登陆注册
15792400000016

第16章

The sense of the propriety or impropriety of a moral action or sentiment is, according to Adam Smith, only one side of the fact of moral approbation, a sense of their merit or demerit constituting the other side. An action or sentiment is proper or improper in relation to its cause, or the motive which excites it, whilst it is meritorious or the contrary in relation to its effect, or in accordance with its beneficial or hurtful tendency.

It is important to notice this distinction, for it is a protest, as Adam Smith himself declares, against the theories of Dr. Hutcheson and Hume, who, he complains, had considered too much the tendency of affections, their good or bad results, whilst neglecting the relation in which they stood to their causes. This was to overlook the facts of common life, since a person's conduct and sentiments are generally regarded under both these aspects, a man receiving blame for excess of love, or grief, or resentment, not only by reason of the ruinous effects they tend to produce, but also on account of the little occasion that was given for them. It is the want of proportion between a passion and its cause, as well as the sense of its disastrous effects, which make up the whole character of moral disapprobation.

Whilst praise or blame are attached to the first aspect of an action or sentiment, a stronger feeling of sympathy or antipathy attaches itself to either in connexion with their effects, a feeling that they deserve reward or punishment, a feeling in other words of their merit or demerit.

As gratitude is the feeling which most directly prompts us to reward another man, and resentment that which most directly prompts us to punish him, an action will call for reward or punishment according as it is the object of either of these feelings. The measure, therefore, of the merit or demerit of any action will be the feeling of gratitude or resentment it excites.

But here again the principle of sympathy must come into play, to decide on the rightfulness of the gratitude or resentment. An action can only seem meritorious or the contrary, as deserving of reward or punishment, if it is the proper and right object of gratitude or resentment; and only that gratitude or resentment can be proper which commands the sympathy of the impartial spectator. That man's action deserves reward as meritorious who to somebody is the object of a gratitude which every human heart is disposed to beat time to, whilst his action seems to deserve punishment as bad who to somebody is the object of a resentment which every reasonable man can sympathize with and adopt. According as everybody who hears of any action would wish to see it rewarded or punished may it fairly be accounted meritorious or the reverse.

In regarding, then, the beneficial or hurtful tendency of actions, our sense of their merit or demerit, due to sympathy with the gratitude or the resentment they respectively excites appears to arise in the following way.

Sympathizing as we do with the joy of others in prosperity, we also join them in the satisfaction with which they regard the cause of their good fortune. If the cause has been a man, this is more especially the case. We regard him in the same engaging light in which we imagine he must appear to the object of his bounty, whilst our sympathy with the joy of the latter inspires us also with a reflection of the same gratitude he feels.

In the same manner we sympathize not only with the distress or sorrow of another, but with the aversion he feels towards the cause of it. When we see one man oppressed or injured by another, our sympathy with the sufferer only animates our fellow-feeling with his resentment against his oppressor.

So we even enter into the imaginary resentment of the slain, and by an illusive sympathy with that resentment which we know he would feel, were he alive, exact vengeance from the criminal who murdered him.

But although our sympathy with the beneficial results of an act may thus lead us to join in the gratitude it occasions, and so to regard it as meritorious or deserving of reward, this is only, as has been said, one side or aspect of complete moral approbation. To constitute the latter, a sense of the propriety of an action must be joined to a sense of its merit.; and an action is only then really good when we can sympathize with the motives of the agent as well as with the gratitude his conduct produces.

Wherever we cannot enter into the affections of the agent, wherever we cannot recognize any propriety in the motives which influenced him, we fail to sympathize with the gratitude of the person he has befriended.

Where, for instance, the greatest benefits have been conferred from the most trivial motives, as where a man gives an estate to another simply because his name or his surname happen to be the same as his own, little gratitude seems due; and con- sequently the action, though beneficial in its tendency, since it fails to command our complete sympathy, fails to command our complete approbation.

So on the other hand, however hurtful in their tendency a man's actions or intentions may be, if we sympathize with his motives, that is, if we look upon him as in the right, we can feel no sympathy with the resentment of the person injuriously affected by him. If he suffers no more than our own sympathetic indignation would have prompted us to inflict upon him, we have no fellow-feeling with his suffering, and consequently no sense of the demerit of the action he regards with resentment. It would be impossible, for instance, to sympathize with the resentment expressed by a murderer against his judge. So that to constitute the sentiment of complete moral disapprobation, there must be impropriety of motive on the part of the agent as well as a hurtful result to some one else; or, in other words, for an action to be pronounced by our sympathetic imagination completely bad, it must be both improper in its motive and injurious in its result.

It is not enough for it to be simply injurious.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 婆娑往世书

    婆娑往世书

    婆娑世界,人分五族。一千年前,人族燧明皇朝的统治因人皇的离世而终结。平静过后,伴随着异象血月的出现,大陆上波澜又起,天命人皇重新现世。千年的孤寂,苦苦追寻,等到妖莲怒放,圣火燃遍大地之时,才发现,一切,似乎早已被安排。天地为局,万物生灵皆为棋子,他,又能否破局而出?
  • 重生之极品特工在学院

    重生之极品特工在学院

    父母双亡的一个少年意外的被人掳走被人经过了十年的训练成了一个极品特工,在他工作了几年之后发现自己身体中有一个恶魔,他在做任务时不幸被抓被人杀死。但他发现自己没死回到了20年前---他17岁的时候。
  • 绝色天下:逆天枭女小狂妻

    绝色天下:逆天枭女小狂妻

    【双强,一对一】结婚前夕,渣男夺了她自幼戴在身上的神秘灵镯,跟着牛逼哄哄的异世女武者去了异世追求他的人生巅峰去了。被渣男虐死的封雪怨气难平,含恨九泉。睁开眼却发现老天有眼,居然也让她重生异世。貌似还生到了在渣男来之前?前脚一家子被皇帝“废了”灵根,后脚又亲封的公主?刚出生就成废物?这可不成,没听说过修炼要从娃娃抓起?于是她灵符当被褥,战灵当宠物,世人大跌眼镜。渣男来啦?好,这一次姑奶奶就站在你要的巅峰低头看着你,如何爬上来!颠皇权,虐渣男,横行霸道,嚣张逆天。可惜,俗话说得好,一物降一物。封雪终究还是遇到了一个见到他掉头就跑的人。男子绝色面容,淡淡一笑,玉指一点,温文尔雅。“小猴子,去哪?”
  • TFBOYS第三人格

    TFBOYS第三人格

    异于常人的她,拥有比双重人格还要罕有的三重人格——兰、菀、瑰。然而她明白,三重人格带给她的不仅是超乎常人的能力,还有生命的倒计时……在美国待了十年后,她回归中国,暂时入学音雅学院,然而,当她遇上他们,她第一次有了情感,第一次对世界有了留恋……当她真正动情,不想离开世界时,她的生命却已经进入倒数……
  • TF不完美小孩的完美恋爱

    TF不完美小孩的完美恋爱

    陌央离,夜沫儿,米静玥三人是最要好的姐妹,因为一个节目与tfboys相遇,相遇过后……
  • 月影雕梦

    月影雕梦

    乱世、军阀、灵异、推理、恐怖、佳人,几个不同意义的词语组合在一起,会是一个怎样的故事?关东军、日本鬼楼、黄皮子、红衣女鬼、出马仙,是鬼神在关外大地上作祟?还是有人在酝酿一个天大的阴谋?
  • 树妖的愿望

    树妖的愿望

    哪怕顾莲儿只是树妖而已,但生活总是要过的,死了一次就更害怕死亡了,不过比起死亡,更可怕的是身边的人露出难过的神色,尽管能继续活着,可这身子也不知道能撑多久,那么在此之前,顾莲儿真的很想给一直为她担忧的大家找一个能够陪伴他们的人,不要再孤独下去了。那种感觉,真的很痛苦……
  • 小心国师夫人在出没

    小心国师夫人在出没

    黑夜!暗室!不明的黑影!“国师大人,不要借机揩油哦,小女子怕是经受不起的。”她美丽放肆又古灵精怪,小小年纪差点让国师大人失去了一辈子的性福,“我那时年少不懂事,请大人千万宽恕则个,要不,我把自己赔大人可好?”“敢说这个话,就得负起全责。”国师大人面若锅底,黑成一片“夫人,千万不要后悔。。。。。。”
  • 报告总裁:你的挚爱刚离婚

    报告总裁:你的挚爱刚离婚

    丈夫出轨,和小三弄死了我的孩子,却不让我离婚。“想报复?做我的女人,无论你想要做什么,都会得到最有利的支持,而没有人敢质疑我闫祯的眼光。”他将我困在了他和墙壁之间,让我只能盯着他一丝不挂的健硕身材。“而你,一点都不吃亏。”总裁大人以诱人的条件引我出轨,我到底要不要扑倒这个行走的荷尔蒙?
  • 奇门诡秘

    奇门诡秘

    人死之前,会不会有什么异常征兆?答案是肯定的!不管你信不信,死亡征兆确实存在,而且,生死有命,就算你发现了,也千万不要妄自破解,不然......我因为无意间破解了一次死亡凶兆,从而被卷入了一个凶险诡异的世界,死人血泪、鳞尸噬心、鼠送钱,狗刨坟,毒虫拜母,万蛇朝宗,几经生死我才明白,这个世界,并没有我们所看到的那么简单!