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The History of Ethics in Western Philosophy

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Title: The History of Ethics in Western Philosophy


1
Part I
  • The History of Ethics in Western Philosophy

Jeremy Neill
2
Overview
  • The Greeks (Socrates, Plato, Aristotle)
  • Hellenistic and Roman Ethics (Epicurus,
    Epictetus, Cicero)
  • Early Christian Ethics (Augustine, Aquinas)
  • Modern Moral Philosophy (Hobbes, Hume, etc.)

3
Greek Moral Philosophy

4
Early Greek History
Pre-Greek "aboriginal settlements
c 4,000BC
c 3,100
Anatolian Migrations
Bronze
Age
c 2,000
Minoan Period (Crete)
Achean Migrations
c 1,600 - 1,150
(Myceanaen Period)
Dorian Migrations
c 1,150 - 1,000
(Dark Ages)
The Great Rhetra
(c 770)
Geometric
c 1,000 - 700
Homer (c 750)
Period
Hesiod (c 725)
First Law Givers (c 635)
Solon -- 594
First Tyrants (c 610)
The Peisistratide --
c 700 - 500
c 546-528/7 527-510
Rise of Ionia (c 550)
Cleisthenes (c 507)
The democratization of Athens
5
Athenian History

6
The Pre-Socratics
Thales (c 575)
Ionian
c 575
Anaximenes (c550)
Physicalists
Anaximander (c550)
Pythagoras the Pythagorians
c 530
Parmenides (The
Principle of Being)
c 490
Heraclitus (The
Principle of Becoming)
c 450
The Sophists (Protagoras, Gorgias)
7
Map of Ancient Greece
8
Socrates
  • Interested in the Sphere of Values
  • Dialectical Search for Definitions
  • Socratic Elenchus

(469 - 399 BCE)
9
Socrates
  • Virtue is Knowledge
  • Socratic Virtues Justice, Courage, Wisdom,
    Moderation
  • The same body of knowledge knowledge of the
    whole of what is and is not good for human
    beings, and why it is so or not must at least
    underlie the allegedly separate virtues
  • Socratic Ignorance / Socratic Wisdom

10
Plato
  • A justification of the Life of Socrates
  • Revaluation of Greek Values The Gorgias
  • Metaphysical Grounding of all Values The Theory
    of the Forms

(427 - 347 BC)
11
The Gorgias
  • Socrates vs. Gorgias
  • Socrates vs. Polus
  • The life of Socrates vs. the life of Archelaus
  • It is better to suffer wrong than to do wrong
  • If one has done wrong, it is better to be justly
    punished than to escape and thrive
  • Socrates vs. Callicles
  • The Good is not the same as the Pleasurable
  • The mythos of Judgment

12
Platos Theory of the FormsThe Divided Line
Intellection
The Forms
The Changeless
Knowledge
Thought
Mathematicals
Trust
Sensible Things
The Changing
Opinion
Imagination
Images
  • The Forms provide a foundation for knowledge
  • Knowledge of the Form of Justice allows us to
    judge whether a particular act is just or not
  • The highest Form is the Form of the Good

13
Platos Theory of the FormsThe Allegory of the
Cave
  • The cave represents an image of the human
    condition
  • We are chained to opinions and illusion
  • With great effort some can turn around and begin
    an ascent toward knowledge (of the Forms)
  • After seeing the brightness of the Sun, those
    who would return to the cave would seem strange
    (mad) even threatening to those chained

14
Platos Theory of the FormsThe Republic
  • The problem of Justice is approached by viewing
    it from the perspective of the polis
  • The most ordered city is one in which the
    parts work together this is required by the
    Form of Justice
  • Money-makers (craftsmen, etc), auxiliaries and
    guardians, and a ruler who knows the Form of
    Justice
  • No property and eugenic marriages assure
    stability
  • A person is just when his parts work together
    and mind their own business (desire,
    spiritedness, and reason)
  • An unjust man, like an unjust city, is out of
    order a tyrannical man in whom desire rules
    over reason and chaos reigns

15
Aristotle
  • Aristotle criticized the belief in a separate
    realm of Forms. He argued that rational beings
    can discover the essences of things and that a
    beings essence is its potential fulfillment
  • The essence of being human is rationality and,
    ultimately, a life of contemplation (philosophy)
    is the best kind of life if leisure abounds.

(384 - 322 BC)
16
The Nicomachean EthicsThe Human Good
  • All human activity aims at some good
  • Everyone seeks happiness (well being), but in
    different ways (lives of physical gratification,
    political activity, honor, wealth, philosophy)
  • Happiness is that which is aimed at for itself
    and is the goal of our actions
  • So true happiness is tied to the purpose or end
    (telos) of human life
  • The function of human beings will show what the
    best good is

17
The Nicomachean EthicsThe Function (Ergon)
Argument
  • The essence of human beings (that which separates
    and distinguishes them as a species) is reason
  • Not nutrition, growth, or sense-perception,
  • But reason as an activity of the soul guiding
    appetite and thought
  • Human good is the (rational) activity of the soul
    that expresses virtue (excellence)
  • qua appetite moral virtues (e.g., moderation,
    courage)
  • qua thought intellectual virtues (e.g.,
    science, art, practical wisdom, theoretical
    wisdom)

18
The Nicomachean EthicsThe Happy Life
  • Reason is employed in achieving happiness (the
    human telos)
  • The expression of the virtues (in a full life)
    leads to human flourishing well or happiness
  • Happiness is an activity of the soul expressing
    complete virtue
  • Note Bene It is the mark of an educated man to
    look for precision in each class of things just
    so far as the nature of the subject admits

19
The Nicomachean EthicsThe Doctrine of the Mean
Human flourishing requires an understanding of
its virtues and the appropriate application of
virtue guided perceptions to a particular course
of action
For example, the virtue of courage is a mean
between a vice of excess (rashness) and a vice of
deficiency (cowardice)
20
The Nicomachean EthicsThe Moral Virtues
  • Courage (in the face of battle)
  • Moderation/Temperance (concerning bodily
    pleasures)
  • Virtues concerned with money
  • Liberality and Magnificence
  • Greatness of Soul (concerned with honor)
  • Virtues of social interactions
  • Friendliness, Straightforwardness, Wittiness

21
The Nicomachean EthicsJustice As
  • What is lawful universal
  • Natural (e.g. no murder) vs. Conventional (e.g.
    legal) Justice
  • Equity as a corrective to the generality of the
    law
  • What is fair particular
  • Distributive Justice distribution of honors and
    wealth among citizens
  • Geometrical Setting up the proper ratio of goods
    to each person
  • Respects the mean between giving more to A than
    is due to giving more to B than is due
  • Remedial Justice rectifying of wrongs done
  • Arithmetical AC, B-C is rectified by giving C
    back to B

22
Hellenistic and Roman Ethics
23
Greek and Judeo-Christian History
c. 1,800 BC
Abraham/El-Shaddai
(Migrations - Cannan - Egypt)
c. 1,250
Moses/Yahweh (Exodus)
c. 1,000
Yahweh vs. Baal
Troy
c. 1,200
Rise of the prophets ("protestors")
(Homeric Age)
Elijah (1,000)
c. 750

Homer (The Iliad)
Amos (760)

493/2-478
Persian Wars
Isaiah (742)
612
Deutronomic Reform
461-429
Age of Pericles
c. 597-586
Babylonian Conquest of Jerusalem
Peloponnesian War
431-401
c. 538-438
Restoration Period
399
Death of Socrates
429-347
Plato
387-322
Aristotle
Alexander the Great
353-323
c. 332
Greek Conquest
24
Hellenistic and Roman Trends
  • Monistic
  • One Universe, One Reason, and One Truth
  • Epicureanism (the Garden)
  • All humans by nature seek a pleasant life
  • The best way to the pleasant life is through a
    life of moderate satisfaction
  • Stoicism (the Porch)
  • The world is independent of our will A life
    detached from the events of life will be calmer
    and less troubled than a life bound up with
    desires for worldly things
  • Virtue, the expiration of the passions, and the
    citadel of the self

25
Epicureanism
  • Strip away the corruptions of society we can
    imagine a childlike understanding of our true
    nature and see that pleasure is to be pursued
    and pain avoided

Epicurus 106 - 43 BC
26
Epicureanism
  • There are three types of human desires
  • Natural (e.g, seeking food, drink, shelter,
    medicine, friendship and happy memories)
  • Natural but not necessary (intercourse/aphrodisia
    distinguished from love/eros)
  • An agonizing desire prone to led to an empty
    desire
  • Empty (caused by society, infected by the falsity
    of the evaluative beliefs that ground them and
    bound to be self-defeating)
  • religious superstitions, love stories,
    conversations glorifying wealth and power

27
Epicureanism
  • Hedonism Desire of the right pleasures
  • Static Pleasure - absence of pain
  • Kinetic Pleasure the process of stimulation
  • Must be carefully regulated
  • Ethics The therapeutic process of achieving
    ataraxia (freedom from disturbance and anxiety)
    in the soul and freedom from bodily pain
  • Achieved through philosophic logos aimed at
    correcting/treating the pupils false view of
    things

28
The Stoics
  • The world is independent of our will
  • Devaluation of the emotions
  • Tension between determinism and humanism
  • The Divine Logos is everywhere men, women,
    slaves all partake in it
  • The method of oikeisis
  • The Brotherhood of Man
  • The guide for the natural law of the world

Zeno of Citium (334 - 262 BC)
29
The Stoics
  • Moral goodness is the only good from which it
    follows that happiness depends on moral goodness
    and nothing else whatever (Cicero, Discussions
    at Tusculum)
  • Virtue alone is good vice alone is bad all else
    are indifferent
  • Desire the life of a virtuous Socrates who
    recognizes a responsibility to participate in the
    world around him and who also recognizes that
    the world is independent of his will
  • The consequences of this for practical living
    clarification of what is important and within our
    reach this is the way to attain the tranquility
    that accompanies the virtuous life

30
Cicero
  • In theory, an Academic Skeptic
  • There are only probabilities
  • In practice, a Stoic
  • Our life and laws should model natural law
  • Investigates Case-Based Moral Reasoning
  • Merchant/Villa Case Studies

(106 - 43 BC)
True law is Reason Neither the Senate nor the
Assembly can exempt us from its demands... There
will not be one law at Rome and one at Athens, or
one now and another later, but all nations will
be subject to this one changeless and everlasting
law
31
Early Christian Ethics
32
Roman and Middle Judeo-Christian History
Roman History
Judeo-Christian Tradition
Rise of the
c. 200 BC
Roman Empire
Syrian Supression/
165 BC
Maccabeian Rebellion
63
Roman Control
4
Birth of Jesus
c. 27/30 AD
Death of Jesus
70
Dispersion of
the Jews
Augustine
354-430
The Apostolic
c. 50-150
383
Age
Christianity as Imperial State Religion
150 - 1054
Ancient Catholic Church
Decline of the Roman Empire
410
Sack of Rome
Fall of the Roman Empire
476
Schism between Eastern
1054
and Western Church
33
AugustineInherits Platonism from Plotinus
  • Platos Form of the Good
  • Plotinus The One
  • Augustine God
  • The Immortal Soul
  • Reincarnation
  • The Divided Line

(354 - 430 AD)
34
AugustineChristianizes Plato
  • The Gorgias Judgment, Heaven, and Hell
  • Unity of the Virtues in Love of God
  • Temperance love keeping itself whole and
    incorrupt for God
  • Courage love bearing everything readily for the
    sake of God
  • Evil as a Lacking Do bad from lack of knowledge
  • Example of suicide

35
AugustineChristianizes Plato
  • The Divided Line
  • The dichotomy between the world of natural
    desires and the realm of divine order
  • We see then that the two cities were created by
    two kinds of love the Earthly City was created
    by self-love reaching the point of contempt for
    God, the Heavenly City by the love of God carried
    as far as contempt of self
  • Allegory of the Cave
  • We must endeavor to do good to all those we can
    reach

36
Augustine
  • Added the concepts of sin, free will, and a
    personal God
  • The world becomes the testing ground for future
    reward and punishment

37
Aquinas
  • Translates Aristotle into the Christian worldview
  • The ultimate beatitude of man consists in the
    use of his highest function, which is the
    operation of his intellect... Hence... the
    blessed see the essence of God.

(1225 - 1274 AD)
38
Aquinas
  • Embraces Aristotles Virtue Ethics
  • Adds the spiritual virtues of Faith, Charity,
    Hope
  • These theological virtues are infused in us by
    God
  • They are not the mean between two vices

39
Aquinas
  • Distinguishes between
  • Eternal Law issued from Gods will and wisdom
  • Natural Law that part of eternal law dealing
    with fundamental precepts of ethics and morality
  • Human Law conventional laws of nations
  • Divine Law those laws revealed in scripture
  • Natural Law is grasped through reason and
    conscience

40
Aquinas
  • Two notions of Conscience
  • The ancients did relate conscience to morality
  • In Greek synderesis
  • Murmurs against sin, and correctly contemplates
    and wants that which is good without
    qualifications
  • Supplies the moral laws which are intellectually
    self-evident
  • In Latin conscientia
  • The conjunction of synderesis and free choice
  • The application of the moral laws to particular
    situations

41
Modern Moral Philosophy
42
The Renaissance
  • Invention of Printing
  • Humanism and Perspective in Art
  • Copernicus challenges Ptolemy
  • Galileo challenges Aristotle
  • Expansion abroad and the rise of the money-based
    economy

"New Birth" for the
Arts and Sciences
c 14th - 16th Centuries
43
Reformation
  • Attack against Indulgences
  • Simple Faith Replaces the Power of the Papacy
  • Schism and Real World Politics Confront the
    Once Universal Church

1517 Luther publishes his 95 Theses
44
Thomas Hobbes
  • Links the laws of motion to the actions of men
  • Knowing and willing are merely the appearance
    of subtle motions
  • What moves us are desires and aversions and the
    force behind these is self-preservation

(1588 - 1679)
45
Hobbes Scientific Analysis of Political
Philosophy
  • The passions of man, driven by
    self-preservation are revealed in the State of
    Nature
  • Radical equalities of strength (to kill or be
    killed) and prudence/ability (if one applies
    oneself)
  • These lead to equality of hope (of gain through
    conflict) driving competition and natural enmity
    only heightened by a desire for glory
  • This is the war of all against all
  • Life is beastly, brutal, and short

46
Hobbes Scientific Analysis of Political
Philosophy
  • Self-interest prescribes that we avoid this life
    in the State of Nature
  • Reason, working with the passions of fear (of
    death), desire (for comfort), and hope (for
    peace), seeks to overcome he desires for glory
    and power
  • The rules of reason serve self-preservation
    (the right of nature) in a natural way by
    seeking to secure peace
  • Self-interest, rather than self-restraint,
    becomes the driving force for limiting ones
    actions and transcending the State of Nature

47
The Leviathan
  • A transfer of power through a Social Contract
    creates the condition for a possibility of peace
  • We transfer our collective strength to a
    sovereign authority (a Leviathan)
  • It is a covenant that creates Civil Society
  • The sovereign power of government serves to
    enforce the peace and is the source of justice
    and right and wrong
  • This is best seen in the laws and rules laid down
    by an absolute monarchy

The Leviathan (1661)
48
David Hume
  • Criticizes a Mechanistic Egoism
  • Egoism seems to violate common sense
  • There seem to be actions that are truly selfless
    (love and friendship)
  • Distinction between the acts and the motives

(1711 - 1776)
49
David Hume
  • Moral Sentiment Informs Us of Good and Evil
  • We disposed to speak of people as being good or
    bad
  • We feel pleasure and displeasure with certain
    traits of others
  • Method Explore the empirical aspects of
    Personal Merit
  • Qualities Useful to Others and Ourselves
  • Qualities Agreeable to Others and Ourselves
  • Posits a Principle of Humanity as the Source of
    Morality
  • Based in sympathy feeling others weal and woe
    as being our own
  • There are certain natural virtues which
    transcend all cultures e.g., compassion,
    friendship, gratitude, and courage
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