Ethics Skill
Master ethical theory: metaethics (nature of morality), normative ethics (what we ought to do), and applied ethics (specific issues).
Structure of Ethics
ETHICAL THEORY ══════════════ METAETHICS ├── What is the nature of moral claims? ├── Are there moral facts? └── Can we have moral knowledge? NORMATIVE ETHICS ├── What makes actions right/wrong? ├── Consequentialism, deontology, virtue ethics └── General moral principles APPLIED ETHICS ├── Specific moral issues ├── Bioethics, environmental ethics, business ethics └── Applying principles to cases
Metaethics
Moral Realism vs. Anti-Realism
Moral Realism:
- •There are objective moral facts
- •Moral claims are truth-apt
- •Some moral beliefs are true
Moral Anti-Realism:
- •Error theory: Moral claims are false
- •Non-cognitivism: Moral claims aren't truth-apt
- •Relativism: Truth relative to culture/individual
Non-Cognitivism
Emotivism (Ayer, Stevenson):
- •"X is wrong" = "Boo X!"
- •Moral claims express attitudes, not beliefs
Prescriptivism (Hare):
- •"X is wrong" = "Don't do X!"
- •Moral claims are universal prescriptions
Expressivism (Blackburn, Gibbard):
- •Moral claims express non-cognitive states
- •But can still be "true" in a deflated sense
Moral Epistemology
Intuitionism: We directly perceive moral truths Rationalism: Moral truths knowable a priori Naturalism: Moral facts = natural facts Constructivism: Moral truths constructed by rational procedures
Normative Ethics
Consequentialism
Core Idea: Actions are right if they produce best outcomes
CONSEQUENTIALIST THEORIES ═════════════════════════ UTILITARIANISM ├── Maximize happiness/pleasure ├── Bentham: Quantity of pleasure ├── Mill: Quality matters too └── Hedonistic vs. preference utilitarianism ACT UTILITARIANISM ├── Each act evaluated by its consequences └── Problems: demanding, counter-intuitive RULE UTILITARIANISM ├── Follow rules that maximize utility └── Handles some objections CONSEQUENTIALIST FORMULA: Right action = Action that maximizes good outcomes
Objections:
- •Integrity (Williams): Alienates us from our projects
- •Justice: Might justify punishing innocents
- •Demandingness: Requires constant maximization
- •Calculation: Impossible to know all consequences
Deontology
Core Idea: Actions have intrinsic rightness/wrongness regardless of consequences
KANTIAN ETHICS
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CATEGORICAL IMPERATIVE (CI)
├── Formula of Universal Law
│ └── Act only on maxims you can will as universal laws
├── Formula of Humanity
│ └── Treat humanity never merely as means
└── Formula of Autonomy
└── Act as if legislating for a kingdom of ends
APPLYING THE CI:
1. Formulate maxim (e.g., "Lie when convenient")
2. Universalize: What if everyone acted this way?
3. If contradiction (logical or practical), action is wrong
4. Lying universalized → No trust → Lying pointless
∴ Lying is wrong
Deontological Constraints:
- •Some acts wrong regardless of consequences
- •Negative duties (don't harm) stronger than positive (help)
- •Agent-relative: My killing is worse than allowing death
Virtue Ethics
Core Idea: Focus on character, not acts or rules
VIRTUE ETHICS ═════════════ EUDAIMONIA (Flourishing) ├── The good life; well-being ├── Achieved through virtue └── Not just feeling good VIRTUES ├── Character traits that promote flourishing ├── Courage, temperance, justice, wisdom ├── Acquired through habituation └── Mean between extremes PHRONESIS (Practical Wisdom) ├── Knowing what virtue requires in situations ├── Cannot be reduced to rules └── Developed through experience VIRTUOUS PERSON AS STANDARD: Right action = What the virtuous person would do
Neo-Aristotelian: MacIntyre, Foot, Hursthouse Challenges: Action guidance, moral disagreement, relativism
Comparison
| Theory | What's Primary | Right Action |
|---|---|---|
| Consequentialism | Good outcomes | Maximizes good |
| Deontology | Right acts/duties | Follows rules |
| Virtue Ethics | Good character | What virtuous do |
Thought Experiments
Trolley Problems
TROLLEY CASES ═════════════ SWITCH: Trolley heading to kill 5. Flip switch → diverts to kill 1. Most say: Permissible FOOTBRIDGE: Trolley heading to kill 5. Push large man off bridge to stop trolley. Most say: Impermissible WHY THE DIFFERENCE? ├── Doing vs. allowing ├── Intended vs. foreseen (Double Effect) ├── Using person as means └── Physical contact
Experience Machine
Nozick: Would you plug into a machine that simulates perfect happiness?
- •Most say no → Pleasure isn't everything
- •Authenticity, achievement, reality matter
Violinist
Thomson: You wake up connected to a famous violinist who needs your kidneys.
- •Argues: Even if fetus is person, abortion can be permissible
- •Your body, your choice
Applied Ethics Topics
Bioethics
- •Abortion, euthanasia, genetic enhancement
- •Autonomy, non-maleficence, beneficence, justice
Environmental Ethics
- •Animal rights, climate change, future generations
- •Anthropocentrism vs. biocentrism
Social/Political Ethics
- •Distributive justice, human rights
- •Rawls' veil of ignorance, libertarianism
Key Vocabulary
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Deontology | Duty-based ethics |
| Consequentialism | Outcome-based ethics |
| Utilitarianism | Maximize happiness |
| Virtue | Excellence of character |
| Eudaimonia | Flourishing, well-being |
| Categorical imperative | Unconditional moral law |
| Supererogatory | Beyond duty, praiseworthy |
| Prima facie | At first glance, defeasible |
| Intrinsic value | Valuable in itself |
| Instrumental value | Valuable as means |
| Moral realism | Objective moral facts exist |
Integration with Repository
Related Themes
- •
thoughts/morality/: Ethical explorations - •
thoughts/life_meaning/: Good life, flourishing