Transcript PPT

Practical ethics:
applying theory
Michael Lacewing
[email protected]
Euthanasia

6 types
– Involuntary, voluntary, nonvoluntary
– Passive, active
Utilitarian thoughts

Act utilitarianism
– Look at each act of euthanasia
individually; not making a rule
– Involuntary: person doesn’t want to die,
so is made unhappy by the thought of
their death
– Voluntary: person does want to die,
often believing they will be less
unhappy by dying
– No significant difference between
active and passive
Two practical points

Morality v. legality
– Whether a practice should be legalized is a
separate debate from whether it is moral
acceptable.

Don’t get into metaethics
– The premise of practical ethics is that we are
searching for the (or a) right thing to do. So
don’t start talking about relativism or
subjectivism.
Deontology

What kind of action is euthanasia?
– Active: more like murder, in that there
is intervention to cause death
– Passive: often combined with intended
pain relief

Slippery slope
– An action that is permitted may incline
people to perform actions that aren’t
permitted.
Two more practical points

Separate empirical (sociology, psychology) from
philosophical
– Don’t spend long discussing whether or not the
slippery slope would actually occur.

The conclusion is often conditional
– It is not just acceptable, but good, to say ‘if it turns
out like this, then this follows’. E.g. ‘if allowing
voluntary euthanasia in some cases caused people to
seek it wrongly, then it would be wrong to allow it at
all’
Complexity


So is voluntary euthanasia
permissible?
Utilitarianism
– Pro: Individual’s suffer differently
– Con: Allowing it has bad
consequences, e.g. looking at better
alternatives

Deontology
– Pro: passive eu is not unjust, and is
charitable
– Con: bringing about death
unnecessarily is always wrong
Two final practical points

Avoid oversimplification
– Normative theories might not deliver just one
answer, but give reasons both for and against.
Noting this is important for evaluation.

Don’t say ‘Who knows? Who can say?’
– You are the thinker – this is your attempt to
try to say.
– Why think practical ethics should or could be
easy?