Chapter 2
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
Introduction
to Ethics
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Chapter Overview
• Introduction
• Review of nine ethical theories
• Comparing four ethical theories
• Morality of breaking the law
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More on Ethics
2.1 Introduction
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What Is Relativism?
• Relativism
– No universal norms of right and wrong
– One person can say “X is right,” another can say
“X is wrong,” and both can be right
• Subjective relativism
– Each person decides right and wrong for himself
or herself
– “What’s right for you may not be right for me”
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2.6 Kantianism
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Critical Importance of Good Will
• Carla
– Single mother
– Works full time
– Takes two evening courses/semester
• History class
– Requires more work than normal
– Carla earning an “A” on all work so far
– Carla doesn’t have time to write final report
• Carla purchases report; submits it as her own work
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Kantian Evaluation (1st Formulation)
• Utilitarianism
– Morality of an action has nothing to do with intent
– Focuses on the consequences
– A consequentialist theory
• Act utilitarianism
– Add up change in happiness of all affected beings
– Sum > 0, action is good
– Sum < 0, action is bad
– Right action to take: one that maximizes the sum
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• Thomas Hobbes
– Lived during the English Civil War (1600s)
– In a “state of nature” our lives would be “solitary, poor,
nasty, brutish, and short”
– We implicitly accept a social contract
• Establishment of moral rules to govern relations among
citizens
• Government capable of enforcing these rules
• Jean-Jacques Rousseau
– In ideal society, no one above rules
– That prevents society from enact bad rules
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James Rachels’s Definition
Kinds of Rights
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Vices
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