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Our Stable/Shifting Task:
From “Choosing a Sex Ethic” to Today
Eugene B. Borowitz, Judaism, Vol. 52. Nos. 1-2, 2003 (appeared 2004)
Romanticism aside, the latter years of the sixties
were, in fact, a time of extraordinary ethical ferment, one in which
people not only were concerned about a broad range of issues but
sought to act upon their decisions concerning them. Sexual freedom
was a major stimulant in the heady intellectual brew of the times
and finding a new sex ethics was a lively concern among thoughtful
young people, though generally explored more in doing than reflecting
on what ought or ought not be done. In this exciting atmosphere
of challenged old assumptions and daring new assertions Jewish leaders
kept talking about the relevance of Judaism to our problems. But,
as so often has been the case, after all the rhetoric no one, as
far as I could tell, dared to give us a thoughtful, learned example
of how our ideology could be realized in this specific, challenging
instance. When I complained about my elders and betters in this
field to Alfred Jospe, then Hillel’s national director of
program, he challenged me to do it myself. So without adequate training
in any of the fields that one might deem necessary for undertaking
such a task but determined to see if our ideology of Jewish tradition’s
continuing relevance would work in a realistic case, I boldly said
I would.
I recall rather clearly the suffering that then ensued. Twice
I thought I knew how to go about the task and sat down to write
a draft of the little book but even before I had gotten very far,
I knew my approach would fail to accomplish my goals. I did not
retain copies of those drafts but I can guess what caused my anguish.
If, as I had been taught, Jewish ethics was essentially universal,
then Judaism had nothing special to say to contemporary college
students. But if I sought to speak to them out of Jewish faith and
its traditions, the youthful rebels simply wouldn’t listen.
They wanted things to make sense to them in their terms. How then
should I proceed? Then, in the summer of 1968, I hit on the arrangement
I finally used: I would respect what I loosely called their “autonomy”
by presenting the four major ethical options I thought they faced
and analyze them in terms of values I thought they shared and Judaism
cared about. To this I added a chapter on the Jewish experience
with sexual ethics, justifying this by its general human interest
as well as its special resonance to Jews. The apologetic caution
evident in that statement also caused my editors to insist that
I relegate to the endnotes much of the pertinent Jewish source material
and some discussions of technical philosophic issues. After I vigorously
argued that Hillel and Schocken had a responsibility to feature,
not bury, the Jewish source material, they relented enough to devote
a page following the Contents to a list of “Notes of Special
Interest” that I hoped would win some readers for the detailed
Jewish data. Despite that small victory for Jewish sources, I came
to the end of the manuscript feeling quite unhappy that I had spent
so much time talking to them in their language that I had not been
able to speak my own. So, hoping that by now they trusted me enough
to let me speak out of my Jewish religious belief, I took the last
four pages to address them directly in my Jewish religious terms
as I had not felt able to do earlier in the book, Choosing a Sex
Ethic, a Jewish inquiry, Schocken, 1969.
I had come to my practical Jewish ethical task convinced that
this was one place where Judaism could speak clearly and convincingly
to our times. I may have left it reasonably satisfied that I had
done the best that I could, but I now knew that Jewish ethics was
an area strewn with intellectual land mines. Today, a third of a
century since the publication of that book, I believe the difficulties
have only exacerbated and I should like to devote the remainder
of my presentation to analyzing our community’s odd situation
with regard to Jewish ethics and then suggesting what I think our
society of academics devoted to the study of Jewish ethics, might
do about that.
Our community’s peculiar problems in this area is, I believe,
best understood in the context of what has happened to our understanding
of ethics during the past century. Painting with a very wide brush
indeed, we may say that as science and technology increasingly demonstrated
their power to explain and control nature, religion lost its long-time
place as people’s primary means of comprehending the world
and their place and responsibility in it. But as the scientific
method prided itself on being value-free, the Kantian notion that
reason itself demanded ethics of us became a powerful humanistic
supplement to the emerging modern worldview. If the human mind,
properly utilized, could distinguish good from evil and could mandate
what people ought to do, it seemed to many secularizers almost unethical
not to spurn religion, its stories so redolent of mythology, its
rites with their overtones of magic, and its social divisiveness.
Those moderns who remained convinced of the essential truth of religion
responded by creating a new understanding of the relationship of
God and duty, one built on themes in Kantian philosophy. As he had
suggested, instead of faith in God serving as the foundation for
human obligation, the certainty of rational ethics would now set
the parameters for what a rational mind might assert about the reality
and nature of God. This model of religious thinking, one that moved
from the certainty of rational ethics to what might be said about
God became the intellectual paradigm undergirding the intellectual
appeal of the many modernized religions we lump together under the
label “liberal.”
This general development in western culture had extraordinary
appeal to that large number in the Jewish community who, wherever
they were given the opportunity, avidly modernized. They recognized
that as nations accepted the modern point of view that religion
was a peripheral consideration in citizenship, Jews could attain
real social equality. In working toward that goal, they found two
aspects of Kant’s thinking about rationality particularly
useful in explaining to themselves and their neighbors their determination
to remain loyal Jews. The first was that truly rational ideas had
universal scope. For Jews, who had long prided themselves on their
monotheism, the notion of universality as a standard of truth seemed
intuitively correct. Moreover, since rational ethics now also had
to apply universally, Jews could not be discriminated against but,
like all other rational beings, needed to be treated as ends in
themselves and not merely as means to an end. It was an insight
Jews saw confirmed in the experience of the general human good modernity
had mobilized in emancipating them from the “ghetto.”
This aspect of Kantian-style ethics thus powerfully combined truth
and practical benefit – a highly biblical notion – and
is, in my opinion, the intellectual reason Jews remain involved
in universal ethical causes in striking statistical disproportion
to the rest of the American population or others in their socio-economic
class. And within our community, this commitment to the universal
reach of ethics continues to provide feminists and other excluded
groups with a commanding justification for their complete inclusion.
The second Jewish attraction to Kantian thinking was that it associated
rational ideas with that special urgency we term “law.”
Newton’s rational universe operated according to natural law.
Similarly, Kantian ethics identified moral obligation not as a matter
of sentiment or goal-seeking but as “a categorical imperative.”
That had all the earmarks of a rational restatement of the classic
Jewish commitment to mitzvah, commandment, and instantly turned
the Protestant denigration of Judaism as a religion of law rather
than of love back on the accusers; Judaism was, by Kantian standards,
the more rational religion. Of course, Kantianism validates only
ethical mandates. Yet in the thrill of attaining social equality,
many Jews once were (and now continue to be) happy to replace the
Oral Law with the Kantian Moral Law. It was this disposition that
gave rise to the transdenominational Jewish ideology that ethics
is the essence of Judaism. Surely many of the tensions in our discussions
of halakhic issues these days echo something of this sentiment.
Hermann Cohen, the great founder of Marburg neo-Kantianism gave
this point of view a solid philosophical foundation and thus, without
himself ever teaching it, began the academic enterprise we call
Jewish ethics. It would be sinful, I feel, and not merely indecent
for us to begin this organization without mentioning his name for
blessing.
At the very least, two consequences of his work, one theoretical,
the other practical, demand acknowledgment, brief though it must
be. Theoretically, later modern Jewish ethical thinkers, though
regularly disagreeing with Cohen substantively, followed him methodologically:
that is, they utilized one or more humanistic university disciplines
to explicate the nature of contemporary Jewish ethics (and –
but only in recent years – occasionally also challenged aspects
of the university perspective based on their vision of Judaism’s
own truth). Practically, the neo-Kantian, ethicized versions of
Judaism were long the only substantial way cultured modern Jews
could validate their Jewishness to their neighbors and themselves.
So many sophisticated American Jewish leaders in the first half
of the twentieth century were, loosely speaking, Cohenians, communicating
to their students and the community the notion that a high rationality
and ethical humaneness lay at the heart of Judaism. Many, of course,
also proclaimed the unique virtues of Judaism’s non-ethical
teachings but they then had to face the tensions the commanding
power of general ethics raised with the halakhah’s strictures
on matters like mamzerut [the Jewish equivalent of bastardy], agunah
[the woman legally “chained” to her husband], and (later)
women’s rights. Today, the continuing power of general ethics
manifests itself most grievously in relation to American Jewish
support for the State of Israel some of whose actions, despite arising
in the exceptional context of unremitting brutal conflict, have
often troubled American Jews even as they have pained many Israelis.
We may say, then, that during the first half of the twentieth
century ethics established itself as the chief pride of modernized
Jewry and the core of its intellectual self-understanding. But that
paradigm for structuring a modern Jewishness largely collapsed in
the three decades following World War II. Hindsight suggests that
my difficulties in conceptualizing my sex ethics book arose from
my sense, like that of a number of other young Jewish thinkers,
that the paradigm which so imbued our teachers, was now untenable.
Let me, so as not to leave more loose ends, remind you of the corollary
developments, theoretical and practical, which robbed us of our
former certainty and brought our community to what I see as its
present paradoxical ethical situation.
Academically, a radical shift took hold after mid-century in the
philosophic understanding of human reason and its effective scope.
The neo-Kantian model of rationality effectively died as mathematically
descriptive science increasingly set the standard for attaining
rational certainty. In this perspective, rationality meant proceeding
logically from premises to conclusions by way of statements that
could be empirically verified or falsified. In such logical analysis
ethics could be dismissed as a species of emotivism. When, in rebellion,
philosophic existentialism emerged, it redirected thought to selfhood,
freedom and the search for authenticity but, if as Sartre said,
“Hell is other people,” this version of rationality
could not, in turn, provide a sure ground for a robust ethics. More
recently, as deconstructionism has undercut the very referentiality
of language and the possibility of any sure foundation on which
to proceed to certainties, philosophic ethics has largely abandoned
the search for a rationalistic meta-ethics and limited itself, often
quite impressively, to ethical issues pursued within given systems.
We may thus say that in the past century, the adequacy of philosophical
reason to serve as the sure, commanding, standard for ethical action
has changed from a certainty to a major intellectual problem. This
reversal lies behind Bob Gibbs’ impressive recent book, “Why
Ethics?,” in which he abandoned his previously announced orientation
to praxis-ethics to work on ethical theory and did so by demonstrating
that every response to the mother-question generated other questions,
each then creating sub questions, all of which he courageously sought
to answer. Am I exaggerating when I suggest that in my lifetime
rational ethics has gone from clarifying categorical imperatives
to refining our ethical uncertainties?
As academic philosophy was largely de-ethicizing itself from within,
a series of critical attacks from without further weakened the identification
of reason with impersonal certainty. Marx, Freud and the anthropologists
showed how our ideas are substantially determined by our class,
our psyche and our culture. In recent years, people of color and
feminists have tellingly indicated how race and gender deeply affect
our readings of reality. Our once vaunted rationalistic universalism
has now been shown to be fundamentally particular. Moreover, we
have no realistic hope of restoring our prior messianic confidence
in the goodness of human nature and the efficacy of education, culture,
therapy or other nostrums to empower ethical existence. The lessons
of the Holocaust reinforced since by daily revelations of the venality
and malevolence of the “best and the brightest” of us,
have forced a new realism about human nature upon us, one highly
reminiscent of the talmudic view of human beings as characterologically
conflicted.
The practical concomitant of these intellectual developments is
glaringly exposed by what society made of a central idea of rationalistic
ethics, namely “autonomy.” Its glory lay in validating
the overthrow of social practices that reason showed were unethical,
thereby empowering such human triumphs as the Emancipation of the
Jews in Europe, the confirmation of full civil rights for African
Americans in the United States, and the continuing worldwide struggle
to achieve women’s equality. But as rationality was divested
of its tie to ethics, naked self-interest usurped the place of rational
choice operating under the sovereignty of moral law. The resulting
increase in drug-taking, sexual license and social violence, or,
among the more genteel, the devotion to what-is-good-for-me at the
expense of a counter-balancing common-good, has made the old adulation
of self-determination seem naive. It has confronted us with a newly
oppressive ethical issue: what now sets the limits of personal freedom?
That is, what authoritative ethics now rightfully overrides individual
preference? Or, to restate the issue in classic Jewish tones, how
today can ethics again command us?
The breakdown of the old ethical paradigm has led many Moslems,
Christians and Jews to a freshly intense commitment to their inherited
traditions and institutions, the many religious phenomena lumped
under the label “fundamentalism.” These believers proudly
turn their backs on the moral license they see abetted by modernity’s
obsession with the self. Instead they glory in setting limits for
the proper use of human freedom, and, equally appealing to many,
provide communities which socially reinforce their standards. We
see the broad appeal of this religious sentiment most plainly in
the fundamentalist presence in American politics.
But we learn something special about the staying power of the
universal ethical intuition among us in observing how the overwhelming
majority of Jews have not accepted some Jewish equivalent of the
general fundamentalism. That is all the more remarkable because
– with due apologies to the various theorists among us –
we have not yet produced a broadly convincing theory of ethics to
replace the Kantian-style paradigm which once made ethics so precious
to us. Many Jews today do believe that their tradition has much
to teach them, but their realism also indicates that Judaism’s
teachers and institutions, being human, are flawed and should not
be accorded the reasonably unquestioned authority they have commonly
demanded. And, our majority will not accept baldly discriminatory
rules such as those of mamzerut, agunot and women’s place
in Judaism, merely to maintain the functional integrity of their
inherited legal tradition. This generation, with all its putative
affection for kabbalah, classic Jewish mysticism, is also one that
regularly epitomizes the purpose of Judaism as tikkun olam, repairing
the universe, by which they do not mean the internalized, mystical
practices of Lurianic kabbalah but, primarily, ethical concern.
Three somewhat overlapping theological positions seem to me be
the ones most widely held contemporary understandings of Judaism
among non-Orthodox Jews (and, I would argue, among many of the modern
or centrist Orthodox as well): First, that Judaism is unthinkable
without halakhah but that needs to be seen not as a substantially
fixed canon but as a historic process in whose development moral
considerations must now be a major factor; or, second, that individual
Jews seriously covenanted to God as part of the Jewish people’s
ongoing covenant with God, deserve a substantial measure of authority
in determining Jewish duty; and, third, the independent cogency
of various interpretations of feminist Jewish thought. All these
views testify to our community’s continuing commitment to
the close connection between general ethics and Judaism despite
the erosion of the modernist intellectual foundation for that belief,
a paradox which should significantly humble those of us devoted
to ethical and theological system-building.
Have we then come together to found this Society for Jewish Ethics
in order to resolve our community’s present ethical perplexity?
In any proximate sense, I hope not, for not only do we share the
condition of our civilization and community but, the academic self-consciousness
we bring to this field only intensifies the difficulties our community
faces. I want to defend that position a bit and then make a suggestion
or two for ways our Society might usefully and realistically respond
to our dilemma.
I begin by sharing with you the results of an informal thought
experiment I conducted to see if I could clarify what we ought to
be talking about and how we might best do that. Very quickly I discovered
that on each of the six topics I raised I found myself in a Gibbsian
situation, facing a number of highly contentious issues, twenty-some
of which I’d like briefly to set before you.
Terminology. Just what do we mean by “ethics,” and
what do we include or exclude when we use that term? And will anyone
be bold enough to suggest that they can definitively define the
meaning of the term “Jewish?” Unless some halakhic and
intellectual wizard can ingeniously reinterpret the laws of kilayim
and indicate how we may hybridize two already suspect species and
come up with a kosher yield, how shall we identify that doubly suspect
thing called “Jewish ethics?” Besides, if it is particularized
how can it be universal ethics? And can we respect the encompassing
horizon of Jewish duty by yoking it to a domain that rejects any
sharing of its authority to command?
Meta-ethics. Can anyone convincingly establish what rationally
grounds an ethic today or what gives it commanding power? Or need
an ethic at all command us? But can it then be called “Jewish”
if it does not make some deeds urgent enough to override temptation
or repair a bit of this broken world? Need there be a notion of
God or the equivalent involved in a Jewish ethics? If so, can the
resulting teaching properly be considered ethics? Or should we,
can we, as many thoughtful ethicists do, by-pass these issues as
insoluble and, proceeding without a foundation, limit our discussion
to mid-level issues?
Authority. To what extent can the mind’s conclusions command
us? As philosophic views shift, do our ethics change with them?
What is the relation of general legal thinking and statement to
ethical teaching? To what extent do reasonably well established
Jewish traditions command us? How do our changing views of the context
and connotations of classic Jewish texts change our views of Jewish
ethics? By what method can one legitimately make an ethical inference
from a halakhic directive? More sweepingly but also more critically,
what today is the best balance of mind and text as the grounds for
a commanding Jewish ethical behest?
Hermeneutics. Feminist Jewish scholars often read texts in ways
that open up new meanings in them; must we all be feminists or their
disciples in order to qualify as a Jewish ethicist today? More abstractly,
to what extent should our shifting hermeneutic practices influence
our ethics? How shall we deal with the conundrum that practitioners
of diverse hermeneutic practices cannot realistically evaluate the
virtues of readings from a perspective different from theirs except
by touting what they see as the advantages of their hermeneutic?
Theory and Praxis. If much philosophical ethics these days seeks
or evades the question of the theory validating this discipline,
while Jewish tradition, emphasizing halakhah, law, over aggadah,
non-legal lore, is fundamentally praxis-oriented, should contemporary
Jewish ethics be weighted toward one or the other interests? And
if we need both in a robust Jewish ethics, what should the proper
balance between them be?
In Sum. Why does my list leave out the question you find most
troubling? Why is there so much overlap between my questions? And,
the question of all questions, so why in the face of all these nettlesome
issues do we nonetheless find ourselves ethically compelled to bring
this Society for Jewish Ethics into being? It is to that mother
of all our questions that I want now to present some non-answer
answers.
I begin by calling our attention to two intellectual forebears
who, in their own ways, have provided valuable, if divergent, guidance
for our perplexity. The first of these is Steven S. Schwarzschild,
z”l, who was for many years Professor of Philosophy and Jewish
Studies at Washington University and a lonely academic voice proclaiming
the continued relevance of Cohen’s Marburg neo-Kantianism.
Long before Levinas, he argued passionately for the primacy of ethics
to all other philosophic thought and insisted that Judaism had first
conceived that notion, thereby making any philosopher whom he judged
to have endorsed that position, a “Jewish philosopher.”
It seemed not to bother Steve at all that most philosophers thought
it quixotic of him to champion so outmoded a set of ideas as Marburg
neo-Kantianism but, if anything, such philosophical opposition only
made him feel called to the intellectual challenge he was shouldering.
I recall how, in one of the years following World War II, he reported
with glee that some Argentine Yiddishists had responded to the charge
that Yiddish was now a dying language by founding a magazine called
Davke, which barely translates as “Just For That Unlikely
Reason.” He not only felt that what they had done was admirable
but exactly what being a Jew was all about.
This memory brought to mind a maxim related to neo-Kantianism
that I don’t believe I ever heard Steve use but it certainly
confirms his attitude. One criticism of that philosophy was that
it illogically insisted that creatures it knew were deterministically
ordered were, as rational beings, required to operate in freedom
in ethical decision-making. The neo-Kantian defense was, “Because
you must, you can,” any other course suggesting the universe
was irrational. Perhaps that should be our motto. We know we must
continue the tradition of Jewish ethics even though it seems to
me we have no coherent group conception of how properly to do so.
Steve would have enjoyed adding, “Indeed, Davke, just because
it seems impossible, it is our Jewish intellectual duty to do so.”
Zekher tzaddik livrakhah, the memory of the righteous is for blessing.
Our second forebear, likewise unfazed by very long odds, is Rabbenu
Tarfon who deserves, I must insist, having both his statements in
Mishnah Pirke Avot (2.15 and 16) considered and not merely the inevitably
quoted one.
Rabbi Tarfon says: The day is short, the work-load immense, the
workers lazy, the pay great and the Householder pressing. He used
to say: You are not required to complete the work but you are not
a free-man who can free himself from it. If you have studied Torah
very much, they will give you very great reward and the Master of
the work is trustworthy. He will pay you the wages of your work
– but know that the payment of the wage of the righteous is
in the world-to-come. (Pirke Avot 2:15-16) [My rendering]
In both texts Rabbenu Tarfon speaks of the magnitude of the work
confronting us, the study of Torah, and gives two reasons why, despite
our sloth and the shortness of our lives, we must work at it. In
both statements he promises us great reward for unremitting effort,
though he realistically reserves it for the life of the world to
come. For those of us who do not believe that ethical acts must
be done out of disinterest, we look forward to the Society rewarding
us with the joys of personal and intellectual comraderie. In the
latter statement he also famously reminds us that we are not in
the status of a ben chorin, a free man, who, unlike a slave, is
able simply to walk away from burdensome employment. In some sense,
the Taskmaster has a claim on us. Neither reward nor compulsion
seem like apt motives for founding a society devoted to ethics but
particularly for those of us who are, in our own way, religious,
Rabbenu Tarfon knows us; our situation, apparently in some still
compelling manner, is very much like his.
To me, these forebears validate what we are doing even though
they do not intellectually resolve the paradox which confronts us.
But each of them may also be read as, horror-of-horrors, demi-pragmatists,
idealists fearful that the impossible ideal will not long remain
compelling unless there is a vigorous intellectual effort under
way to rebuild its eroded foundations. Our work may be that necessary.
To give it some initial focus I propose that our Society undertake
a practical project that should help clarify what we are doing and
how we can best do it. It mimics one carried out by the Society
for Jewish Law, though not done by them for the purpose I have in
mind. Among the many other things we do over the next three or four
years, let us ask a diverse group of our members to plan for and,
with other contributors, write a one-volume introduction to Jewish
ethics. I envision not a professorial Einleitung, “Introduction,”
but the sort of multi-faceted statement that could serve as a serious
undergraduate textbook for courses in our field. Coming with the
blessing of our society, edited by a diverse group of its members,
testifying to the variety of present approaches to our topic, and
drawing on the diverse experience and learning of our members, it
should be a splendid pedagogic tool. For all its practical value,
I am primarily suggesting the project to us for what constructing
an integrated overview of the sprawling reaches of our discipline
might teach us about how best to spend our early years. It would,
of course, be a substantial undertaking and perhaps others may think
of less demanding ways of working toward this goal. For myself,
a sefer, a book, has special Jewish appeal despite the difficulties
it always involves.
I conclude now as our tradition instructs us to do when there
are moments of great personal benefit amplified by the knowledge
that the good involved reaches out to embrace many others as well.
The language of the classic blessing prescribed for such celebrative
moments seems to me particularly appropriate at the founding of
a Society for Jewish Ethics: Barukh atah Adonai, Elohenu, melekh
haolam, hatov vehametiv, We bless you Adonai, our God, sovereign
of the universe, the Good and the Causer of good.
Eugene B. Borowitz is the Sigmund L. Falk Distinguished Professor
of Education and Jewish Religious Thought at the New York School
of Hebrew Union College-Jewistitute of Religion. The Jewish Publication
Society has recently honored his work with a volume in its Scholar
of Distinction Series, Studies in the Meaning of Judaism, a selection
of his papers tracing the evolution of his thought from 1950-2002.
He is a Contributing Editor of JUDAISM.
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