Utility and Utilitarianism - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Utility and Utilitarianism

Description:

Utilitarianism. Actions are good/bad based on an examination of their effects ... Note that this process begins to approach the teleological (rule utilitarianism) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:60
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: jmorr
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Utility and Utilitarianism


1
Chapter 3
  • Utility and Utilitarianism

2
Utilitarianism
  • Define
  • Any action which maximizes good for the greatest
    number of people is ethically correct
  • How would it be stated in business?
  • Making profit is good, since it benefits the
    many, even if it is unfair to the few.
  • Cost/benefit analysis of ethical behavior
  • Utilitarianism versus a utilitarian business
    analysis

3
Types
  • Hedonistic utilitarianism
  • Pleasure versus pain
  • Jeremy Bentham
  • See http//utilitarianism.com/bentham.htm
  • Eudaimonistic utilitarianism
  • Happiness (not just pleasure) versus unhappiness
  • John Stuart Mill
  • Considers quality and quantity.
  • Happiness is difficult to measure
  • Ideal utilitarianism
  • Everything must be considered
  • Happiness, pleasure, friendship, knowledge,
    accomplishment, recognition, charity, goodwill,
    etc.

4
Utilitarianism
  • Actions are good/bad based on an examination of
    their effects
  • Therefore, the behaviors are not inherently
    good/bad
  • Ethical cost/benefit approach
  • We consider the effect on ALL, not just the
    individuals involved directly
  • We must evaluate and compare to ALL alternative
    behaviors (behavioral options)

5
Utilitarianism
  • Two types
  • Act utilitarianism
  • Each act must be decided on its own
  • Exceptions are allowed
  • Were likely to misuse this
  • Rule utilitarianism
  • Classes of actions are treated the same (no
    exceptions)
  • Preferable because we cant know all consequences
    of any action

6
Utilitarianism
  • Frequently used in legislative arguments
  • Not all unethical behavior appears bad
  • Theft, murder etc, is often driven by individual
    cost/benefit analysis
  • If we increase fear of doing whats wrong, we
    reduce objectionable behavior
  • Penal codes
  • Classic arguments against Utilitarianism
  • It puts utility over God
  • Its impossible to calculate all consequences
  • Were not able to know the full results of any
    act
  • Impossible to calculate greatest good

7
Utilitarianism
  • Greatest good sometimes hard to determine.
    Example
  • An act is extremely beneficial to 20 people at
    your organization of 1000, and offered the rest a
    very small advantage
  • An alternate act is moderately beneficial to 950,
    and ignore the other 50
  • Assuming these offer identical total good,
    which is preferable?
  • Neutral language is best when describing the act
    under scrutiny
  • Cheating vs. copying information from
    anothers test

8
Utilitarianism and Justice
  • Justice does not depend on consequences
  • Utilitarian calculations sounds easy in theory,
    but are difficult in practice
  • Read the story on page 66 (top)
  • Was the judge correct? Why or why not?
  • Are ALL consequences considered by the judge?
  • See steps on page 70

9
Situational Analysis
  • Assume you have to decide whether to lie on your
    resume concerning your qualifications

10
Chapter 4
  • Moral Duty, Rights, and Justice

11
Deontological Approach
  • Johnson Controls case
  • Fair resolution?
  • What were the manufacturers ethical
    responsibilities?
  • What would you do?
  • Rights vs. consequences conflict
  • Rights represent the deontological approach to
    ethics
  • Contrast with the utilitarian approach

12
Deontological Approach
  • Things are right and wrong independent of
    consequences

13
Deontological Approach
  • Consistent with Judeo-Christian tradition
  • Ten Commandments
  • Right and wrong are determined by God
  • Or, things are right because they are right
  • No examination of consequences before decision of
    right or wrong

14
Deontological Approach
  • Emmanuel Kant
  • Things are right because we determine they are
    right, not others (parents, teachers, scientists,
    etc.)
  • We impose them on ourselves others cant impose
    them on us
  • A moral person is a rational person
  • Others cant impose either on us
  • Reason is the same in all of us
  • What is moral is the same in all of us
  • Moral laws are reasonable, have a certain form
    (formalist ethical approach)
  • They are consistent, universal, a priori

15
Characteristics of Reason
  • Consistent
  • Moral laws should not conflict with each other
  • Universal
  • If something is rational and logical, it is the
    same for all
  • A priori
  • Not based on experience
  • Derived by reasoning from self-evident
    propositions (Merriam-Webster, 2005)

16
Deontological Approach
  • Kant
  • Moral law is categorical, not hypothetical
  • Hypothetical imperative (choice based on
    circumstances)
  • Ends based rule. Not necessarily universal
  • Categorical imperative (absolute, unqualified)
  • Three tests
  • Can it be made consistently universal?
  • Does it treats humans as ends, not means?
  • Does it respect and reflect individual autonomy?
  • Freely chosen, self-imposed, acceptance of
    universality

17
Deontological Approach
  • Maxims that pass the test must be stated
    completely with all exceptions
  • E.g. never lie is a difficult rule to defend
  • Lie only when the welfare of others is at
    greater risk may be better
  • Note that this process begins to approach the
    teleological (rule utilitarianism)
  • Perfect versus imperfect duties
  • Perfect duty clearly defined action people
    affected clearly defined e.g. do not steal
  • Imperfect duty ambiguous action or degree of
    application e.g. helping the poor

18
Deontological Approach
  • Rights and justice are from a deontological
    perspective
  • What are moral rights?
  • important, normative, justifiable claims or
    entitlements
  • Rights
  • Cannot be overridden by consequences
  • Can be overridden by other rights
  • Can be stated as positive or negative
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com