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Conscience: The self in search of the good

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Charles Taylor. Born in Montreal in 1931. Professor of philosophy. Shows great concern over the images that Westerners have developed. Recognizes the need for a new ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conscience: The self in search of the good


1
Chapter 3
Ernest D, Eugene L, Alessia LC, Autumn S
  • Conscience The self in search of the good

2
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • The importance of others
  • Recall the other from the three famous
    philosophers
  • Western view human person as an individual
    others are an obstacle to our freedom.
  • Heavy emphasis on autonomy, independence
  • We should not see others as roadblocks
  • It is only possible for us to become our true
    selves through others

3
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • Narcissism
  • Narcissism is the inability to look beyond ones
    self to achieve balance between themselves and
    the other
  • Marked by self-absorption
  • Manifests itself in feelings of rage/aggression
    against those who do not support the self

4
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • The importance of having direction in life
  • Being committed to a certain set of values and
    knowing where you stand on situations
  • This is important for ones identity as well as
    for their moral development

5
Charles Taylor
  • Born in Montreal in 1931
  • Professor of philosophy
  • Shows great concern over the images that
    Westerners have developed
  • Recognizes the need for a new spirituality the
    current human understanding of the self is not
    able to sustain important values such as care for
    others
  • Wants to return to Judeo-Christian values
    richer version of the self than that which is
    promoted by todays secularism
  • Argues that there is a crucial link between moral
    direction and stance, and the identity.

6
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • Identity lies in commitments
  • It is a painful and frightening experience not
    knowing who you are
  • We need our identity to provide us a frame that
    allows us to figure out where our commitments lie
    and where we stand

7
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • Identity comes from the direction we take in life
  • Our identities are complex and are defined by the
    values that give us direction in life
  • Our answers often come in the form of a name I
    am or a social role I am a. This is our
    fundamental stance, and determines our identity.

8
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • The importance of communication and language
  • We cannot be inducted into personhood without
    first being initiated into a language
  • It is through language that we are taught moral
    and spiritual judgment
  • Language contains and shares with others common
    experiences and commitments
  • A larger set of words allows us to express our
    experiences in life more precisely, and allows us
    to better relate with others

9
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • The importance of character and ones body
  • Character refers to the way our actions become
    fixed to our body over time
  • Repeated actions develop into habits that
    influence choices in our life
  • Others can recognize us by our habits (kind,
    stubborn, impatient, etc.)

10
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • The importance of conscience
  • The Second Vatican Council calls conscience a
    voice that calls us to love and to do what is
    good and to avoid evil.
  • Consciences are formed through everyday life
    (society, family, friends, etc.)
  • You have a responsibility to be well informed,
    not only about the issues that challenge moral
    living, but also about the views of other moral
    thinkers

11
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • The development of ones conscience
  • Conscience is formed in 5 ways
  • Conscience develops as you mature
  • Conscience develops as you take account of and
    follow the norms, values, virtues, and
    commandments found in Christian tradition as
    guidelines
  • Conscience helps deal with moral failures
  • Conscience develops as you participate in the
    Eucharist and prayer life of the Church
  • Conscience develops as you grow in the virtue of
    humility

12
The Six Aspects of the Human Person
  • Conscience versus superego Freud
  • Conscience is a feeling that warns us that
    something is wrong, while the superego is an
    internal sensor that uses guilt as a punishment.
  • Superego stores all of the values and types of
    behaviour taught to us when we were young to help
    us gain approval and acceptance in society
  • Children absorb the standards of authority
    figures and peers, especially parents, and guilt
    comes forth immediately if these standards are
    not upheld.

13
Discussion
  • Do you think that the superego or conscience is
    more effective in regulating behaviour?

14
The Three Senses of Conscience
  • Conscience as a capacity to recognize right and
    wrong
  • Capacity to know what is right/wrong
  • Basic focus towards good avoidance of evil
  • Sense of value and personal responsibility

15
The Three Senses of Conscience
  • Conscience as a process of moral reasoning
  • S.T.O.P. or L.I.S.T.E.N. decision making models
  • Conscience must be constantly formed and informed
  • Lifelong process of correcting through personal
    experience, scripture, Church teachings, etc.
  • Cannot rely on ourselves formed in community
  • Knowing how to perceive and think correctly
  • Seeking truth and making it our own

16
The Three Senses of Conscience
  • Conscience as judgment
  • We must act on our conscience and be true to
    ourselves
  • Judgment and decisions of what we must do in
    certain situations are based on our values and
    perceptions
  • Conscience makes a moral decision my own by
    realizing our stance

17
Thomas More
  • April 1534 More refuses to swear to the Act of
    Succession and the Oath of Supremacy, which
    vested the succession of the English Crown to the
    descendants of King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn.
  • Due to his actions, More was committed to the
    Tower of London on April 17, and found guilty of
    treason, causing his beheading on July 9, 1535.
  • His final words were The Kings good servant,
    but Gods first
  • Thomas More did not agree with what his King
    wanted him to, and he stood up for his decision.
    He had a well formed conscience and was able to
    uphold his stance, even though he knew in doing
    so he faced death.
  • More was beatified in 1886 and canonized by the
    Catholic Church as a saint in 1935 by Pope Pius
    XI

18
Malformed Conscience
  • It is possible to go through decision making
    processes and come up with a decision that does
    not promote full humanness. This can be due to a
    malformed conscience.
  • There are 6 symptoms that can identify a
    malformed conscience.

19
Malformed Conscience
  • Rationalization
  • Stealing may be wrong sometimes, but large
    stores can afford it because they are making huge
    profits
  • We sometimes come up with excuses to justify our
    actions, knowing that they are wrong

20
Malformed Conscience
  • Trivialization
  • Its no big deal everybody else does it
  • We can make a situation out to be less important
    than it actually is so that we can justify our
    behaviour, or make it seem like it does not
    really matter what decision we make

21
Malformed Conscience
  • Misinformation
  • My doctor told me that all teenage girls should
    take the birth control pill to prevent getting
    pregnant
  • Sometimes, we make decisions because the
    information provided to us by others was not
    entirely true or valid

22
Malformed Conscience
  • The end justifies the immoral means
  • I had to steal the chocolate bar I didnt have
    any money and I hadnt eaten for 12 hours. I get
    sick if I dont eat.
  • We use an end that we may think is good, or
    beneficial, to justify the decision that we make
    in order to achieve that outcome

23
Malformed Conscience
  • Means to an end
  • By dropping a nuclear bomb to end the war, well
    end up saving lives.
  • We may do something that we know is immoral
    because we think that the outcome will be positive

24
Malformed Conscience
  • Difficult to reason
  • Having been kicked out of his home and finding
    himself with no place to go, a teen acts without
    thinking. He breaks into an empty home to keep
    warm when he could have asked for help from the
    police.
  • We may find ourselves in situations that make it
    hard for us to determine what we should or should
    not do at that particular moment.

25
L.I.S.T.E.N. Model for Decision Making
  • Look for the facts
  • Imagine possibilities
  • Seek insight beyond your own
  • Turn inward
  • Expect Gods help
  • Name your decision

26
L.I.S.T.E.N. Model for Decision Making
  • Look for the facts
  • What are the facts needed to make a good
    decision?
  • Where is this situation happening?
  • Why did this happen?
  • Who did it affect?

27
L.I.S.T.E.N. Model for Decision Making
  • Imagine possibilities
  • What are all the possible choices that could be
    made in this situation?
  • What are the consequences, short- and long- term,
    for each possible decision?
  • What is the most loving response I could have in
    this situation?

28
L.I.S.T.E.N. Model for Decision Making
  • Seek insight beyond your own
  • What would my friends and community say I should
    do?
  • Is there a legal issue involved?
  • What does the Bible say about this situation?

29
L.I.S.T.E.N. Model for Decision Making
  • Turn inward
  • What is my inner reality saying to me?
  • What is my conscience telling me?
  • What are my personal feelings about this
    situation?
  • What are my motives for acting one way or
    another?
  • What does my gut say about this?

30
L.I.S.T.E.N. Model for Decision Making
  • Expect Gods help
  • How is God present in this situation?
  • How is God with me as I discern what I should do?
  • What can I pray for as I make this decision?

31
L.I.S.T.E.N. Model for Decision Making
  • Name your decision
  • What am I going to decide?
  • Why should I decide this?
  • What values am I living out in making this
    decision?
  • What is my plan for carrying out this decision?

32
L.I.S.T.E.N. Applied to The Strangest Dream
  • Look for the facts
  • The US was creating a weapon capable of killing a
    massive number of people to end WWII, a nuclear
    bomb.
  • Joseph Rotblat was the only scientist to leave
    the project. It disagreed with what his
    conscience told him was morally right.

33
L.I.S.T.E.N. Applied to The Strangest Dream
  • Imagine possibilities
  • Could he have told the public about the bomb?
  • Is it possible to convince others to stop working
    on the bomb?
  • What will happen if the bomb is completed?

34
L.I.S.T.E.N. Applied to The Strangest Dream
  • Seek insight beyond your own
  • Do the citizens of the US agree with killing
    innocent lives to end a war?
  • What do other governments have to say about the
    building of a nuclear weapon?
  • Do any other scientists have deeper feelings
    about the project?

35
L.I.S.T.E.N. Applied to The Strangest Dream
  • Turn inward
  • Rotblat looked within himself and decided that he
    needed to leave the project
  • He did this knowing that he would not get the
    notoriety associated with the project

36
L.I.S.T.E.N. Applied to The Strangest Dream
  • Expect Gods help
  • Rotblat was agnostic, but still believed that a
    higher power was present and guiding him in his
    decisions

37
L.I.S.T.E.N. Applied to The Strangest Dream
  • Name your decision
  • Rotlblat ultimately decided that he needed to
    leave the Manhattan project
  • The bomb was still created, leading to the end of
    WWII and the deaths of over 150000 innocent
    people in Japan.
  • Joseph Rotlblat is renowned for being the only
    one to leave the Manhattan Project, and is the
    creator of PUGWASH.

38
S.T.O.P. Decision Making Model
  • Search for the facts
  • Think about alternatives and consequences
  • Others affected
  • Prayer

39
S.T.O.P. Decision Making Model
  • Search for the facts
  • Under what circumstances?
  • What/why/who/where/when/how?
  • Know what you are discussing

40
S.T.O.P. Decision Making Model
  • Think about alternatives and consequences
  • How else can this be solved?
  • What are the choices?
  • Reflect on the consequences of each decision

41
S.T.O.P. Decision Making Model
  • Others affected
  • Who is affected?
  • Who will it negatively affect?
  • Consult with others who know best about the
    matter
  • Consult those with good intentions at heart

42
S.T.O.P. Decision Making Model
  • Prayer
  • Pray to God for the situation to get better
  • Pray for the right answer
  • Pray with others
  • Meditation and reflection (can use Scripture)

43
Conscience Scenarios
  • Use the S.T.O.P. method to analyse one of the
    following scenarios
  • Students in med-school are given a research
    assignment that requires them to use articles
    from a medical journal. A highly competitive
    student cuts out important sections of the
    articles to keep other students from accessing
    the information.

44
Conscience Scenarios
  1. Two students are conversing about their favourite
    bands. One of the students admits to some great
    music he downloaded from the internet. The other
    student reacts and says Hey, dont you know
    youre ripping off the artist? Anyway, can you
    burn me a copy of your CD?

45
Conscience Scenarios
  1. Amelia has connected with a guy on the internet
    and is communicating a mixture of truths and
    untruths about herself, creating a persona she
    considers to be more attractive than how she
    really sees herself.

46
S.T.O.P. Applied to Runaway Jury
  • S
  • Both Fitch and Easter are trying to control the
    jury
  • Both appear to be doing it for money
  • The trial at has to do with the shooting of
    innocent people and the responsibility that the
    gun company should have for those lives

47
S.T.O.P. Applied to Runaway Jury
  • T
  • A mistrial is a possibility if Fitch or Rohr were
    to go to the judge about the person controlling
    the jury
  • Both Fitch or Rohr could pay Easter and Marlee to
    sway the jury their way
  • O
  • Affected are the gun industry, the families
    affected by gun violence, the jury

48
S.T.O.P. Applied to Runaway Jury
  • P
  • Prayed for God to give the jury the power to make
    the right decision
  • Prayed for good to prevail over bad in this trial

49
Moral Fibre
  • Example Similar to muscle fibre. It must be
    exercised for it to become stronger. If a person
    wants their character to strengthen, they must
    exercise their moral fibre.
  • As a child, your character can take many
    different directions but that becomes set,
    essentially, when you mature into adulthood/
  • Moral and ethical actions increase character.

50
Discussion
  • What is the link between values and behaviour?

51
Humanism and Secularism
  • Humanism is a global view which centers on human
    interest and values, and the individuals
    capacity for reflection and realization through
    reason and action. Humanists typically reject
    ties to the divine in order to focus on the
    individual self, outside of religion.
  • Secularism is a view that completely denotes
    religious connotations. Secularists only accept
    reason and matters of logic.

52
Discussion
  • Do you think that society should move toward
    humanistic or secular views, or should religion
    still be an integral part of society? Explain.

53
The Christian Understanding of the Human Person
Based on the Trinity
  • In Christian belief God is a union of three
    persons
  • One meaning of person is an individual who
    bears rights and responsibilities one of a kind,
    autonomous.
  • The word person can also mean the outpouring of
    love toward the other based on the love that
    binds the three persons of the Trinity together.
    God is love.
  • Since humans are made in Gods image, each human
    has the outpouring of Gods love inscribed in
    their very being.
  • The other is not my hell, you cannot do without
    the other. Human beings are, by nature, social.
  • Person means the self as relational.
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