The Moral Landscape

how science can determine human values

307 pages

English language

Published July 29, 2011 by Free Press.

ISBN:
978-1-4391-7122-6
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OCLC Number:
693533063

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3 stars (13 reviews)

Sam Harris dismantles the most common justification for religious faith--that a moral system cannot be based on science.

3 editions

Review of 'The Moral Landscape' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I was quite excited about reading this book. It'd be incredibly interesting to read a compelling or at least clearly articulated explanation of how science can determine human values.

Unfortunately, the main argument Harris makes in this book is a lot weaker. Essentially, it comes down to the following:

1. Take as an axiom that everybody experiencing maximum well-being is morally better than everybody experiencing maximum suffering. (I was hoping this wouldn't be taken as an axiom but would instead be argued for, but OK, I can accept this axiom.)
2. People's well-being is a consequence by physical realities, such as the state of their brains.
3. Science can help us better predict what physical realities our actions will lead to.
4. Ergo, science can theoretically help us determine what constitutes more and less ethical behaviour (the moral landscape).

Which, sure, is convincing enough, but dodges all the actually interesting …

Review of 'The Moral Landscape' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

How we can understand morality and values on a spectrum of well-being.

Combining his experience in neuroscience and philosophy, Sam highlights the importance of changing people’s ethical commitments, explaining that "Nearly every other important goal, from combating climate change, to fighting terrorism, to curing cancer, to saving the whales falls within its purview.” This is a rational, scientific framing of actions and mindsets to pave a path for effective altruism in the 21st century.

The book is meant to lay groundwork for further discussion and progress. Sam has said that this was an edit of his dissertation for a PhD in neuroscience at UCLA. The mission here is determining which patterns of thought and behavior we should collectively be aiming towards. Atheism is a central theme: Sam slams religion broadly, the Catholic church and Islam specifically, and an apologetics book brutally, saying "to read it is to witness nothing less …

Review of 'The Moral Landscape' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

There isn't much of an argument found in this book. That's not to say that Harris is demonstrably wrong or uninteresting, it's just that the claim that there's something to be known about ethics is a weak proposition, that few will debate. The truly interesting parts, such as the defense of utilitarianism as a meta-ethical position, are wholly skipped by Harris. There's a lot to say on the problems of this book, but I will do so elsewhere. My verdict is that it's conceptually naive and, surprisingly enough, also primitive with regards to the interpretation of neuroimaging findings.

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Subjects

  • Science
  • Ethics
  • Values
  • Moral and ethical aspects