“There are no objective values.”
He then sets about showing why he believes this must be so.
When I first read this book, I was discomforted, to say the least. At that stage, I had been an atheist for some years but had remained a staunch moral realist. Of course it was true that murder and rape were morally wrong! How could they not be wrong? If they weren’t wrong, then what were they? I just couldn’t take on board the idea that the only thing wrong with murder and rape was that I didn’t like them. I put Mackie’s book aside and it sat gathering dust for some years.
I only read Mackie’s book again after I had read Dawkins’, The Selfish Gene, (and all his other books published before 2003), Michael Ruse’s books, Biology and the Foundation of Ethics and Darwinism and its Discontents and Richard Joyce’s books, The Evolution of Morality and The Myth of Morality.
Around the time I first read Mackie and started reading the others mentioned above, I had been reading quite a bit of Ken Wilbur’s philosophical mysterianism. Wilbur writes well and is quite poetic, but I just couldn’t take his work seriously as either philosophy or science. I really needed clarity at this time and not more mystery.
I’d always believed evolution was true, but after reading Dawkins, Ruse and Joyce, the evolutionary penny in respect of morality began to drop. And the good thing was that it wasn’t all bad news. There were evolutionary reasons for being nice.
So I went back to Mackie. Only then could I read Mackie and properly hear what he was saying, and only then did I feel that I had a more or less complete and believable picture of where our morality came from and what we are doing when we moralize.
To my mind, Mackie’s philosophical argument merged seamlessly with the evolutionary arguments of the evolutionary scientists and with the evolutionary ethicists mentioned above, even though Mackie used the word “evolution” only a couple of times throughout his entire book. For him, evolution was obviously true, but he hadn’t joined the dots and so he said only that evolutionary science may shed more light on ethics. And so it has.
I had the big picture now. The metaethical problem that had tormented me for years had a solution. And, best of all, there was no cause for alarm. I was now not only an atheist but a moral antirealist. But not a despairing nihilist. Things could still matter to me. I could carry on being a decent and stable person. I wasn’t going to run amok and turn into a depraved, cannibalistic serial killer just because I had leaned that there were no objective moral values and that there were evolutionary explanations for why we were mostly nice to family, friends and our community (in that order) and often nasty to outsiders.
Evolution came up with morality which helped us cooperate in groups which is what got us through the Pleistocene and launched our genes into the future. And here we are. All this without objective moral values, which don’t exist because they are impossible. But evolution did a marvellous job of making us think that our evolved moral sentiments actually tracked moral truth. Most of us don’t yet realise all this, or like me a while back, refuse to believe it.
There are two parts to Mackie’s thesis, the first demolished moral universalism and the second, objective moral values. These are his Argument from Disagreement and his Argument from Queerness, respectively, neither of which I will try to summarize here. But Mackie’s book was pivotal for me. It is moral philosophy at its lucid best. And the writing of the evolutionary scientists, and the reasoning and writing of the philosophers who took up evolutionary ethics, whose work I mentioned above, were each a model of reason, rationality and literary clarity.
The facts of evolution revealed by science, the arguments of Mackie, and of philosophers working in evolutionary ethics, form a unified whole - a satisfying synthesis that will, of course, be refined as more work is done, but which together form an edifice as solid as Einstein’s theories of relativity. And this evolutionary and philosophical synthesis is a demonstration of what can be achieved when philosophy, and her daughter, science, work in tandem.
Of course many will disagree. I know that atheists and moral anti-realists are still a minority in the population at large and that there is still a significant minority of philosophers (if few scientists) who still argue for moral realism. And some of those philosophers are no doubt here on this forum. So, if you are one of them, if you disagree with moral anti-realism (in particular with Mackie’s error theory) and with evolutionary ethics, it might make for an interesting thread if we can discuss your thoughts on why you disagree.