Ethics test 3
Do you believe in God? Currently-89%Belief in God by demographic categories-What are the differences among groups based on age, geography, educational level, or political affiliation?Younger Americans (18-29)=84% Eastern U.S.=84%South=92%Post-graduate education=77%Liberal=86%
American Belief in God
Old Testament: History of the Jewish people-Creator-God-Life and morality come from GodAbraham: Covenant with GodThree major world religions: 2/3 of world's population trace roots to AbrahamJudaism: IsaacIslam: IshmaelChristianity-Christ through line of Isaac-Moses/Ten Commandments: basis of many of our ethical beliefs and laws-Faith in and Obedience to God indicate RIGHT or ethical living.
Ancient Hebrew Culture
A philosopher of the Classical Period, this pupil of Greek philosophy believed that reaching one's full potential through the development of virtues was the key to a moral life.
Aristotle
Student of Plato; believed that the life of virtue was the ethical life
Aristotle
The trend was toward a comprehensible God who could be understood, reasoned and even scientifically modeled.-In the extreme, God became more a theory than a person.
As a result of the ideas of early modern era philosophers:
A set of laws governing conduct is built into nature.These laws are universally known by reason apart from revelation. While natural law ethicists think biblical revelation of moral norms is important, they hold that even without that revelation everyone can know by reason alone the basic principles of right and wrong. Consequently, one need not be a Christian or theist to know the moral law. Since human nature and the natural order do not change, whatever ethical norms are derivable from nature do not change from time to time and place to place.
Basic assumptions of Natural Law Theory
The scientific community was looking for an explanation for life other than God. -Darwin gave them their God substitute: Natural selectionDarwin's own search was not solely scientific: He saw "cruelties in nature" that he could not reconcile with a loving God.
CHARLES DARWIN
If there are no moral absolutes---no agreement upon right/wrong—
Chaos
What would the world be like if there were noPhysical absolutes
Chaotic
All Greek philosophers emphasize the LIFE OF REASON as a means to understanding ethics and living morally.Ethical emphasis was the DUTY of the individual as a citizen of the city state.Ethics =spiritual counterpart to medicineThe function of ethics=to provide care of the SOUL
Classical Era
Socrates, Aristotle and Plato were key philosophers during this era.
Classical Period
The moral focus was on the duty of the individual as a citizen and the function of ethics was to provide care for the soul.
Classical Period
1. there was a general turning away from organized religion especially the Roman Catholic Church with less emphasis on literal interpretation of the Bible.2. there was an emergence of a secular public culture that challenged authority previously held by the Roman Catholic Church and state leaders.3. it provided the philosophical foundations for the American Revolution for leaders such as Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson
Conclusions about the enlightenment
Roman Ruler-He converted to Christianity and persecution of Christians decline under his rule.
Constantine
Goes from a general theory to the particular experiments
DEDUCTIVE METHOD
The ideas of Bacon and Descartes led to the development of the scientific method, a set of simple steps that can be easily followed to solve even the most complex of scientific problems.-These ideas spread resulting in the Scientific Revolution.-The Scientific Revolution challenged established ways of thinking replacing faith with science and reason.
DESCARTES and BACON
His theory of evolution changed our view of our origin and redefined "purpose" and "meaning" His view that we are driven by the need to procreate and transmit our genes to the next generation changed our view of morality to "do what you have to."
Darwin
The title: "Origin of Species" mistakenly indicated that the theory of evolution could explain how life arose from natural processes.Darwin himself said: "Science as yet throws NO LIGHT on the far HIGHER problem of the essence of ORIGIN OF LIFE."**
Darwin's book title: "Origin of Species"
DNA drives all life and its processes-Natural selection is the process through which evolution occurs; also sometimes called "survival of the fittest"- His ideas redefined the PURPOSE and MEANING of life.
Darwin's conclusions & Impact on ethics
French philosopher who believed that SELF KNOWLEDGE is the basis of ALL KNOWLEDGE; God as the revealer of truth is "pushed from center" and "WHAT I THINK" replaces TRUTH by REVELATION from a higher source; his most famous quote: "I think; therefore, I am."
Descartes
The measure of "right" is whatever "feels right."(EMOTIVISM)-Believed we are born GOOD -We are all "noble savages" (an idealized form of human uncorrupted by civilization) -Man must immerse himself in a "back to nature" movement**
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Diametrically opposed to Hobbes' pessimistic view -Believed that all people have natural rights including life, liberty and property.-Saw America as a vast Enlightenment laboratoryBelieved we are born: "TABULA RASA"---blank slate-EXPERIENCE is the source of all knowledge and understanding.-Argued that pleasure is the standard of moral judgment. (EMOTIVISM)
John Locke
believed all people have "natural rights:" these include life, liberty and property
John Locke
Marx proposed the law of evolution in human HISTORY.-Influenced by the French Revolution and in particular the ideas of Rousseau"All of history can be viewed as a series of conflicts resulting from competition over scarce resources."Two classes of people: the rich & the poor (bourgeoisie & proletariat)
KARL MARX
An English philosopher who believed that PERSONAL EXPERIENCE is the basis of life and reality; prosed the idea or concept of "tabula rasa." Man becomes the "center " of his own universe His ideas of "rule by the people for the people" in his treatise—The Social Contract" was influential in the creation of the U. S. Constitution.
Locke
A German monk who challenged the authority of the Roman Catholic Church; posted 95 theses or arguments against the "sale of indulgences"
Martin Luther
Rise and spread of Christianity supported the model of moral absolutism; built on the birth, life and teachings of Jesus; great impact on ethical thinking in Western Civilization for centuries
Medieval Era of Ethics
Its intellectual and social context was Christianity with its emphasis on the individual's obligations to God as set forth in the Bible and interpreted by the "church."
Medieval Period
St. Augustine and Thomas Aquinas were important figures during this period.
Medieval Period
A time of corruption in the Roman Catholic Church in which the sale of indulgences had become a common practice; Martin Luther posted his 95 theses in protest of the practice which was the start of the Protestant Reformation
Middle Ages
Moral context and social climate are characterized by intellectual and social upheaval.-Paradigm Shift begins. -New paradigm of ethics is moral relativism.
Modern Era:
During this era, scripture became available to common man and introduced the idea of each person interpreting the Bible for him/her self. Later, scientific discoveries shifted the focus of morality from the Bible to science.
Modern Period
time period for this era was 1500 to the present
Modern Period
Assumes there is a definable & knowable truth.Assumes there are moral principles (absolutes) that apply to all people in similar circumstances.Assumes moral principles are OBJECTIVE
Moral Absolutism
Moral Relativism is based on a type of thinking called the DIALECT.Which is An IDEA and its COUNTER IDEA are synthesized (combined) to form a NEW IDEA
Moral Relativism LOGIC
There is NO OBJECTIVE truth.There are NO absolute moral principles.Right and wrong are SUBJECTIVE or (open to interpretation) .Each person defines right and wrong according to his/her own desires a term, thing, or concept that is dependent on something else
Moral Relativism's Assumptions
There are BOTH physical laws & moral laws & God is the author of BOTH-These laws are built into Nature-They can be universally known by reason apart from revelation -Taught that we are NOW to pursue the goodness of God, our well-being (telos) -We do this through a virtuous life and the law found in Scripture & nature.
Natural Law Theory
Believed that religion and morality were only for the weak who used it as a crutch; led the "death of God" movement
Nietzsche
A state of meaninglessness and chaos out of which, according to Nietzsche, a 'superman' would arise who would be above any morality
Nihilism
A paradigm is a standard, pattern or model; a framework for understanding something : a system of beliefs.
PARADIGM
A change from ONE WAY of thinking to another; a change in thinking which occurred as we moved from the beliefs of moral absolutism to those of moral relativism
Paradigm Shift
Pupil of SocratesWrote Socrates' teachings in "The Republic"Ethics was grounded in the nature of external reality ----"perfect" standard existed in the "realm of forms" a world beyond our senses.Believed the perfect society would be ruled by "philosopher kings"
Plato
Student of Socrates; believed the "world of ideas" or Realm of Forms was the highest "good"and where reality is.
Plato
This philosopher believed in a more extreme view of maintaining a proper ethical perspective and believed in the denial of bodily pleasures.
Plato
Laws of evolution apply to social structures and lifeSocial structure is engineered and controlled by impersonal forces rather than by God
Social Darwinism:
Dominant figure of the classical era of ethics; most famous for his method of teaching which was to ask questions; most famous quote: The unexamined life is not worth living
Socrates
Happiest and best life is the LIFE OF REASON"The un-examined life is not worth living."In vented the Socratic Method
Socrates
The dominant figure in the Classical Period, this philosopher believed it was possible to develop a universal set of ethical standards to guide conduct. The key to doing so, he believed, was human reason. "The unexamined life is not worth living.
Socrates
A philosopher who made Plato's ideas the basis of Christian ethics, this philosopher believed that earthly l life is only a preparation for eternal life.
St. Augustine
Made Plato's philosophy the basis of Christian Ethics; propose a two sided system of moral law—the life of reason and faith
St. Augustine
He taught that ethics has two dimensions---the natural and the theological. His philosophy was built around the belief that there is a Natural Law (the divine law of God as written in man's heart). He also taught that "all of man is fallen except his intellect.
St. Thomas of Aquinas
A phrase used by the English philosopher, John Locke meaning "blank slate." This view promotes the belief that we are born NEITHER "good" or "bad" but BLANK and that experience writes our reality.
Tabula rasa
St. Augustine and Thomas Aquinas
Two Great Thinkers of the Medieval Era of Ethics
Something that is not doubted or questioned.Something that exists outside our subjective realitySomething that does not change. Exists without being dependent on anything else.
What is an absolute?
Theistic answer to this question is GOD.Assumes that God or a Higher BEING exists.Morality comes from God or a higher being. Morality is OBJECTIVE.
Who Makes the rules?....
The Humanistic answer is Humans.There is no authority other than humans.Humans must KNOW all and BE all.There is NO definable TRUTH .
Who makes the rules?
A French philosopher who believed that children are born good and become corrupted by the constraints of society.
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Roman ruler who made Christianity STATE religion of the empire (official)
Theodosius
But....Isn't this an ABSOLUTE statement???
There are NO absolute moral principles...
An idea and its counter idea BOTH CAN NOT BE TRUE. If one is RIGHT or TRUE the other is WRONG or FALSE.
Thesis/Anti-thesis Logic
Inductive method + deductive method
= Scientific Method
a norm or principle that is true at all times and in all places and admits no exceptions. CIRCUMSTANCES may change the JUDGEMENT of the action, but the PRINCIPLE does not change
A MORAL ABSOLUTE:
Pupil of Plato/tutored Alexander the Great-As part of this purposeful universe, humans, too, have purpose.-We all move toward a telos (goal)=well-being-He believed we all share a nature which requires us to live a LIFE OF VIRTUE in order to find well being.Life of reason includes:1.Pursuit of truth through reflection (REASON)2.Pursuit of Virtue through conduct (PRACTICE)
ARISTOTLE
Origin of the 3 major monotheistic religions of the world
Abraham
This type of thinking has resulted in the unwillingness to say that ANY BEHAVIOR is wrong.
Absolutophobia
A time which glorified man's ability to reason and was a time of "illumination" in which rational thought was viewed as way to rid ordinary man of ignorance and make a way for productive living.
Age of Enlightenment
Also known as the age of reason; began in 16th century and marked the beginning of the paradigm shift from moral absolutism to moral relativism;
Age of Enlightenment
views of ethics that see God as the ultimate source of morality.According to this view, God wills right because His character is a reflection of all that is good, just, moral and ethical. Thus, to be made in His image we have the capacity to choose good and to live morally is to follow His will.
Divine Command Theory
God's will is right because His character is a reflection of all that is good, just, moral and ethical. -Thus, to be made in His image we have the capacity to choose good and to live morally is to follow His will.
Divine Command TheoryDivine
No RATIONAL basis for ethics; all moral statements are just expressions of our own feelings, attitudes and preferences
EMOTIVISM
Used a rational approach to science based on experimentation and arriving at conclusions based on careful observation. (Empiricism)
FRANCIS BACONFRANCIS BACON
Promoted the INDUCTIVE METHODHe believed that science would free men from ignorance so they could lead productive lives; his ideas along with those of Descartes set the stage for the scientific revolution
Francis Bacon
one of the two "fathers" of the enlightenment who believed that science could free ordinary man from ignorance and allow for a productive life.
Francis Bacon
A 19th century psychologist who changed our view of the ability to "control our impulses;" according to this theorist we are driven by unconscious desires which give us license to do what we want.
Freud
Saint AugustineSaint Thomas Aquinas
Great thinkers of the MEDIEVAL ERA:
Early ancient culture built on the history of the Jews; Old Testament and 10 commandments; influenced ethical thinking in Western Civilization
Hebrew Culture
A system of thinking in which "man" is the only reference point for truth and morality
Humanism
Answers the questions: Where does morality come from? & Who makes the rules? by claiming that all morality comes from man
Humanistic Approach to Ethics
Never happen in a vacuum- Ideas are framed within a CONTEXT-They have CAUSES and CONSEQUENCES
IDEAS
Goes FROM the particular experiments to a GENERAL theory
INDUCTIVE METHOD
Humans are nothing more than a higher sort of animals -Soul, spirit and eternity are but chemical actions of the brain-If there is NO MEANING in our origins (Random origins), NO MEANING beyond biological drives to ensure our DNA continues and NO MEANING beyond THIS LIFE, then WHY SHOULD WE CARE, BE GOOD, or DO GOOD?**
Ideas originated from DARWIN'S theories
Compared the universe to a clock that had been designed by a master clock maker—an all powerful God---who set the universe in motion and then left it alone. - God as Clockmaker= DEISM
RENEE DESCARTES
Religion was a system of illusions and superstitions that "fed" social inequality by reinforcing beliefs and practices of the wealthy.-Thus religion was "an opiate" of the people which caused the poor to accept their conditions in life by promising a better life to come-God is an illusion; we can create our own "utopia" **
Religion according to Marx
Father of modern philosophyMost famous quote: "I think; therefore I am." SELF knowledge defines existence
Renee Descartes
One of two "fathers" of the "Enlightenment" who believed that match and reason were all that are necessary to discover truth in sciences; developed the 'clock-maker' theory of creation; developed a field a mathematics called analytic geometry.
Renee Descartes
A French philosopher who believed that we are "born good;" he believed that what corrupts an individual are the constraints and rules of society; an early proponent of "following our feelings" as the basis of making moral decisions
Rousseau
believed people who lived in civilized society were unhappy and that everyone should live outdoors in harmony with nature.
Rousseau
In this module's context is the view that if moral standards are changed in one area it leads to changes in morality in other areas and eventual moral decay of society
SLIPPERY SLOPESlippery slope
He developed a two sided system of morality.1. Life of reason leads to earthly well being (internal peace here)2. Faith leads to salvation and eternal happiness Wrote The City of God
ST AUGUSTINE:
Used Plato's philosophy in developing a system of Christian ethics: Plato's realm of forms = Christian heaven-Plato believed this world was imperfect (a copy)/ Christianity argues that we live in a fallen imperfect world-Plato emphasized self-denial/Christianity does the same
ST AUGUSTINE:
-He combined Biblical principles with the ideas of Aristotle-Agreed with Aristotle that the universe has PURPOSE built into it—however, proposed that this was due to the creative work of God.-Developed an approach to ethics called NATURAL LAW THEORY
Saint Thomas Aquinas
The Scientific Revolution*Brought new discoveries / inventions which changed how people thought and lived
The Scientific Revolution
A thinker of the medieval era of ethics; built on the ideas of Aristotle and believed natural law was the basis of understanding morality
Thomas Aquinas
- First thinker to systematically approach ethics from a scientific viewpoint.-Argued that human nature is inherently BADIf this nature is left unchecked, the rule of self-preservation will produce a morality based on self-interest-Argued that the concept of right/wrong only exist when a civil society is formed.
Thomas Hobbes
He was the first philosopher to systematically treat ethics from a scientific viewpoint. He believed that man's tendency to self preservation produces a morality based on self interests.
Thomas Hobbes
Life is nasty, short and brutish." Conflict is a part of human nature
Thomas Hobbes
Post-Modern definition---acceptance of any action as within the "person's right" to his/her own morality that extends to condoning the action
Tolerance -Post-Modern definition-
original definition---to listen respectfully to differing views in a COMMON SEARCH for TRUTH
Tolerance: original definition-
StabilityOrderSecurityConfidencePhysical absolutes establish BOUNDARIES: lines of protection; lines that keep us safe or at the least are in our best interest and/or the best interests of others
some functions of physical absolutes
Our "hedonistic" nature rebels at the idea of being confined by boundaries and restrictions. IF there are absolutes that means that EACH of us is bound by a defined RIGHT AND WRONG.IF there are NO absolute principles, then each one is FREE TO DO WHAT ONE WANTS
why do we rebel against the idea of MORAL ABSOLUTES?