{"title":"名誉与救赎:论名人道歉的道德危险","authors":"Benjamin Matheson","doi":"10.1111/josp.12510","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Like most celebrity apologies, Woods offered his apology publicly. But he did not just apologize to those he directly wronged. He also apologized <i>to his fans</i>.</p><p>Why do celebrities sometimes apologize to their fans? Why do celebrities typically publicly apologize? In this paper, I first consider three possible explanations for why celebrities typically apologize publicly <i>and</i> sometimes also include their fans among the targets of their apology. I then identify three moral dangers of celebrity apologies, the third of which arises specifically for fan-targeted apologies, and each of which teaches us important lessons about the practice of celebrity apologies. From these individual lessons, I draw more general lessons about apologies from those with elevated social positions. So, while my initial focus is on celebrities and on learning about an important and undertheorized social phenomenon, this investigation into celebrity apologies aims to illuminate a more general social phenomenon by using celebrity apologies as a case study.</p><p>In Section 2, I outline an account of apology and redemption, drawing primarily on Radzik's (<span>2009</span>) work. In Sections 3, 5, I consider three possible explanations for why celebrities apologies are often both fan-targeted and publicly given. Because my focus is on such apologies, I set aside standard reasons for why people might apologize (e.g., a desire to make amends), though I discuss the relevance of celebrities <i>also</i> being motivated by these other reasons. The first explanation I consider is that celebrities are motivated to set the public record straight. The second I consider is that celebrities see themselves as having role model obligations. And the third is that celebrities aim to maintain their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers.</p><p>In Sections 6, 8, I then identify three moral dangers of celebrity apologies and then draw out lessons each danger teaches us about the practice of celebrity apologies. First, by apologizing publicly celebrities can set the public narrative about their misdeed in their favor. So, we have reason not to trust celebrity apologies. Second, even when they do not set the public narrative in their favor, a publicly given celebrity apology can still function to disempower the victim from having control over their own life narrative. So, celebrity apologies can present an additional harm to victims. Third, publicly given fan-targeted apologies block a celebrity from, what I will call, <i>moral redemption</i>. So, celebrities ought to be concerned about caring about their fame more than anything else. Additionally, the third moral danger also risks exacerbating the first two moral dangers.</p><p>According to Linda Radzik (<span>2009</span>, p. 113), redemption is the “proper end state of responses to wrongdoing.” She holds that “When one is redeemed, one has justifiably regained one's moral standing” (Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 113). On her view, moral standing is “the degree of esteem and trust to conduct oneself appropriately that we merit with the moral community” and we ought to be trusted to a particular degree by default (Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 82). When we act wrongly, we demonstrate that we are not that trustworthy. When we are redeemed, we are seen to be trustworthy and thus have regained our standing within the moral community. Radzik draws on Karen Jones's account of trust according to which trust is “an attitude of optimism that the goodwill and competence of another will extend to cover the domain of our interaction with her, together with the expectation that the one trusted will be directly and favorably moved by the thought that we are counting on her” (Jones, <span>1996</span>, p. 4; cited in Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 114).</p><p>To understand her account of redemption, we must first appreciate her account of wrongdoing. On Radzik's view, wrongdoing damages relationships through presenting insults and threats that persist over time (see also Murphy & Hampton, <span>1988</span>). For example, a solitary thief may have no friends or family, but she might still damage possible relationships between herself and others, and herself and the moral community, through her past wrongs grounding the persistent threat that she will steal from others. Because her past actions send this message, others will not trust her and so her moral standing is at least diminished. To redeem herself, the thief must therefore remove this threat—that is, she must stop her past action sending such messages. Once the threat is removed, the thief merits <i>reconciliation</i>—that is, she is such that her victims and the moral community ought to reconcile with her. Importantly, removing threats requires more than just the wrongdoer morally transforming.</p><p>Moral transformation is still crucial for meriting reconciliation. By morally transforming herself, the wrongdoer becomes trustworthy. However, merely being transformed is not enough. Wrongdoers are responsible for their own diminished moral standing, so they are responsible for letting others know they have changed. In other words, they must communicate that they are now (or again) trustworthy. So, they must also communicate their transformation. Finally, the wrongdoer must meet any claims they have incurred through acting wrongly. In doing so, the wrongdoer demonstrates their trustworthiness. Thus, to merit reconciliation and thereby be redeemed, a wrongdoer must do three things: (i) morally transform, (ii) communicate that transformation, and (iii) meet any claims incurred through acting wrongly (Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 85).</p><p>Moral transformation has backward- and forward-looking elements, which Radzik (<span>2009</span>, p. 86) takes to be tantamount to repentance. The transformed wrongdoer looks back at her wrongs and sees them in the proper light. This involves acknowledging her responsibility for what she has done, the wrongness of the relevant acts, the authority of the norms she violated, and that she should not have acted as she did. She must also care about the effect her actions have had. This involves feeling negative emotions, such as guilt, remorse, regret, and shame, with the right target and to an appropriate extent. The person who feels regret just because they have been caught acting wrongly does not feel regret with the right target. The person who feels slightly and briefly remorseful for a significant wrong does not feel bad enough. But the person who spirals into self-hatred for a minor wrong takes things too far. In short, wrongdoers ought to assess themselves and the impact their actions have had correctly. The transformed wrongdoer also looks forward to future behavior: she resolves not to repeat her past wrongs, to improve her character if more improvement is required, or to maintain her character improvements.</p><p>Because wrongdoing involves expressive harms—in particular, threats to victims and the moral community—wrongdoers ought to communicate their moral transformation—for example, by apologizing, truth telling, and undertaking reparative work (e.g., care and charity work). Radzik does not hold that any are essential to meriting moral reconciliation. Rather, they are all possible ways to communicate one's moral transformation. Which forms of communication are appropriate will depend on the details of the wrong and the impact it has had.</p><p>Apologies are a common and important way to meet this communication requirement. An apology can explicitly help to counter the harmful messages that one's earlier wrongs sent by demonstrating one's respect for the victims and community, as well as one's humility in response to one's earlier wrongs. Wrongdoers can make explicit that they are responsible for an earlier wrong, that they feel appropriately bad about the wrong, and so on. However, sometimes wrongdoers do not conceptualize or understand everything they ought to understand immediately. For this reason, Radzik endorses the view that apologies are often a <i>negotiation</i> between wrongdoer and victim/community (see also Battistella, <span>2014</span>; Lazare, <span>2005</span>; MacLachlan, <span>2014</span>; Smith, <span>2008</span>). Through this negotiation, a wrongdoer's feelings of guilt, regret, shame, and remorse, as well as her commitments for future behavior, can become more accurate and articulate.</p><p>In short, public apologies have a public record setting function and can send a message of respect to those subject to similar wrongs as the victim (see also MacLachlan, <span>2014</span>, <span>2018</span>; Smith, <span>2008</span>).</p><p>If an apology serves the communication requirement of merited reconciliation, it counts as a morally good apology. Such an apology can also help to meet some of the claims the wrongdoer incurred in acting wrongly—such as repairing any damage done to the victim's reputation. A wrongdoer must meet any claims she has incurred through acting wrongly just so that they rectify their wrong, but this also has the initial benefit of communicating their transformation and renewed trustworthiness. While Radzik (<span>2009</span>, p. 84) holds that certain wrongs are beyond the pale and the wrongdoer cannot ever subsequently merit full reconciliation, she believes that wrongdoers often can atone for their past wrongs.</p><p>Importantly, all aspects of redemption can be feigned, misleading, or otherwise illicit. We can fall for a dodgy apology or believe someone has changed and trust them again, even though they have not changed and are not trustworthy. Even if we still distrust them, others can come to think that the wrongdoer has full moral standing again. In short, we can mistakenly believe someone has redeemed even though they do not in fact merit reconciliation. This, of course, is not genuine redemption, but rather a merely apparent redemption. To mark the distinction between these two types of redemption, call the former <i>moral</i> redemption and the latter <i>public</i> redemption.</p><p>Let us now turn to consider the first of three possible explanations for why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and given publicly. This is that celebrities are motivated to set the public record straight. For example, in his apology for masturbating in front of junior colleagues, comedian Louis CK (<span>2017</span>) begins by saying “These stories are true” which reflects a clear effort to set the public record straight.</p><p>He identifies the fact he was widely admired as a reason why his accusers were not believed. When a wrongdoer is widely admired, this can lead to a form of testimonial injustice for the wrongdoer's victims (Archer & Matheson, <span>2019</span>, <span>2021</span>). Unlike standard cases of testimonial injustice that focus on a person being judged to be less epistemically credible than she is because of features of her identity (Fricker, <span>2007</span>), this form involves a victim being seen as less epistemically credible than she is <i>because</i> she contradicts a wrongdoer who has excessive epistemic credibility—that is, the wrongdoer is believed more than they ought to be. As I discuss in Section 5, the fact a celebrity can disable others from being believed when they ought to be believed means the celebrity has not only excessive epistemic credibility, but also excessive <i>epistemic power</i>. CK seems aware he has such power. Because he had the power to stop his victims being believed, he might have felt he ought to wield that same power so that his victims would now be believed.</p><p>Setting the public record is often a morally commendable motivation for apologizing—for example, when a person establishes an accurate and verifiable record of what wrongs they committed. However, it is not always. Consider an evil person who is motivated to set the public record straight so that the public know all the wicked things they have done. They could do this through an insincere apology, or simply by boldly stating what they have done. While this motivation is not always morally commendable, it remains that it often is.</p><p>Being motivated to set the public record straight is also not necessary for a celebrity apology to be a morally good one. A celebrity apology that was just motivated by usual motives for apologizing (e.g., a desire to make amends) could be morally commendable. For example, Samantha Geimer (<span>2013</span>, p. 291), who was drugged and raped by Roman Polanski, says that Polanski offered her a written private apology. Polanski's apology might well be a morally good one even though he did not offer it publicly.<sup>1</sup></p><p>Correcting the public record helps to explain why celebrity apologies are typically publicly given. By giving the apology publicly, a celebrity acknowledges what they have been accused of doing. However, this motivation does not obviously explain why celebrity apologies are also sometimes fan-targeted. We must look elsewhere for such an explanation.</p><p>The second possible explanation for why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and publicly given is that celebrities see themselves as having role model obligation that they can only meet by providing an apology that is both fan-targeted and given publicly.</p><p>Several authors have investigated whether celebrities—with a particular focus on athletes—have role model obligations (e.g., Feezell, <span>2005</span>; Spurgin, <span>2012</span>; Wellman, <span>2003</span>; Yorke & Archer, <span>2020</span>). The idea is that because celebrities occupy a privileged position, they have a special obligation to model good behavior. When they act wrongly, such role models incur greater blame than a person who performs a type-identical wrong. For example, a famous athlete who uses racial slurs is blameworthy for more wrongs than an ordinary person who also uses racial slurs. Both are blameworthy for using racial slurs, but the famous athlete is also blameworthy <i>for not modeling good behavior</i>.</p><p>There is a lot of controversy about role model obligation. Some argue that celebrities are not prima facie good role models, and so cannot be thought to have role model obligations (e.g., Feezell, <span>2005</span>). Others argue that because these obligations violate a person's right to privacy, such obligations can only be acquired by consent (e.g., Spurgin, <span>2012</span>).</p><p>Whether celebrities have role model obligations does not affect my present point. Rather, it is only important that celebrities <i>believe</i> they have role model obligations because this may explain why they sometimes apologize to their fans and in public for their wrongs. This is especially clear in the case of Tiger Woods. He explicitly identifies himself as a role model in his apology, and then apologies to his fans on that basis. It is clear, then, that Woods takes himself to have violated a role model obligation and that his violation calls for an apology to those to whom he was supposed to be modeling good behavior. Because he cannot feasibly apologize to each fan individually, it makes sense that he gave his apology publicly to reach all his fans. Indeed, it is through his public behavior that he is a role model, so it makes even more sense that Woods would apologize publicly.</p><p>This motivation for apologizing to one's fans and in public is a morally commendable one: regardless of whether celebrities do in fact have role model obligations, it is a good thing that celebrities acknowledge they have the power to influence the behavior of others and that they then take extra steps to try to stop their wrongs from badly influencing others.</p><p>She issued this apology <i>to her fans</i> after they complained that a skincare routine video she uploaded to TikTok mocked a similar one that Hailey Bieber had recently uploaded. While she directs her apology to her fans, Gomez makes no claims about having role model obligations. So, not all fan-targeted and publicly given celebrity apologies are motivated by the celebrity's belief that they have violated a role model obligation.</p><p>Let us now consider a third possible explanation for why celebrity apologies are sometimes fan-targeted and publicly given. This is that celebrities offer such apologies simply or primarily to maintain their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers. In what follows, I will first explain how celebrities depend (to a significant extent) on their fans and potential fans for their social position and associated powers. I will then argue that this dependence helps to explain why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and publicly given. Finally, I argue that if this is a celebrity's sole motivation for apologizing, it is clearly a morally blameworthy motivation. Moreover, even if the celebrity has other motivations for apologizing, if they care about maintaining their fame <i>more</i> than anything else, their overall set of motivations for apologizing is morally blameworthy.</p><p>In this and the next section, I consider moral dangers that arise from celebrity apologies being publicly given. In Section 8, I consider a moral danger unique to fan-targeted and publicly given celebrity apologies. This third moral danger is important because, as I discuss, it can further exacerbate the first two moral dangers. I will now argue that publicly given celebrity apologies can be morally dangerous because they can set the public narrative around the celebrity's behavior in a way that is favorable to them.<sup>9</sup></p><p>Consider first how celebrities do not just have epistemic power. They sometimes have <i>agenda setting power</i>. Because of all the attention paid to the things he said before and during his Presidency, Trump had the power to <i>set the agenda</i> about what got spoken about regardless of whether he was loved or hated. Through being able to have strong influence over what gets talked about in the news and in politics, Trump was able to influence who heard him and potentially who might become a fan or a hater. As his one-time press secretary said, “Whatever [Trump] tweets is going to drive the news” (cited in Archer et al., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Archer et al. (<span>2020</span>, p. 31) consider agenda setting power to be part of epistemic power, but there is good reason to consider it a distinct power. While epistemic power is influenced by the emotions and attitudes of the audience, agenda setting power is not. For example, Trump had agenda setting power over people whether they loved or hated him. Indeed, agenda setting power does not depend on how much we are likely to believe a celebrity or the extent to which she can enable or disable others from exerting epistemic influence. Whereas whether a celebrity has positive or negative epistemic power with respect to a person rather depends on how this person is emotionally and attitudinally orientated toward the celebrity—for example, whether they are fans, haters, potential fans, potential haters, or somewhere in-between. While epistemic power and agenda setting power are distinct, positive epistemic power and agenda setting power can be used in tandem to greater effect. One might frame what people think about while also lending credibility to that framing.</p><p>This pairing of positive epistemic power and agenda setting power is especially useful for celebrities in responding to their own wrongs. This pairing can lead to what I will call <i>narrative setting power</i>. This is related to but important different from agenda setting power. Agenda setting power is the power to determine, or help to determine, <i>what</i> gets talked about. Narrative setting power is the power to determine, or help to determine, <i>how</i> something gets talked about. For example, a boss has the power to set the agenda about what gets talked about in their workplace—for example, what projects must be worked on. But just because the boss can set the agenda about what gets talked about, it does not mean they can influence how their workers think about those things—for example, how important the project is. Of course, a boss can also have narrative setting power. They might be charismatic or have persuasive arguments in favor of their view, and so workers can come to share the boss's attitude about, for example, the importance of the project.</p><p>Sometimes narrative setting power can be used to deny a celebrity's wrongdoing, and in turn, even if only implicitly, to disparage the accusers. For example, a celebrity might appeal to the common idea that accusers are motivated purely for financial reasons or emotional reasons, such as jealousy. But it can also be used in a celebrity apology. An apologizer might try to frame the narrative around their wrong in a way they hope is favorable to them.</p><p>Kevin Spacey's apology to Anthony Rapp provides an instructive example of how a celebrity's narrative setting power can misfire. Rapp accused Spacey of making a sexual advance when Rapp was 14. After issuing his conditional apology to Rapp (“if I did behave then as he describes, I owe him the sincerest apology for what would have been deeply inappropriate drunken behavior”; Spacey, <span>2017</span>), Spacey went to announce that he was a gay man, something that had been widely speculated about but never confirmed by Spacey. This seems like a clear attempt to use his “apology” to set the narrative around his (possible) wrong in a way that favors him. I take the suggestion to be that Spacey's behavior (if it happened) was the result of having lived as a closeted gay man and the surrounding societal pressures with respect to homosexuality that were much stronger when Spacey is alleged to have propositioned Rapp. Spacey's apology failed in part because it was at best a conditional apology (and perhaps more accurately a conditional acknowledgement of a duty to apologize), and also in part because his narrative setting power misfired.</p><p>However, narrative setting power does not always misfire in this way. Consider, for example, Louis CK's apology. In and of itself, his apology appears to be morally good: it appears humble, appropriately remorseful, it identifies the wrongs, it suggests he cares about the effect his wrongs have on his victims, and so on.<sup>10</sup> But it could also be that this apology is deliberately trying to hit all the right notes to <i>appear</i> as if it is a morally good apology. CK may not use the language of epistemic power, but he implicitly admits to having such power. He also seems to have focused on elements that are more likely to get one's apology accepted—namely, ones that focus on the victim and the suffering they have undergone, on how mortified one is from having made the victim suffer, and outlining what steps one has taken, or will take, to make amends (see Cerulo & Ruane, <span>2014</span>).</p><p>While CK's apology focuses on the victim, there is perhaps also a subtle framing about <i>his</i> redemption: <i>he</i> feels really bad, and <i>he</i> has seen the error of his ways. Of course, his apology still bears many of the hallmarks of a morally good apology. It is certainly hard for an apology not the mention the wrongdoer's change of heart, as this is something that a morally good apology requires. But the fact he—a celebrity with access to public relations experts that can help him intensify his narrative setting power—manages to provide such an apology that makes him look so favorable is something that should give us pause. Again, perhaps his apology is a bit <i>too good</i>. And perhaps by appearing so good, by typical evaluative standards of a morally good apology, we are lured into accepting how CK's apology construes him and his victims, and in particular on him as a person who is trying to redeem himself.</p><p>This is somewhat speculative, of course. When narrative setting power is used well, we are unlikely to be aware of its effects. We might not immediately realize that we are focusing more on the wrongdoer's hoped for redemption than on the victim and the wrongs they have suffered. In some cases, the celebrity's narrative setting power might even help them misconstrue the extent of the wrong, the extent to which they truly want to redeem themselves, and so on. We may learn a slightly twisted version of events that helps the celebrity appear better than they are. Narrative setting power is morally dangerous because it means those who have it <i>can</i> establish an inaccurate impression of the wrong and of themselves in social imagination, even if they do not actually exercise that power. The lesson we learn from this is that because celebrities often have narrative setting power, we have reason to be suspicious of publicly given celebrity apologies.</p><p>A second moral danger with publicly given celebrity apologies is what I call <i>narrative disempowerment</i>—that is, hindering or removing a person's control over their own life narrative. Being wronged is one kind of narrative disempowerment. A person becomes a victim, and it is often then hard to avoid being seen and seeing oneself <i>as a victim</i>. While we cannot have total control over our life narratives, an important source of meaningfulness in life is the control we can exercise about how our life narratives go (Fischer, <span>2009</span>); narrative disempowerment therefore lessens the meaningfulness of a person's life. Through apologizing in way that subtly sets the narrative around the wrong in a way that favors the wrongdoer, a wrongdoer further narratively disempowers the victim, who now has even less control over how she and others understand her life story. I consider two forms of narrative disempowerment in what follows.</p><p>The first form arises because celebrities typically have greater narrative setting power than their victims. Even if a celebrity does not set the narrative in her favor, the fact <i>she could</i> means the celebrity possesses the power in this situation. It is thanks <i>to the celebrity</i> that a victim's side of the story might be heard and believed. It is not because of the victim's testimony in and of itself. So even when a celebrity does not set the public narrative surrounding the wrong in her favor, the fact the celebrity helps to establish the public narrative about, and the public record of, the wrong still involves narratively disempowering the victim. The victim has to hope for the celebrity's co-operation <i>or else</i> they will not be able to combat the celebrity's narrative setting power. Because of the celebrity's greater narrative setting power, the victim's power to set the narrative around what has happened to them is always at risk of being undermined.</p><p>The second form of narrative disempowerment arises because a celebrity apology can place more emphasis on the celebrity, even when it is an otherwise good apology. The celebrity's apology will likely draw more attention to the wrongdoer than the victim. The victim, then, becomes a supporting character in their own story.<sup>11</sup> A celebrity apology can draw more attention to the celebrity so that, even if the account is accurate and fair—and even focuses on the victim to a significant extent—the celebrity is still its practical focus and may then become the person we sympathize with more.</p><p>The second form of narrative disempowerment is wrongful because victims are no longer protagonists in their own story, and instead must see the story of their lives as inherently connected to the person who wronged them.<sup>12</sup> Whereas the first form is wrongful because victims have had their power to determine their life story reduced. The lesson we learn from this is that even a morally good publicly given celebrity apology can be morally dangerous, because even such an apology can further harm victims.</p><p>The final moral danger I consider is that being primarily motivated to maintain one's fame can stop celebrities achieving moral redemption, and instead lead the celebrity toward mere public redemption. Moreover, through being a barrier to moral redemption, it can further exacerbate the first two moral dangers.</p><p>As I discussed in Section 5, celebrities can be motivated to apologize to their fans and in public because this will help them maintain their fame. When a celebrity is only motivated for this reason, their apology is morally substandard because this motivation, when considered alone, is a self-serving one. One reason why acting only for such a self-serving reason leads to a morally substandard apology is that a morally good apology requires humility (Bennett, <span>Forthcoming</span>; Radzik, <span>2009</span>). But when a celebrity apologizes only to maintain their fame, this shows a lack of humility: the celebrity is putting themselves above the victim by aiming to save their own positive celebrity status over seeking reconciliation with the victim.</p><p>Failing to be appropriately humble is not just a failure of an apology. It is also something that blocks moral redemption. Even if we accept Radzik's view that apology is not necessary for moral redemption, apologies still serve a communicative function that is necessary for moral redemption. To merit reconciliation and thus be morally redeemed, a wrongdoer must communicate their moral transformation, among other things. Part of this transformation is being appropriately humble as a consequence of having acted wrongly. The problem is that only being motivated to apologize to maintain one's fame demonstrates a complete lack of humility because it means a wrongdoer favors maintaining their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers over meriting reconciliation with their victims. Such a wrongdoer does not merit reconciliation. As long as they care more about maintaining their own fame, moral redemption is closed off to them. However, the wrongdoer can gain public redemption—that is, they can appear to be redeemed in the eyes of their fans and the public. With public redemption, a celebrity maintains her fame. Apologizing with just this motivation is therefore morally dangerous <i>for the celebrity</i>.</p><p>Of course, as I also discussed in Section 5, we often act for multiple reasons. A celebrity might be motivated to apologize to maintain her fame <i>and</i> for other reasons. If the other reasons are morally commendable ones, this can sometimes undermine the badness of being motivated to maintain one's fame. However, as I argued in Section 5, the moral valence of one's overall set of motivations for a particular action depends on how the motivations that make up that set are structured. The upshot is that just because a celebrity has some morally commendable motivations for apologizing does not mean their apology is a morally good one.</p><p>Likewise, the fact that a celebrity has some morally commendable motivations for apologizing does not make them appropriately humble. If a celebrity cares more about maintaining their fame, they care more about themselves than they do about, for example, rectifying the harm they have brought upon the victim. This is not what an appropriately humble person would do. Celebrities therefore do not avoid this moral danger just by having some morally commendable motivations for apologizing. It matters what importance they give to those motivations; it matters what they care about more. When celebrities care more about maintaining their fame, any apology that they issue will be morally substandard, and they will be blocked from moral redemption.</p><p>Being motivated to apologize to maintain one's fame is morally dangerous when this motivation arises from caring more about maintaining one's fame. There is a lesson for celebrities here: they should be wary of placing too much importance on their fame, and of becoming seduced and consumed by their fame. There is also a lesson for others: when a celebrity cares more about their own fame, they have greater motivation to use their apology to set the public narrative in their favor, as this will help them maintain their fans and thus their fame; celebrities will also care less about narratively disempowering the victims. If what ultimately matters to them is that they maintain their fame, a celebrity can easily silence the morally good reasons they have to apologize to, and make amends with, their victims.</p><p>When a celebrity's primary motivation for apologizing is that it will maintain their fame, this is not only morally dangerous in its own right (as it will block the celebrity from moral redemption), but it is also morally dangerous because it makes them more likely to not care about the first two moral dangers of publicly apologizing to their victims. So, when celebrities care about their fame more than anything else, this is also morally dangerous for their victims and us.</p><p>In this paper, I first considered three explanations for why celebrities apologize to their fans and in public. I then identified three moral dangers with celebrity apologies. I then drew out four lessons about the practice of celebrity apologies. First, we should not trust celebrity apologies so easily. Second, even a good celebrity apology can still further harm victims. Third, celebrities should be wary of placing too much importance on their fame, as doing so can block their moral redemption. Fourth, the third moral danger also leads to celebrities being more likely to exacerbate the first two moral dangers.</p><p>There are wider lessons to learn from this discussion. I focus on three points here. First, these problems do not imply that we should ignore or completely reject celebrity apologies. Rather, they highlight that it is harder for celebrities <i>given their social position and associated powers</i> to give good public apologies and achieve moral redemption. One way to improve celebrity apologies might be for celebrities to enter into dialogue and negotiate with their victims, as Radzik and others propose (see Section 2). So, rather than seeing their apology as a monologue that draws a line under their earlier wrong, a celebrity should take their initial apology to be just one part of an overall process. Importantly, this requires more than just giving multiple apologies, as Will Smith did for slapping Chris Rock. And this might require only giving a private apology, such as the one Roman Polanski gave Samantha Geimer. Of course, private apologies just to victims will not have the same fan-appeasing function as publicly given fan-targeted apologies. Such apologies might also have their own moral dangers.</p><p>Second, while I have focused on well-known celebrity apologies and people who are arguably superstars, fame and celebrity are features of many areas of life. For example, small towns have local celebrities, and academic disciplines have superstars. Indeed, the advent of social media has made it easier for anyone to become a celebrity. This might be a domain specific fame, such as a famous academic tweeter. Such “micro-influencers” will have a small but still perhaps excessive epistemic power. This is something they might wield responsibly, but we must still question whether this is appropriate for anyone to have. Just as Archer et al. (<span>2020</span>) investigate the effect that celebrity epistemic power has on democracy, we might also investigate the effect that academic celebrity epistemic power has on academia and other areas of life.</p><p>Third, people are often motivated, at least in part, to apologize for their behavior because they wish to maintain their social position and associated powers. While I focused on being motivated to maintain one's fame in Sections 5 and 8, it is likely that any apology that is primarily or solely motivated by a person's desire to maintain her social position and associated powers will block that person achieving moral redemption. So, being primarily motivated to apologize to maintain one's social position is morally dangerous. This suggests that a condition on a morally good apology is that one is <i>not</i> primarily motivated to maintain one's social position, and perhaps one must even be willing to lose one's social position to an appropriate extent. If that is correct, celebrities ought to be willing to cease being famous if they actually wish to achieve moral redemption. Of course, being willing does not amount to not at all caring about continuing to be famous.</p><p>Each of these points merits further investigation. Philosophical investigations into fame not only help to illuminate a crucial aspect of contemporary life, but also help to shed light on other structurally similar social phenomenon.<sup>13</sup></p>","PeriodicalId":46756,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Social Philosophy","volume":"56 1","pages":"98-115"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/josp.12510","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Fame and redemption: On the moral dangers of celebrity apologies\",\"authors\":\"Benjamin Matheson\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/josp.12510\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Like most celebrity apologies, Woods offered his apology publicly. But he did not just apologize to those he directly wronged. He also apologized <i>to his fans</i>.</p><p>Why do celebrities sometimes apologize to their fans? Why do celebrities typically publicly apologize? In this paper, I first consider three possible explanations for why celebrities typically apologize publicly <i>and</i> sometimes also include their fans among the targets of their apology. I then identify three moral dangers of celebrity apologies, the third of which arises specifically for fan-targeted apologies, and each of which teaches us important lessons about the practice of celebrity apologies. From these individual lessons, I draw more general lessons about apologies from those with elevated social positions. So, while my initial focus is on celebrities and on learning about an important and undertheorized social phenomenon, this investigation into celebrity apologies aims to illuminate a more general social phenomenon by using celebrity apologies as a case study.</p><p>In Section 2, I outline an account of apology and redemption, drawing primarily on Radzik's (<span>2009</span>) work. In Sections 3, 5, I consider three possible explanations for why celebrities apologies are often both fan-targeted and publicly given. Because my focus is on such apologies, I set aside standard reasons for why people might apologize (e.g., a desire to make amends), though I discuss the relevance of celebrities <i>also</i> being motivated by these other reasons. The first explanation I consider is that celebrities are motivated to set the public record straight. The second I consider is that celebrities see themselves as having role model obligations. And the third is that celebrities aim to maintain their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers.</p><p>In Sections 6, 8, I then identify three moral dangers of celebrity apologies and then draw out lessons each danger teaches us about the practice of celebrity apologies. First, by apologizing publicly celebrities can set the public narrative about their misdeed in their favor. So, we have reason not to trust celebrity apologies. Second, even when they do not set the public narrative in their favor, a publicly given celebrity apology can still function to disempower the victim from having control over their own life narrative. So, celebrity apologies can present an additional harm to victims. Third, publicly given fan-targeted apologies block a celebrity from, what I will call, <i>moral redemption</i>. So, celebrities ought to be concerned about caring about their fame more than anything else. Additionally, the third moral danger also risks exacerbating the first two moral dangers.</p><p>According to Linda Radzik (<span>2009</span>, p. 113), redemption is the “proper end state of responses to wrongdoing.” She holds that “When one is redeemed, one has justifiably regained one's moral standing” (Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 113). On her view, moral standing is “the degree of esteem and trust to conduct oneself appropriately that we merit with the moral community” and we ought to be trusted to a particular degree by default (Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 82). When we act wrongly, we demonstrate that we are not that trustworthy. When we are redeemed, we are seen to be trustworthy and thus have regained our standing within the moral community. Radzik draws on Karen Jones's account of trust according to which trust is “an attitude of optimism that the goodwill and competence of another will extend to cover the domain of our interaction with her, together with the expectation that the one trusted will be directly and favorably moved by the thought that we are counting on her” (Jones, <span>1996</span>, p. 4; cited in Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 114).</p><p>To understand her account of redemption, we must first appreciate her account of wrongdoing. On Radzik's view, wrongdoing damages relationships through presenting insults and threats that persist over time (see also Murphy & Hampton, <span>1988</span>). For example, a solitary thief may have no friends or family, but she might still damage possible relationships between herself and others, and herself and the moral community, through her past wrongs grounding the persistent threat that she will steal from others. Because her past actions send this message, others will not trust her and so her moral standing is at least diminished. To redeem herself, the thief must therefore remove this threat—that is, she must stop her past action sending such messages. Once the threat is removed, the thief merits <i>reconciliation</i>—that is, she is such that her victims and the moral community ought to reconcile with her. Importantly, removing threats requires more than just the wrongdoer morally transforming.</p><p>Moral transformation is still crucial for meriting reconciliation. By morally transforming herself, the wrongdoer becomes trustworthy. However, merely being transformed is not enough. Wrongdoers are responsible for their own diminished moral standing, so they are responsible for letting others know they have changed. In other words, they must communicate that they are now (or again) trustworthy. So, they must also communicate their transformation. Finally, the wrongdoer must meet any claims they have incurred through acting wrongly. In doing so, the wrongdoer demonstrates their trustworthiness. Thus, to merit reconciliation and thereby be redeemed, a wrongdoer must do three things: (i) morally transform, (ii) communicate that transformation, and (iii) meet any claims incurred through acting wrongly (Radzik, <span>2009</span>, p. 85).</p><p>Moral transformation has backward- and forward-looking elements, which Radzik (<span>2009</span>, p. 86) takes to be tantamount to repentance. The transformed wrongdoer looks back at her wrongs and sees them in the proper light. This involves acknowledging her responsibility for what she has done, the wrongness of the relevant acts, the authority of the norms she violated, and that she should not have acted as she did. She must also care about the effect her actions have had. This involves feeling negative emotions, such as guilt, remorse, regret, and shame, with the right target and to an appropriate extent. The person who feels regret just because they have been caught acting wrongly does not feel regret with the right target. The person who feels slightly and briefly remorseful for a significant wrong does not feel bad enough. But the person who spirals into self-hatred for a minor wrong takes things too far. In short, wrongdoers ought to assess themselves and the impact their actions have had correctly. The transformed wrongdoer also looks forward to future behavior: she resolves not to repeat her past wrongs, to improve her character if more improvement is required, or to maintain her character improvements.</p><p>Because wrongdoing involves expressive harms—in particular, threats to victims and the moral community—wrongdoers ought to communicate their moral transformation—for example, by apologizing, truth telling, and undertaking reparative work (e.g., care and charity work). Radzik does not hold that any are essential to meriting moral reconciliation. Rather, they are all possible ways to communicate one's moral transformation. Which forms of communication are appropriate will depend on the details of the wrong and the impact it has had.</p><p>Apologies are a common and important way to meet this communication requirement. An apology can explicitly help to counter the harmful messages that one's earlier wrongs sent by demonstrating one's respect for the victims and community, as well as one's humility in response to one's earlier wrongs. Wrongdoers can make explicit that they are responsible for an earlier wrong, that they feel appropriately bad about the wrong, and so on. However, sometimes wrongdoers do not conceptualize or understand everything they ought to understand immediately. For this reason, Radzik endorses the view that apologies are often a <i>negotiation</i> between wrongdoer and victim/community (see also Battistella, <span>2014</span>; Lazare, <span>2005</span>; MacLachlan, <span>2014</span>; Smith, <span>2008</span>). Through this negotiation, a wrongdoer's feelings of guilt, regret, shame, and remorse, as well as her commitments for future behavior, can become more accurate and articulate.</p><p>In short, public apologies have a public record setting function and can send a message of respect to those subject to similar wrongs as the victim (see also MacLachlan, <span>2014</span>, <span>2018</span>; Smith, <span>2008</span>).</p><p>If an apology serves the communication requirement of merited reconciliation, it counts as a morally good apology. Such an apology can also help to meet some of the claims the wrongdoer incurred in acting wrongly—such as repairing any damage done to the victim's reputation. A wrongdoer must meet any claims she has incurred through acting wrongly just so that they rectify their wrong, but this also has the initial benefit of communicating their transformation and renewed trustworthiness. While Radzik (<span>2009</span>, p. 84) holds that certain wrongs are beyond the pale and the wrongdoer cannot ever subsequently merit full reconciliation, she believes that wrongdoers often can atone for their past wrongs.</p><p>Importantly, all aspects of redemption can be feigned, misleading, or otherwise illicit. We can fall for a dodgy apology or believe someone has changed and trust them again, even though they have not changed and are not trustworthy. Even if we still distrust them, others can come to think that the wrongdoer has full moral standing again. In short, we can mistakenly believe someone has redeemed even though they do not in fact merit reconciliation. This, of course, is not genuine redemption, but rather a merely apparent redemption. To mark the distinction between these two types of redemption, call the former <i>moral</i> redemption and the latter <i>public</i> redemption.</p><p>Let us now turn to consider the first of three possible explanations for why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and given publicly. This is that celebrities are motivated to set the public record straight. For example, in his apology for masturbating in front of junior colleagues, comedian Louis CK (<span>2017</span>) begins by saying “These stories are true” which reflects a clear effort to set the public record straight.</p><p>He identifies the fact he was widely admired as a reason why his accusers were not believed. When a wrongdoer is widely admired, this can lead to a form of testimonial injustice for the wrongdoer's victims (Archer & Matheson, <span>2019</span>, <span>2021</span>). Unlike standard cases of testimonial injustice that focus on a person being judged to be less epistemically credible than she is because of features of her identity (Fricker, <span>2007</span>), this form involves a victim being seen as less epistemically credible than she is <i>because</i> she contradicts a wrongdoer who has excessive epistemic credibility—that is, the wrongdoer is believed more than they ought to be. As I discuss in Section 5, the fact a celebrity can disable others from being believed when they ought to be believed means the celebrity has not only excessive epistemic credibility, but also excessive <i>epistemic power</i>. CK seems aware he has such power. Because he had the power to stop his victims being believed, he might have felt he ought to wield that same power so that his victims would now be believed.</p><p>Setting the public record is often a morally commendable motivation for apologizing—for example, when a person establishes an accurate and verifiable record of what wrongs they committed. However, it is not always. Consider an evil person who is motivated to set the public record straight so that the public know all the wicked things they have done. They could do this through an insincere apology, or simply by boldly stating what they have done. While this motivation is not always morally commendable, it remains that it often is.</p><p>Being motivated to set the public record straight is also not necessary for a celebrity apology to be a morally good one. A celebrity apology that was just motivated by usual motives for apologizing (e.g., a desire to make amends) could be morally commendable. For example, Samantha Geimer (<span>2013</span>, p. 291), who was drugged and raped by Roman Polanski, says that Polanski offered her a written private apology. Polanski's apology might well be a morally good one even though he did not offer it publicly.<sup>1</sup></p><p>Correcting the public record helps to explain why celebrity apologies are typically publicly given. By giving the apology publicly, a celebrity acknowledges what they have been accused of doing. However, this motivation does not obviously explain why celebrity apologies are also sometimes fan-targeted. We must look elsewhere for such an explanation.</p><p>The second possible explanation for why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and publicly given is that celebrities see themselves as having role model obligation that they can only meet by providing an apology that is both fan-targeted and given publicly.</p><p>Several authors have investigated whether celebrities—with a particular focus on athletes—have role model obligations (e.g., Feezell, <span>2005</span>; Spurgin, <span>2012</span>; Wellman, <span>2003</span>; Yorke & Archer, <span>2020</span>). The idea is that because celebrities occupy a privileged position, they have a special obligation to model good behavior. When they act wrongly, such role models incur greater blame than a person who performs a type-identical wrong. For example, a famous athlete who uses racial slurs is blameworthy for more wrongs than an ordinary person who also uses racial slurs. Both are blameworthy for using racial slurs, but the famous athlete is also blameworthy <i>for not modeling good behavior</i>.</p><p>There is a lot of controversy about role model obligation. Some argue that celebrities are not prima facie good role models, and so cannot be thought to have role model obligations (e.g., Feezell, <span>2005</span>). Others argue that because these obligations violate a person's right to privacy, such obligations can only be acquired by consent (e.g., Spurgin, <span>2012</span>).</p><p>Whether celebrities have role model obligations does not affect my present point. Rather, it is only important that celebrities <i>believe</i> they have role model obligations because this may explain why they sometimes apologize to their fans and in public for their wrongs. This is especially clear in the case of Tiger Woods. He explicitly identifies himself as a role model in his apology, and then apologies to his fans on that basis. It is clear, then, that Woods takes himself to have violated a role model obligation and that his violation calls for an apology to those to whom he was supposed to be modeling good behavior. Because he cannot feasibly apologize to each fan individually, it makes sense that he gave his apology publicly to reach all his fans. Indeed, it is through his public behavior that he is a role model, so it makes even more sense that Woods would apologize publicly.</p><p>This motivation for apologizing to one's fans and in public is a morally commendable one: regardless of whether celebrities do in fact have role model obligations, it is a good thing that celebrities acknowledge they have the power to influence the behavior of others and that they then take extra steps to try to stop their wrongs from badly influencing others.</p><p>She issued this apology <i>to her fans</i> after they complained that a skincare routine video she uploaded to TikTok mocked a similar one that Hailey Bieber had recently uploaded. While she directs her apology to her fans, Gomez makes no claims about having role model obligations. So, not all fan-targeted and publicly given celebrity apologies are motivated by the celebrity's belief that they have violated a role model obligation.</p><p>Let us now consider a third possible explanation for why celebrity apologies are sometimes fan-targeted and publicly given. This is that celebrities offer such apologies simply or primarily to maintain their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers. In what follows, I will first explain how celebrities depend (to a significant extent) on their fans and potential fans for their social position and associated powers. I will then argue that this dependence helps to explain why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and publicly given. Finally, I argue that if this is a celebrity's sole motivation for apologizing, it is clearly a morally blameworthy motivation. Moreover, even if the celebrity has other motivations for apologizing, if they care about maintaining their fame <i>more</i> than anything else, their overall set of motivations for apologizing is morally blameworthy.</p><p>In this and the next section, I consider moral dangers that arise from celebrity apologies being publicly given. In Section 8, I consider a moral danger unique to fan-targeted and publicly given celebrity apologies. This third moral danger is important because, as I discuss, it can further exacerbate the first two moral dangers. I will now argue that publicly given celebrity apologies can be morally dangerous because they can set the public narrative around the celebrity's behavior in a way that is favorable to them.<sup>9</sup></p><p>Consider first how celebrities do not just have epistemic power. They sometimes have <i>agenda setting power</i>. Because of all the attention paid to the things he said before and during his Presidency, Trump had the power to <i>set the agenda</i> about what got spoken about regardless of whether he was loved or hated. Through being able to have strong influence over what gets talked about in the news and in politics, Trump was able to influence who heard him and potentially who might become a fan or a hater. As his one-time press secretary said, “Whatever [Trump] tweets is going to drive the news” (cited in Archer et al., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Archer et al. (<span>2020</span>, p. 31) consider agenda setting power to be part of epistemic power, but there is good reason to consider it a distinct power. While epistemic power is influenced by the emotions and attitudes of the audience, agenda setting power is not. For example, Trump had agenda setting power over people whether they loved or hated him. Indeed, agenda setting power does not depend on how much we are likely to believe a celebrity or the extent to which she can enable or disable others from exerting epistemic influence. Whereas whether a celebrity has positive or negative epistemic power with respect to a person rather depends on how this person is emotionally and attitudinally orientated toward the celebrity—for example, whether they are fans, haters, potential fans, potential haters, or somewhere in-between. While epistemic power and agenda setting power are distinct, positive epistemic power and agenda setting power can be used in tandem to greater effect. One might frame what people think about while also lending credibility to that framing.</p><p>This pairing of positive epistemic power and agenda setting power is especially useful for celebrities in responding to their own wrongs. This pairing can lead to what I will call <i>narrative setting power</i>. This is related to but important different from agenda setting power. Agenda setting power is the power to determine, or help to determine, <i>what</i> gets talked about. Narrative setting power is the power to determine, or help to determine, <i>how</i> something gets talked about. For example, a boss has the power to set the agenda about what gets talked about in their workplace—for example, what projects must be worked on. But just because the boss can set the agenda about what gets talked about, it does not mean they can influence how their workers think about those things—for example, how important the project is. Of course, a boss can also have narrative setting power. They might be charismatic or have persuasive arguments in favor of their view, and so workers can come to share the boss's attitude about, for example, the importance of the project.</p><p>Sometimes narrative setting power can be used to deny a celebrity's wrongdoing, and in turn, even if only implicitly, to disparage the accusers. For example, a celebrity might appeal to the common idea that accusers are motivated purely for financial reasons or emotional reasons, such as jealousy. But it can also be used in a celebrity apology. An apologizer might try to frame the narrative around their wrong in a way they hope is favorable to them.</p><p>Kevin Spacey's apology to Anthony Rapp provides an instructive example of how a celebrity's narrative setting power can misfire. Rapp accused Spacey of making a sexual advance when Rapp was 14. After issuing his conditional apology to Rapp (“if I did behave then as he describes, I owe him the sincerest apology for what would have been deeply inappropriate drunken behavior”; Spacey, <span>2017</span>), Spacey went to announce that he was a gay man, something that had been widely speculated about but never confirmed by Spacey. This seems like a clear attempt to use his “apology” to set the narrative around his (possible) wrong in a way that favors him. I take the suggestion to be that Spacey's behavior (if it happened) was the result of having lived as a closeted gay man and the surrounding societal pressures with respect to homosexuality that were much stronger when Spacey is alleged to have propositioned Rapp. Spacey's apology failed in part because it was at best a conditional apology (and perhaps more accurately a conditional acknowledgement of a duty to apologize), and also in part because his narrative setting power misfired.</p><p>However, narrative setting power does not always misfire in this way. Consider, for example, Louis CK's apology. In and of itself, his apology appears to be morally good: it appears humble, appropriately remorseful, it identifies the wrongs, it suggests he cares about the effect his wrongs have on his victims, and so on.<sup>10</sup> But it could also be that this apology is deliberately trying to hit all the right notes to <i>appear</i> as if it is a morally good apology. CK may not use the language of epistemic power, but he implicitly admits to having such power. He also seems to have focused on elements that are more likely to get one's apology accepted—namely, ones that focus on the victim and the suffering they have undergone, on how mortified one is from having made the victim suffer, and outlining what steps one has taken, or will take, to make amends (see Cerulo & Ruane, <span>2014</span>).</p><p>While CK's apology focuses on the victim, there is perhaps also a subtle framing about <i>his</i> redemption: <i>he</i> feels really bad, and <i>he</i> has seen the error of his ways. Of course, his apology still bears many of the hallmarks of a morally good apology. It is certainly hard for an apology not the mention the wrongdoer's change of heart, as this is something that a morally good apology requires. But the fact he—a celebrity with access to public relations experts that can help him intensify his narrative setting power—manages to provide such an apology that makes him look so favorable is something that should give us pause. Again, perhaps his apology is a bit <i>too good</i>. And perhaps by appearing so good, by typical evaluative standards of a morally good apology, we are lured into accepting how CK's apology construes him and his victims, and in particular on him as a person who is trying to redeem himself.</p><p>This is somewhat speculative, of course. When narrative setting power is used well, we are unlikely to be aware of its effects. We might not immediately realize that we are focusing more on the wrongdoer's hoped for redemption than on the victim and the wrongs they have suffered. In some cases, the celebrity's narrative setting power might even help them misconstrue the extent of the wrong, the extent to which they truly want to redeem themselves, and so on. We may learn a slightly twisted version of events that helps the celebrity appear better than they are. Narrative setting power is morally dangerous because it means those who have it <i>can</i> establish an inaccurate impression of the wrong and of themselves in social imagination, even if they do not actually exercise that power. The lesson we learn from this is that because celebrities often have narrative setting power, we have reason to be suspicious of publicly given celebrity apologies.</p><p>A second moral danger with publicly given celebrity apologies is what I call <i>narrative disempowerment</i>—that is, hindering or removing a person's control over their own life narrative. Being wronged is one kind of narrative disempowerment. A person becomes a victim, and it is often then hard to avoid being seen and seeing oneself <i>as a victim</i>. While we cannot have total control over our life narratives, an important source of meaningfulness in life is the control we can exercise about how our life narratives go (Fischer, <span>2009</span>); narrative disempowerment therefore lessens the meaningfulness of a person's life. Through apologizing in way that subtly sets the narrative around the wrong in a way that favors the wrongdoer, a wrongdoer further narratively disempowers the victim, who now has even less control over how she and others understand her life story. I consider two forms of narrative disempowerment in what follows.</p><p>The first form arises because celebrities typically have greater narrative setting power than their victims. Even if a celebrity does not set the narrative in her favor, the fact <i>she could</i> means the celebrity possesses the power in this situation. It is thanks <i>to the celebrity</i> that a victim's side of the story might be heard and believed. It is not because of the victim's testimony in and of itself. So even when a celebrity does not set the public narrative surrounding the wrong in her favor, the fact the celebrity helps to establish the public narrative about, and the public record of, the wrong still involves narratively disempowering the victim. The victim has to hope for the celebrity's co-operation <i>or else</i> they will not be able to combat the celebrity's narrative setting power. Because of the celebrity's greater narrative setting power, the victim's power to set the narrative around what has happened to them is always at risk of being undermined.</p><p>The second form of narrative disempowerment arises because a celebrity apology can place more emphasis on the celebrity, even when it is an otherwise good apology. The celebrity's apology will likely draw more attention to the wrongdoer than the victim. The victim, then, becomes a supporting character in their own story.<sup>11</sup> A celebrity apology can draw more attention to the celebrity so that, even if the account is accurate and fair—and even focuses on the victim to a significant extent—the celebrity is still its practical focus and may then become the person we sympathize with more.</p><p>The second form of narrative disempowerment is wrongful because victims are no longer protagonists in their own story, and instead must see the story of their lives as inherently connected to the person who wronged them.<sup>12</sup> Whereas the first form is wrongful because victims have had their power to determine their life story reduced. The lesson we learn from this is that even a morally good publicly given celebrity apology can be morally dangerous, because even such an apology can further harm victims.</p><p>The final moral danger I consider is that being primarily motivated to maintain one's fame can stop celebrities achieving moral redemption, and instead lead the celebrity toward mere public redemption. Moreover, through being a barrier to moral redemption, it can further exacerbate the first two moral dangers.</p><p>As I discussed in Section 5, celebrities can be motivated to apologize to their fans and in public because this will help them maintain their fame. When a celebrity is only motivated for this reason, their apology is morally substandard because this motivation, when considered alone, is a self-serving one. One reason why acting only for such a self-serving reason leads to a morally substandard apology is that a morally good apology requires humility (Bennett, <span>Forthcoming</span>; Radzik, <span>2009</span>). But when a celebrity apologizes only to maintain their fame, this shows a lack of humility: the celebrity is putting themselves above the victim by aiming to save their own positive celebrity status over seeking reconciliation with the victim.</p><p>Failing to be appropriately humble is not just a failure of an apology. It is also something that blocks moral redemption. Even if we accept Radzik's view that apology is not necessary for moral redemption, apologies still serve a communicative function that is necessary for moral redemption. To merit reconciliation and thus be morally redeemed, a wrongdoer must communicate their moral transformation, among other things. Part of this transformation is being appropriately humble as a consequence of having acted wrongly. The problem is that only being motivated to apologize to maintain one's fame demonstrates a complete lack of humility because it means a wrongdoer favors maintaining their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers over meriting reconciliation with their victims. Such a wrongdoer does not merit reconciliation. As long as they care more about maintaining their own fame, moral redemption is closed off to them. However, the wrongdoer can gain public redemption—that is, they can appear to be redeemed in the eyes of their fans and the public. With public redemption, a celebrity maintains her fame. Apologizing with just this motivation is therefore morally dangerous <i>for the celebrity</i>.</p><p>Of course, as I also discussed in Section 5, we often act for multiple reasons. A celebrity might be motivated to apologize to maintain her fame <i>and</i> for other reasons. If the other reasons are morally commendable ones, this can sometimes undermine the badness of being motivated to maintain one's fame. However, as I argued in Section 5, the moral valence of one's overall set of motivations for a particular action depends on how the motivations that make up that set are structured. The upshot is that just because a celebrity has some morally commendable motivations for apologizing does not mean their apology is a morally good one.</p><p>Likewise, the fact that a celebrity has some morally commendable motivations for apologizing does not make them appropriately humble. If a celebrity cares more about maintaining their fame, they care more about themselves than they do about, for example, rectifying the harm they have brought upon the victim. This is not what an appropriately humble person would do. Celebrities therefore do not avoid this moral danger just by having some morally commendable motivations for apologizing. It matters what importance they give to those motivations; it matters what they care about more. When celebrities care more about maintaining their fame, any apology that they issue will be morally substandard, and they will be blocked from moral redemption.</p><p>Being motivated to apologize to maintain one's fame is morally dangerous when this motivation arises from caring more about maintaining one's fame. There is a lesson for celebrities here: they should be wary of placing too much importance on their fame, and of becoming seduced and consumed by their fame. There is also a lesson for others: when a celebrity cares more about their own fame, they have greater motivation to use their apology to set the public narrative in their favor, as this will help them maintain their fans and thus their fame; celebrities will also care less about narratively disempowering the victims. If what ultimately matters to them is that they maintain their fame, a celebrity can easily silence the morally good reasons they have to apologize to, and make amends with, their victims.</p><p>When a celebrity's primary motivation for apologizing is that it will maintain their fame, this is not only morally dangerous in its own right (as it will block the celebrity from moral redemption), but it is also morally dangerous because it makes them more likely to not care about the first two moral dangers of publicly apologizing to their victims. So, when celebrities care about their fame more than anything else, this is also morally dangerous for their victims and us.</p><p>In this paper, I first considered three explanations for why celebrities apologize to their fans and in public. I then identified three moral dangers with celebrity apologies. I then drew out four lessons about the practice of celebrity apologies. First, we should not trust celebrity apologies so easily. Second, even a good celebrity apology can still further harm victims. Third, celebrities should be wary of placing too much importance on their fame, as doing so can block their moral redemption. Fourth, the third moral danger also leads to celebrities being more likely to exacerbate the first two moral dangers.</p><p>There are wider lessons to learn from this discussion. I focus on three points here. First, these problems do not imply that we should ignore or completely reject celebrity apologies. Rather, they highlight that it is harder for celebrities <i>given their social position and associated powers</i> to give good public apologies and achieve moral redemption. One way to improve celebrity apologies might be for celebrities to enter into dialogue and negotiate with their victims, as Radzik and others propose (see Section 2). So, rather than seeing their apology as a monologue that draws a line under their earlier wrong, a celebrity should take their initial apology to be just one part of an overall process. Importantly, this requires more than just giving multiple apologies, as Will Smith did for slapping Chris Rock. And this might require only giving a private apology, such as the one Roman Polanski gave Samantha Geimer. Of course, private apologies just to victims will not have the same fan-appeasing function as publicly given fan-targeted apologies. Such apologies might also have their own moral dangers.</p><p>Second, while I have focused on well-known celebrity apologies and people who are arguably superstars, fame and celebrity are features of many areas of life. For example, small towns have local celebrities, and academic disciplines have superstars. Indeed, the advent of social media has made it easier for anyone to become a celebrity. This might be a domain specific fame, such as a famous academic tweeter. Such “micro-influencers” will have a small but still perhaps excessive epistemic power. This is something they might wield responsibly, but we must still question whether this is appropriate for anyone to have. Just as Archer et al. (<span>2020</span>) investigate the effect that celebrity epistemic power has on democracy, we might also investigate the effect that academic celebrity epistemic power has on academia and other areas of life.</p><p>Third, people are often motivated, at least in part, to apologize for their behavior because they wish to maintain their social position and associated powers. While I focused on being motivated to maintain one's fame in Sections 5 and 8, it is likely that any apology that is primarily or solely motivated by a person's desire to maintain her social position and associated powers will block that person achieving moral redemption. So, being primarily motivated to apologize to maintain one's social position is morally dangerous. This suggests that a condition on a morally good apology is that one is <i>not</i> primarily motivated to maintain one's social position, and perhaps one must even be willing to lose one's social position to an appropriate extent. If that is correct, celebrities ought to be willing to cease being famous if they actually wish to achieve moral redemption. Of course, being willing does not amount to not at all caring about continuing to be famous.</p><p>Each of these points merits further investigation. Philosophical investigations into fame not only help to illuminate a crucial aspect of contemporary life, but also help to shed light on other structurally similar social phenomenon.<sup>13</sup></p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":46756,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Social Philosophy\",\"volume\":\"56 1\",\"pages\":\"98-115\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.1000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-01-30\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/josp.12510\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Social Philosophy\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"98\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/josp.12510\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"哲学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"ETHICS\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Social Philosophy","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/josp.12510","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ETHICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
像大多数名人道歉一样,伍兹公开道歉。但他不只是向他直接冤枉的人道歉。他还向粉丝道歉。为什么明星有时会向粉丝道歉?为什么名人通常会公开道歉?在本文中,我首先考虑了三种可能的解释,为什么名人通常公开道歉,有时也把他们的粉丝作为他们道歉的目标。然后,我指出了名人道歉的三种道德危险,其中第三种是专门针对粉丝的道歉,每一种都给我们上了关于名人道歉实践的重要一课。从这些个人的教训中,我从那些社会地位较高的人那里得到了更多关于道歉的普遍教训。因此,虽然我最初关注的是名人和学习一个重要的和未被理论化的社会现象,但对名人道歉的调查旨在通过名人道歉作为案例研究来阐明一个更普遍的社会现象。在第二部分中,我主要借鉴Radzik(2009)的作品,概述了对道歉和救赎的描述。在第3节和第5节中,我考虑了三种可能的解释,为什么名人的道歉通常是针对粉丝的,也是公开的。因为我关注的是这种道歉,所以我把人们道歉的标准原因(例如,渴望弥补)放在一边,尽管我讨论了名人也受到这些其他原因激励的相关性。我考虑的第一个解释是,名人有纠正公众记录的动机。第二,我认为名人认为自己有榜样的义务。第三,名人的目标是维持他们的名声——也就是说,他们积极的名人地位——以及与之相关的权力。在第6、8节中,我指出了名人道歉的三种道德危险,然后总结出每种危险教给我们的关于名人道歉实践的教训。首先,通过公开道歉,名人可以使公众对他们的不当行为的叙述对他们有利。所以,我们有理由不相信名人的道歉。其次,即使他们没有让公众的叙述对他们有利,一个公开的名人道歉仍然可以剥夺受害者对自己生活叙述的控制权。所以,名人道歉会给受害者带来额外的伤害。第三,公开向粉丝道歉会阻碍名人获得我所说的道德救赎。所以,名人应该关心关心他们的名声比什么都重要。此外,第三种道德风险也有加剧前两种道德风险的风险。根据Linda Radzik(2009,第113页)的说法,救赎是“对错误行为的正确回应的最终状态”。她认为“当一个人被救赎时,他就有理由重新获得了自己的道德地位”(Radzik, 2009, p. 113)。在她看来,道德地位是“我们在道德共同体中获得的适当行为的尊重和信任程度”,我们应该在默认情况下得到一定程度的信任(Radzik, 2009, p. 82)。当我们做错事的时候,就表明我们不值得信任。当我们被救赎时,我们被认为是值得信赖的,从而重新获得了我们在道德共同体中的地位。Radzik借鉴了Karen Jones对信任的描述,根据该描述,信任是“一种乐观的态度,认为另一个人的善意和能力将扩展到我们与她互动的领域,同时期望被信任的人会被我们指望她的想法直接和有利地感动”(Jones, 1996,第4页;引自Radzik, 2009,第114页)。要理解她对救赎的描述,我们必须首先理解她对错误的描述。在Radzik看来,不当行为通过长期持续的侮辱和威胁来破坏人际关系(参见Murphy &;汉普顿,1988)。例如,一个孤独的小偷可能没有朋友或家人,但她可能仍然会破坏自己和他人之间的关系,以及她自己和道德社区之间的关系,因为她过去的错误使她持续威胁要从别人那里偷东西。因为她过去的行为传递了这样的信息,别人不会信任她,所以她的道德地位至少会降低。为了救赎自己,小偷必须消除这种威胁——也就是说,她必须停止过去发送这种信息的行为。一旦威胁被消除,小偷就值得和解——也就是说,她是这样的,她的受害者和道德社会应该与她和解。重要的是,消除威胁需要的不仅仅是罪犯的道德转变。道德转变仍然是促成和解的关键。通过在道德上改变自己,犯错的人变得值得信赖。然而,仅仅改变是不够的。 做错事的人要为自己道德地位的下降负责,所以他们有责任让别人知道他们已经改变了。换句话说,他们必须传达他们现在(或再次)是值得信赖的。因此,他们也必须传达他们的转变。最后,违法者必须满足他们因错误行为而产生的任何索赔。在这样做的过程中,犯错的人展示了他们的可信度。因此,为了获得和解并因此得到救赎,犯错者必须做三件事:(i)道德转变,(ii)传达这种转变,(iii)满足因错误行为而产生的任何索赔(Radzik, 2009,第85页)。道德转化具有向后和前瞻性的因素,Radzik (2009, p. 86)认为这等同于忏悔。改过自新的作恶者回顾自己的过错,以正确的眼光看待它们。这包括承认她对自己所做的事情的责任,相关行为的错误,她所违反的规范的权威,以及她不应该那样做。她也必须关心她的行为所产生的影响。这包括以正确的目标和适当的程度感受负面情绪,如内疚、悔恨、遗憾和羞耻。仅仅因为行为不当被发现而感到后悔的人,不会对正确的目标感到后悔。对重大错误感到轻微而短暂的悔恨的人感觉还不够糟糕。但是那些因为一个小错误而陷入自我憎恨的人就太过分了。简而言之,犯错的人应该正确地评估自己和他们的行为所造成的影响。转变后的犯错者也期待着未来的行为:她决心不再重复过去的错误,如果需要更多的改进,她会改善自己的性格,或者保持自己的性格改善。因为不法行为涉及表达性伤害——特别是对受害者和道德社区的威胁——不法行为者应该传达他们的道德转变——例如,通过道歉、说实话和承担补救工作(例如,护理和慈善工作)。Radzik并不认为任何一个都是值得道德和解的必要条件。相反,它们都是传达一个人道德转变的可能方式。哪种沟通方式是合适的,将取决于错误的细节和它所产生的影响。道歉是满足这种沟通要求的一种常见而重要的方式。道歉可以通过展示对受害者和社区的尊重,以及对自己早期错误的谦逊回应,明确地帮助抵消自己早期错误所发出的有害信息。做错事的人可以明确表示,他们对之前的错误负有责任,他们对错误感到适当的内疚,等等。然而,有时候做错事的人并没有将他们应该立即理解的事情概念化或理解。出于这个原因,Radzik赞同这样一种观点,即道歉通常是犯错者与受害者/社区之间的谈判(参见Battistella, 2014;来到2005;预告,2014;史密斯,2008)。通过这种协商,犯错者的内疚、后悔、羞耻和悔恨的感觉,以及她对未来行为的承诺,可以变得更加准确和清晰。简而言之,公开道歉具有公共记录设置功能,可以向那些与受害者有类似错误的人发出尊重的信息(另见MacLachlan, 2014, 2018;史密斯,2008)。如果道歉满足了“应得的和解”的沟通要求,就算是道德上好的道歉。这样的道歉也可以帮助满足犯错者因错误行为而招致的一些索赔——比如修复对受害者名誉造成的任何损害。做错事的人必须满足她因错误行为而招致的任何索赔,这样他们才能纠正自己的错误,但这也有一个最初的好处,那就是沟通他们的转变和重新获得信任。虽然Radzik (2009, p. 84)认为某些错误是无法容忍的,犯错的人随后不可能得到完全的和解,但她认为犯错的人通常可以为他们过去的错误赎罪。重要的是,救赎的所有方面都可能是虚假的、误导的或非法的。我们可以相信一个狡猾的道歉,或者相信某人已经改变了,并再次信任他们,即使他们没有改变,也不值得信任。即使我们仍然不信任他们,其他人也会认为做错事的人再次拥有完全的道德地位。简而言之,我们可能会错误地认为某人已经赎罪,即使他们实际上并不值得和解。当然,这不是真正的救赎,而只是表面上的救赎。为了区分这两种类型的救赎,我们称前者为道德救赎,后者为公共救赎。 现在让我们来考虑一下为什么名人道歉有时既针对粉丝,又公开发表的三种可能解释中的第一种。这是因为名人有动机纠正公众记录。例如,喜剧演员Louis CK(2017)在他为在初级同事面前手淫道歉时说:“这些故事是真的”,这反映了他明确努力纠正公众记录。他认为,他受到广泛钦佩的事实是指控他的人不被相信的原因。当一个作恶者受到广泛钦佩时,这可能会导致作恶者的受害者受到某种形式的证词不公正(阿切尔&;Matheson, 2019, 2021)。证词不公正的标准案例关注的是一个人因其身份特征而被判断为比她更不可信(Fricker, 2007),而这种形式涉及到一个受害者被视为比她更不可信,因为她与一个拥有过度认知可信度的犯错者相矛盾——也就是说,犯错者被认为比他们应该被相信的更多。正如我在第5节中讨论的那样,名人可以在应该被相信的时候让别人失去信任,这一事实意味着名人不仅具有过度的认知可信度,而且具有过度的认知权力。CK似乎意识到他有这样的权力。因为他有能力阻止他的受害者被相信,他可能觉得他应该使用同样的权力,这样他的受害者就会被相信。建立公开记录通常是道德上值得赞扬的道歉动机——例如,当一个人对自己所犯的错误建立了准确和可核实的记录时。然而,并非总是如此。想想一个坏人,他被激励去纠正公众的记录,以便公众知道他所做的一切坏事。他们可以通过不真诚的道歉来做到这一点,或者干脆大胆地陈述他们所做的事情。虽然这种动机在道德上并不总是值得赞扬的,但它仍然经常是值得赞扬的。名人的道歉在道德上是好的,也不一定是出于纠正公众记录的动机。一个名人的道歉,如果只是出于通常的道歉动机(例如,渴望弥补),在道德上是值得赞扬的。例如,被罗曼·波兰斯基下药并强奸的萨曼莎·盖默(2013年,第291页)说,波兰斯基给她写了一封私下的书面道歉信。波兰斯基的道歉很可能在道德上是好的,尽管他没有公开道歉。纠正公众记录有助于解释为什么名人通常会公开道歉。通过公开道歉,名人承认了他们被指控的行为。然而,这种动机并不能明显解释为什么名人的道歉有时也是针对粉丝的。我们必须到别处去寻找这样的解释。第二种可能的解释是,为什么名人的道歉有时是针对粉丝的,有时是公开的,这是因为名人认为自己有榜样的义务,他们只能通过既针对粉丝又公开的道歉来满足这一义务。几位作者调查了名人——尤其是运动员——是否有榜样义务(例如,fezell, 2005;Spurgin, 2012;Wellman, 2003;约克,阿切尔,2020)。这个想法是,因为名人占据着特权地位,他们有特殊的义务去树立良好的行为榜样。当他们做错事时,这样的榜样比做同样错误的人受到更大的指责。例如,一个使用种族歧视言论的著名运动员比一个同样使用种族歧视言论的普通人犯下更多的错误。两人都因使用种族歧视言论而受到指责,但这位著名运动员也因没有树立良好的行为榜样而受到指责。关于榜样义务有很多争议。一些人认为,名人不是表面上好的榜样,因此不能被认为有榜样义务(例如,fezell, 2005)。其他人则认为,由于这些义务侵犯了个人的隐私权,因此只能通过同意来获得这些义务(例如,Spurgin, 2012)。名人是否有模范义务并不影响我现在的观点。更重要的是,名人相信他们有榜样的义务,因为这可能解释了为什么他们有时会向粉丝道歉,并在公开场合为自己的错误道歉。这一点在老虎伍兹身上表现得尤为明显。他在道歉中明确地将自己定位为一个榜样,然后在此基础上向他的粉丝道歉。因此,很明显,伍兹认为自己违反了一个榜样的义务,他的违规行为需要向那些他应该为之树立良好行为榜样的人道歉。因为他不可能单独向每个粉丝道歉,所以他公开道歉是有道理的。 事实上,正是通过他的公开行为,他成为了一个榜样,所以伍兹公开道歉更有意义。这种向粉丝道歉和在公众场合道歉的动机在道德上是值得赞扬的:不管名人是否真的有榜样义务,名人承认他们有能力影响他人的行为,然后采取额外的措施试图阻止他们的错误对他人造成严重影响,这是一件好事。她向粉丝道歉,因为粉丝们抱怨她上传到TikTok上的一个护肤视频模仿了海莉·比伯最近上传的一个类似视频。虽然她直接向粉丝道歉,但戈麦斯并没有声称自己有榜样的义务。因此,并非所有以粉丝为目标的、公开的名人道歉都是出于名人认为自己违反了榜样义务的动机。现在让我们来考虑第三种可能的解释,为什么名人的道歉有时是针对粉丝的,并且是公开的。也就是说,名人做出这样的道歉只是为了或主要是为了维持他们的名声——也就是说,他们积极的名人地位——以及与之相关的权力。接下来,我将首先解释名人如何(在很大程度上)依赖于他们的粉丝和潜在粉丝来获得他们的社会地位和相关权力。然后,我将论证,这种依赖有助于解释为什么名人的道歉有时既是针对粉丝的,也是公开的。最后,我认为,如果这是名人道歉的唯一动机,那么它显然是一种道德上应受谴责的动机。此外,即使名人道歉有其他动机,如果他们更关心保持自己的名声,他们道歉的整体动机在道德上是应该受到谴责的。在这一节和下一节中,我将探讨名人公开道歉所带来的道德风险。在第8部分,我考虑了一种道德危险,这种危险是针对粉丝的、公开的名人道歉所特有的。第三种道德危险很重要,因为正如我所讨论的,它会进一步加剧前两种道德危险。我现在要说的是,名人公开道歉可能在道德上是危险的,因为他们会以一种有利于他们的方式,围绕名人的行为展开公众叙事。首先考虑名人不仅仅拥有认知能力。他们有时有制定议程的权力。因为所有的注意力都集中在他在担任总统之前和期间所说的话上,特朗普有能力设定议程,不管他是被爱还是被恨。通过能够对新闻和政治话题产生强大的影响力,特朗普能够影响听到他讲话的人,以及可能成为他的粉丝或仇恨者的人。正如他曾经的新闻秘书所说,“无论(特朗普)发什么推文,都会推动新闻的发展”(引自Archer et al., 2020)。Archer等人(2020年,第31页)认为议程设定权力是认知权力的一部分,但有充分的理由认为它是一种独特的权力。认识论权力受受众情绪和态度的影响,议程设定权力则不受影响。例如,特朗普有制定议程的权力,不管人们是爱他还是恨他。事实上,制定议程的权力并不取决于我们有多相信一个名人,也不取决于她能在多大程度上使他人发挥认知影响。然而,一个名人对一个人的认知能力是积极的还是消极的,取决于这个人在情感上和态度上是如何看待这个名人的——例如,他们是粉丝、讨厌者、潜在的粉丝、潜在的讨厌者,还是介于两者之间。虽然认知力和议程设置力是不同的,但积极认知力和议程设置力可以同时使用,效果更大。一个人可能会把人们的想法框定下来,同时给这个框定增添可信度。这种积极认知能力和议程设定能力的结合,对名人在回应自己的错误时尤其有用。这种配对可以产生我所说的叙事设定能力。这与议程设定权相关,但又有重要区别。议程设定权是决定或帮助决定讨论内容的权力。叙事设定能力是决定或帮助决定如何谈论某件事的能力。例如,老板有权设定工作场所谈论的话题——例如,哪些项目必须进行。但是,仅仅因为老板可以设定谈话的议程,并不意味着他们可以影响员工对这些事情的看法——例如,项目的重要性。当然,boss也有设定故事的权力。 他们可能很有魅力,或者有说服力的论据来支持他们的观点,所以员工们可以分享老板的态度,例如,项目的重要性。有时,叙事设定的权力可以用来否认名人的不法行为,反过来,即使只是含蓄地,也可以用来贬低指控者。例如,一个名人可能会吸引人们的普遍看法,即指控者的动机纯粹是出于经济原因或情感原因,比如嫉妒。但它也可以用在名人道歉中。道歉者可能会试图以一种他们希望对自己有利的方式来围绕他们的错误进行叙述。凯文·史派西(Kevin Spacey)对安东尼·拉普(Anthony Rapp)的道歉提供了一个有启发性的例子,说明名人的叙事设定能力可能会失败。拉普指控史派西在他14岁时对他进行性侵犯。在向拉普发表了有条件的道歉(“如果我的行为确实如他所描述的那样,我欠他一个最诚挚的道歉,因为我的酒后行为是非常不恰当的”)之后;史派西,2017),史派西去宣布他是一个同性恋者,这是一件被广泛猜测但从未被史派西证实的事情。这似乎是一个明显的尝试,用他的“道歉”来围绕他的(可能的)错误,以一种有利于他的方式进行叙述。我认为,史派西的行为(如果真的发生了)是他作为一个未出柜的男同性恋者生活的结果,以及当史派西被指控向拉普提出要求时,周围社会对同性恋的压力要大得多。史派西的道歉之所以失败,部分原因是他充其量是有条件的道歉(或许更准确地说,是有条件地承认有责任道歉),还有部分原因是他的叙事设定力没有发挥作用。然而,叙事设定的力量并不总是以这种方式失效。比如,想想Louis CK的道歉。就其本身而言,他的道歉似乎在道德上是好的:它显得谦卑,适当地悔恨,它承认了错误,它表明他关心他的错误对受害者的影响,等等但也有可能是,这个道歉故意试图达到所有正确的程度,让人觉得它是一个道德上好的道歉。CK可能不会使用认知能力的语言,但他含蓄地承认自己拥有这种能力。他似乎还关注了更有可能让道歉被接受的因素——也就是说,关注受害者和他们所经历的痛苦,关注自己因让受害者遭受痛苦而感到多么羞愧,以及概述自己已经采取或将采取哪些步骤来弥补(见Cerulo &;之后,2014年)。虽然CK的道歉关注的是受害者,但他的救赎可能也有一个微妙的框架:他感觉真的很糟糕,他已经看到了自己的错误。当然,他的道歉仍然带有道德上良好的道歉的许多特征。道歉当然很难,更不用说犯错的人回心转意了,因为这是道德上好的道歉所需要的。但事实是,作为一个能接触到公共关系专家的名人,他能帮助他加强叙事设定的能力,却能做出这样一个让他看起来如此受欢迎的道歉,这应该让我们三思而后行。再一次,也许他的道歉有点太好了。也许因为CK的道歉表现得很好,按照道德上好的道歉的典型评价标准,我们会被引诱接受CK的道歉是如何解释他和他的受害者的,尤其是他是一个试图救赎自己的人。当然,这有点投机。当叙事设定的力量被很好地运用时,我们不太可能意识到它的影响。我们可能不会立即意识到,我们更多地关注的是作恶者希望得到救赎,而不是受害者和他们所遭受的错误。在某些情况下,名人的叙事设定力甚至可能帮助他们误解错误的程度,他们真正想要救赎自己的程度,等等。我们可能会了解到一个略微扭曲的事件版本,这有助于名人看起来比他们更好。叙事设定权力在道德上是危险的,因为这意味着拥有这种权力的人可以在社会想象中对错误和自己建立一种不准确的印象,即使他们实际上没有行使这种权力。我们从中得到的教训是,由于名人通常具有叙事设定的力量,我们有理由对名人公开道歉持怀疑态度。名人公开道歉的第二个道德风险是我所说的叙事权力剥夺——也就是说,阻碍或剥夺了一个人对自己生活叙事的控制。被冤枉是一种叙事上的权力剥夺。一个人成为受害者,然后很难避免被看到,并把自己视为受害者。 当然,正如我在第5节中所讨论的,我们经常出于多种原因采取行动。名人可能会为了维持自己的名声或其他原因而道歉。如果其他原因在道德上是值得赞扬的,这有时会削弱保持名声的动机的害处。然而,正如我在第5节中所说,一个人对某一特定行为的整体动机的道德价取决于构成该动机集的动机的结构。结论是,仅仅因为名人有一些道德上值得赞扬的道歉动机,并不意味着他们的道歉在道德上是好的。同样,名人的道歉动机在道德上是值得称赞的,但这并不意味着他们应该谦虚。如果一个名人更关心维持他们的名声,他们更关心自己,而不是他们所做的,例如,纠正他们给受害者带来的伤害。这不是一个谦虚的人会做的事。因此,名人不会仅仅通过一些道德上值得赞扬的道歉动机来避免这种道德危险。重要的是他们赋予这些动机多大的重要性;重要的是他们更关心什么。当名人更关心维护自己的名声时,他们发出的任何道歉都是道德上的不合格,他们将无法获得道德上的救赎。当这种动机更多地来自于维护自己的名声时,为了维护自己的名声而道歉在道德上是危险的。对于名人来说,这里有一个教训:他们应该警惕过于重视自己的名声,不要被自己的名声所诱惑和消耗。这也给其他人上了一课:当一个名人更关心自己的名声时,他们有更大的动机利用他们的道歉来让公众对他们有利,因为这将有助于他们维持自己的粉丝,从而保持他们的名声;名人也不会太在意在叙事上剥夺受害者的权力。如果对他们来说,最终重要的是保持自己的名声,那么名人可以很容易地掩盖他们必须向受害者道歉和赔罪的道德理由。当一个名人道歉的主要动机是为了维持他们的名声时,这不仅在道德上是危险的(因为它会阻止名人获得道德救赎),而且在道德上也是危险的,因为它使他们更有可能不关心公开向受害者道歉的前两个道德危险。所以,当名人把自己的名声看得比什么都重要时,这对他们的受害者和我们来说,在道德上也是危险的。在本文中,我首先考虑了三种解释为什么名人向粉丝和公开道歉。然后,我指出了名人道歉带来的三种道德风险。然后,我就名人道歉的做法总结出了四条教训。首先,我们不应该轻易相信名人的道歉。其次,即使是一个好的名人道歉也会进一步伤害受害者。第三,名人应该警惕过于重视他们的名声,因为这样做会阻碍他们的道德救赎。第四,第三种道德危险也导致名人更有可能加剧前两种道德危险。我们可以从这一讨论中学到更广泛的教训。我在这里着重谈三点。首先,这些问题并不意味着我们应该忽略或完全拒绝名人的道歉。相反,他们强调,鉴于名人的社会地位和相关权力,他们更难做出良好的公开道歉,并实现道德救赎。正如Radzik和其他人所建议的那样,改善名人道歉的一种方法可能是让名人与受害者进行对话和协商(见第2节)。因此,与其将他们的道歉视为为他们先前的错误划一条线的独白,名人应该将他们最初的道歉视为整个过程的一部分。重要的是,这需要的不仅仅是多次道歉,就像威尔·史密斯打了克里斯·洛克那样。这可能只需要私下道歉,就像罗曼·波兰斯基(Roman Polanski)向萨曼莎·盖默(Samantha Geimer)道歉那样。当然,私下向受害者道歉不会像公开向粉丝道歉那样起到安抚粉丝的作用。这样的道歉也可能存在道德风险。其次,虽然我关注的是知名名人的道歉和那些可以说是超级明星的人,但名声和名人是生活中许多领域的特征。例如,小城镇有当地的名人,学术领域有超级明星。事实上,社交媒体的出现让任何人都更容易成为名人。这可能是一个特定领域的名声,比如一个著名的学术推特。这样的“微影响者”将拥有一种虽小但可能仍然过度的认知力量。 这是他们可能会负责任地使用的东西,但我们仍然必须质疑这对任何人来说是否合适。正如Archer等人(2020)研究名人认知力对民主的影响一样,我们也可以研究学术名人认知力对学术界和其他生活领域的影响。第三,人们通常(至少在一定程度上)有动机为自己的行为道歉,因为他们希望保持自己的社会地位和相关权力。虽然我在第5节和第8节集中讨论了维持名誉的动机,但很可能任何道歉主要或完全是出于一个人维持其社会地位和相关权力的愿望,将阻碍这个人获得道德救赎。因此,道歉主要是为了维护自己的社会地位,这在道德上是危险的。这表明,道德上好的道歉的一个条件是,一个人的主要动机不是维持自己的社会地位,也许他甚至必须愿意在适当程度上失去自己的社会地位。如果这是正确的,那么名人如果真的希望获得道德上的救赎,就应该愿意停止成名。当然,愿意并不等于完全不关心继续出名。以上每一点都值得进一步研究。对名誉的哲学研究不仅有助于阐明当代生活的一个重要方面,而且也有助于阐明其他结构上类似的社会现象
Fame and redemption: On the moral dangers of celebrity apologies
Like most celebrity apologies, Woods offered his apology publicly. But he did not just apologize to those he directly wronged. He also apologized to his fans.
Why do celebrities sometimes apologize to their fans? Why do celebrities typically publicly apologize? In this paper, I first consider three possible explanations for why celebrities typically apologize publicly and sometimes also include their fans among the targets of their apology. I then identify three moral dangers of celebrity apologies, the third of which arises specifically for fan-targeted apologies, and each of which teaches us important lessons about the practice of celebrity apologies. From these individual lessons, I draw more general lessons about apologies from those with elevated social positions. So, while my initial focus is on celebrities and on learning about an important and undertheorized social phenomenon, this investigation into celebrity apologies aims to illuminate a more general social phenomenon by using celebrity apologies as a case study.
In Section 2, I outline an account of apology and redemption, drawing primarily on Radzik's (2009) work. In Sections 3, 5, I consider three possible explanations for why celebrities apologies are often both fan-targeted and publicly given. Because my focus is on such apologies, I set aside standard reasons for why people might apologize (e.g., a desire to make amends), though I discuss the relevance of celebrities also being motivated by these other reasons. The first explanation I consider is that celebrities are motivated to set the public record straight. The second I consider is that celebrities see themselves as having role model obligations. And the third is that celebrities aim to maintain their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers.
In Sections 6, 8, I then identify three moral dangers of celebrity apologies and then draw out lessons each danger teaches us about the practice of celebrity apologies. First, by apologizing publicly celebrities can set the public narrative about their misdeed in their favor. So, we have reason not to trust celebrity apologies. Second, even when they do not set the public narrative in their favor, a publicly given celebrity apology can still function to disempower the victim from having control over their own life narrative. So, celebrity apologies can present an additional harm to victims. Third, publicly given fan-targeted apologies block a celebrity from, what I will call, moral redemption. So, celebrities ought to be concerned about caring about their fame more than anything else. Additionally, the third moral danger also risks exacerbating the first two moral dangers.
According to Linda Radzik (2009, p. 113), redemption is the “proper end state of responses to wrongdoing.” She holds that “When one is redeemed, one has justifiably regained one's moral standing” (Radzik, 2009, p. 113). On her view, moral standing is “the degree of esteem and trust to conduct oneself appropriately that we merit with the moral community” and we ought to be trusted to a particular degree by default (Radzik, 2009, p. 82). When we act wrongly, we demonstrate that we are not that trustworthy. When we are redeemed, we are seen to be trustworthy and thus have regained our standing within the moral community. Radzik draws on Karen Jones's account of trust according to which trust is “an attitude of optimism that the goodwill and competence of another will extend to cover the domain of our interaction with her, together with the expectation that the one trusted will be directly and favorably moved by the thought that we are counting on her” (Jones, 1996, p. 4; cited in Radzik, 2009, p. 114).
To understand her account of redemption, we must first appreciate her account of wrongdoing. On Radzik's view, wrongdoing damages relationships through presenting insults and threats that persist over time (see also Murphy & Hampton, 1988). For example, a solitary thief may have no friends or family, but she might still damage possible relationships between herself and others, and herself and the moral community, through her past wrongs grounding the persistent threat that she will steal from others. Because her past actions send this message, others will not trust her and so her moral standing is at least diminished. To redeem herself, the thief must therefore remove this threat—that is, she must stop her past action sending such messages. Once the threat is removed, the thief merits reconciliation—that is, she is such that her victims and the moral community ought to reconcile with her. Importantly, removing threats requires more than just the wrongdoer morally transforming.
Moral transformation is still crucial for meriting reconciliation. By morally transforming herself, the wrongdoer becomes trustworthy. However, merely being transformed is not enough. Wrongdoers are responsible for their own diminished moral standing, so they are responsible for letting others know they have changed. In other words, they must communicate that they are now (or again) trustworthy. So, they must also communicate their transformation. Finally, the wrongdoer must meet any claims they have incurred through acting wrongly. In doing so, the wrongdoer demonstrates their trustworthiness. Thus, to merit reconciliation and thereby be redeemed, a wrongdoer must do three things: (i) morally transform, (ii) communicate that transformation, and (iii) meet any claims incurred through acting wrongly (Radzik, 2009, p. 85).
Moral transformation has backward- and forward-looking elements, which Radzik (2009, p. 86) takes to be tantamount to repentance. The transformed wrongdoer looks back at her wrongs and sees them in the proper light. This involves acknowledging her responsibility for what she has done, the wrongness of the relevant acts, the authority of the norms she violated, and that she should not have acted as she did. She must also care about the effect her actions have had. This involves feeling negative emotions, such as guilt, remorse, regret, and shame, with the right target and to an appropriate extent. The person who feels regret just because they have been caught acting wrongly does not feel regret with the right target. The person who feels slightly and briefly remorseful for a significant wrong does not feel bad enough. But the person who spirals into self-hatred for a minor wrong takes things too far. In short, wrongdoers ought to assess themselves and the impact their actions have had correctly. The transformed wrongdoer also looks forward to future behavior: she resolves not to repeat her past wrongs, to improve her character if more improvement is required, or to maintain her character improvements.
Because wrongdoing involves expressive harms—in particular, threats to victims and the moral community—wrongdoers ought to communicate their moral transformation—for example, by apologizing, truth telling, and undertaking reparative work (e.g., care and charity work). Radzik does not hold that any are essential to meriting moral reconciliation. Rather, they are all possible ways to communicate one's moral transformation. Which forms of communication are appropriate will depend on the details of the wrong and the impact it has had.
Apologies are a common and important way to meet this communication requirement. An apology can explicitly help to counter the harmful messages that one's earlier wrongs sent by demonstrating one's respect for the victims and community, as well as one's humility in response to one's earlier wrongs. Wrongdoers can make explicit that they are responsible for an earlier wrong, that they feel appropriately bad about the wrong, and so on. However, sometimes wrongdoers do not conceptualize or understand everything they ought to understand immediately. For this reason, Radzik endorses the view that apologies are often a negotiation between wrongdoer and victim/community (see also Battistella, 2014; Lazare, 2005; MacLachlan, 2014; Smith, 2008). Through this negotiation, a wrongdoer's feelings of guilt, regret, shame, and remorse, as well as her commitments for future behavior, can become more accurate and articulate.
In short, public apologies have a public record setting function and can send a message of respect to those subject to similar wrongs as the victim (see also MacLachlan, 2014, 2018; Smith, 2008).
If an apology serves the communication requirement of merited reconciliation, it counts as a morally good apology. Such an apology can also help to meet some of the claims the wrongdoer incurred in acting wrongly—such as repairing any damage done to the victim's reputation. A wrongdoer must meet any claims she has incurred through acting wrongly just so that they rectify their wrong, but this also has the initial benefit of communicating their transformation and renewed trustworthiness. While Radzik (2009, p. 84) holds that certain wrongs are beyond the pale and the wrongdoer cannot ever subsequently merit full reconciliation, she believes that wrongdoers often can atone for their past wrongs.
Importantly, all aspects of redemption can be feigned, misleading, or otherwise illicit. We can fall for a dodgy apology or believe someone has changed and trust them again, even though they have not changed and are not trustworthy. Even if we still distrust them, others can come to think that the wrongdoer has full moral standing again. In short, we can mistakenly believe someone has redeemed even though they do not in fact merit reconciliation. This, of course, is not genuine redemption, but rather a merely apparent redemption. To mark the distinction between these two types of redemption, call the former moral redemption and the latter public redemption.
Let us now turn to consider the first of three possible explanations for why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and given publicly. This is that celebrities are motivated to set the public record straight. For example, in his apology for masturbating in front of junior colleagues, comedian Louis CK (2017) begins by saying “These stories are true” which reflects a clear effort to set the public record straight.
He identifies the fact he was widely admired as a reason why his accusers were not believed. When a wrongdoer is widely admired, this can lead to a form of testimonial injustice for the wrongdoer's victims (Archer & Matheson, 2019, 2021). Unlike standard cases of testimonial injustice that focus on a person being judged to be less epistemically credible than she is because of features of her identity (Fricker, 2007), this form involves a victim being seen as less epistemically credible than she is because she contradicts a wrongdoer who has excessive epistemic credibility—that is, the wrongdoer is believed more than they ought to be. As I discuss in Section 5, the fact a celebrity can disable others from being believed when they ought to be believed means the celebrity has not only excessive epistemic credibility, but also excessive epistemic power. CK seems aware he has such power. Because he had the power to stop his victims being believed, he might have felt he ought to wield that same power so that his victims would now be believed.
Setting the public record is often a morally commendable motivation for apologizing—for example, when a person establishes an accurate and verifiable record of what wrongs they committed. However, it is not always. Consider an evil person who is motivated to set the public record straight so that the public know all the wicked things they have done. They could do this through an insincere apology, or simply by boldly stating what they have done. While this motivation is not always morally commendable, it remains that it often is.
Being motivated to set the public record straight is also not necessary for a celebrity apology to be a morally good one. A celebrity apology that was just motivated by usual motives for apologizing (e.g., a desire to make amends) could be morally commendable. For example, Samantha Geimer (2013, p. 291), who was drugged and raped by Roman Polanski, says that Polanski offered her a written private apology. Polanski's apology might well be a morally good one even though he did not offer it publicly.1
Correcting the public record helps to explain why celebrity apologies are typically publicly given. By giving the apology publicly, a celebrity acknowledges what they have been accused of doing. However, this motivation does not obviously explain why celebrity apologies are also sometimes fan-targeted. We must look elsewhere for such an explanation.
The second possible explanation for why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and publicly given is that celebrities see themselves as having role model obligation that they can only meet by providing an apology that is both fan-targeted and given publicly.
Several authors have investigated whether celebrities—with a particular focus on athletes—have role model obligations (e.g., Feezell, 2005; Spurgin, 2012; Wellman, 2003; Yorke & Archer, 2020). The idea is that because celebrities occupy a privileged position, they have a special obligation to model good behavior. When they act wrongly, such role models incur greater blame than a person who performs a type-identical wrong. For example, a famous athlete who uses racial slurs is blameworthy for more wrongs than an ordinary person who also uses racial slurs. Both are blameworthy for using racial slurs, but the famous athlete is also blameworthy for not modeling good behavior.
There is a lot of controversy about role model obligation. Some argue that celebrities are not prima facie good role models, and so cannot be thought to have role model obligations (e.g., Feezell, 2005). Others argue that because these obligations violate a person's right to privacy, such obligations can only be acquired by consent (e.g., Spurgin, 2012).
Whether celebrities have role model obligations does not affect my present point. Rather, it is only important that celebrities believe they have role model obligations because this may explain why they sometimes apologize to their fans and in public for their wrongs. This is especially clear in the case of Tiger Woods. He explicitly identifies himself as a role model in his apology, and then apologies to his fans on that basis. It is clear, then, that Woods takes himself to have violated a role model obligation and that his violation calls for an apology to those to whom he was supposed to be modeling good behavior. Because he cannot feasibly apologize to each fan individually, it makes sense that he gave his apology publicly to reach all his fans. Indeed, it is through his public behavior that he is a role model, so it makes even more sense that Woods would apologize publicly.
This motivation for apologizing to one's fans and in public is a morally commendable one: regardless of whether celebrities do in fact have role model obligations, it is a good thing that celebrities acknowledge they have the power to influence the behavior of others and that they then take extra steps to try to stop their wrongs from badly influencing others.
She issued this apology to her fans after they complained that a skincare routine video she uploaded to TikTok mocked a similar one that Hailey Bieber had recently uploaded. While she directs her apology to her fans, Gomez makes no claims about having role model obligations. So, not all fan-targeted and publicly given celebrity apologies are motivated by the celebrity's belief that they have violated a role model obligation.
Let us now consider a third possible explanation for why celebrity apologies are sometimes fan-targeted and publicly given. This is that celebrities offer such apologies simply or primarily to maintain their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers. In what follows, I will first explain how celebrities depend (to a significant extent) on their fans and potential fans for their social position and associated powers. I will then argue that this dependence helps to explain why celebrity apologies are sometimes both fan-targeted and publicly given. Finally, I argue that if this is a celebrity's sole motivation for apologizing, it is clearly a morally blameworthy motivation. Moreover, even if the celebrity has other motivations for apologizing, if they care about maintaining their fame more than anything else, their overall set of motivations for apologizing is morally blameworthy.
In this and the next section, I consider moral dangers that arise from celebrity apologies being publicly given. In Section 8, I consider a moral danger unique to fan-targeted and publicly given celebrity apologies. This third moral danger is important because, as I discuss, it can further exacerbate the first two moral dangers. I will now argue that publicly given celebrity apologies can be morally dangerous because they can set the public narrative around the celebrity's behavior in a way that is favorable to them.9
Consider first how celebrities do not just have epistemic power. They sometimes have agenda setting power. Because of all the attention paid to the things he said before and during his Presidency, Trump had the power to set the agenda about what got spoken about regardless of whether he was loved or hated. Through being able to have strong influence over what gets talked about in the news and in politics, Trump was able to influence who heard him and potentially who might become a fan or a hater. As his one-time press secretary said, “Whatever [Trump] tweets is going to drive the news” (cited in Archer et al., 2020).
Archer et al. (2020, p. 31) consider agenda setting power to be part of epistemic power, but there is good reason to consider it a distinct power. While epistemic power is influenced by the emotions and attitudes of the audience, agenda setting power is not. For example, Trump had agenda setting power over people whether they loved or hated him. Indeed, agenda setting power does not depend on how much we are likely to believe a celebrity or the extent to which she can enable or disable others from exerting epistemic influence. Whereas whether a celebrity has positive or negative epistemic power with respect to a person rather depends on how this person is emotionally and attitudinally orientated toward the celebrity—for example, whether they are fans, haters, potential fans, potential haters, or somewhere in-between. While epistemic power and agenda setting power are distinct, positive epistemic power and agenda setting power can be used in tandem to greater effect. One might frame what people think about while also lending credibility to that framing.
This pairing of positive epistemic power and agenda setting power is especially useful for celebrities in responding to their own wrongs. This pairing can lead to what I will call narrative setting power. This is related to but important different from agenda setting power. Agenda setting power is the power to determine, or help to determine, what gets talked about. Narrative setting power is the power to determine, or help to determine, how something gets talked about. For example, a boss has the power to set the agenda about what gets talked about in their workplace—for example, what projects must be worked on. But just because the boss can set the agenda about what gets talked about, it does not mean they can influence how their workers think about those things—for example, how important the project is. Of course, a boss can also have narrative setting power. They might be charismatic or have persuasive arguments in favor of their view, and so workers can come to share the boss's attitude about, for example, the importance of the project.
Sometimes narrative setting power can be used to deny a celebrity's wrongdoing, and in turn, even if only implicitly, to disparage the accusers. For example, a celebrity might appeal to the common idea that accusers are motivated purely for financial reasons or emotional reasons, such as jealousy. But it can also be used in a celebrity apology. An apologizer might try to frame the narrative around their wrong in a way they hope is favorable to them.
Kevin Spacey's apology to Anthony Rapp provides an instructive example of how a celebrity's narrative setting power can misfire. Rapp accused Spacey of making a sexual advance when Rapp was 14. After issuing his conditional apology to Rapp (“if I did behave then as he describes, I owe him the sincerest apology for what would have been deeply inappropriate drunken behavior”; Spacey, 2017), Spacey went to announce that he was a gay man, something that had been widely speculated about but never confirmed by Spacey. This seems like a clear attempt to use his “apology” to set the narrative around his (possible) wrong in a way that favors him. I take the suggestion to be that Spacey's behavior (if it happened) was the result of having lived as a closeted gay man and the surrounding societal pressures with respect to homosexuality that were much stronger when Spacey is alleged to have propositioned Rapp. Spacey's apology failed in part because it was at best a conditional apology (and perhaps more accurately a conditional acknowledgement of a duty to apologize), and also in part because his narrative setting power misfired.
However, narrative setting power does not always misfire in this way. Consider, for example, Louis CK's apology. In and of itself, his apology appears to be morally good: it appears humble, appropriately remorseful, it identifies the wrongs, it suggests he cares about the effect his wrongs have on his victims, and so on.10 But it could also be that this apology is deliberately trying to hit all the right notes to appear as if it is a morally good apology. CK may not use the language of epistemic power, but he implicitly admits to having such power. He also seems to have focused on elements that are more likely to get one's apology accepted—namely, ones that focus on the victim and the suffering they have undergone, on how mortified one is from having made the victim suffer, and outlining what steps one has taken, or will take, to make amends (see Cerulo & Ruane, 2014).
While CK's apology focuses on the victim, there is perhaps also a subtle framing about his redemption: he feels really bad, and he has seen the error of his ways. Of course, his apology still bears many of the hallmarks of a morally good apology. It is certainly hard for an apology not the mention the wrongdoer's change of heart, as this is something that a morally good apology requires. But the fact he—a celebrity with access to public relations experts that can help him intensify his narrative setting power—manages to provide such an apology that makes him look so favorable is something that should give us pause. Again, perhaps his apology is a bit too good. And perhaps by appearing so good, by typical evaluative standards of a morally good apology, we are lured into accepting how CK's apology construes him and his victims, and in particular on him as a person who is trying to redeem himself.
This is somewhat speculative, of course. When narrative setting power is used well, we are unlikely to be aware of its effects. We might not immediately realize that we are focusing more on the wrongdoer's hoped for redemption than on the victim and the wrongs they have suffered. In some cases, the celebrity's narrative setting power might even help them misconstrue the extent of the wrong, the extent to which they truly want to redeem themselves, and so on. We may learn a slightly twisted version of events that helps the celebrity appear better than they are. Narrative setting power is morally dangerous because it means those who have it can establish an inaccurate impression of the wrong and of themselves in social imagination, even if they do not actually exercise that power. The lesson we learn from this is that because celebrities often have narrative setting power, we have reason to be suspicious of publicly given celebrity apologies.
A second moral danger with publicly given celebrity apologies is what I call narrative disempowerment—that is, hindering or removing a person's control over their own life narrative. Being wronged is one kind of narrative disempowerment. A person becomes a victim, and it is often then hard to avoid being seen and seeing oneself as a victim. While we cannot have total control over our life narratives, an important source of meaningfulness in life is the control we can exercise about how our life narratives go (Fischer, 2009); narrative disempowerment therefore lessens the meaningfulness of a person's life. Through apologizing in way that subtly sets the narrative around the wrong in a way that favors the wrongdoer, a wrongdoer further narratively disempowers the victim, who now has even less control over how she and others understand her life story. I consider two forms of narrative disempowerment in what follows.
The first form arises because celebrities typically have greater narrative setting power than their victims. Even if a celebrity does not set the narrative in her favor, the fact she could means the celebrity possesses the power in this situation. It is thanks to the celebrity that a victim's side of the story might be heard and believed. It is not because of the victim's testimony in and of itself. So even when a celebrity does not set the public narrative surrounding the wrong in her favor, the fact the celebrity helps to establish the public narrative about, and the public record of, the wrong still involves narratively disempowering the victim. The victim has to hope for the celebrity's co-operation or else they will not be able to combat the celebrity's narrative setting power. Because of the celebrity's greater narrative setting power, the victim's power to set the narrative around what has happened to them is always at risk of being undermined.
The second form of narrative disempowerment arises because a celebrity apology can place more emphasis on the celebrity, even when it is an otherwise good apology. The celebrity's apology will likely draw more attention to the wrongdoer than the victim. The victim, then, becomes a supporting character in their own story.11 A celebrity apology can draw more attention to the celebrity so that, even if the account is accurate and fair—and even focuses on the victim to a significant extent—the celebrity is still its practical focus and may then become the person we sympathize with more.
The second form of narrative disempowerment is wrongful because victims are no longer protagonists in their own story, and instead must see the story of their lives as inherently connected to the person who wronged them.12 Whereas the first form is wrongful because victims have had their power to determine their life story reduced. The lesson we learn from this is that even a morally good publicly given celebrity apology can be morally dangerous, because even such an apology can further harm victims.
The final moral danger I consider is that being primarily motivated to maintain one's fame can stop celebrities achieving moral redemption, and instead lead the celebrity toward mere public redemption. Moreover, through being a barrier to moral redemption, it can further exacerbate the first two moral dangers.
As I discussed in Section 5, celebrities can be motivated to apologize to their fans and in public because this will help them maintain their fame. When a celebrity is only motivated for this reason, their apology is morally substandard because this motivation, when considered alone, is a self-serving one. One reason why acting only for such a self-serving reason leads to a morally substandard apology is that a morally good apology requires humility (Bennett, Forthcoming; Radzik, 2009). But when a celebrity apologizes only to maintain their fame, this shows a lack of humility: the celebrity is putting themselves above the victim by aiming to save their own positive celebrity status over seeking reconciliation with the victim.
Failing to be appropriately humble is not just a failure of an apology. It is also something that blocks moral redemption. Even if we accept Radzik's view that apology is not necessary for moral redemption, apologies still serve a communicative function that is necessary for moral redemption. To merit reconciliation and thus be morally redeemed, a wrongdoer must communicate their moral transformation, among other things. Part of this transformation is being appropriately humble as a consequence of having acted wrongly. The problem is that only being motivated to apologize to maintain one's fame demonstrates a complete lack of humility because it means a wrongdoer favors maintaining their fame—that is, their positive celebrity status—and its associated powers over meriting reconciliation with their victims. Such a wrongdoer does not merit reconciliation. As long as they care more about maintaining their own fame, moral redemption is closed off to them. However, the wrongdoer can gain public redemption—that is, they can appear to be redeemed in the eyes of their fans and the public. With public redemption, a celebrity maintains her fame. Apologizing with just this motivation is therefore morally dangerous for the celebrity.
Of course, as I also discussed in Section 5, we often act for multiple reasons. A celebrity might be motivated to apologize to maintain her fame and for other reasons. If the other reasons are morally commendable ones, this can sometimes undermine the badness of being motivated to maintain one's fame. However, as I argued in Section 5, the moral valence of one's overall set of motivations for a particular action depends on how the motivations that make up that set are structured. The upshot is that just because a celebrity has some morally commendable motivations for apologizing does not mean their apology is a morally good one.
Likewise, the fact that a celebrity has some morally commendable motivations for apologizing does not make them appropriately humble. If a celebrity cares more about maintaining their fame, they care more about themselves than they do about, for example, rectifying the harm they have brought upon the victim. This is not what an appropriately humble person would do. Celebrities therefore do not avoid this moral danger just by having some morally commendable motivations for apologizing. It matters what importance they give to those motivations; it matters what they care about more. When celebrities care more about maintaining their fame, any apology that they issue will be morally substandard, and they will be blocked from moral redemption.
Being motivated to apologize to maintain one's fame is morally dangerous when this motivation arises from caring more about maintaining one's fame. There is a lesson for celebrities here: they should be wary of placing too much importance on their fame, and of becoming seduced and consumed by their fame. There is also a lesson for others: when a celebrity cares more about their own fame, they have greater motivation to use their apology to set the public narrative in their favor, as this will help them maintain their fans and thus their fame; celebrities will also care less about narratively disempowering the victims. If what ultimately matters to them is that they maintain their fame, a celebrity can easily silence the morally good reasons they have to apologize to, and make amends with, their victims.
When a celebrity's primary motivation for apologizing is that it will maintain their fame, this is not only morally dangerous in its own right (as it will block the celebrity from moral redemption), but it is also morally dangerous because it makes them more likely to not care about the first two moral dangers of publicly apologizing to their victims. So, when celebrities care about their fame more than anything else, this is also morally dangerous for their victims and us.
In this paper, I first considered three explanations for why celebrities apologize to their fans and in public. I then identified three moral dangers with celebrity apologies. I then drew out four lessons about the practice of celebrity apologies. First, we should not trust celebrity apologies so easily. Second, even a good celebrity apology can still further harm victims. Third, celebrities should be wary of placing too much importance on their fame, as doing so can block their moral redemption. Fourth, the third moral danger also leads to celebrities being more likely to exacerbate the first two moral dangers.
There are wider lessons to learn from this discussion. I focus on three points here. First, these problems do not imply that we should ignore or completely reject celebrity apologies. Rather, they highlight that it is harder for celebrities given their social position and associated powers to give good public apologies and achieve moral redemption. One way to improve celebrity apologies might be for celebrities to enter into dialogue and negotiate with their victims, as Radzik and others propose (see Section 2). So, rather than seeing their apology as a monologue that draws a line under their earlier wrong, a celebrity should take their initial apology to be just one part of an overall process. Importantly, this requires more than just giving multiple apologies, as Will Smith did for slapping Chris Rock. And this might require only giving a private apology, such as the one Roman Polanski gave Samantha Geimer. Of course, private apologies just to victims will not have the same fan-appeasing function as publicly given fan-targeted apologies. Such apologies might also have their own moral dangers.
Second, while I have focused on well-known celebrity apologies and people who are arguably superstars, fame and celebrity are features of many areas of life. For example, small towns have local celebrities, and academic disciplines have superstars. Indeed, the advent of social media has made it easier for anyone to become a celebrity. This might be a domain specific fame, such as a famous academic tweeter. Such “micro-influencers” will have a small but still perhaps excessive epistemic power. This is something they might wield responsibly, but we must still question whether this is appropriate for anyone to have. Just as Archer et al. (2020) investigate the effect that celebrity epistemic power has on democracy, we might also investigate the effect that academic celebrity epistemic power has on academia and other areas of life.
Third, people are often motivated, at least in part, to apologize for their behavior because they wish to maintain their social position and associated powers. While I focused on being motivated to maintain one's fame in Sections 5 and 8, it is likely that any apology that is primarily or solely motivated by a person's desire to maintain her social position and associated powers will block that person achieving moral redemption. So, being primarily motivated to apologize to maintain one's social position is morally dangerous. This suggests that a condition on a morally good apology is that one is not primarily motivated to maintain one's social position, and perhaps one must even be willing to lose one's social position to an appropriate extent. If that is correct, celebrities ought to be willing to cease being famous if they actually wish to achieve moral redemption. Of course, being willing does not amount to not at all caring about continuing to be famous.
Each of these points merits further investigation. Philosophical investigations into fame not only help to illuminate a crucial aspect of contemporary life, but also help to shed light on other structurally similar social phenomenon.13