Seedbeds of Virtue edited by Mary Ann Glendon and David Blankenhorn Common Values by Sissela Bok
McCabe, David
RELATIVISM IN RETREAT Seedbeds of Virtue Edited by Mary Ann Glendon and David Blankenhom Madmm Books, $27,95,300 pp. Common Values Sissela Bok University of Missouri Press, $2750, 134...
...Human goods like religious freedom, political self-rule, and career choice, for example, can't clearly be derived from Bok's list of minimal morality, but how far from relativism are we if we can't defend the value even of these...
...In the last third of the book, Bok traces some of the implications of her argument on the conduct of international policy and crisis intervention...
...This omission is especially problematic in a book dedicated to renewing the virtues, for a sense of full membership in the polity must rank as one of the chief prerequisites for developing the virtues and the essays here offer too little guidance for healing our divisions...
...In contrast to many critics of contemporary American culture, who seem to enjoy nothing more than a good national scolding, the authors here are chiefly concerned not with finding fault and apportioning blame, but with figuring out ways to improve our condition...
...Though Bok more than once refers to the need for such arguments, one can't help wishing she had made them herself...
...More troubling than the occasional nostalgia wafting through these essays is their general unwillingness to connect the decline of the virtues to those social forces that have made so many Americans feel deeply alienated from the life of the polity...
...Though Bok leaves these difficulties unresolved, her insistence that human beings have certain universal needs does, I think, constitute the right approach for combating moral relativism...
...But skeptical critics will do better not to dwell on such occasional follies lest they ignore the merits of this collection, not the least of which is the genuine spirit of constructive criticism in which most of the essays are offered...
...Still, the generally thoughtful level of its essays makes Seedbeds a valuable contribution to a crucial area of public debate...
...Whereas Seedbeds explores the shared virtues needed for liberal society to flourish, Sissela Bok's Common Values is after bigger game: the defense of a universal morality...
...As the values she enumerates are extremely modest, Bok maintains as well that her approach should satisfy reasonable advocates of pluralism and diversity...
...After all, we are often most critical of those we love most, their failings disturbing us all the more because we know what they're capable of...
...The importance of the family as the chief seedbed of virtue figures heavily in several essays, but many examine the broader institutions of civil society...
...Since Bok believes that all cultures do recognize these values, it's not clear why her argument is worth making...
...But if this is the case, one must wonder what sort of threat relativism really poses...
...Against this supposed '60s-in-spired relativism, however, a counterrevolution has clearly begun, and both of the books reviewed here are to some degree motivated by a desire to restore a degree of moral ballast to our discussion about values...
...In this regard, questions of political and economic marginalization seem to me crucial to understanding our current malaise-I mean the kind of marginal-ization accelerated by things like the Republican party's depiction of welfare recipients as parasites, the utterly pernicious and stultifying effect that money has on the democratic process, and the schism between the rising profits of corporations and their increasingly vulnerable and dispensable employees-and one wishes this side of the story had received more attention...
...The problem here is that the universal values Bok defends are so minimal (duties of support and loyalty, injunctions against harm and deceit, and procedural justice) that it's not clear how she could criticize a society that refused to acknowledge the richer human ideals many of us see both as essential to leading a fulfilling life and as the natural rights of human beings...
...All of the essays here (authored chiefly by political philosophers, sociologists, theologians, and law professors) take off from the premise that the level of virtue in most Americans is dismayingly low, and all offer some analysis of how to address this problem...
...Readers of Hamlet might dub this the cruel-to-be-kind approach, though we moderns know it as tough love...
...Common Values Sissela Bok University of Missouri Press, $2750, 134 pp...
...Despite the many virtues of Bok's approach-including her accessible prose and manifest good sense-her book may leave readers with two nagging worries...
...David McCabe according to some, recent American history has led disastrously to a rejection of the notion that there exist either identifiable virtues that all citizens should possess or a universal set of moral values that all cultures ought to respect...
...Thus one essay treats the effect that the decline of labor unions has had on citizens' developing civic virtues, another looks at the connection between religious and civic virtues, and a third questions the overall compatibility between a society that stresses individual freedom and the cultivation in citizens of a concern for the common good...
...The really difficult work, though, lies in establishing moral values substantive enough to allow for serious critique of other cultures...
...First, Bok attempts to refute moral relativism by pointing out that all human communities recognize the moral values she enumerates...
...Philosophy and anthropology departments may contain moral relativists, but since on her account they're mistaken anyway, why worry about them...
...Perhaps Bok would respond that although all cultures do recognize certain values, they don't all live up to them, and thus her argument provides a foundation for criticizing those societies that fail in this way...
...To be sure, there is something vaguely menacing, in a 1950s-ish way, in David Popenoe's claims that fundamentalist Christian groups have been extremely successful in maintaining high moral standards among their members, or that being "socially accomplished" just means being married and having children...
...Those who prefer the scolding school should turn to Jean Bethke Elshtain's contribution, an updating of C. S. Lewis's vitriolic Screwtape Letters which manages to suggest that Woody Allen, Madonna, and Jean Paul Sartre are agents of Satan...
...Whatever we call it, a similar tendency is displayed throughout this collection...
...Disgusted by what she sees as the disgraceful accommodations with evil around the world that moral relativists have reached, Bok, a distinguished fellow at Harvard's Center for Population and Development Studies, claims that certain minimal moral principles are recognized by all human communities and that these principles constitute objective criteria for transcultural assessments of social practices...
...Given the skeptical Zeitgeist that characterizes our culture, readers will no doubt find much to cavil with in these earnest and well-intentioned essays...
...But this leads to the second worry, regarding the practical force of her argument...
...This no doubt would have resulted in a book that offended more people, but also, I think, in one that might have changed more minds...
...In a strange way, of course, such criticism reflects a deep affection for the nation...
...Seedbeds of Virtue, the collection of essays edited by Mary Ann Glendon, professor of law at Harvard, and David Blankenhorn, president of the Institute for American Values, is yet another sign that there may be no more popular activity in this country than talking about its deficiencies...
...Most defenders of universal moral values are motivated by the belief that various cultures fail to recognize such values...
Vol. 123 • June 1996 • No. 12