician who sends a naked picture of himself to an intern is out on the
street by the end of the week. A politician who gets caught in a “pants on fire”
lie goes on with business as usual. A news organization can be caught asserting
blatant falsehoods without the least sanction or embarrassment. Many posters on
social media scarcely ask themselves, “Is this true?” and pass on and fill the
public airways with misinformation and false beliefs.
This will come with a cost.
It is not at all difficult to understand the importance of
accurate information.
You are thirsty. You are going to want to know what is in
the water. You are going to want to know the consequences of drinking out of
the glass. There is a cost associated with wrongly believing that glass
contains clean water when, in fact, it is poisoned. On the other hand, in the
absence of some other source of water that you know to be clean, there is a
cost associated with thinking that a specific source is poisoned when, in fact,
it is not.
Ignorance over the fact of climate change will either
destroy whole cities and whole countries, or it will impose huge costs on
populations that they have many reasons to avoid.
A mistake in thinking that a black teenager is a threat can
result in a tragic death.
The belief that you can protect a city from hurricanes or
terrorist attacks by outlawing abortion and implementing prayer in school, or
that you can cure a disease with prayer and have no need for an immunization,
or that by making sex particularly dangerous is an effective way of preventing
teenagers from having sex, are all ideas that get people killed.
When one’s beliefs impact actions that have an effect on
others, that is where the concept of epistemic responsibility comes in. A
doctor’s mistake of removing the right leg when the left leg was the one with
the cancer cannot be dismissed by saying, “Everybody is entitled to their
opinion,” or “You have no right to criticize my belief that the cancer was in
the right leg.” Similarly, an engineer cannot dismiss the moral responsibility
of underestimating the type of wiring that would be needed to handle the
electric current in the kitchen of a highrise apartment building.
Clearly, the importance of true belief and, thus, the moral
importance of epistemic responsibility is hard to underestimate.
Yet, culture today seems to have entered an era where “everybody
has a right to their opinion” and where nobody is permitted to criticize the
beliefs of another – even beliefs that have implications on who will live, who
will die, and how much suffering they may have to endure.
We are scarcely permitted to say, “You are wrong” – let alone
saying, “Not only are you wrong but no morally responsible person with a proper
care for the lives and well-being of others would have reasoned as you did; you
should be ashamed of yourself.”
It's the latter that needs to be said, and much more often, to build the aversion to deception and intellectual recklessness on which the lives and well-being of many actually depends.
Or, in terms that are applicable in the world today:
“No news program that values truth would have reported what
your news organization reported or, if they did, would have been significantly
embarrassed by the fact, retracted the error, and taken steps to avoid similar
mistakes in the future.”
Or, “No responsible user of social media would have “shared”
or “retreated” this particular pack of lies and deceptions; people who behave
irresponsibility in that way deserve not only to be corrected, but condemned.”
Everybody makes mistakes, of course. However, there is a
difference between, “I made a mistake. I am sorry. I will try not to do it
again,” and “I was wrong, but I don’t care – because the truth is not what
matters. Social and political success is what matters even if it is built on
epistemic recklessness and even deliberate deception.” It is this latter
attitude that is far more common that it should be, and we will suffer for it.
Of course . . . and this is important. Intellectual recklessness should be condemned where it exists in fact, not when charges of intellectual recklessness are themselves reckless or deliberately false, because they serve a political agenda. Anybody who takes this article as providing moral permission for the reckless condemnation of the beliefs of others did not understand what was written.