Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge

In Book I of Plato's Republic, Thrasymachus famously maintains that ideas of morality and justice are nothing more than an ideology indoctrinated in "the weaker" to benefit "the stronger." This is Thrasymachus's challenge to morality: The thesis that some social arrange...

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Main Author: Luco, Andrés Carlos
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142293
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author Luco, Andrés Carlos
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Luco, Andrés Carlos
author_sort Luco, Andrés Carlos
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description In Book I of Plato's Republic, Thrasymachus famously maintains that ideas of morality and justice are nothing more than an ideology indoctrinated in "the weaker" to benefit "the stronger." This is Thrasymachus's challenge to morality: The thesis that some social arrangements, including some moral norms, are products of "false consciousness." False consciousness occurs when a dominant social group shapes the beliefs and desires of a subordinate group in such a way that the subordinates act for the benefit of the dominants, but against their own interests. In this paper, I grant that some moral norms èmerge or persist because of false consciousness. However, I shall argue that these norms actually have the function of impartially promoting the interests of all persons in their range of application. Even if the actual effect of false consciousness norms is to benefit a powerful class while being harmful and discriminatory toward others, the true function of false consciousness norms is the intended effect that they were designed to have. And the crucial feature of false consciousness norms is that their designers-particularly subordinates-teach, preach, follow, and enforce them with the intention of promoting the mutual interests of everyone to whom the norms apply.
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spelling ntu-10356/1422932023-03-11T20:07:04Z Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge Luco, Andrés Carlos School of Humanities Humanities::Philosophy Morality Thrasymachus In Book I of Plato's Republic, Thrasymachus famously maintains that ideas of morality and justice are nothing more than an ideology indoctrinated in "the weaker" to benefit "the stronger." This is Thrasymachus's challenge to morality: The thesis that some social arrangements, including some moral norms, are products of "false consciousness." False consciousness occurs when a dominant social group shapes the beliefs and desires of a subordinate group in such a way that the subordinates act for the benefit of the dominants, but against their own interests. In this paper, I grant that some moral norms èmerge or persist because of false consciousness. However, I shall argue that these norms actually have the function of impartially promoting the interests of all persons in their range of application. Even if the actual effect of false consciousness norms is to benefit a powerful class while being harmful and discriminatory toward others, the true function of false consciousness norms is the intended effect that they were designed to have. And the crucial feature of false consciousness norms is that their designers-particularly subordinates-teach, preach, follow, and enforce them with the intention of promoting the mutual interests of everyone to whom the norms apply. Accepted version 2020-06-18T07:28:15Z 2020-06-18T07:28:15Z 2016 Journal Article Luco, A. C. (2016). Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge. Journal of Philosophical Research, 41, 371-400. doi:10.5840/jpr20168985 1053-8364 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142293 10.5840/jpr20168985 2-s2.0-85049125611 41 371 400 en Journal of Philosophical Research © 2016 Philosophy Documentation Center. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Journal of Philosophical Research and is made available with permission of Philosophy Documentation Center. application/pdf
spellingShingle Humanities::Philosophy
Morality
Thrasymachus
Luco, Andrés Carlos
Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge
title Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge
title_full Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge
title_fullStr Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge
title_full_unstemmed Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge
title_short Morality or "false consciousness"? How moral naturalists can answer Thrasymachus's challenge
title_sort morality or false consciousness how moral naturalists can answer thrasymachus s challenge
topic Humanities::Philosophy
Morality
Thrasymachus
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142293
work_keys_str_mv AT lucoandrescarlos moralityorfalseconsciousnesshowmoralnaturalistscananswerthrasymachusschallenge