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Morality and Social Progress

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2024

Extract

The Eddington Memorial Lectures were founded to foster interest in the relationship of the natural sciences to religion or ethics, with the hope of finding some common basis between different methods of seeking truth. In particular, as Professor Polanyi says at the beginning of this year’s lecture, the founders were preoccupied with the tardiness of moral improvement as compared with the swift advances of science; this aspect, neglected by his predecessors, he proposes to examine. But in the first place he doubts the assumptions which lie behind the ‘problem’, for, he writes:

Never in the history of mankind has the hunger for brotherhood and righteousness exercised so much power over the minds of men as today. The past two centuries have not been an age of moral weakness; but have, on the contrary, seen an outbreak of moral fervour which has achieved numberless humanitarian reforms and improved modern society beyond the boldest thought of earlier centuries.

He is not, in fact, here saying that moral improvement does or does not lag behind the advances of science, but that the problem with which we should concern ourselves is something quite different.

With the subject to be discussed, and the first stage in Polanyi’s answer laid before us, we can already see some of the difficulties which lurk within the lecture, although others, scarcely less important, will arise as the arguments develop. Leaving aside for the moment Polanyi’s criticism of the problem, we may doubt its validity for more fundamental reasons.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1960 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 Beyond Nihilism: The Eddington Memorial Lecture, 1960. By Michael Polanyi, F.R.S. Cambridge University Press; 3s. 6d.

2 I have used this expression to describe that group of people who may be expected to be familiar with the Gospels, and who should believe in moral standards because they hold one of the many possible positions between ‘this is right because Good commands it’, and ‘God commands this because it is right’.

3 In The Pursuit of the Millenium.