Ethics

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Chapter3.ppt

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Ethics: Theory and Practice

Jacques P. Thiroux

Keith W. Krasemann

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Chapter Three

Nonconsequentialist (Deontological) Theories of Morality

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Nonconsequentialist Theories

  • Consequences do not, and should not, enter into our judging of whether actions or people are moral or immoral
  • What is moral or immoral is decided upon the basis of some standard or standards of morality other than consequences

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Act Nonconsequentialist Theories

  • Major assumption: There are no general moral rules or theories, but only particular actions, situations, and people about which we cannot generalize

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Act Nonconsequentialist Theories

  • One must approach each situation individually to decide the right action to take
  • Decisions are “intuitionistic,” which means a person decides on a particular situation based on his or her intuition about what is right

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Intuitionism

  • Reasons in support of moral intuitionism:
  • Any well-meaning person seems to have an immediate sense of right and wrong
  • Human beings had moral ideas and convictions long before a system of ethics was created

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Intuitionism

  • Our reasoning upon moral matters usually is used to confirm our intuitions
  • Our reasoning can go wrong in relation to moral issues as well as others, and then we must fall back on our moral insights and intuitions

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Intuitionism

  • Arguments against Intuitionism
  • Intuition lacks scientific or philosophical respectability
  • There is no proof that we have an inborn, innate sense of morality

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Intuitionism

  • Arguments against Intuitionism
  • Intuition is immune to objective criticism, because it applies only to the possessor
  • Human beings without moral intuition have no others or establish them on other grounds

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Criticism of Act Nonconsequentialism

  • How can we know, with no other guides, that what we feel will be morally correct?
  • How will we know when we have acquired sufficient facts to make a moral decision?
  • With morality so highly individualized, how can we know we are doing the best thing for everyone else involved in a particular situation?

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Criticism of Act Nonconsequentialism

  • Can we really rely upon nothing more than our momentary feelings to help us make our moral decisions?
  • How will we be able to justify our actions except by saying that it felt like the right thing to do?

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Rule Nonconsequentialist Theories

  • There are or can be rules that are the only basis for morality and consequences do not matter
  • The following of the rules is, itself, moral
  • Morality cannot be applied to consequences that ensue from following the rules

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Divine Command Theory

  • The Divine Command Theory states that morality is based on something higher that mundane human events
  • Morality is based on the existence of an all-good being or beings who are supernatural

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Divine Command Theory

  • They have communicated to human beings what they should and should not do morally
  • Morality requires humans to follow those commands

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Criticisms of the Divine Command Theory

  • The theory does not provide a rational foundation for the existence of a supernatural being and therefore not for morality either
  • Even if we could prove conclusively the existence of a supernatural being, how could we prove that this being was morally trustworthy?

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Criticisms of the Divine Command Theory

  • How are we to interpret these commands even if we accept the existence of a supernatural?
  • Rules founded upon the Divine Command Theory may be valid, but they need to be justified on some other, more rational basis

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Kant’s Duty Ethics

  • Kant believed that nothing was good in itself except as a good will
  • Will is the unique human ability to act in accordance with moral rules, laws, or principles regardless of interests or consequences

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Establishing Morality by Reasoning Alone

  • Kant argued that it is possible by reasoning alone to set up valid absolute moral rules that have the same force as indisputable mathematical truths
  • Such truths must be logically consistent, not self-contradictory
  • They must also be universalizable

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Imperatives

  • The Categorical Imperative: An act is immoral if the rule that would authorize it cannot be made into a rule for all human beings to follow
  • The Practical Imperative: No human being should be thought of or used merely as a means for someone else’s ends; each human being is a unique end

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Duty Rather Than Inclination

  • Once moral rules have been discovered to be absolutes, human beings must obey them out of a sense of duty rather than follow their inclinations

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Criticism of Kant’s Duty Ethics

  • Although Kant showed that some rules would become inconsistent when universalized, this does not tell us which rules are morally valid
  • Kant never showed us how to resolve conflicts between equally absolute rules
  • Kant did not distinguish between making an exception to a rule and qualifying a rule

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Criticism of Kant’s Duty Ethics

  • Some rules can be universalized without inconsistency yet still have questionable moral value
  • Kant answered this criticism by means of the reversibility criterion, that is, the would-you-want-this-done-to-you idea (Golden Rule)
  • But the reversibility criterion suggests a reliance upon consequences, which goes against Kant’s system

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Criticism of Kant’s Duty Ethics

  • Kant seems to have emphasized duties over inclinations, in stating that we must act from a sense of duty rather than from our inclinations
  • But he gave us no rule for what we should do when our inclinations and duties are the same

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Ross’s Prima Facie Duties

  • Ross agreed with Kant as to the establishing of morality on a basis other than consequences but disagreed with Kant’s overly absolute rules
  • He established Prima Facie duties that all human beings must adhere to, unless there are serious reasons why they should not

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Ross’s Prima Facie Duties

  • Some Prima Facie duties:
  • Fidelity
  • Reparation
  • Gratitude
  • Justice
  • Beneficence
  • Self-improvement
  • Nonmaleficence

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Principles to Resolve
Conflicting Duties

  • Always act in accord with the stronger prima facie duty
  • Always act in such a way as to achieve the greatest amount of prima facie rightness over wrongness

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Criticisms of Ross’s Theory

  • How are we to decided which duties are prima facie?
  • On what basis are we to decide which take precedence over the rest?
  • How can we determine when there is sufficient reason to override one prima facie duty with another?

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Difficulty with Consequentialist Theories
in General

  • Consequentialist theories demand that we discover and determine all of the consequences of our actions or rules
  • That is virtually impossible
  • Do consequences or ends constitute all of morality?

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General Criticisms of Nonconsequentialist Theories

  • Can we avoid consequences when we are trying to set up a moral system?
  • Is it entirely possible to exclude consequences from an ethical system?

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General Criticisms of Nonconsequentialist Theories

  • What is the real point of any moral system if not to do good for oneself, others, or both and if not to create a moral society in which people can create and grow peacefully with a minimum of unnecessary conflict?

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General Criticisms of Nonconsequentialist Theories

  • How do we resolve conflicts among moral rules that are equally absolute?
  • Any system that operates on a basis of such rigid absolutes as does rule nonconsequentialism closes the door on further discussion of moral quandaries