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Culture Wars : When Morality Collapses - Albert Mohler
Posted by David Virtue on 2009/11/30 10:00:00 (545 reads)

When Morality Collapses

By Albert Mohler
Christian Post
http://www.christianpost.com/article/20091127/when-morality-collapses/index.html
November 28th, 2009

Any civilization requires a stable, rational, and consensual moral framework in order to survive. Western civilization has been built on a framework of Christian morality, with the so-called "Judeo-Christian ethic" providing the moral principles that support laws, ethical reasoning, and moral impulses.

Over the past several decades, that framework has been under sustained attack by ideological opponents, subverted by a secular shift among the elites, and increasingly forgotten by the masses. In its place, the moral reasoning mustered by many Americans amounts to a mixture of moral intuitions, ideological threads, and cultural assumptions. In the main, these all add up to what Philip Rieff called the "triumph of the therapeutic." When morality collapses, all that remains is therapy.

This has been brought to our attention in the aftermath of the massacre at Fort Hood, Texas. Major Nidal Malik Hasan, arrested for the shootings that killed 13 and wounded scores of others, is now known to have yelled "Allahu Akbar" (God is Great) as he was shooting, to have links to Islamic extremists in Yemen, and to have visited a mosque frequented by the September 11, 2001 terrorists. More details of his background and motivation have been revealed over the last few days. There is ample evidence that Major Hasan, a physician and psychiatrist, provided much evidence of his motivation.

The role his Muslim faith played in the shootings will require more time to unpack. There will be plenty of time for that consideration as his trial is conducted. In the meantime, we should note the extent to which some observers are doing their best to absolve Major Hasan, whatever the deepest sources of his motivation, of moral responsibility for the massacre.

Writing in The Wall Street Journal, Dorothy Rabinowitz described the kind of moral evasion that the agents of therapy now substitute for any serious moral argument:

The quality and thrust of this argument was best captured by the impassioned Dr. Phil, who asked us to consider, "how far out of touch with reality do you have to be to kill your fellow Americans . . . this is not a well act." And how far out of touch with reality is such a question, one asks in return-not only of Dr. Phil, but of the legions of commentators like him immersed in the labyrinths of motive hunting even as the details of Maj. Hasan's proclivities became ever clearer and more ominous.

To kill your fellow Americans-as many as possible, unarmed and in the most helpless of circumstances, while shouting "Allahu Akbar" (God is great), requires, of course, only murderous hatred-the sort of mindset that regularly eludes the Dr. Phils of our world as the motive for mass murder of this kind.

This was not a well act? Would the killing of even one person in cold blood be a "well act," Dr. Phil? Is our moral discourse now limited to distinguishing between what some psychologist or psychiatrist considers as well acts and unwell acts? That is all we have to say in light of a mass murder?

Columnist Charles Krauthammer described the same phenomenon in The Washington Post. Krauthammer, who is himself a psychiatrist, was outraged when so many commentators and national leaders responded to the massacre by suggesting that Major Hasan is a victim of some traumatic stress disorder brought on by his treatment of returning troops fresh from Iraq and Afghanistan.

He wrote:

Really? What about the doctors and nurses, the counselors and physical therapists at Walter Reed Army Medical Center who every day hear and live with the pain and the suffering of returning soldiers? How many of them then picked up a gun and shot 51 innocents?

And what about civilian psychiatrists - not the Upper West Side therapist treating Woody Allen neurotics, but the thousands of doctors working with hospitalized psychotics - who every day hear not just tales but cries of the most excruciating anguish, of the most unimaginable torment? How many of those doctors commit mass murder?

Rejecting this evasion, Krauthammer wrote with exasperation: "It's been decades since I practiced psychiatry. Perhaps I missed the epidemic."

The medicalization of mass murder is a great moral evasion. Substituting the therapeutic worldview for morality will not work. Krauthammer explains:

Medicalizing mass murder not only exonerates. It turns the murderer into a victim, indeed a sympathetic one. After all, secondary PTSD, for those who believe in it (you won't find it in DSM-IV-TR, psychiatry's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual), is known as "compassion fatigue." The poor man - pushed over the edge by an excess of sensitivity.

We must listen carefully to the conversations all around us - and particularly to those among the opinion-makers. Krauthammer and Rabinowitz offer much-needed words of warning. We ignore this at our peril.

The therapeutic mentality is all that remains when a moral framework is abandoned. No civilization can survive this evasion of moral responsibility. Sick is no adequate substitute for evil. Medicalizing morality means the end of right and wrong as meaningful categories.

We are just left with Dr. Phil, and his concern that a massacre is "not a well act." If that is all we can say - even the first thing that we say - we are not a well society.

END

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Poster Thread
anilwang
Posted: 2009/11/30 14:17  Updated: 2009/11/30 14:17
Just can't stay away
Joined: 2009/10/11
From:
Posts: 71
 It is to be expected
Medicalization of morality is a natural product of materialism.

If all we are are atoms in motion, completely determined by environment and genetics, then there is no free will. Sure you can dress it up as "an emergent phenomenon", but the simple fact is, if every step in a journey is completely determined, then the journey (which is the sum of all steps) will be completely determined. Its simple logic. Sure you can add randomness due to quantum mechanics, but all that does is make a completely determined journey a little hazy (in physics terms, we've added error bars).

Morality itself falls apart under this argument. Sure you can dress it up with Kant's universals and conveniently forget that you're selective about apply how you apply it (e.g. you don't apply it to a chair that bug you just squashed or that flu you just killed) and conveniently forget that all you're talking about is just materials in various configurations that have no ultimate value or consequence,

Its difficult for someone with faith to understand this, but it really is possible to be a materialist. You just have to make it up as you go along and convince yourself that your arbitrary foundations (which change from time to time) are solid and as David Hume once said, you don't think so deeply that you get sick.

With the "solid" foundations of materialism, medicalization of morality is a no-brainer....literally.
jfmckenna
Posted: 2009/11/30 22:09  Updated: 2009/11/30 22:09
Home away from home
Joined: 2006/2/4
From:
Posts: 584
 Re: When Morality Collapses - Albert Mohler
"When morality collapses, all that remains is therapy."

An interesting observation. Actually the therapy business itself -- secular psychology -- has come to the conclusion in many quarters that it is doing very little to help anyone except for listening and medication. It is also lamenting (at least those leaning toward "positive psychology") that it is only involved in helping people with problems and has given up on bolstering those qualities that make life worth living. In an effort to rectify these things, many psychologists have inevitably returned to an emphasis on the value of virtues, which is essentially -- guess what? -- morality.
CH-Discern
Posted: 2009/12/1 1:34  Updated: 2009/12/1 1:37
Home away from home
Joined: 2009/10/10
From:
Posts: 259
 Re: When Morality Collapses - Albert Mohler
As a Christian psychologist I find it easy to proclaim an ugly truth: people can be not only sick, but evil. The two factors, health and morality, often overlap, it is true. We are body, soul, and spirit (1Thessalonians 5:28), and without the Spirit of God within us, evil will reign. When humans are both sick and evil, we sometimes observe extremes of behavior. However, without there being unadulterated evil involved, illness alone will not lead to such murderous extremes.
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