Ethics

Cards (46)

  • Feelings
    Instinctive response to moral dilemmas
  • Reason and emotion
    Not really opposites, both have relative roles in ethical thinking
  • Emotions
    Judgments about the accomplishment of one's goals, can be rational based on good judgments
  • Feelings
    Visceral or instinctual, provide motivations to act morally
  • Moral sentiments highlight the need for morality to be based also on sympathy for other people
  • Ethical Subjectivism
    Moral judgments are dependent on the feelings, attitudes, or standards of a person or group, not objective facts
  • Emotivism
    Moral judgments express positive or negative feelings, not statements of fact
  • Reason
    Basis or motive for an action, decision, or conviction, capacity for logical, rational, and analytic thought
  • Impartiality
    Principle of justice holding that decisions ought to be based on objective criteria, rather than on the basis of bias, prejudice, or preferring the benefit to one person over another for improper reasons
    1. Step Moral Reasoning Model
    1. Gather the facts
    2. Determine the ethical issues
    3. Identify the principles that have a bearing on the case
    4. Consider the consequences of the available options
    5. Consider your duties and obligations
    6. Consider the virtues involved
    7. Make a decision and be prepared to defend it
  • Ethical issues
    Moral issues stated in terms of competing interests that make for a moral dilemma
  • Principles
    Moral values or principles that have a bearing on a moral dilemma
  • Moral decision-making process
    1. Determine ethical issues
    2. Identify principles
    3. List alternatives
    4. Compare alternatives with principles
    5. Weigh consequences
    6. Make a decision
  • Moral courage
    Doing the right thing even at the risk of inconvenience, ridicule, punishment, loss of job or security or social status
  • Will
    The faculty of the mind which chooses, at the moment of making decision, the strongest desire from among the various desires present
  • Willpower
    The inner strength to make a decision, take action, and handle and execute any aim or task until it is accomplished, regardless of inner and outer resistance, discomfort, or difficulties
  • Moral courage and will require us to recognize our responsibilities and be accountable to the consequences of our own actions
  • Feelings
    Instinctive response to moral dilemmas
  • Some ethicists believe that ethics is also a matter of emotion
  • Moral judgments at their best should also be emotional
  • Reason and emotion
    Not really opposites, both have relative roles in ethical thinking
  • Emotions
    Judgments about the accomplishment of one's goals, can be rational based on good judgments
  • Feelings
    Visceral or instinctual, provide motivations to act morally
  • Moral sentiments highlight the need for morality to be based also on sympathy for other people
  • Being good involves both thinking and feeling
  • Ethical Subjectivism
    Moral judgments are dependent on the feelings, attitudes, or standards of a person or group, not objective facts
  • Emotivism
    Moral judgments express positive or negative feelings, not statements of fact
  • Excluding feelings in moral living seems to go against the biblical decree to worship and serve God with a joyful heart or feeling
  • Subjective feelings sometimes matter when deciding between right and wrong
  • Emotions, like our love for our friends and family, are a crucial part of what gives life meaning, and ought to play a guiding role in morality
  • Feelings or emotions involved in moral thinking should be anchored on careful consideration of a full range of right goals, including altruistic ones
  • Reason
    Basis or motive for an action, decision, or conviction, capacity for logical, rational, and analytic thought
  • Reason is a requirement for morality, moral judgments require backing by reasons
  • Impartiality
    Principle of justice holding that decisions ought to be based on objective criteria, rather than on the basis of bias, prejudice, or preferring the benefit to one person over another for improper reasons
  • Impartiality in morality requires that we give equal and/or adequate consideration to the interests of all concerned parties
    1. Step Moral Reasoning Model
    1. Gather the facts
    2. Determine the ethical issues
    3. Identify the principles that have a bearing on the case
    4. Consider the consequences of the available options
    5. Consult your moral intuitions
    6. Decide on the best course of action
    7. Reflect on the decision and its implications
  • Ethical issues
    Moral issues stated in terms of competing interests that make for a moral dilemma
  • Principles
    Moral values or principles that have a bearing on a moral dilemma
  • Resolving a moral dilemma
    1. Determine the ethical issues
    2. Identify the principles
    3. List the alternatives
    4. Compare the alternatives with the principles
    5. Weigh the consequences
    6. Make a decision
  • Moral courage
    Doing the right thing even at the risk of inconvenience, ridicule, punishment, loss of job or security or social status