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How Actions Can Be Morally Evaluated

How Actions Can Be Morally Evaluated. Teleological Ethics. Teleological Ethics: morality is the means to achieve what is identified as good or valuable Deontological Ethics: the good or valuable is doing our duty (the morally right, obligatory)

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How Actions Can Be Morally Evaluated

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  1. How Actions Can Be Morally Evaluated Teleological Ethics • Teleological Ethics: morality is the means to achieve what is identified as good or valuable • Deontological Ethics: the good or valuable is doing our duty (the morally right, obligatory) • Divine Command $Natural Law $Kant $Buddhism Motive/Intention (Character) ACT Consequences Deontological Ethics

  2. Divine Command Theory The good is whatever God commands (as identified in the Scriptures) because it is God’s command Objections: • What God wills can be arbitrary • Scriptures conflict and need interpretation • The theory does not appeal to non-believers & lacks rationalpersuasiveness (circular)

  3. Natural Law Theory Thomas Aquinas Epictetus • Natural Law: we should follow reason and our God-instilled inclinations (Stoics, Aquinas) • Objections: inclinations sometimes conflict • Reply: principle of double effect: our intention should always be to do the good • Counter-replies: $natural is not always good $people differ on what is natural $even double effects are intended

  4. Kant’s Ethics (Formalism) • The essential feature of morality is obligation; you are obligated only if everyone else is too; the form of moral obligation is its universality • Moral obligation does not vary from person to person. It is not a hypothetical imperative (ifyou want Y, you ought to do X); rather, the imperative is categorical (you must do X) • Your intention must be to do your duty, to act for the sake of doing your duty

  5. Kant: Objections to Consequentialism, Divine Command & Natural Law Theories • If we are naturally oriented to seek happiness, we are not free and thus cannot be morally obligated to seek happiness: ought implies can • Because opinions differ about what happiness is, we could never agree on moral principles • Consequences are often out of our control, so we cannot be held responsible for our actions • We can hold ourselves responsible only if the moral law is self-imposed (“autonomous”)

  6. Kant: The Categorical Imperative • Always act only on maxims (rules) that you could will everyone universally to adopt • Two tests for universalizability: • Consistency: a maxim must be universalizable without contradiction • Acceptability: a universalized maxim must be acceptable Objection: moral rules often conflict

  7. Kant’s Categorical Imperative (continued) • Because human beings can act rationally, they can act for the sake of doing their duty; that is, they can act on the basis of a “good will” • Rational beings are capable of self-obligating behavior; we should therefore treat others as ends-in-themselves, freely consenting agents Objection: humans are not simply rational

  8. Buddhist Ethics • The craving for individuality (including life, pleasure, power) produces suffering—which is ended through virtue and meditation • Being virtuous requires us to respect ourselves and others, and to be patient, moderate, and to maintain a clear and balanced mind • Personal enlightenment consists not in merely following rules but in seeing one’s place in the universe

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