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I am looking for the name and possibly deeper development of the system of ethics / morality exemplified by the attitude of Yossarian, the main protagonist of Catch-22 novel by Joseph Heller. Yossarian's primary concern is his own safety:

Havermeyer was a lead bombardier who never missed. Yossarian was a lead bombardier who had been demoted because he no longer gave a damn whether he missed or not. He had decided to live forever or die in the attempt, and his only mission each time he went up was to come down alive.

  • Yossarian cannot be really called a coward, since he is not believing in the war in which he is fighting and the necessity of his sacrifice (at least not in the way these are viewed by his superior officers, such as Colonel Cathcart).
  • Neither is he a conscientious objector or a pacifist, since he is not really objecting the war, but only the risks that it poses to him. Unlike his friend Dunbar, Yossarian is not willing to risk a court-martial (indeed, this would compromise his personal safety)
  • Yossarian also cannot be called a free rider, as he is not aiming to benefit from the war being fought by others.

Perhaps, his attitude is some form of individualism or liberatrianism, since his beliefs are ultimately grounded in the dangers the war poses personally to him, and he considers anyone oblivious to these dangers as crazy.

Quote about personal dangers:

“They're trying to kill me," Yossarian told him calmly.
"No one's trying to kill you," Clevinger cried.
"Then why are they shooting at me?" Yossarian asked.
"They're shooting at everyone," Clevinger answered. "They're trying to kill everyone."
"And what difference does that make?”

About craziness (the attitude is apparently shared by the author - at least it is taken as the basis of the discussion):

There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that a concern for one’s own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn’t, but if he was sane, he had to fly them. If he flew them, he was crazy and didn’t have to; but if he didn’t want to, he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle.

In my answer in another thread I have called this attitude Yossarianism. I am interested in exploring it deeper, particularly in the context of an individual vis-à-vis war.

Remark: Note that the question is not about the logical paradox, also known as Catch-22, and popularized by the novel (as discussed, e.g., in this thread.)

Roger V.
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It is worth contrasting what people say, with what they do. It's actually difficult to get people to shoot to kill, with estimates between 25% & 75% of soldiers only willing to do this. In human history war was generally a last resort, with armies being drawn up and then often negotiations done if things were obviously going to go one way - we aren't so good at remembering those cases. It was much easier to find one champion to fight to death, than pursuade an entire army to do so. The ideal in war is to willingly die for your comrades, but when people volitionally do that or seriously risk that, they get special medals - and not many of them get awarded. You can order someone to do something dangerous, but a system of punishment can't force someone into certain death - because what greater punishment could there be to enforce that? It has to be chosen.

It's worth considering the idea that society is created through an implicit social contract. We gain collective benefits, and commit to certain costs, and we get society. The contentions between powers and cultures, have very often come down to who will fight to preserve the system they have, and how fiercely. The fact you can't order people to die on pain of death, has meant people who have shown willingness to take on that risk have often been accorded special sway, from membership of the demos in Ancient Athens requiring military service, to votes for women in the UK being driven by war service far more than suffragettes actions (who admitted with their pre WW1 bombing campaign that their tactics weren't working).

I would look to Game Theory, and the Evolutionary Theory of Multi Level Selection to make sense of this. If a group or class within a society can order others to die, but themselves are insulated from the processes of selection, that risks the creation of a free-rider problem, that can destabilise the system, or create fractures that fragment the society in extremis, like war. Russia is a pretty good example: WW2 where is was a shared existential threat, versus Ukraine where it seems to be about Putin's vanity - shared priorities, versus defence of an elite's priorities. Discussed in more detail here: Is the tyrannicide perpetrated by William Tell morally legitimate?

I'd look to the history of sagas epics and religions, to understand the emergence of ideas that people felt were worth dying for, discussed here: What are some philosophical works that explore constructing meaning in life from an agnostic or atheist view?

Yossarian is fundamentally an example of an agent with rational self-interest, as assumed in economic theories until very recent times, as summarised in the idea of 'homo economicus'. A freely-associating rational self-interested agent, simply cannot be pursuaded that they should die, unless perhaps they are reacting to kin-selection of protecting family. As I see it that is what Catch 22 draws out: The contradiction between the mythos associated with war and heroism, and the pervasive idea that we are rational individuals (which is not unchallenged, see the homo economics article).

WW1 poetry drew out a similar tension or contradiction, between the mythos of war and supposed rewards of symbolic immortality:

"As the stars that shall be bright when we are dust, Moving in marches upon the heavenly plain, As the stars that are starry in the time of our darkness, To the end, to the end, they remain." -closing verse of RL Binyon's 'For The Fallen'

And the challenge of the lived experience to find what could justify it's necessity:

"If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs, Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,— My friend, you would not tell with such high zest To children ardent for some desperate glory, The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori." -closing lines of Wilfred Owen's 'Dulce et Decorum Est'

I wouldn't call Yossarianism a fully developed philosophy. But instead an investigation of War, a questioning of whether in truth it can be rational to accept an order to die, and to die for the sake of an order.

I would argue based on a social contract theory of society, game theory, and Multi Level Selection, that ordering people to die for aims which don't serve them or their descendents, is not rational to demand people participate in.

But, what serves us and our descendents, is the product of endless tensions and negotiation, to discover. And is in the realm of mythos and trans-personal meaning, not of rationality. Deciding what we would die for, involves knowing what is required to make life worth living, which is not the result of analysis, but is a felt response to our our entire situation.

CriglCragl
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    Great analysis! I think the real contradiction when force is used, is that there is no rational way to stop it. You are forced to reply with force, which is irrational. "War doesn't decide who is right, only who is left." (Maybe we should all go left?) – Scott Rowe Nov 17 '22 at 15:53
  • +1 Thank you. I disagree though that war has been treated as last resort throughout human history - a champion fighting to death or fighting till the enemy run was true in ancient Athens, but finished with Alexander the Great (whose major strategic innovation was pursuing the enemy and killing as many as possible.) Death punishment is a good way to drive people into a battle - Trotsky openly stated that this was the only way he could motivate troops in the civil war, and Stalin later used the infamous barrier troops on the massive scale - no one really wanted to die for the Communists. – Roger V. Nov 17 '22 at 16:06
  • @RogerVadim: I said, carefully, 'war was generally a last resort'. I'd in mind the larger scope of human history. I'll accept psychotechnologies involved have got so good at tolerating lose-lose outcomes, we have Mutually Assured Destruction. My core contention, is that following Marshall's research & Holmes' review of it, it's hard to get people to murder each other without a lot of brutalising & dehumanisation first. In Ireland they had a tradition of champions to avoid battles at fords. + https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combat_of_the_Thirty (1351AD). Coerced forces still have a slim choice – CriglCragl Nov 17 '22 at 17:10
  • @ScottRowe: It wasn't the Allies who saw that dark tide turned. But Russians, and Germans, thirty millions of them Who beat down that fire from when the Reichstag burned. It was in Stalingrad, where their own dead buried them.

    It was not guns or hope, but deaths that won. Because all tyrants can make, is ruins and dead men. The innocents of that time must not be forgotten - And that tyrants should die, before dead men bury them.

    – CriglCragl Nov 17 '22 at 17:13
  • You would think that people would learn that force is ultimately self-defeating, but it is not chosen by reasoning, at least, not correct reasoning. – Scott Rowe Nov 17 '22 at 19:03
  • @ScottRowe: 'What are the arguments for revenge and retribution?' https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/94137/what-are-the-arguments-for-revenge-and-retribution/94143#94143 'If we had the ability to make humanity less war-like, should we?' https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/90783/if-we-had-the-ability-to-make-humanity-less-war-like-should-we/90793#90793 – CriglCragl Nov 17 '22 at 21:12
  • I suggest your source misinterpreted "between 25% & 75% of soldiers only willing to do this… " for the real truth, which is that between 25% & 75% of soldiers are not capable of doing that; their "willingness" doesn't come into it. – Robbie Goodwin Dec 07 '22 at 00:39
  • @RobbieGoodwin: I cited my sources. Motivation is key. – CriglCragl Dec 07 '22 at 16:24
  • @CriglCragl Are you seriously offering two members' personal opinions as "sources"?

    Either way, can you explain "motivation is key"?

    – Robbie Goodwin Dec 19 '22 at 02:14
  • @RobbieGoodwin: Did you not follow the link? The reference was to the book 'Acts of War: Behavior of Men in Battle'. I heard more recently that the issue was, snipering an enemy soldier in the opposite trench would result in vengeance killings, leading to soldiers pleasing officers by shooting, but protecting colleagues by missing. This mindset resulted in the Christmas Truce, & the risk to directors of the war on both sides of the soldiers recognising they had more in common with each other than those leading them.. – CriglCragl Jul 22 '23 at 18:24
  • @CriglCragl Did you not follow the meaning? Snipering an enemy soldier in the opposite trench might indeed lead to soldiers pleasing officers by shooting, or protecting colleagues by missing.

    That mindset might have contributed to the Christmas Truce. Where is the evidence that it did?

    If your point is that the directors of war on both sides risk soldiers recognising they have more in common with each other than their leaders, why not say that in the first place?

    Anyway, how does that relate to Yossarian's ethics or morals?

    – Robbie Goodwin Jul 22 '23 at 21:59
  • @RobbieGoodwin: Oh I see, it was in reference to the comment. I was citing my own posts on related relevant topics to the comment, so no not related to Yossarian. The unwillingness of people in general to murder & die, is a najor theme of Catch 22, & I mention evidence of it to support my conclusion that the book is about: "questioning of whether in truth it can be rational to accept an order to die, and to die for the sake of an order" – CriglCragl Jul 23 '23 at 01:08
  • @CriglCragl Oh, right; citing your own posts… To what other philosophies, in what other tomes, might Roger look to compare Yossarian's, d'you think? – Robbie Goodwin Jul 23 '23 at 14:28
  • @RobbieGoodwin: What Yossarian posseses? Or did you mean multiple Yossarians, contrasted? Or books/perspectives to contrast to Yossarian's own? I'd describe a cynic watching 'children ardent for some desperate glory' as brought into special focus by the industrialisation of war, by machineguns & long range artillery. Perhaps 'The Charge of the Light Brigade' describes the moment of change, old lies could no longer cover ordering people to die for no reason, with no threat but death for failure to follow stupid orders. Aping the Song of Roland, & Spartans at Thermopylae, but failing to convince – CriglCragl Jul 23 '23 at 14:52
  • @CriglCragl Try 'To what other philosophies might Yossarian's be compared?'

    Don't you think the Light Brigade was massacred by mistake, not design? I don't remember Roland but didn't the Spartans make a clear choice, and the Thespians an even more definite decision?

    That Roger didn't bother to offer a view for validation is a shame, but so is that fact that SE doesn't want us to do what he Asked: 'explore it deeper'.

    Sorry but 'the context of an individual vis-à-vis war' would still be obscure if SE did welcome exploration

    – Robbie Goodwin Jul 23 '23 at 15:13