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Autonomy, Moral Tragedy, and Ethical Coherence in Complex Societies
Author: William McCain Affiliation: Independent Researcher
Abstract
Contemporary moral philosophy remains divided among deontological, consequentialist, virtue-based, and anti-theoretical approaches. While each framework captures important moral intuitions, none adequately accounts for systemic harm, biological constraint, and technological scale without either collapsing into moral absolutism or retreating into relativism. This paper proposes an autonomy-centered ethical framework grounded in empirical reality rather than moral purity. Good is defined as the sustainable increase of autonomy across time and persons, while evil is understood as the reduction, counterfeit, or monopolization of autonomy. Unlike rule-based or outcome-maximizing systems, autonomy ethics accepts moral tragedy and mixed outcomes as intrinsic features of ethical life. Through conceptual clarification, comparison with Kantian deontology, and applied analysis, this paper argues that ethical coherence rather than moral innocence is the necessary foundation for a survivable human morality.
1. Introduction
Moral philosophy has traditionally sought universal principles capable of guiding human conduct. Yet historical evidence suggests that large-scale harm is rarely committed in the absence of moral reasoning. Atrocities are more often justified through moral systems than caused by their absence. This raises a critical question: whether prevailing ethical frameworks meaningfully constrain power under conditions of scale, abstraction, and non-ideal human behavior.
Modern moral debates frequently center on disputes between moral realism and anti-realism, or between rule-based and outcome-based systems. These debates often fail to address the more practical issue of whether a moral framework can remain coherent when applied to biological constraint, technological mediation, and systemic asymmetry. A viable moral theory must operate within these realities rather than treating them as deviations from an ideal moral world.
This paper proposes an autonomy-centered ethical framework designed to meet this requirement.
2. Moral Reality and Biological Constraint
Human moral behavior is inseparable from biological and evolutionary pressures. Self-interest, fear responses, kin preference, and dominance behaviors are not moral anomalies but structural features of human psychology (Trivers 1971; Haidt 2012). Ethical systems that deny these forces tend toward idealism or authoritarian enforcement, while systems that accept them without constraint tend toward domination.
Morality must therefore be understood as an emergent system operating within material constraints. Ethical frameworks that presuppose perfectly rational agents or unlimited moral motivation fail when confronted with scarcity, uncertainty, and unequal power. A functional morality must accommodate these conditions while still constraining harm.
3. Defining Autonomy
Autonomy is often invoked in ethical discourse but rarely defined with sufficient rigor. In this framework, autonomy is defined as the capacity of an individual or group to act meaningfully in the world over time. This capacity depends on multiple interrelated dimensions:
Epistemic autonomy, defined as access to truthful and sufficient knowledge.
Bodily autonomy, defined as control over one’s physical existence.
Agency autonomy, defined as the ability to choose and execute actions.
Temporal autonomy, defined as the ability to revise one’s life trajectory.
Relational autonomy, defined as freedom from domination by others.
Autonomy exists in degrees and can be expanded, constrained, destroyed, or counterfeited. Moral relevance arises wherever autonomy can be meaningfully affected.
4. The Core Ethical Principle
The central claim of autonomy ethics is as follows:
Good consists in the sustainable increase of multi-layer autonomy across time and persons.
Evil consists in the systematic reduction, counterfeit, or monopolization of autonomy.
The requirement of sustainability excludes systems that increase autonomy temporarily while creating long-term dependency, fragility, or coercive control. Moral evaluation under this framework is scalar rather than binary and requires accounting for both gains and losses of autonomy.
5. Comparison with Kantian Deontology
Immanuel Kant grounds morality in rational self-legislation. Moral worth, in his framework, belongs to rational beings capable of recognizing and binding themselves to universal moral law (Kant [1785] 1996). This approach provides strong protections against the instrumentalization of persons and clear constraints on moral action.
However, Kantian ethics exhibits a significant limitation of moral scope. By tying moral standing to rational authorship rather than vulnerability to harm, Kant excludes non-rational beings from direct moral consideration. Animal suffering, systemic harm, ecological degradation, and non-ideal human conditions receive only indirect moral relevance. Appeals to species membership or potential rationality remain philosophically unstable, as they contradict Kant’s own emphasis on actual rational capacity.
Autonomy ethics addresses this limitation by grounding moral relevance wherever agency can be reduced or expanded, independent of rational self-legislation. Moral concern arises from the capacity to be constrained or dominated, not from metaphysical membership in a rational category.
6. Moral Tragedy and Mixed Outcomes
Many real-world actions generate both moral goods and moral harms. For example, consuming animal products may support human health and economic stability while destroying animal autonomy. Traditional moral systems often attempt to resolve such cases through permissibility judgments. Autonomy ethics instead treats these cases as morally mixed.
Harm does not lose moral significance when it is unavoidable. Moral responsibility persists through acknowledgment, minimization, and structural reform. This acceptance of moral tragedy distinguishes autonomy ethics from frameworks that pursue moral purity at the cost of realism.
7. Structural Failure Modes
Ethical frameworks become dangerous when abstraction replaces accountability. Historical and speculative analysis reveals recurring failure modes, including the removal of autonomy floors, the substitution of metrics for persons, coercive consent, and the normalization of irreversible harm.
Technological systems such as predictive governance, simulation, and large-scale optimization intensify these risks (Zuboff 2019). Without autonomy-based constraints, moral reasoning can be deployed to justify domination while maintaining the appearance of benevolence.
8. Moral Education and Social Agreement
A moral society cannot be sustained through rule memorization or ideological conformity. It requires moral literacy, defined as the ability to identify power dynamics, tradeoffs, and hidden harms. Ethical education should emphasize reasoning rather than obedience and accountability rather than innocence.
Evaluative questions central to autonomy ethics include who gains autonomy, who loses it, whether losses are necessary, whether they are minimized, whether they are reversible, and whether they are obscured by abstraction. These questions scale from interpersonal ethics to institutional policy.
9. Conclusion
Humanity possesses unprecedented technological power without a correspondingly coherent moral framework. Ethical systems that deny moral tragedy or promise moral purity fail under scale. Autonomy ethics offers neither utopia nor absolution. It offers coherence, restraint, and resistance to moral laundering.
In a universe defined by uncertainty and constraint, morality cannot eliminate harm. It can only limit domination, preserve agency, and prevent the systematic erosion of human freedom. Ethical survival depends not on certainty but on accountability.
References
Haidt, Jonathan. 2012.
The Righteous Mind
Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion .
New York
Pantheon.
Kant, Immanuel. [1785] 1996. Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals. Translated by Mary Gregor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Trivers, Robert L. 1971. “The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism.” Quarterly Review of Biology 46 (1): 35–57.
Zuboff, Shoshana. 2019. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism. New York: PublicAffairs.
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