Transcript Ethics

On a blank sheet of paper:
(do not write you name on it!)





Name 2-3 things (actions) that you think are
wrong/evil/immoral. You can be as general
or as specific as you would like.
For each item, give a brief reason.
Name 2-3 characteristics of a person who is
good/moral/praiseworthy.
For each item, give a brief reason.
What do you want to do for a living?
(lawyer, doctor, cop, etc….)
What are the purposes of Morality?





To keep society from falling apart.
To ameliorate human suffering.
To promote human flourishing.
To resolve conflicts of interest in just and
orderly ways.
To assign praise and blame, reward the good
and punish the guilty.
The question of Relativism
Are there (any) rules to live by
and/or by which society or
individuals should be governed?
•Is there such a thing as (objective)
truth? right and wrong?
•
Relativism
General definition
The position which holds that there are
no universal moral norms, or norms
that apply to everyone.
 Two types:
 Individual (subjectivism)relativism
 Cultural (conventional) relativism

Individual (subjectivism) relativism



There are no moral norms that apply to all
people; one person should not make a
judgment about another person’s moral
code or actions.
“Morality is in the eye of the beholder.”
If subjectivism is correct then what we think
of as morality is merely a matter of taste.
Ethical (conventional) relativism

“Ethical relativism is the doctrine that the
moral rightness or wrongness of actions
vary from society to society and that there
are not absolute universal moral standards
on all men at all times. Accordingly, it holds
that whether or not it is right for an
individual to act in a certain way depends
on or is relative to the society to which he
belongs.” (John Ladd)
Ethical (conventional) relativism

“. . . it has always seemed [to me] to be
obvious that the dictates of morality arise
from some sort of convention or
understanding among people, that different
people arrive at different understanding,
and that there are no basic moral demands
that apply to everyone.” (Gilbert Harman)
Cultural (conventional)relativism


There are no moral norms that apply to all
cultures; no culture should try to judge the moral
codes of another culture
Examples:






samurai sword-testing
female “circumcision”
Aztec human sacrifice
slavery in the United States
treatment of women by the Taliban
abortion in the United States
Relativism



Overarching question – is there such a thing as
objective knowledge/truth when it comes to
ethics/morality?
Subjective – varies from person to person
(depends on the subject/person doing the
thinking/feeling/etc.) – “there is no right or wrong
in matters of taste”
Objective – to exist or to be true independent of
anyone’s opinion – truth/knowledge depends on
the object – the thing that is being perceived,
experienced, thought about, etc.
Three partial truths of relativism. Why it
is appealing?
1.
2.
3.
What is the basic position of
relativism for each partial truth?
What is the partial truth?
What is the criticism of the
authors?
I. No science, no knowledge
1.
2.
3.
If it is not scientifically proven, it is
not true (objectively)
There are different types of
knowledge – and it is true that ethics
is not science
But other types of knowledge are
valid
II. Circumstances make a difference
1.
2.
3.
Circumstances make all the difference
Circumstances do make some
difference
Don’t take circumstances too far.
Circumstances do not make all the
difference.
III. Virtues of Tolerance and Compassion
Be tolerant/compassionate – don’t judge other’s
morals
We should be tolerant/compassionate
Jesus meant not to be hypocritical – not judge the
person
1.
2.
3.
•
•
Relativism – no judgment of morality of
actions/ethical codes
Jesus – no judgment of the person; yes to judgment of
wrong actions/ethical codes (for their good!); and
even when judging actions, try to understand special
circumstances
Why relativism is wrong and
unappealing
1.
2.
3.
Relativism is self-contradictory
Relativism is impracticable
Different cultures – not all
different moral rules