Sunday, 3 September 2017

The Wisdom Of Max Abrams

In Poul Anderson's Ensign Flandry, Commander Max Abrams, Imperial Naval Intelligence Corps, looks at a picture of his wife and children, including young Miriam. (Will future generations really reapply the term, "Naval," to fleets of spaceships? We do call them "ships.")

In Anderson's A Stone In Heaven (see here), Miriam "Banner" Abrams recalls her father. I am grateful for this brief reappearance by Dominic Flandry's mentor:

"In a chamber of her spirit that was warm and softly lit, Max Abrams knocked out his pipe, leaned back in his worn old armchair, and said to his little girl with a solemnity that smiled, 'Miri, a lot of qualities are known as virtues, but most of them don't do more than please or convenience folks. Real virtue wears different faces, of course, but it doesn't come in different kinds. One way or another, what it always amounts to is loyalty.'" (XII, pp. 161-162)

Is Abrams right? What is virtue? I remember someone in a radio debate demanding of his opponent, "I get my morality from the Gospels. Where do you get yours from?" The Gospels or any other documents merely formulate precepts that we must evaluate, not blindly accept. I do not accept many of the commandments in the Hebrew canon.

(Incidentally, I pointed out to a street Evangelical that according to the Mosaic law, adulterers should be stoned to death. When I asked, "That's got to be wrong, hasn't it?" his only reply was, "Well, nowadays people have abortions. That's killing, isn't it?" Lord, save us from Thy messengers.)

I think that the bases of morality are as follows:

human beings have been naturally selected to help others either because they bear the same genes or because they might help us in return and we experience this motivation as moral obligation/charity/compassion/kindness/solidarity, not as calculating self-interest which is what it sounds like when expressed in biological terms;

we are social beings and therefore have common interests that transcend a simplistic altruism/selfishness dichotomy, the most obvious examples being to speak a common language and to drive on the same side of the road.

Paradoxically, we cooperate in agreeing on the same meanings for words in the English language even when disagreeing totally about what we have to say using those words.

So my three bases for morality are:

(i) some people bear the same genes;
(ii) others might help us in return;
(iii) all are fellow members of a social species.

(i) and (iii) can be described as "loyalty." (ii) is a universal extension of loyalty, as in the punch line of the Parable of the Good Samaritan. So I have agreed with Abrams more than I had expected to.

8 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Commenting on a minor point: well, if space vehicles are called SHIPS, it seems natural to call a large number of them a FLEET. And if these space ships are designed and made for combat, then it seems to follow they would be organized into a NAVY. And the highest commissioned navy officers are admirals. So I don't think it's that odd to think future space military organizations will be called NAVIES.

You msde a small error in your quote from Chapter XII of STONE IN HEAVEN. Miriam Abrams thought of her father as sitting in a WORN armchair, not a "warm" one.

Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

Courage is the first of virtues, in the sense that it permits the others -- without it, you can be threatened out of any of the others, or won't hold to them when it's physically or socially dangerous.

Loyalty, in all its permutations, is the second: without that, you're not even the moral equal of a dog.

(In fact, IMHO, dogs are often morally superior to human beings; also they enjoy life more, when circumstances allow.)

I tend to be suspicious when people say they're going to ignore a "lesser" loyalty in favor of a "higher" one -- it's often an excuse for egocentricity.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Mr Stirling,
When asked to support trade union industrial action, a teacher "found" that there were higher loyalties. IMO, this was not something that he "found" but a choice that he made.
Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Well, of course it was a CHOICE this teacher made: wisely or foolishly, rightly or wrongly.

Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

My own take on loyalty is that it has to proceed from the inside out -- from the family, and outward to friends, neighbors, co-workers, fellow citizens, nation.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Dear Mr. Stirling,

And is it possible to be loyal to the human race? Or is that too wide and abstract a concept for most of us to grasp?

Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,
It has become necessary, I think. Our moral sentiments already tell us this. We should rescue anyone from a burning building, a Duke and his servants with equal urgency, also criminals, illegal immigrants etc. Recently a lot of people died in a tower block fire in London. One of my Muslim neighbours unfortunately feels so insecure and threatened not only by racists but even by more recent immigrants that his response to the tower block fire was, "Well, some of them were illegals and shouldn't have been there anyway!" A serious moral failing, IMO.
Paul.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

CS Lewis says that courage is every virtue at its testing point or something like that.