Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Cathy Kaveny responds to Robby's "rebuke"
[This is what Cathy has to say:]
I can’t help but note the irony of Robby’s call for intellectual rigor and
clarity at the end of a post that throws labels, accusations, and insults around
as if they are cashmere sweaters on the final sale table at Saks. But perhaps
everyone is a bit crabby after Christmas.
But if you get past the petty
insults, there is a serious question about current method in Christian ethics.
Since Michael apparently conscripted me into this discussion, and since Jean
Porter apparently has the good sense not to read blogs over the Christmas
holidays, let me offer a couple of remarks on the state of the field.
To
put it bluntly: Germain Grisez’s work is not regularly read or studied, as far
as I am aware, in any major doctoral program in moral theology or Christian
ethics in the country–although it is read in seminaries. Nor is it read, as
far as I am aware, in any major doctoral program in philosophy in the
country–including well-ranked programs in philosophy at Catholic university’s
such as Notre Dame’s. This, in my view, is a shame–I think that his analysis of
intention, deeply indebted to Anscombe, is very insightful. I also think some
of the casuistry is very helpful. It is always worthwhile on particular
questions, thinking up against Germain Grisez–as my mentor, Paul Ramsey said. I
have learned a great deal from Grisez, and written on him, even when I don’t
ultimately agree with him.
But despite his intelligence and dedication
to the church, Grisez’s method is not widely seen as the way forward. The
general theme: if you accept the rules of his framework, and agree to play it,
Grisez is very good. But most moral theologians–liberal and conservative--reject the entire framework as essentially responding to the controversies of
the 1960s–not as a way forward.
Why?
A. Problems in basic
philosophical method. Many philosophers, including conservative Catholic
philosophers, dispute the basic framework of Grisez’s account of the natural
law, on two grounds. First, they reject their acceptance of Hume’s sharp
distinction between fact and value, which post-analytic philosophy has largely
eroded. Second, many theologians and philosophers have called into question the
idea that moral life should be defined in terms of a number of “self-evident”
basic goods, which are not permissible ever to intentionally attack. The goods
seem to be defined arbitrarily--at one point, “play” was taken out
and “marriage” put in. Further, the “goods” do not seem to be at all the same
type of thing (marriage is a social institution, life is a physical state).
Finally, what counts as acting against a good seems to be defined arbitrarily.
Why does contraception act against the good of marriage but smoking a cigarette
not act against the good of life?
Many people, including myself, think
Grisez’s theory and proportionalism need to be understood together as ad hoc
responses to the contraception brouhaha in the late 1960s. Wider application of
either theory isn’t seen as desirable or even feasible. It’s time to move on
from both.
B. Problems with natural law theory. Grisez assumes an
ahistorical account of human reason, which many natural lawyers question.
Moreover, he defends an understanding of natural law that is not as open to
insights from the natural and social scientists as many natural lawyers believe
ought to be the case. The cutting edge work in natural law is attempting to
incorporate the insights from neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and social
psychology into the conception of human nature. Grisez’s project tends to
isolate his normative framework from any serious challenge from empirical or
social data. To what degree does evidence about the marriage and mating habits
of human persons around the world enter into our conception of human nature and
natural morality? One fault line between say, Margaret Farley and Grisez would
be the way in which they consider it legitimate to make use of empirical data in
formulating a conception of human nature and the natural in regard to sexual
ethics. Other challenges to Grisez within this framework include whether or not
his deductive approach to the norms of natural law is appropriate, or whether a
more inductive approach is more adequate (Cahn/Maritain)
B. Fit with the
Catholic tradition. The “new” natural law thinkers break significantly with the
tradition, in large part over the separation of facts and values. This break is
seen as a significant distortion of the tradition –and a great loss- not only by
progressives but by (very different) conservative Catholic philosophers such as
Alsadiair MacIntyre and Russell Hitginger. MacIntyre’s later work (Dependent
Rational Animals) trying to show the place of nature and a natural biology in
any real Aristotelian account of natural law is extremely important. Hittinger
shows how far the natural law theory of Grisez/Finnis is from a more traditional
Thomistic account. The criticism, in essence, is that Grisez is more Kantian
than Aristotelian Thomist. But there is no need to go to Kant if you don’t find
Hume’s account compelling.
C. Move toward virtue theory. In philosophy
and in theology, there has been a great move toward virtue theory, which places
moral rules in a context of a) an account of human nature; and b) an account of
human flourishing including social practices. This move transcends liberal and
conservative distinctions. No one calls Alasdair MacIntyre a liberal Catholic
in philosophical circles, or Stanley Hauerwas a liberal Christian ethicist. In
specifically Catholic circles, I would suggest you read Romanus Cessario, OP–no
one ever called Father Cessario a liberal. Cessario’s work on virtue, however,
is frequently read and taught by both liberal and conservative virtue Catholic
virtue theorists. Grisez’s and Finnis’s dismissal of the importance of virtue
theory in general, or as the framework within which to interpret Aquinas, is
seen as deeply unsound–and untrue to the texts–as any cursory review of the
Summa Theologica will show. To dismiss the importance of virtue in interpreting
Thomas is about on a par with dismissing utility in interpreting
Bentham.;
D. Problems with Method in Theological Ethics. Grisez is also
not seen as helpful by many Catholic moralists because of several other reasons.
He tends to treat scripture narrowly as a source of true propositions or
commands–ignoring the developments that have been made by Catholic scriptural
scholars in examining the way genre and context affect scriptural
interpretation. Many younger, conservative Catholic scholars want to integrate
fuller uses of scripture into their ethical method. More generally, Grisez tends
to treat theology as a matter of true propositions–ignoring the resourcement of
less linear and deductive ways of doing theology from the Patristic period
thanks to people like Congar and de Lubac, as well as the recent discussions
about the relationship of context to dogma (in different ways, Sullivan and
Dulles and Lindbeck). His understanding of sin, like Robby’s, tends to locate it
in the emotions, and to leave human reason untouched. That is seen by many
theologians to be too rationalist, and to fail to account for the depths of the
fall. Conversely, his understanding of grace treats it as providing no
epistemological help, but merely help to a weak will. It doesn’t resonate with
the best studies on grace, either historically or methodologically.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2009/12/cathy-kaveny-responds-to-robbys-rebuke.html