1 / 12

Ethics (presentation adapted from Prof. J. Christman’s and A. Lau’s Workshop on Ethics)

Ethics (presentation adapted from Prof. J. Christman’s and A. Lau’s Workshop on Ethics). Our goal: systematic approach Definition Ethical Frameworks. Definition of Ethics. “Positive guidelines we use to shape our behavior, and the systematic study of these guidelines” More than just

craigbanks
Télécharger la présentation

Ethics (presentation adapted from Prof. J. Christman’s and A. Lau’s Workshop on Ethics)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ethics(presentation adapted from Prof. J. Christman’s and A. Lau’s Workshop on Ethics) Our goal: systematic approach Definition Ethical Frameworks

  2. Definition of Ethics • “Positive guidelines we use to shape our behavior, and the systematic study of these guidelines” • More than just • being prudent out of self interest • following the letter of the law • abiding by professional codes of conduct

  3. Thinking Ethically • Foreseeing and averting problems • Becoming ethically aware • Developing moral imagination • Maximalist always looking for ethical problems • Minimalist looks only for minimal criteria to signal an ethical problem • Finding the right balance

  4. Ethical Frameworks • Consequence-based thinking • Duty-based thinking • Virtue-based thinking

  5. Consequence-based • Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill • Utilitarian • Do what produces greatest good for the greatest number of people • Monetary costs and benefits • Human welfare • Pleasure or happiness

  6. Consequence-based (cont’d) • Limitations: • Difficult to predict consequences • Can end up reducing ethics to economics • Differing views of what makes people happy • Ends do not justify the means if the means are morally unacceptable • Formally, this theory does not pertain to non-human life

  7. Duty-based • Emmanuel Kant • Categorical imperative (do only that which you would want everyone to do) • “What if everyone did this?” (Golden Rule) • Duty to obey universal principles • e.g., never lie or steal • The right to be treated with respect • NO EXCEPTIONS

  8. Duty-based (cont’d) • Limitations: • Requires everyone to be a perfect reasoner • Does not allow for situational exceptions • Sometimes, consequences do matter and may override our duty • Formally, this theory does not pertain to non-human life

  9. Virtue-based • What would a person of “good moral character” do? • Exercise appropriate virtue in every case • e.g. honesty, respect, generosity • Must use judgment to determine applicable virtue (as opposed to ethical rules)

  10. Virtue-based • Limitations: • Virtues may be defined too loosely to guide decisions in difficult cases • Virtues may be defined in terms of social setting or culture, making morality relativistic • Formally, this theory does not pertain to non-human life

  11. Overarching Rule of Thumb • Shorthand Principle that combines all 3 moral frameworks: Can I reasonably justify my actions and their consequences to all affected in a way that is consistent with my integrity and my relations with others? If not, can I live with that?

  12. General Guide to Ethical Thinking Redo other steps Am I missing something? use moral imagination reflect, choose, revisit decision gather facts Thinking/Acting Ethically how will relations be affected? formulate options (creatively) what virtues apply? consult others consider consequences -identify optimal option identify relevant duties Think through ethical frameworks carefully Engage stakeholders -- as appropriate

More Related