On the evening of October 11th, incumbent Joe Biden and
challenger Paul Ryan met to square off in the first and only 2012 Vice
Presidential Debate. While the two men are currently competing against each
other, they share an amicable history as Congressional colleagues. Both are
practicing Catholics (though some could quibble about the extent of this) and
both have acknowledged that they consider the other to be good men and enjoy
one another personally, yet simply disagree on certain political positions. How
is it then that men with similar pasts and experiences can disagree on so much?
This question is the subject of Jonathan Haidt’s most recent book,
The
Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion (Pantheon, 2012).
Haidt, a social psychologist at New York University, is a
rare breed for academics, in that he is not afraid to bring God or religion
into the discourse of his professional work. In fact, he’s willing to grant the
religion offers a positive contribution to both individuals and society. His
research, however, is focused on why there are so many lines that divide
society as a whole.
Beginning with moral intuition, Haidt draws from years of
prior anthropological and psychological research to ask the question: “where
does morality come from?.” The two traditional camps of thought have long held
that it is either innate within every person or that morality is something that
develops during childhood learning. Haidt, however, does not fully accept
either view, and instead follows a third possibility, that morality is
constructed and developed through our “cultural learning and guidance” and can
be both innate and developed over time.
For Haidt, most of us perceive morality based on our WEIRD
upbringingsan acronym meaning Western, Educated, Industrial, Rich, and
Democratic societies. These conditions, according to Haidt, have shaped our
moral matrices, and made it impossible to conceive that there are other
possible moralities and truths. In order to better understand our moral
sensibilities, Haidt develops six moral foundations and depending on which of
these moral foundations we prioritize or value more, Haidt argues they evidence
our political leanings, be it conservative or liberal.
Categories are nothing new when it comes to understanding
thought processes or structureseven Aristotle and Aquinas used similar methods
to organize various principles and ideas. In Haidt’s model, these moral
foundations are an attempt to outline broad values or virtues that are cared
about in all cultures, even though the particulars may vary. These foundations
are: Care/Harm, Liberty/Oppression, Fairness/Cheating, Loyalty/Betrayal,
Authority/Subversion, and Sanctity/Degradation.
Haidt concludes that if you tend to rank loyalty, authority,
and sanctity over concerns for care, liberty, and fairness, you are likely to
be a social conservative, whereas those that prefer the latter are likely to be
social liberals. This construction, for Haidt, leads him to declare that “morality
binds and blinds.” In his assessment, however, using these foundations allows
us to have a better understanding of both where others are coming from and to
also better articulate our political and religious preferences.
What then does Haidt make of belief in God, one may
rightfully ask, considering his moral foundations are supposedly both innate,
but also shaped by cultural factors? According to his framework, we use these
foundations to order our relationships with people, our community, and, indeed,
the transcendent, to bring about happiness, which is his ultimate goal. “Happiness,”
he writes, “comes from between. It comes from getting the right relationships
between yourself and others, yourself and your work, and yourself and something
larger than yourself.” Here, he allows for belief in a higher being and favors
a Durkheimian approach to religion as a “team sport”but ultimately leaves
little room for a personal, active God, as found in Christianity.
Haidt concludes The Righteous Mind with a call for all people to exhibit greater
civility in matters of politics and religion. Similar calls have been made in
recent months and in this election season by figures such as Carl Anderson,
head of the Knights of Columbus, and Cardinal Timothy Dolan, archbishop of New
York and head of the USCCB. Such a demand is both noble and necessary to
sustain our political life today. What Haidt lacks, however, is an ultimate
telos, or end goal, for either civility or happiness. For figures like Anderson
and Dolan, their telos is oriented toward knowing and loving God in order to
find ultimate truth and happiness.
Only then can we experience the good life that Haidt and others so
desperately seek.
At a time when certain politicians seem intent on stripping
away all religious influence on political life in hopes of achieving a naked
public square, Haidt’s allowance and sometimes praise of religion, is most
welcome. However, there is more to life than simply making nice with our
neighbors. We are called to something highera larger goal of making good. This
good depends on orienting ones life toward and for God, which Haidt is
unwilling to admit. While his Righteous Mind provides a starting point and directs us toward noble ends in this
world, the good and happiness that he hopes for can only be fully realized in
the world to come.