Ethics
Ethics
Ethics
RATIONALISTS:
Rene Descartes - “ Father of Modern Philosophy”
Philosophy- “ Meditations on first Philosophy “
- COGITO ERGO SUM- I think therefore, I am.
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz- The Monadology
Baruch Spinoza- The Ethics
Plato- First Rationalist
- TWO WORLDS: Form- Perfect Reality- souls of human being- (sea of forgetfulness)
Matter- where we exist
EMPIRICISTS
John Locke - human mind is like tabula rasa, blank slate
George Berkeley
David Hume
- LEARNING- recollection
Immanuel Kant- resolve between rationalists and empiricists
- Stalemate- book ( THE CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON )
- No such thing as pure innate knowledge/ideas
- No pure sensory experience
Knowledge – synthetic a priori knowledge
- By product of a priori and a posteriori
A priori principles- framework of the mind ( concept of space and time )
A posteriori- influx of your experience as registered by your senses
Phenomenon- totality of all synthetic a priori knowledge
Noumenon/noumena- world in itself- something that we cannot know
1. TRUTH VS. LOYALTY- contrast between sticking to what is true, and keeping
allegiance with someone like friends, etc.
2. INDIVIDUAL VS. COMMUNITY- contrast between the interest of one person or a small
group and the interest of the larger group.
3. SHORT-TERM VS. LONG-TERM- now vs. needs, immediate needs of the present and
the mediated needs of the future.
4. JUSTICE VS. VIRTUE- following the books and somehow bending the rules. Justice vs.
compassion, and empathy
Moral Accountability
- By product of moral personhood’s defining feature, the faculty of reason
- Equates to the term responsibility only when it means duty or obligation towards other
people.
Accountability
- Arises from our rationality, which encompasses our intelligence and freedom. It entails
taking responsibility for our actions. Our reason helps us discern right from wrong
actions, while our free will empowers us to select our actions.
Two dimensions of moral accountability- falls under the moral agent, the source of morally
evaluable actions.
1. Moral agents’ deservingness of praise
2. Deservingness of blame
Responsibility
- Could refer to entities, humans, and non-humans alike.
Agent
- A human person who is the cause of something or an event
Cause
- Inanimate object or non-human factor is involved
Prospective Responsibility
- Responsibility directed toward what will or may happen.
Retrospective Responsibility
- Directed toward what already happened.
Legal Accountability
- Relies on legal measures such as laws or statutes
- May not always align with moral accountability, as laws can be morally flawed, do not
embody ethical principles.
- Sanctions typically involve external physical punishments, such as imprisonment or the
deprivation of freedom.
Moral Accountability
- Basis its evaluation using moral or ethical principles.
- Moral sanctions encompass internal mental suffering like guilt, remorse, and low self-
esteem.
Conditions for Moral Accountability: Incriminating and Excusing Conditions
Incriminating Conditions
- Establish moral accountability for the action in question
Three Incriminating Conditions
1. Agency condition- stipulates that a person is only accountable for actins in which they
are the cause.
2. Knowledge condition- pertains to the state in which an individual possesses
knowledge or the capacity to understand their actions ethical nature whether morally
right or wrong.
3. Intentionality condition- situation where an individual consciously intends or freely
chooses to engage in particular action.
Excusing Conditions
- Absolve one from moral accountability.
- Absence of the three incriminating conditions mentioned.
- These conditions are non-agency, ignorance, and involuntariness.
Blameless Ignorance- situations where the individua cannot be held accountable for their lack
of knowledge. It serves as an exemption or justification.
Blameful or blameworthy Ignorance- when an individual could have known better but failed to
do so. It stems from negligence in fulfilling one’s duty to acquire relevant knowledge. It does not
serve as an excuse.
Ethical Relativism
- Claims that the validity of moral principles is contingent upon the specific person or
society in question.
- Proclaims the non- existence of valid moral principles.
- Redentor A. de la Rosa’s book Introduction to Moral Philosophy: An Anthropology-based
Ethics
Ethical Skepticism
- Denies the existence of valid moral principles and altogether asserts our inability to know
them.
Ethical Objectivism
- Maintains the presence of universal moral principles that apply to all individuals.
Two Versions of Ethical Relativism
Ethical Conventionalism
- Equates to the moral standards of the society or culture
- Moral standards hinge on the society or culture. It acknowledges the social dimension of
morality.
- Rejects the notion of universal moral principles but asserts the validity of ethical
principles based on their acceptance within a particular culture.
- Frees itself from the assault from moral or ethical skepticism and inclines itself to support
ethical objectivism
Ethical Subjectivism
- Speaks of the individuals commitment to what is right and wrong.
- Posits a basis for moral judgment dependent on the person’s standards without any
objective standard external to the individual.
- It falls prey to the ethical skepticism.