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If It Feels Right ...
During the summer of 2008, the
eminent Notre Dame sociologist Christian Smith led a research team that conducted
in-depth interviews with 230 young adults from across America. The interviews
were part of a larger study that Smith, Kari Christoffersen, Hilary Davidson,
Patricia Snell Herzog and others have been conducting on the state of America’s
youth.
Smith and company asked about
the young people’s moral lives, and the results are depressing.
It’s not so much that these
young Americans are living lives of sin and debauchery, at least no more than
you’d expect from 18- to 23-year-olds. What’s disheartening is how bad they are
at thinking and talking about moral issues.
The interviewers asked
open-ended questions about right and wrong, moral dilemmas and the meaning of
life. In the rambling answers, which Smith and company recount in a new book, “Lost
in Transition,” you see the young people groping to say anything sensible on
these matters. But they just don’t have the categories or vocabulary to do so.
When asked to describe a moral
dilemma they had faced, two-thirds of the young people either couldn’t answer
the question or described problems that are not moral at all, like whether they
could afford to rent a certain apartment or whether they had enough quarters to
feed the meter at a parking spot.
“Not many of them have
previously given much or any thought to many of the kinds of questions about
morality that we asked,” Smith and his co-authors write. When asked about wrong
or evil, they could generally agree that rape and murder are wrong. But, aside
from these extreme cases, moral thinking didn’t enter the picture, even when
considering things like drunken driving, cheating in school or cheating on a
partner. “I don’t really deal with right and wrong that often,” is how one
interviewee put it.
The default position, which
most of them came back to again and again, is that moral choices are just a
matter of individual taste. “It’s personal,” the respondents typically said. “It’s
up to the individual. Who am I to say?”
Rejecting blind deference to
authority, many of the young people have gone off to the other extreme: “I
would do what I thought made me happy or how I felt. I have no other way of
knowing what to do but how I internally feel.”
Many were quick to talk about
their moral feelings but hesitant to link these feelings to any broader
thinking about a shared moral framework or obligation. As one put it, “I mean,
I guess what makes something right is how I feel about it. But different people
feel different ways, so I couldn’t speak on behalf of anyone else as to what’s
right and wrong.”
Smith and company found an
atmosphere of extreme moral individualism — of relativism and nonjudgmentalism.
Again, this doesn’t mean that America’s young people are immoral. Far from it.
But, Smith and company emphasize, they have not been given the resources — by
schools, institutions and families — to cultivate their moral intuitions, to
think more broadly about moral obligations, to check behaviors that may be
degrading. In this way, the study says more about adult America than youthful
America.
Smith and company are stunned,
for example, that the interviewees were so completely untroubled by rabid
consumerism. (This was the summer of 2008, just before the crash).
Many of these shortcomings will
sort themselves out as these youngsters get married, have kids, enter a
profession or fit into more clearly defined social roles. Institutions will
inculcate certain habits. Broader moral horizons will be forced upon them. But
their attitudes at the start of their adult lives do reveal something about
American culture. For decades, writers from different perspectives have been
warning about the erosion of shared moral frameworks and the rise of an
easygoing moral individualism.
Allan Bloom and Gertrude
Himmelfarb warned that sturdy virtues are being diluted into shallow values.
Alasdair MacIntyre has written about emotivism, the idea that it’s impossible
to secure moral agreement in our culture because all judgments are based on how
we feel at the moment.
Charles Taylor has argued that
morals have become separated from moral sources. People are less likely to feel
embedded on a moral landscape that transcends self. James Davison Hunter wrote
a book called “The Death of Character.” Smith’s interviewees are living,
breathing examples of the trends these writers have described.
In most times and in most
places, the group was seen to be the essential moral unit. A shared religion
defined rules and practices. Cultures structured people’s imaginations and
imposed moral disciplines. But now more people are led to assume that the
free-floating individual is the essential moral unit. Morality was once
revealed, inherited and shared, but now it’s thought of as something that
emerges in the privacy of your own heart.
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