Ethics Report
Ethics Report
Ethics Report
4
Terms
MAXIM (intention)
- A personal rule on which we make our decisions
- The principle on which the actor sees himself or
herself acting
DUTY
- Inbred, Self Imposed
- The obligation required of us as rational beings
- In order for an act to be morally praiseworthy, it
must be done for the sake of duty
Terms
CATEGORICAL IMPERATIVES
– moral requirements are based on a standard
of rationality
– a moral ‘ought’ that does not depend on
results
Kant’s deontological ideas:
Kant believed that the experience of moral law leads
to our awareness of freedom. This sense of freedom is
used when we make moral choices.
He believed that these moral decisions are
independent of any thought of consequence.
Acting morally is an end in itself.
Being moral is a matter of the categorical imperative.
There is nothing moral about carrying out an action
simply because of the intended outcome.
“The obligation to do our duty is unconditional.
That is, we must do it for the sake of duty,
because it is the right thing to do, not because it
will profit us psychologically, or economically, not
because if we don’t do it and get caught we’ll be
punished. The categorical imperative was Kant’s
name for this inbred, self-imposed restraint, for
the command of conscience within that tells us
that the only true moral act is done from a pure
sense of duty.”
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UNIVERSALIZATION
The first requirement is that when we are
considering an action we must ask whether
we can imagine our intentions for an action
as a general rule for everyone.
Kant intends that one’s actions become a
law that applies to all.
What would Kant do?
Universal Principle
Suppose…
– IED Victim
Horrific Burns
Brain damage
Coma
Life support
– $1,000,000 life
insurance policy
2 This formulation concerns the treatment
of other people. ‘Act in such a way that
you always treat humanity, whether in
your own person, or in the person of any
other, never simply as a means, but
always at the same time as an end’.
Note that Kant’s morality is a priori . It is established quite apart
from a consideration of possible results.
Kant firmly believed that a person experienced his or her own worth
primarily when acting in this way, based on a priori reason, & not
simply responding to sense experience.
His moral vision here is that a person should set aside all
considerations of personal gain & have a genuinely universal
sympathy. By doing so, one achieves what is highest in human
nature.
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The Formula of the End in Itself
Act in such a way that you always treat
humanity as a means or as an end. To
finish-up formula of the End in Itself, since
we are using one or more of our maxims
then we should not look at how much
misery or happiness the act is likely to
produce.
Antiutilitarian.
Using Persons as Mere Means
This is what it means to be a moral agent-
someone capable of reflection and can be held
accountable for his actions. This is why Kant
believes rationality is morally relevant. This is
what makes human beings capable of moral
reflection and action. This is what gives us
value and makes us “ends” deserving of respect.
That is why we should not treat people as
“means” because we deny them the respect
they deserve.
Treating Person as End in
Themselves
Put bluntly, treating people respectfully
but not complying with their wants or
maxims. This makes sense because if we
just complied with everyone's wishes we
may find ourselves doing unjust things.
Moreover, we would not require rules or
laws under this assumption. Additionally,
under this point, one should not use the
maxims of others to drive their decisions.
Intentions and Results
Good intentions lead to bad results
sometimes. Bad intentions lead to good
results sometimes. How do we choose?
3 The 3rd form of the CI highlights Kant’s view
that it is human reason that determines morality:
‘Act as if [you are] a legislating
member in the universal kingdom of ends’.
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The “Categorical Imperative
Procedure” (CI3)
“The Kingdom of Ends” – Reason is both the source of moral
law (legislator) and subject of the law (citizen).
“Do this, whether you want to or not, whether you can be made to
or not, whether anyone will notice, reward, praise, or blame you (or
not).”
Conflict
Good Will
Indicates Acts solely
Free Will,
we have a out of
choice Autonomy
What makes us Reverence for
human...not animals
Moral Law
Kantian Ethics
Strengths
Realm of duty, free from utility
Respect for persons
Golden rule – do unto others, expressed in rational
terms
Reason based
Weaknesses
Hyper-rationality and lack of emotion
The irrelevance of inclination
Overly formal and universal
– i.e., most of our duties are in social roles
Inflexibility
Lead in to Virtue Ethics
How does Kant account for
heroism?
– Is it our duty to go “beyond the call
of duty?”