The Golden Rule

A short essay on the golden rule
The golden rule is endorsed by all the great world religions; Jesus, Hillel, and Confucius used it to summarize their ethical teachings. And for many centuries the idea has been influential among people of very diverse cultures. These facts suggest that the golden rule may be an important moral truth.
Let's consider an example of how the rule is used. President Kennedy in 1963 appealed to the golden rule in an anti-segregation speech at the time of the first black enrollment at the University of Alabama. He asked whites to consider what it would be like to be treated as second-class citizens because of skin color. Whites were to imagine themselves being black -- and being told that they couldn't vote, or go to the best public schools, or eat at most public restaurants, or sit in the front of the bus. Would whites be content to be treated that way? He was sure that they wouldn't -- and yet this is how they treated others. He said the "heart of the question is ... whether we are going to treat our fellow Americans as we want to be treated."
The golden rule is best interpreted as saying: "Treat others only as you consent to being treated in the same situation." To apply it, you'd imagine yourself on the receiving end of the action in the exact place of the other person (which includes having the other person's likes and dislikes). If you act in a given way toward another, and yet are unwilling to be treated that way in the same circumstances, then you violate the rule.
To apply the golden rule adequately, we need knowledge and imagination. We need to know what effect our actions have on the lives of others. And we need to be able to imagine ourselves, vividly and accurately, in the other person's place on the receiving end of the action. With knowledge, imagination, and the golden rule, we can progress far in our moral thinking.
The golden rule is best seen as a consistency principle. It doesn't replace regular moral norms. It isn't an infallible guide on which actions are right or wrong; it doesn't give all the answers. It only prescribes consistency -- that we not have our actions (toward another) be out of harmony with our desires (toward a reversed situation action). It tests our moral coherence. If we violate the golden rule, then we're violating the spirit of fairness and concern that lie at the heart of morality.
The golden rule, with roots in a wide range of world cultures, is well suited to be a standard that different cultures can appeal to in resolving conflicts. As the world becomes more and more a single interacting global community, the need for such a common standard is becoming more urgent.
Genslers
GRTreat others only as you consent to
being treated in the same situation.
• I do something to another.
• Im unwilling that this be done
to me in the same situation.⇐ Dont
⇐ combine
⇐ these
Videos on golden-rule talks
2008 talk at Bard College
Click to play or download the video (or try this Mac/iPhone version) and the GR slides. I gave this talk at a golden-rule conference hosted by Bard College's Institute of Advanced Theology; you can order all the talks on DVD from them.
2010 talk at Boston College
Click to play or download the video. I gave this talk at Boston College; here are the the GR slides. And here's the audio of a talk I gave in 2011 at Scarboro Missions (Toronto) (scroll down).
My books on the golden rule
Ethics and the Golden Rule (New York and London: Routledge, 2012?) will be a fairly comprehensive treatment of the golden rule. It will cover a wide range of topics, such as how the golden rule connects with world religions and history, how it applies to practical areas like moral education and business, and how it can be understood and defended philosophically. I wrote this to be a "golden-rule book for everyone," from students to general readers to specialists. I hope to have it out in late 2012 or early 2013.I got interested in the golden rule in 1968, after hearing a talk in Detroit by R.M. Hare. I did an MA thesis (1969 Wayne State University) and PhD dissertation (1977 Michigan) on GR. Since then, I've done many book chapters and articles on GR (the short essay above is adapted from my GR entry in the Blackwell Dictionary of Business Ethics). Three of my earlier books have much on GR.
My Formal Ethics (Routledge, 1996) focuses on the golden rule ("Treat others as you want to be treated") and on other formal ethical principles (like "Be logically consistent in your beliefs," "Follow your conscience," and "Make similar evaluations about similar cases"). Formal Ethics shows how to formulate these principles in clear ways that don't lead to absurdities -- and how to use the principles to help with practical problems, like racism and moral education. This book is addressed to specialists in the area of moral philosophy.
My Ethics: A Contemporary Introduction, second edition (Routledge, 2011) is an introductory textbook in moral philosophy. Chapters 7 to 9 talk about how to understand, defend, and apply the golden rule. This book is written in a simple way and should be understandable to the general reader. This book and Formal Ethics have cool Web exercises and EthiCola downloadable exercise software, much of which deals with GR.
My Introduction to Logic, second edition (Routledge, 2010) has a chapter that formalizes a system of ethics, leading to a proof of the golden rule in symbolic logic. This gets pretty technical. Other books of mine have GR parts, including my Historical Dictionary of Ethics, Anthology of Catholic Philosophy (the essay on pages 523-31), and Ethics: Contemporary Readings. To order any of my books, click here or here. Several of my books are available in e-book format: Kindle, Sony, Routledge (search for author Gensler). Yes, the golden rule does have an intellectual component; it's not as simple as it might seem.
Other longer golden-rule studies
- R.M. Hare's Freedom and Reason (Oxford 1963) greatly influenced my thinking on the golden rule. The main difference in my approach is that I'm more neutral on foundational issues, formulate GR a little differently, and am a logician at heart (perhaps too much so).
- Jeff Wattles's The Golden Rule (Oxford 1996) emphasizes historical and religious aspects and thus complements my logical-rational approach. I have benefited much from our discussions (mostly done through e-mail).
- Howard (Q.C.) Terry's Golden Rules and Silver Rules of Humanity (Infinity Publishing 2011) is a recent study of GR and related principles.
GR links -- you'll see that GR is a growing movement
| Google scholar | Google books | Amazon books | Acrobat files pages that link to this one | academic articles (or here)

 Baha'i,
 Buddhism,
 Christianity,
 Confucianism,
 Hinduism,
 Islam,
 Judaism, and
 Taoism.If you have one of these shirts, it's fun to ask people to guess which symbol goes with which religion. One smart first-grader that I know got most of them right!