The Moral Point of View
Download
Report
Transcript The Moral Point of View
The Moral Point of
View
Lawrence M. Hinman, Ph.D.
University of San Diego
7/7/2015
Director, The Values Institute
©Lawrence M. Hinman
1
Why Study Ethics?
Moral concerns are unavoidable in
life.
Analogy: morality is a lot like
nutrition.
– Principal concern: health
– The role of experts
– Disagreement
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
2
Ethics as an Ongoing
Conversation
Professional discussions of ethical
issues in journals.
We come back to ideas again and
again, finding new meaning in them.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
3
Ethics and Morality
Morality: first-order set of beliefs and
practices about how to live a good
life
Ethics: a second-order, conscious
reflection on the adequacy of our
moral beliefs.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
4
Moral Health
The goal of ethical reflection is moral
health.
Thus we seek to determine what will
nourish our moral life and what will
poison it.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
5
Ethical Inventory
Take the ethical inventory on pp. 8-10
now or on the web at:
– http://ethics.sandiego.edu/ActiveWebSurvey/theory/
.
Return to your answers after
finishing each chapter.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
6
The Moral Point of View
What makes something a moral
issue?
– Content:
• duties, rights, human welfare, suffering,
character, etc.
– Perspective:
• impartial, compassionate, etc.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
7
Example: Cheating
Imagine a situation in which you see a
classmate cheating. There are several
elements from a moral point of view:
– Some people are hurt by the cheating
– There is deception in the situation
– Cheating seems to be unfair to those who
don’t cheat
– There are conflicting values—honesty, loyalty,
etc.
– There are questions of character.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
8
The Language of Moral Concerns
Some philosophers have argued that
moral issues are characterized by a
particular kind of language—terms
such as duty, obligation, right, and
good.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
9
Impartiality
Many philosophers have argued that
the moral point of view is
characterized by impartiality, that is, I
don’t give my own interest any
special weight.
– Immanuel Kant
– John Stuart Mill
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
10
Compassion
Other philosophers have seen the
origin of the moral life to be in
compassion, feeling for the suffering
of other sentient beings.
Josiah Royce: “Such as that is for
me, so is it for him, nothing less.”
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
11
Universally Binding
Moral obligations, some
philosophers maintain, are
universally binding and that is what
gives them their distinctive
character.
Kant: morality is a matter of
categorical imperatives.
– Distinguish between hypothetical and
categorical imperatives.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
12
Concern for Character
Philosophers from Aristotle onward
have seen the primary focus of
morality to be character.
Two questions:
– What ought I to do? (Kant and Mill)
– What kind of person ought I to be?
(Aristotle)
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
13
The Focus of Ethics
Ethics as the Evaluation of Other
People’s Behavior
– We are often eager to pass judgment on
others
Ethics as the Search for Meaning and
Value in Our Own Lives
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
14
Ethics as the Evaluation of Other
People’s Behavior
Ethics often used as a weapon
Hypocrisy
Possibility of knowing other people
The right to judge other people
The right to intervene
Judging and caring
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
15
Ethics as the Search for Meaning
and Value in Our Own Lives
Positive focus
Aims at discerning what is good
Emphasizes personal responsibility
for one’s own life
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
16
What to Expect from a Moral
Theory
Functions of theory:
Describe
Explain
Give strength (Stockdale)
Prescribe
– Open new possibilities
– Wonder
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
17
What to Expect from a Moral
Theory, 2
What is ethics like?
Physics
– Clear-cut, definitive answers
Engineering
– Several possible ways of doing things,
many ways that are wrong
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
18
The Point of Ethical Reflection
Ethics as the evaluation of other people’s
behavior
– Sources of mistrust about moral judgments
•
•
•
•
•
Hypocrisy
Knowing other people
The right to judge
Judging and intervention
Judging and caring
Ethics as the search for the meaning of
our own lives
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
19
Conclusion:
Ethics & Good Health
Ethics is like nutrition
– One studies bodily health, the other
moral health
– Significant disagreement in both fields
– Still there is a significant common
ground.
7/7/2015
©Lawrence M. Hinman
20