Morse’s article tries to answer two challenges from neuroscience. The
first challenge is that neuroscience seems to show that the brain causes
behavior. The second challenge is that neuroscience seems to show that
mental states like beliefs, desires, and intentions do not
cause behavior.
The first challenge maintains that the brain does cause
behavior.
Punishment is justified only if the person who is punished was the
cause of the behavior in question.
If the brain causes behavior, then the person does not.
Neuroscience will show that all behavior is caused by the
brain.
Therefore, neuroscience will show that punishment is never
justified.
The second challenge maintains that beliefs do not cause
behavior. I will call this the “threat to folk psychology” below.
Punishment is justified only if those who are punished are
rational.
People are rational only if (a) they can have accurate beliefs about
the law and their behavior and (b) they are capable of acting on those
beliefs.
Neuroscience will show that beliefs play no role in causing
behavior.
Therefore, neuroscience will show that punishment is never
justified.
Morse is especially worried about the second challenge because it
threatens to undermine the legal standard for responsibility. The legal
standard is rationality: people are liable to punishment only if they
are rational. Rationality involves acting on one’s beliefs and desires:
rational people act in ways that they believe will enable them to get
what they want. If beliefs and desires do not cause actions, then
rationality is irrelevant to how we behave and the legal standard of
rationality is misconceived.
The Law’s Compatibilism
The law recognizes excuses for behavior that violates the criminal
law. People who do not meet the standards of rationality cannot be
punished for their actions.
So what does it mean to be rational? The main component, according to
Morse, concerns knowledge: rational people understand what the law
requires and the nature of their own behavior (Morse 2010, 842).
Note that this is a pretty low bar. You can do something that you
know to be stupid and still count as rational as far as the law is
concerned. You just have to be capable of understanding what the law
requires and what you are doing.
The law also recognizes external compulsion or coercion as excuses.
Those who break the law with a gun to their heads are excused even
though they do not suffer from defects in their rationality.
This raises a question about what is sometimes called “internal”
compulsion. Cases of internal compulsion involve people who cannot
control their behavior. They do what they know to be wrong for reasons
that, they maintain, are out of their control. Is internal compulsion an
excuse and, if so, why?
Morse treats these cases as defects of rationality (Morse 2010, 843). His
presentation of his opinion here is quite terse, so I am not entirely
confident that I have him right. The idea seems to be that cases of
internal compulsion involve an inability to control one’s behavior in
the light of what one knows to be right. So you can know what the law is
and what your behavior involves but still suffer from a lack of
rationality if you cannot bring your knowledge to bear on your actions.
The idea is that these cases are similar to cases of external
compulsion because it is unusually difficult for the person to make the
correct choice. Consequently, the law excuses the behavior in both kinds
of case.
We know that the law excuses people who are subject to external and
internal compulsion. The important thing for Morse is that the legal
excuse cannot be generalized from these specific causes of behavior to
all causes of behavior. So, he maintains, you can be excused if
you were forced by a gun to your head but not if your behavior was the
product of causal forces that originated with the big bang.
We will talk more about internal compulsion next time, when we
discuss the unfortunate Kevin.
The Threat to Folk Psychology
What really worries Morse is the possibility that neuroscience will
displace what he calls “folk psychology.” When we employ folk
psychology, we explain people’s behavior as the product of their
beliefs, desires, and intentions. Morse believes the law assumes folk
psychology is accurate and that beliefs, desires, and intentions really
do explain why people do the things they do.
Suppose we ask whether someone’s behavior is rational or not. One way
of answering that is to see whether it reflects the person’s beliefs and
desires or not. Your behavior is rational if it makes sense in the light
of what you want to achieve and your beliefs about how to achieve it. If
you want to go to lunch and you believe that the cafeteria is to the
west of Pearsons Hall, your behavior of walking west is rational. If you
walk south despite believing there is no place to eat to the south, your
behavior is irrational.
Here is Morse’s nightmare. If neuroscience displaces folk psychology
one of the assumptions the law relies on would have been shown to be
false: the assumption that our behavior can be rational. If your beliefs
and desires don’t actually govern your behavior, then the way we assess
rationality will be divorced from the behavior we want to evaluate.
The evidence that Morse describes comes from experiments done by none
other than Benjamin Libet. So we will get to
see how Morse tries to interpret Libet’s experiments.
Main Points
Here is what you should know or have an opinion about from today’s
class.
How Morse answers the charge that the brain causes behavior.
The rationality standard for punishment.
Morse’s worry about the second charge, that “folk psychology” is not
true.
Folk physics at work
Morse’s worry is that folk psychology is going to go the way of folk
physics, that is, the explanations of physical phenomena that are good
enough for everyday life but actually false.
To illustrate folk physics, you can do a little experiment. Pick up a
heavy book in one hand and a piece of paper in the other hand. Now ask
yourself this question. “If I were to drop both at the same time, which
one do I believe will fall the fastest?”
If you are honest, your answer is going to be “the heavy book.”
If you figured that I was asking a trick question, you might say “um,
they will fall at the same rate?”
That’s the correct answer. But none of us believe it. That’s folk
physics in action. We all think the heavier object falls faster. It’s
nearly hard wired in our heads even though it is not true.
You still don’t really believe it. I know this because you are going
to be genuinely surprised when you see what happens when you drop a
bowling ball and a feather in a
vacuum.
Was I right? Were you amazed? If not, you are made of sterner stuff
than I am.
This is the what Morse is thinking. Folk physics is false. Even
though we believe it as we go about our daily lives, engineers and
physicists know not to use in when they are making important things like
bridges and airplanes. If neuroscience shows that folk psychology is
false like folk physics is, maybe lawyers and judges shouldn’t use it
when they are making important decisions about guilt and innocence.
References
Morse, Stephen J. 2010. “Scientific Challenges to Criminal
Responsibility.” In Philosophy of Law, edited by Joel
Feinberg, Jules Coleman, and Christopher Kutz, 9th ed., 839–53. Belmont,
CA: Wadsworth.