The Modifiers of Human Act
The Modifiers of Human Act
The Modifiers of Human Act
Human acts, because they are voluntary, are accountable acts. Actions are imputed on
the doer as its principal cause and, therefore, deserving of either reward or punishment
Subject of Human Acts
Business organizations, institutions, associations, or unions which are constituted by law as
juridical person are also subject of human acts. Like the individual person, these organizations
can sue and be sued for their actions.
is any person who is capable of acting intelligently and freely.
A Captain of a ship who assumes full responsibility for the ship and its cargo. A Person
accountable for his decisions and actuations. A person is either guilty or innocent, deserving or
undeserving of punishment
Hatefully, wicked or shockingly Evil.
Sanctions and Penalties
The Penal laws of the country provide for a system of punishment for wrongdoings,
ranging from fines to imprisonment. The capital punishment or death penalty is reserved
for heinous crimes.
Moral Accountability
Did the Captain of the Titanic cry?
Heinous crime - is a willful crime punishable in law by death penalty (in some countries/regions)
and unacceptable in society as extremely evil & cruel crime.
Responsibility - is the ability of a person to respond to a need or problem in a situation. That
ability to respond is an internal quality of a person, which is free and voluntary yet morally
obligatory in himself.
HUMAN ACT ELEMENTS
The Act in Itself
An act is a physical tendency towards a definite result (end of an act). Some actions are bad
because they produce evils as hunger, pain, illness, or death. In the moral sense, actions are
bad because they disturb the harmony within the acting person.
2. The Motive is the motive or reason why a person performs an act.
3. Circumstances of an Act
The term "temperance" itself seems in a certain way to refer to what is "outside man". We say, in fact,
that a temperate man is one who does not abuse food, drinks, pleasures, who does not drink alcohol to
excess, who does not deprive himself of consciousness by the use of drugs, etc. This reference to
elements external to man has its basis, however, within man. It is as if there existed in each of us a
"higher self" and a "lower self". In our "lower self", our "body" and everything that belongs to it is
expressed: its needs, its desires, its passions of a sensual nature particularly. The virtue of temperance
guarantees every man mastery of the "lower self" by the "higher self". Is this a humiliation of our body? Or
a disability? On the contrary, this mastery gives higher value to the body. As a result of the virtue of
temperance, the body and our senses find the right place which pertains to them in our human condition.
A temperate man is one who is master of himself. One in whom passions do not prevail over reason, will,
and even the "heart". A man who can control himself! If this is so, we can easily realize what a
fundamental and radical value the virtue of temperance has. It is even indispensable, in order that man
may be fully a man. It is enough to look at some one who, carried away by his passions, becomes a
"victim" of them—renouncing of his own accord the use of reason (such as, for example, an alcoholic, a
drug addict)—to see clearly that "to be a man" means respecting one's own dignity, and therefore, among
other things, letting oneself be guided by the virtue of temperance.
Exercise 3(Write your answer in a short clean band paper and write it legibly with STRICLY NO
ERASURE (encoded is not allowed). Follow the format)
Exercise No.3
Right Rev. Msgr. Paul J. Glenn, Ethics: A Class Manual in Moral Philosophy, (B. Herder Book Company:
Philippine Copyright, 1968)
Ramon B. Agapay, Ethics and the Filipino: A Manual on Moral for Student and Educators, Second
Edition, National Book Store, Copyright 2008
http://www.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/audiences/1978/documents/hf_jp-ii_aud_19781122.html
https://prezi.com/5f6znb9qokst/the-human-acts/
THE ENDS OF HUMAN ACT
Man does not aimlessly. His every action is done for a purpose. The purpose of human acts is
significant because it defines the nature of an act and reveals the moral judgement of the doer
The meaning of end
End- The “end” means the purpose or goal of an act. It’s either the end of the act or the end of
the doer.
1. HUMAN ACTS are neutral in themselves but they acquire morality when we speak of: 1.
OBJECT OF THE ACT 2. CIRCUMSTANCE 3. INTENTION
1. THE END OF THE ACT – is natural termination or completion of an act. . The
end of the act of eating is appeasing hunger, the end of playing basketball is
scoring point, and the of medication is curing illness The end of the Doer
2. THE END OF THE DOER is the purpose or motives which the doer wishes to
accomplish by his action. Without a motive, an act is accidental and involuntary.
A good motive is truthful, prudent, temperate, and just.
“The Ends does not justify the Means” is a fundamental moral principle. It affirms
that one should not do wrong (means) in order to attain a good purpose (end)
Motivation and Action
The circumstance do not change the specific nature of the human act
The definition of Law
Law , according to St. Thomas Aquinas, is an ordinance of reason, promulgated for
the common good by one who has charge society.
“ordinance if reason “because they are results of serous study, deliberation, public
debate.
“promulgated” because they are made known to the people who are bound to observe
them
“for the common good “because the purpose of the law is the general welfare of the
people.
“who has charge of society’ “because only those who have legitimate authority to govern
may pass laws.
Kind of Laws
1. Divine Positive Laws – are those made known to men by God like the Decalogue (Ten
Commandments) given to Moses.
2. Human Positive Laws – are those made by legitimate human authority, such as the
laws enacted by the State or the Church. It is intended to preserve peace and order and
to direct members to works towards the common good.
3. Affirmative and Negative Laws it is both divine and human positive laws
a. Affirmative laws are those that require the performance of an act, like that of
giving respect to parents and that paying of taxes when due.
b. Negative laws are those that prohibit the performance of an act, like the
prohibition against smoking in designated public area.
Binding in Conscience
Moral laws are those derived from natural law. They are the inherent and essentials of
human nature so they are thought as being written in the hearts of men. They regulate thoughts
and feelings.
Moral laws are enforced by personal commitment in the absence of the threat of corporal
punishment or sanctions.It is bin to conscience becaust they impose pon the person a moral
obligation to accept the law and comply with it.
On the other hand, human laws regulate only the external acts when these are
manifested and observed. Human laws do not bind in conscience and are purely penal, that is,
they are enforced by police power and justice is served when the culprit suffers punishment.
Popoerties of Law
1. A human law must conform with divine laws
2. A human law must promote the common good.
3. A human law must not discriminate against certain individual or groups
4. A human law must be practicable
5. A human law must be flexible
6. A law must be amendable.
Reading:
The reality of Evil
There are good actions and there are evil actions. Their realities do not come from the mind in
spite of some people saying evil is all in the mind”.
Some people do not see evil, accept it is as something normal”, or identify it somethings else.
Some, for example, would regard pornography as an art. Some think gambling and prostitution
as means of livelihood. A terrorist believes the murdering unbelievers is fulfilling God’s Will. A
government office believes accepting bribe is privilege of his office.
A pile of garbage is garbage even if the scavenger were to say it is good. Garbage represents
what is ugly, dirty, and bad in the surrounding. In contrast, a rose garden stands for what is
clean, beautiful, and wholesome. Therefore, only he who is intellectual dishonest would claim
ëvil is only in the mind”, implying that evil is something imaginary, an illusion.
The expression “äng masama ay nasa isip lang should not mean that evil is a fiction. It should
mean rather that an evil act begins in the mind as an evil thought and is translated into an
immoral act. Indeed, the mind us “the devil’s workshop”.
Exercise No. 4 (STRICTLY NO CP\OPYING IF ANSWERS)
Answer the following briefly
1. What factors determine the moral quality of an act?
2. When is an action a just act”?
3. Explain “the ends does not justify the means”.
4. Why do we need laws