Game of Thrones presents Eddard Stark as a good, heroic protagonist, while Cersei stands out among many characters who fit the mold of the classic evil antagonist. Is this too simplistic and judgmental? Is it unfair to think of people in such stark moral distinctions? Should words like ‘good’ and ‘evil’ even be used in the conversation?
Games of Thrones and Philosophy, one of many books in the Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture series, offers an array of essays over a number of thought-provoking topics (see my reviews on The Hunger Games and Philosophy and The Walking Dead and Philosophy).
My first post in this series covered several essays on politics as seen through the eyes of Hobbes and Machiavelli. This post will look at ethical systems discussed in “Lord Eddard Stark, Queen Cersei Lannister: Moral Judgments
From Different Perspectives”(Albert F. F. Anglberger and Alexander Heike), and “No One Dances The Water Dance” (Henry Jacoby).
Games of Thrones and Philosophy, one of many books in the Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture series, offers an array of essays over a number of thought-provoking topics (see my reviews on The Hunger Games and Philosophy and The Walking Dead and Philosophy).
If we are going to talk about what’s good or evil, we will need at least some idea about what these terms mean.
Aristotle used the the term ‘virtue’ to talk about the good.
He claimed that virtues (honesty, courage, justice, etc) were character traits
that brought about eudaimonia, or
well-being, in the people who had them. In eudaimonia,
rationality controls the desires and appetites. Any time people let their
appetites override their rationality, they were going to get into trouble. People
not controlled by reason may find pleasure in the indulgence of their appetites,
but they will never find true happiness since that can only be found in the
goodness of virtue. The Big Three – Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle – all agreed
on this point.
The prevailing opinion was that virtues cannot be taught; they must be experienced. So people must do honest, courageous and just things in order to become honest, courageous and just people. Socrates called this “the examined life”; Aristotle preferred “the life of reason”; Taoism calls it wu wei, an authentic life that flows like water as it adapts to situations and obstacles. In both Western and Eastern philosophy, people's actions and identity were closely enmeshed.
In the 2,000 plus years since then, moral philosophy has
often divided the ethics of doing (how we should live) and being (what we
should be like) more sharply. In Game of Thrones, Eddard (virtue
ethics), and Cersei (consequentialist ethics) show that while the division is
helpful in the discussion of ethics, the reality is that the two must work
together if the virtuous want to win the game.
VIRTUE ETHICS
Virtue ethics is primarily concerned with one’s character
over one’s actions. A virtuous person will do virtuous things, right? We discover
which actions qualify as good by seeing what a virtuous person does.
Unfortunately, three problems arise when we rely on virtue ethics alone to
inform about what is good or evil.
First, if we can tell who a virtuous person is because they
do virtuous things, it seems we have to know ahead of time what actions or
states of being actually are virtuous. Virtue ethics does not provide rules for
conduct, just people whose actions are supposed to establish which acts are
virtuous. But what if people or cultures disagree on what is actually virtuous?
Charity matters in Winterfell; the Dothraki see it as weakness.
Second, virtue ethics is not always clear about what to do
when obligations clash. If Eddard lies about whether or not he is treasonous,
his daughter’s life will be spared. Which is more important: love or honesty? Aristotle
claimed that in these situations we have to rely on phronesis, or practical wisdom, which helps us determine which of
these is more important. But that is something outside of virtue ethics that
must adjudicate.
Third, virtues can become too extreme – but we know this
because of the consequences. One can be too honest (and be mean), too brave
(and be foolishly ), or too kind (and enable). That’s why the ultimate goal is eudaimonia, a state of flourishing that
is found in the Golden Mean, the place between the extremes.
CONSEQUENTIALIST ETHICS
Cersei bases her choices on the likely outcome of her
actions. The most common form of this consequentialist approach is
utilitarianism, which seeks the greatest good for the greatest number. This is
clearly not Cersei’s approach. She is what Anglberger and Heike call a
“minimally extended” – and very successful -
ego consequentialist. She is ruthless, self-centered, and willing to do
anything it takes to win every game she plays. Ned's the kind of person we want to win the game; Cersei's the kind of person who actually does.
Consequentialism is not concerned with the inner state of
people, but it does offer guidelines for what they ought to do to bring about
the best result. Will charity or cruelty bring about the best consequence? Typically the answer is charity. This
at least offers a framework to discuss the good of the community (or city, or
state).
And there’s where it gets tricky. Without a sense of what (and
who) is actually virtuous, how does one decide which consequences are good in any sense beyond personal preference? I suppose folks on both sides of the
infamous Red Wedding could make the case that the consequence of their plan was
for the greater good. Tyrion thinks the world would be a better place were it
relieved of the burden of his father.
Joffrey thinks his iron fist on a throne of swords is the best thing for
the land. Plenty of others disagree.
An ethical system that does not take into account both being and doing seems to result in two less than ideal choices: a virtuous person
whose principled position brings about more evil than a compromised position,
or a morally bankrupt person whose decisions may happen to bring about a balance of good.
Of course, there are other ethical systems not covered in Game of Thrones and Philosophy (*cough* deontological ethics *cough*) – but that’s a discussion that must happen elsewhere.
Of course, there are other ethical systems not covered in Game of Thrones and Philosophy (*cough* deontological ethics *cough*) – but that’s a discussion that must happen elsewhere.
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