Unit 4 - Conscience

    Cards (15)

    • What is the role of the conscience?

      -used to decide what should be done before making a moral decision
      -inform moral agents whether their actions were right/wrong > e.g. causes guilt
    • What did St Augustine believe conscience to be?

      • he believed conscience to be the innate voice of God
      • conscience has been placed in the human mind by God
      • our conscience tells us what is right and wrong >>> we must listen to God
    • Strengths of St Augustine's idea of conscience
      • Consistent with scripture >>> St Paul 'Conscience is a witness to the requirements of law'
      • supported by later theologians e.g. F Schleiermacher - 'voice of God within'
    • Criticisms of St Augustine's idea of conscience
      • Depends on belief in God
      • Amount of moral evil suggests not everybody hears the voice of God within them
      • Different people have different ideas of 'good'
      • Does this compromise free will?
    • What did St Thomas Aquinas believe conscience to be?

      • he believed conscience was a God given faculty of reason
      • Synderesis principle - 'good should be done and evil should be avoided'
      • 'synderesis is in the rational part of a human agent. It is a natural disposition of the human mind'
      • Argues what is innate for humans is not the voice of God yet the ability to reason which was given to us by God
      • Aquinas believes conscience is fallible(make mistakes). However we should still follow it because its the best moral guide we have.
    • Strengths of Aquinas' idea of conscience
      • realistic as it considers conscience is fallible
      • emphasis on reason safeguards human free will
    • Criticisms of Aquinas' idea of conscience
      • Depends of belief In God
      • Aquinas assumes we all act accordingly to the synderesis principle
      • many people act irrationally >>> was not everyone given the ability to reason?
    • What did Joseph Butler believe conscience to be?

      • conscience is a reflective principle placed within us by God to act as a guide and governor
      • 'proper governor' - it is our duty to follow it
      • allows to reflect morally on what we have done and what we are to do in the future
      • based on two governing principles - prudence and benevolence
      • balance of the two is needed for the individual to function morally
      • "principle of reflection" "natural to man"
    • Strengths of Joseph Butlers idea of conscience
      • makes us morally responsible for our actions - we must be held accountable
    • Criticisms of Joesph Butlers idea of conscience
      • some people do not have balance between prudence and benevolence - misunderstood human nature?
      • moral evil suggests that not everybody has this inner reflective principle
    • What did Joseph Fletcher believe conscience to be?

      • sees conscience as a verb
      • doesn't see conscience as a 'thing' that we have but instead something we do
      • rejects conscience is an innate faculty - "merely a word for our attempts to make decisions"
      • conscience is something we do when we are deciding how love is best served in a situation
      • "traditional error lies in thinking about conscience as a noun instead of a verb"
    • Strengths of Joseph Fletchers idea of conscience
      • resolves problem of conscience not being a physical feature of the brain
      • shows how conscience function as a 'verb' in the development of his situation ethics
      • shows why different people make different moral decisions
    • Criticisms of Joseph Fletchers idea of conscience
      • depends of belief in God
      • depends in using situation ethics - based on applying love
      • contradicts traditional Christian understanding of conscience as a faculty/thing we have been given by God
    • What did Sigmund Freud believe conscience to be?

      • conscience is the internalised voice of authority figures experienced as feelings of guilt
      • aspect of the super ego - functional part
      • rules/regulations given to us by authority figures when we are younger are internalised in us
      • conscience is therefore the repository of our parents commands to us during childhood
    • Strengths of Sigmund Freuds idea of conscience
      • gives us an insight into the origin of guilt
      • takes into account social influences on our conscience
      • provides an explanation for conscience that doesn't depend on God
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