week nine

    Cards (37)

    • Branches of ethics
      I. Applied ethics - is it right/wrong?
      II. Normative ethics - why is right/wrong?
      III. Meta-ethics - is there such thing as right/wrong?
    • Normative ethics
      • provides criteria for the right action, the virtuous character and/or the good state of affairs
      • e.g is it an action's consequences that make it right/wrong?
    • Applied ethics
      • Takes principles of normative ethics and apply to moral problems
      • e.g should we censor the arts?
    • Meta-ethics
      • not interested in moral theory of goodness
      • focuses on higher order analysis
      • e.g is there moral truths
    • Consequentialism (normative)
      • an act is morally good if it produces good consequences
      • pleasure & avoiding pain, preference, development of talents
    • Universalism vs Egosim (consequentialism, normative)
      • universalism - everyone equally important, consequences for all people matter
      • egosim - only your own consequences matter
    • Utilitarianism (consequentialism)
      • hedonistic - max pleasure, min pain for most people
      • some focus on preference satisfaction
    • Instrumental vs Intrinsic value (consequentialism)
      • instrumental - means of getting something ie money
      • intrinsic - valued for its own sake ie friendship
    • Deontology (normative)
      • morality of act determined by intrinsic feature of the act itself
      • act can be wrong even if brings about better consequences
      • talks about rights and duty
    • Kantian deontology (normative)
      • Kant believed we identify the intrinsic rightness/wrongness of an act using reason - no emotion
      • good acts come from sense of duty
      • categorical imperative: don't treat as a means to an end
    • Virtue ethics (normative)
      • what matters for morality is the kind of people we are - kind/cruel
      • right action is one that an entirely virtuous person would do
    • Virtue & vices
      • traces back to Aristotle - understood human virtues as falling between vices of deficiency of excess
      • Timidity/humility/arrogance
      • Cowardice/courage/recklessness
    • Consequentialist moral argument
      • includes a premise about goodness/badness of a consequence
      • 1 about how action leads to consequence
      • 2 premises guarantee conclusion
      • deductively valid, proper form
    • Consequentialist moral argument form
      1. Action A= consequence C
      2. It'd be good/ bad for C to occur
      therefore
      3. It would be right/wrong to perform A
    • Deontological moral arguments
      • premise about action's intrinsic feature + premise which says acts with that feature are right/wrong
      • 2 premises guarantee conclusion - deductively valid
    • Deontological moral argument form
      1. Action A has intrinsic feature F
      2. morally right/wrong to do act with F
      therefore
      3. Action A is morally right/wrong
    • Virtue ethical moral argument
      • moral evaluation of people's habits + dispositions is more fundamental than moral evaluation of actions
      • deductively valid
    • Virtue ethical moral argument form
      1. Action A would be performed by a person that is a paragon of virtue
      2. Action is only right if performed by a virtuous person
      therefore
      3. It's right to perform A
    • Aretaic moral arguments
      • evaluate people on basis of doing good actions for good consequences
      • actions agent takes are good/bad = agent is good/bad
    • Aretaic moral argument form
      1. Agent H does good/bad actions for good/bad reasons
      Therefore
      2. H is a good/bad person
    • Higher order of discipline (meta-ethics)
      • don't make moral judgement
      • non-moral judgements about moral judgements + discourse
      • 'second order' discipline
      • e.g 'moral statements cannot really be true/false'
    • Moral semantics (meta-ethics)
      • asks questions about the meanings of moral discourse
      • e.g 'what is the role of moral discourse?'
    • Moral metaphysics (meta-ethics)
      • asks questions about whether there is a moral reality and questions about its nature
      • e.g 'is there a moral reality?'
    • Moral epistemology (meta-ethics)
      • asks whether there can be moral knowledge & about the nature of our moral beliefs
      • e.g 'if there's moral truths, how can we come to know them?'
    • Moral phenomenology (meta-ethics)
      • focuses on the 1st person experiences we have that relate to morality
      • e.g 'how does it feel to have a moral life?'
    • Moral psychology (meta-ethics)
      • asks questions about the psychology of how we make moral decisions
      • e.g 'how do our moral capacities develop as we grow?'
    • Moral cognitivism vs non-cognitivism
      1. moral cognitivism (cognitive state) - moral judgements are beliefs, truth apt
      2. moral non-cognitivism (affective state) - moral judgements are attitudes, not truth apt
    • Moral cognitivism
      • expresses moral beliefs - truth apt
      • moral disagreement: can be genuine disagreement as one person can say something truth apt and the other false
    • Non-cognitivism
      • express attitudes not beliefs
      • declarative form - not true or false
    • Non-factivity
      • no moral facts to begin with
      • function to express attitudes and/or influence behaviour
    • Cognitivist accounts - objectivism
      express true/false proposition, at least one party is objectively false
    • Cognitivist accounts - (first person) subjectivism
      describe their beliefs, subjectively true/false - ie 'I believe that'
    • Cognitivist accounts - cultural relativism
      someone expresses the predominant moral view in society - differs in truth value
    • Non-cognitivist accounts: emotivism
      express emotions & aim to produce same in others - not declarative
    • Non-cognitivist accounts: prescriptivism
      use of imperative, ie 'do not kill' means killing is wrong
    • Non-cognitivist accounts: expressivism
      • systemic connection between moral language and expression
      • approval/disapproval
      • attitude not belief
    • Fallacy - appeal to nature
      • argues that because something is natural it must be good/right
      • inverse is also fallacy - unnatural = bad
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