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Religious studies A-Level
Ethics
Unit 4 - Conscience
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Created by
Evie Kelly
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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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