Ethics Input
Ethics Input
Ethics Input
1. Subjectivism
It t suggests that the individual thinking person is at the heart of all
moral valuations. The person is the one confronted with the situation
and is burdened with the need to make decision or judgment. From
this point of view, subjectivism leaps to the more radical claim that
the individual is the sole determining agent of what is morally good
or bad, right or wrong. Bulaong Jr. et al. suggest some clichés
expressive of this mentality:
Level I. Pre-conventional
The pre-conventional level corresponds to how infants and
children think.
The type of reasoning at this level is centered on the
consequences of one's action and the level is divided into
two stages.
Stage I. The first stage of reasoning focuses on obedience
and the avoidance of punishment. At this stage, a child
reasons out that actions are "good" if they are able to avoid
punishment and actions are "bad" if they result to
punishment. By that, we understand that children's action as
thought of is not that they have found what the best thing to
do is, rather, they have found what to do in order to evade
getting scolded or punished.
Stage II. At this point, entering the second stage of
reasoning, children act according to what will satisfy their
interests. The good at this stage of development is what
brings pleasure to them. Children's activities at this stage are
focused on those in line with their interests. Characteristically,
at this stage, children still have difficulties making a
distinction between them and others. Others are considered
extensions of who they are and deals with them to the extent
that they can bring them pleasure or some kind of advantage.
The pre-conventional stage symbolizes the stage when
children have not yet understood the importance of rules in
their life. The consequences of their acts are most important
as they may lead to cither punishment or to their satisfaction
or pleasure their interests having been served. What is right or
wrong is not determined by following rules but by what their
actions bring them.
Assessment
Identify the stage of moral development (first, second, third,
fourth, fifth and sixth). Write your answer on the space
provided before the item.
1. It is characterized by following the rules and regulations
knowing that these are significant for the society's existence.
2. It is the stage when acts are performed in order to avoid
pain.
3. Andres wants that his playmates play only games he wants
to play.
4. Concerned that the government is not serious about what it
should implement as laws of the land like recognition of the
rights of its citizens, Marco decided to join the rebels.
5. Miss X defied the tradition of lavish wedding celebration
believing that it does not help anymore the family and the
new couple.
6. It refers to the stage when the child desires to be always
number one.
7. It is characterized by the belief that what rational people
have realized as good is the right thing to do.
8. Consequences of the act are the bases of the rightness or
wrongness of the act.
9. It is the stage during which Boy Y thinks that his playmates
are there to serve his interest or the inability to make
distinction between him and others.
10. It is the stage when individuals are convinced that laws
and community traditions should be honored only when they
serve universal principles but should be rejected when they
don't.