I would tend to take the position that to “do good” is simply to take actions that satisfy (in the sense of maximizing or satisficing output utility, or some approximation thereof) some fixed function of likely great complexity, which we refer to by the handle “morality.”
Obviously, we only take those actions because of our luck (in a moral sense) in having evolved to be motivated by such a function. And we are strongly motivated by other things as well. But I don’t think it’s reasonable to state that because we are motivated, therefore we are not motivated by morality. Of course, you might call me a moral realist, though I don’t believe that morality is written in the stars.
I would tend to take the position that to “do good” is simply to take actions that satisfy (in the sense of maximizing or satisficing output utility, or some approximation thereof) some fixed function of likely great complexity, which we refer to by the handle “morality.”
Obviously, we only take those actions because of our luck (in a moral sense) in having evolved to be motivated by such a function. And we are strongly motivated by other things as well. But I don’t think it’s reasonable to state that because we are motivated, therefore we are not motivated by morality. Of course, you might call me a moral realist, though I don’t believe that morality is written in the stars.