This writer solemnly asserts that Kant's idea of an ultimate conscience
is a fable because Mohammedans think it wrong to drink wine,
while English officers think it right. Really he might just as well
say that the instinct of self-preservation is a fable because some
people avoid brandy in order to live long, and some people drink
brandy in order to save their lives. Does Professor Forel believe
that Kant, or anybody else, thought that our consciences gave us
direct commands about the details of diet or social etiquette?
Did Kant maintain that, when we had reached a certain stage of dinner,
a supernatural voice whispered in our ear "Asparagus"; or that
the marriage between almonds and raisins was a marriage that was made
in heaven? Surely it is plain enough that all these social duties
are deduced from primary moral duties--and may be deduced wrong.
Conscience does not suggest "asparagus," but it does suggest amiability,
and it is thought by some to be an amiable act to accept asparagus
when it is offered to you. Conscience does not respect fish and sherry;
but it does respect any innocent ritual that will make men feel alike.
Conscience does not tell you not to drink your hock after your port.
But it does tell you not to commit suicide; and your mere naturalistic
reason tells you that the first act may easily approximate
to the second.
Christians encourage wine as something which will benefit men.
Teetotallers discourage wine as something that will destroy men.
Their conscientious conclusions are different, but their
consciences are just the same. Teetotallers say that wine
is bad because they think it moral to say what they think.
Christians will not say that wine is bad because they think it immoral
to say what they don't think. And a triangle is a three-sided figure.
And a dog is a four-legged animal. And Queen Anne is dead.
We have, indeed, come back to alphabetical truths.
But Professor Forel has not yet even come to them. He goes on
laboriously repeating that there cannot be a fixed moral sense,
because some people drink wine and some people don't. I cannot
imagine how it was that he forgot to mention that France and England
cannot have the same moral sense, because Frenchmen drive cabs
on the right side of the road and Englishmen on the left.
-The Uses of Diversity (1921)
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