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Title: Bioethics and Values Clark Wolf Iowa State University


1
Bioethics and ValuesClark WolfIowa State
University
2
  • BIOETHICS AS A BRANCH OF PHILOSOPHY
  • The problems of philosophy involve questions in
    which we are all (or should all be) deeply
    interested at the most basic level. They are
    important to us as we make decisions about what
    to believe, and how to be critical of our own
    naively held beliefs. Philosophical investigation
    may help us to determine what kinds of choices we
    should make, and what kind of person to be. It
    may help us to understand and justify our belief
    (or disbelief) in God. It may help us to form a
    rational life plan, and to better understand our
    own motives and fears. Philosophical questions
    are important to us as we try to understand what
    we are and to determine our place in the scheme
    of things. And they are important to us as we try
    to choose right actions in a complicated and
    difficult world, and to find meaning in our
    lives. These are not trivial projects.

3
Identifying Ethics Principles of ethics should
provide us guidance as we make choices in a
complicated world. Ideally, an account of
ethics should help us to identify moral
principles and morally relevant features of the
choices we face.
4
  • There is no simple recipe for ethical decision
    making. Philosophical and religious theories
    about ethics do not remove our need (obligation?)
    to exercise deliberative judgment and to evaluate
    alternative values that are at play in concrete
    cases.

5
  • Ethical codes of conduct instruct us on what we
    ought or ought not to do.
  • Typical ethical theories or ethical codes include
    basic principles that are intended to be used to
    guide conduct.

6
  • Ethics and Reasons Our ethical values are
    supported by reasons and principles. For any
    moral or ethical claim, we can evaluate it by
    considering the reasons that support it.
  • Upshot We can be self-reflective and critical
    about our moral values. The goal of
    philosophical ethics is to help us to be
    self-reflective in this way.

7
Ethical Theories
  • Principles, concepts, and ideals that can be used
    to justify moral judgments and choices, or to
    rank outcomes as good, better, worse, or bad.
  • An ethical theory should be capable of serving as
    a guide for conduct and judgment.

8
Case for Consideration The Trolley
  • Youre riding a run-away trolley car, and the
    only control you have is to direct the car on to
    one track or another. On one track ahead there
    are five people, on the other there is only one.
    If you do nothing, the trolley will kill five,
    but if you intervene it will kill only one.
    Should you kill one person to save five? What
    should you do?

9
What justifies your judgment about what should be
done?
  • Save as many as you can.
  • Day After Tomorrow Scientist
  • The good of the many outweighs the good of the
    few. -Spock
  • Act so that you provide the maximum benefit to
    the maximum number of people.
  • Are there other principles that could be used to
    justify the judgment that one should direct the
    trolley to kill as few as possible?

10
Utilitarianism
  • Act always such that your action produces the
    greatest benefit for the greatest number of
    people.
  • J.S. Mill,
  • Jeremy Bentham

11
Is Utilitarianism an Acceptable Ethical Theory?
  • Focuses our attention on well-being.
  • Leaves room for moral concern for animals as well
    as for people.
  • The question is not can they reason nor can
    they speak, but can they suffer. -Jeremy
    Bentham
  • Includes an implicit appeal to equality
    Everyones interests count the same.

12
Testing an Ethical Theory Apply the theory to a
different problem.
  • Case The Surgeons Dilemma
  • You are a surgeon with six patients. Five of
    them need major organ transplants, which you
    could easily do if you had access to transplant
    organs. The sixth, an ideal donor for all the
    relevant organs, has a cold. Should you kill one
    person to save six?
  • Question What does utilitarianism imply in this
    case? Should this cause us to call the theory
    into question? Do we need to appeal to
    non-utilitarian values to explain what is wrong
    with killing one patient to save six?

13
Revising Utilitarianism?
  • Rights The reason it is wrong to kill one to
    save six is that it would violate the rights of
    the person killed.
  • This response requires that we give an account
    of rights, explain what they are, why they have
    moral significance, and how they may interact
    with utilitarian considerations.

14
Universal Rules
  • Perhaps we cant universalize a principle to
    kill one to save six
  • Act only such that you could will the maxim on
    which you act as a universal law. -Immanuel
    Kant
  • Interpretation
  • Ask What if everyone did that?
  • Kant says that this is a more general statement
    of the principle that lies behind the Golden
    Rule Always treat others as you would have
    them treat you.

15
Revising Utilitarianism?
  • Using People as Means Always act such that you
    treat humanity, whether in your own person or
    that of another, always as an end in itself and
    never as a means only.
  • Immanuel Kant
  • Analysis Perhaps whats wrong with killing one
    patient to save six is that it would be using the
    one as a mere means for the benefit of others.
  • -We use others as means all the time Does this
    principle imply that it is morally problematical
    to do so?
  • -Once again, we need to consider what it means
    to treat a person as a mere means, and make it
    quite clear.

16
Using Ethical Theories to Make Judgments and
Decisions
  • Ethical theories can give us insight into the
    morally salient features of the choices we face.
  • By reflecting on the principles that lie behind
    our moral choices, we may come to make better
    choices, and to gain a deeper understanding of
    ourselves.
  • Ethical theories cannot provide a simple recipe
    for correct moral decision-making. It is always
    necessary to use reflective judgment, to ask
    whether there are other morally significant
    factors to consider.

17
W.D. Ross List of Prima Facie Duties
  • 1) Duties that rest on previous acts of my own.
  • a) Promises.
  • b) Previous wrongs in need of reparation.
  • 2) Duties that rest on previous acts of others
  • (Example gratitude)
  • 3) Duties of justice (A duty to endeavor to bring
    the distribution of pleasure or happiness in line
    with merit.)
  • 4) Beneficence- Duty to benefit others.
  • 5) Duty to improve one's own virtue or
    intelligence.
  • 6) Duty not to harm or injure others.

18
  • Joel Feinberg
  • List of Prima Facie Obligations
  • 1) Fidelity- Obligation to keep promises.
  • 2) Veracity- Obligation to tell the truth, or
    (or better-- not to tell lies).
  • 3) Fair Play- Obligation not to exploit, cheat,
    or "free load" on others
  • 4) Gratitude- Obligation to return favors
  • 5) Nonmaleficence- Obligation not to cause harm,
    pain or suffering to others,
  • 6) Beneficence- Obligation to help others in
    distress, at least when this involves no great
    danger to oneself or to third parties.
  • 7) Reparation- Obligation to repair harms to
    others that are one's fault.
  • 8) Obligation not to kill others (except in
    self-defense).
  • 9) Obligation not to deprive others of their
    property.
  • 10) Obligation to oppose injustices, at least
    when this involves no great cost to oneself.
  • 11) Obligation to promote just institutions and
    to work toward their establishment, maintenance,
    and improvement.

19
Is Ethical Decision Making Easy?
  • Some ethical theories present themselves as a
    simple recipe for decision making, but it cant
    be that easy.
  • Other theories present themselves as a more or
    less un-ordered list of obligations to be
    evaluated against one another using judgment.

20
What good is philosophical ethics?
  • Philosophical theories cant remove the burden of
    moral decision-making.
  • What philosophical theories can do is to direct
    our attention to features of our choices that
    are, or may be morally salient.

21
What good is philosophical ethics?
  • Most importantly, reflection on the motives and
    principles that lie behind our choices shows that
    our moral judgments are based on reasons. By
    articulating these reasons, we gain the ability
    to evaluate them and to consider alternatives.

22
Ethical Arguments
  • Argument A set of statements, some of which
    serve as premises, one of which serves as a
    conclusion, where the premises are intended to
    provide evidence for the conclusion.

23
Ethical Arguments
  • When presented with an argument, one may either
  • 1) Accept the premises and the conclusion
  • 2) Reject the premises
  • 3) Argue (or show) that the conclusion does not
    follow from the premises.

24
  • Questions Requiring Ethical Judgment
  • 1) Should developed countries control
    availability of GMOs in developing (poor)
    countries?
  • 2) Who should make decisions regarding the use of
    land for agricultural, commercial and residential
    use?
  • 3) Do animal housing systems (crates, cages etc)
    need to be altered to improve animal welfare?
  • 4) Is it ethical to dehorn, brand, beak trim, or
    castrate farm animals?
  • 5) Should cloning be allowed in farm animals? in
    humans?
  • 6) Should wolves be reintroduced into areas
    where human activity has been responsible for
    their absence?
  • 7) Should stem cell research derived from human
    embryos be allowed?
  • 8) Is it ethical to eat meat?
  • 9) Hunting and fishingshould it be allowed, how
    much, who can do it?
  • 10) Are livestock shows ethical?

25
  • Questions Requiring Ethical Judgment
  • 11) Is it ethical to encourage livestock use in
    poor and developing countries?
  • 12) Should livestock producers be responsible
    for air and water quality?
  • 13) Is it acceptable to use animals to test
    products for human use/consumption?
  • 14) Should the use of subtherapeutic antibiotics
    be banned in livestock?
  • 15) Should diverse breeds of livestock be
    maintained and who should pay?
  • 16) Should rodeos and circuses be allowed to
    exploit animals?
  • 17) Should the use of growth enhancing agents be
    allowed in the production of farm animals?
  • 19) Is it ethical to trim ears, dock tails, and
    train companion animals?
  • 20) Should the family farm be maintained at the
    expense of corporate farming?
  • 21) Should life be patented?

26
  • Thinking Clearly about Ethical Judgments
  • 1) Clearly articulate alternative positions.
  • Example We (should/should not) maintain
    institutions that grant patents on living
    organisms.
  • 2) Develop a list of arguments for each position,
    for and against. (This requires balance and
    fair-mindedness!)
  • 3) Think about how the different reasons you have
    listed interact with one another.
  • 4) Try to come to a balanced and fair conclusion,
    giving appropriate weight to all relevant reasons.

27
Some Moral Concepts
  • Individual Moral Choice
  • Utility
  • Right and Rights
  • Universality
  • Virtue
  • Exploitation
  • Institutional Norms
  • Legality
  • Liberty
  • Justice
  • Social Utility
  • Democracy
  • Community

28
Norms for Individual Moral Choice
  • Utility Happiness and well-being
  • are typically taken to be good things,
  • significant from the moral point of
  • view. To argue that a policy or procedure
  • would compromise happiness or create misery
  • is to give reasons why its a bad thing. (Maybe
    not
  • decisive reasons, since there may be other
    relevant
  • considerations.)

29
Norms for Individual Moral Choice
  • Right and Rights Rights are claims that people
    have against others. If a person has a right,
    then it is not permissible to do what would
    violate that right, even if doing so would
    maximize utility or have good consequences.
    Rights (if there are any) are side constraints on
    the maximization of utility.

30
Norms for Individual Moral Choice
  • Universality What if everyone did that?
  • Kantian principles involve an appeal to universal
    judgment.
  • Example In considering whether it is legitimate
    to engineer people to be better basketball
    players, one might ask whether the general policy
    would be self-defeating If everyone did that,
    no one would be specially advantaged.

31
Norms for Individual Moral Choice
  • Virtue What would a Good Person do in a
    situation like this one?
  • According to Aristotle, we need to ask what
    principles of character we should inculcate into
    ourselves, and any action we undertake should be
    evaluated in terms of the effect on our character
    and judgment.
  • Aristotle did not intend for his concept of
    virtue to be used for practical ethical dilemmas
    like those we will (mostly) be considering in
    this class.

32
Norms for Individual Moral Choice
  • Exploitation
  • We should treat people always as ends in
    themselves and never as means only.
  • Immanuel Kant
  • We should avoid actions that improve our
    situation at cost to those who are worse off than
    we are.
  • John Rawls (paraphrase)

33
Institutional Norms
  • Legality We can always ask what the law
    requires, and sometimes its relevant from the
    moral point of view. But we still need to
    consider whether the law is a good law, whether
    it is a bad law, and whether we have an
    obligation to obey (or disobey) it.

34
Institutional Norms
  • Liberty
  • The only purpose for which power can be
    rightfully exercised over any member of a
    civilized community, against his will, is to
    prevent harm to others. His own good, either
    physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant.
    He cannot rightfully be compelled to do or
    forbear because it will be better for him to do
    so, because it will make him happier, because in
    the opinion of others, to do so would be wise, or
    even right. These are good reasons for
    remonstrating with him, or reasoning with him, or
    persuading him, or entreating him, but not for
    compelling him of visiting him with any evil in
    case he do otherwise. () Over himself, over his
    own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.
  • -J.S. Mill, On Liberty

35
Institutional Norms
  • Justice Involves the fair distribution of
    burdens and benefits of social cooperation.
  • Equality Equal distribution is one theory of
    justice. But sometimes it can be argued that
    unequal distributions are required by justice.

36
Institutional Norms
  • Social Utility We can evaluate policies based
    on their likely consequences, and on whether the
    benefits they provide are likely to outweigh the
    burdens they impose.

37
Institutional Norms
  • Democracy If policies undermine democracy or
    democratic equality, this is a powerful argument
    against them.
  • Example The genetic inheritance of the earth
    belongs equally to all people. Allowing patent
    rights in organisms and species would be
    undemocratic, since it would take this right
    away.

38
Institutional Norms
  • Community If a policy would undermine the bonds
    of community that link us together, this is a
    powerful argument against it.
  • Example Allowing genetic manipulation and
    improvement of human beings would undermine
    social solidarity, creating a genetically normal
    and thus disadvantaged underclass.
  • Michael Sandel (paraphrase).

39
Using Norms to Evaluate Cases
  • Consider different normative concepts and how
    they apply to a given policy or case.
  • What rights are involved?
  • What will the consequences be?
  • What if everyone did that?
  • Is it legal?
  • Does it undermine liberty?
  • What does justice require?
  • Is the proposal democratic?
  • Would this undermine community?

40
Patenting Life Reasons Against
  • Patents on life reflect a disrespect for life.
  • People who gain patents on life arent really
    the creators of what they patent.
  • Patents on life permit or facilitate the
    oppression of people in the developing world.
  • Patents undermine peoples free right to use the
    earths genetic heritage, which should be a
    common available to everyone.
  • Other reasons?

41
Patenting Life Reasons For
  • Plant and animal breeders deserve protection for
    their efforts, and patents are an appropriate
    means for protection.
  • Plant and animal patents promote research in
    livestock and plant varieties, improving
    agriculture for everyone.
  • Appropriate patent institutions can protect the
    welfare of people in the developing world while
    protecting the rights of researchers and
    innovators.

42
Beyond For and Against
  • Once you have identified the reasons and
    arguments that lie behind alternative positions,
    you may be in a position to reformulate the
    question.
  • For example
  • Are there intellectual property institutions
    that can protect the legitimate claims of
    researchers without causing disadvantage to
    others, and without violating other important
    moral convictions?

43
Patenting Life
  • What do you think?
  • One who knows only his own side of a case knows
    little of that. -Cicero.
  • Only if you are able to articulate the arguments
    of those who disagree with you are you really in
    a position to defend and understand your own
    judgments.

44
What good is Ethics?
  • Ethics and ethical decision making are not
    simply the province of philosophers or ethicists.
    Our choices reveal our values to the world.
    These values are either unreflective and shallow,
    or reflective and deep.
  • Philosophical deliberation should help us to
    make our values and choices deep and thoughtful.
    Maybe this makes it more likely that our choices
    will be the right ones.

45
  • Clark Wolf
  • Director of the ISU Bioethics Program.
  • Questions? Email me at jwcwolf_at_iastate.edu
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