道德无国界:人类共同体的愿景

Joseph P. Hester, D. Killian
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摘要

身份政治正在兴起,不仅在美国,而且在全世界。这是一种固有的民族主义,如果不受约束和制约,它就会向社会释放一种排他性的伦理,这种伦理呼吁的不是一种宽泛的道德应该,而是一种狭隘、偏狭、谴责和诋毁的道德应该。民族多样性的事实和不同价值取向的印记往往会引起群体和子群体的恐惧和不安全感,他们倾向于将自己的价值取向浓缩为-à-vis他们的民族或文化认同,提倡伦理相对主义,忽视人类的核心价值。随着宗教神圣和神圣的道德视野的削弱,许多人开始依赖理想化的国家身份来设定他们道德视野的参数。这通常被表达为一种“道德优越感”,意味着某些传统和习俗优于其他传统和习俗。必须提醒我们,无论是国家专制还是宗教专制,都可能成为任何寻求道德至上的人的工具。回顾历史,历史告诉我们,建立严格的、教条的边界在道德上是破坏性的,它将持不同观点的人拒之门外,扼杀了境内外的对话和文明。显然,设置意识形态的界限很容易把那些自称具有限制性和/或优越伦理的人封闭在非生产性和道德腐蚀的价值观之中。种族中心主义和部落主义似乎很自然,因为人们渴望保护我们最珍视的信仰,声称自己具有道德优越感。价值观定义了我们;它们是我们的本质,揭示了我们的承诺和信念,以及它们所假定的权威。但是,我们的价值观也会限制我们的道德敏锐度,缩小道德的焦点,削弱道德的能量,不寻求将人类与人类联系在一起的共性。显然,现在是时候将这种被截断的叙述从排他性的伦理转变为无国界的道德,以作为共同体的人性为例。专制主义表现出专制和反平等主义的价值观,是压制性的,导致对他人的看法有限,往往是不道德的。今天,我们从政治光谱的各个角落目睹了这一点,不仅在美国,而且在其他地方。为了推进道德可能性的愿景,一个包容和广泛的道德“应该”是需要的,但由于文化多样性的事实,实现甚至表达都非常困难,但我们在努力。正如托马斯·唐纳森(Thomas Donaldson, 1996,第52页)所指出的,“我们都是在特定的文化背景下学习伦理学的,而这些原则的力量与它们的表达方式密切相关。”国际公认的道德原则清单,如联合国的《世界人权宣言》,借鉴了许多文化和宗教传统。正如哲学家迈克尔·沃尔泽(Michael Walzer, 1983)所指出的,“没有
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Morality Without Borders: A Vision of Humanity as Community
Identity politics is on the rise, and not only in America, but throughout the world. It is an inherent nationalism, and when unbridled and unchecked, unleashes an exclusive ethic into society appealing, not to an expansive moral ought, but one that is narrow and provincial, condemning and vilifying. The fact of national diversity and the imprint of dissimilar value orientations often cause fear and insecurity among groups and sub-groups who are apt to condense their value-orientation vis-à-vis their national or cultural identity, promoting ethical relativism and neglecting core human values. With a diminishing of religion’s consecrated and sanctified moral vision, many are falling upon an idealized version of national identity to set the parameters of their moral horizon. This is often expressed as a “moral superiority” implying the dominance of certain traditions and customs over those of others. We must be reminded that autocracy, national or religious, can be a tool of anyone seeking moral supremacy. Looking back, history teaches that putting up constrictive, dogmatic borders is morally destructive, fencing out those with different views and stifling dialogue and civility within and without. Obviously, putting up ideological boundaries is apt to enclose those who profess a restrictive and/or superior ethic to unproductive and morality corrosive values. Being ethnocentric and tribal seems natural as there is a desire to protect our most cherished beliefs claiming moral superiority. Values are what define us; they are the substance of whom we are and reveal our commitments and convictions and their assumed authority. But our values can also limit our moral acuity, narrowing moral focus and diminishing its energy, unseeking of the commonalities that bind humanity to humanity. Clearly, it’s time to change this truncated narrative from an exclusive ethic to a morality without borders, exemplified as humanity as community. Authoritarianism, displaying autocratic and anti-egalitarian values, is repressive and results in a limited and often amoral view of others. This we are witnessing today from all corners of the political spectrum, and not only in America, but elsewhere as well. For advancing a vision of the morally possible, an inclusive and expansive moral “ought” is needed, but terribly difficult to achieve or even articulate given the fact of cultural diversity, but we try. As Thomas Donaldson (1996, p.52) has noted, “We all learn ethics in the context of our particular cultures, and the power in the principles is deeply tied to the way in which they are expressed. Internationally accepted lists of moral principles, such as the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights, draw on many cultural and religious traditions. As philosopher Michael Walzer (1983) has noted, ‘There is no
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