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Moral Theory

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Title: Aristotle on Human Excellence Author: Mark Pursley Last modified by: purslemr Created Date: 12/11/2001 7:52:37 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Moral Theory


1
Moral Theory
  • Mark Pursley

2
Issues in Moral Theory
  • Do statements containing value terms have a truth
    value?
  • If so, what are the truth conditions for value
    claims?
  • Are relativist or subjectivist accounts of moral
    language plausible?
  • How does a community reach a consensus about
    moral issues?

3
Virtue Theory
  • Plato and Aristotle offer virtue theories of
    ethics.
  • Virtue theories rely on an analogy between health
    (the good of the body) and eudaimonia (the good
    of the mind).

4
Aristotle on Human Excellence
  • A virtue (arete, excellence) is a character
    trait, acquired by practice, that disposes a
    person to adopt the right course of action in
    morally charged situations. Virtues are
    life-skills that enable a person to realize their
    potential for living the good life as a rational,
    social, animal.

5
Are we not more likely to hit the mark if we have
a target?
  • Good the aim, end, or goal (telos) of an
    activity. What is the goal (final end) of living
    a human life? All agree Happiness (eudaimonia,
    well-being, flourishing).
  • What is happiness?
  • Pleasure? No, too Brutish.
  • Wealth? No, its a means, not a final end.
  • Honor? No, its not self-sufficient.
  • Virtue? No, its not complete.
  • The end sought must be final, self-sufficient,
    and complete.

6
What is the function of human life?
  • To find the human good, find the human function
    (ergon, what a thing does that makes it what it
    is). What is the characteristically human
    activity? Nutrition and growth? (No, all living
    things) Sensation? (No, all animals) Rational
    activity. Function of a good human rational
    activity in accordance with virtue. Objectors
    ask Are evil people irrational?

7
Becoming Excellent
  • As a skill or craft, virtue is acquired by
    practice. Patterns of behavior produce states of
    character. Good character produces good behavior.
    If you imitate good people, youll become one.
  • Moral virtues control natural feelings (passions,
    appetites) and actions, making them arise in the
    right amounts at the right times for the right
    reasons (such a rule or principle as would arise
    in the mind of the practically wise person).

8
Virtue a mean between extremes
  • Confidence, appetites, anger, giving .
  • Excess Mean Deficiency
  • Foolhardiness Courage Cowardice
  • Indulgence Temperance Insensibility
  • Hot head Cool head Apathetic
  • Too generous Generous Stingy

9
Character Types
  • Heroic extraordinary goodness.
  • Virtuous Takes pleasure in doing good.
  • Continent Must control bodily desires in order
    to do good.
  • Incontinent Try's, but fails, to control bodily
    desires, and so does evil.
  • Vicious Takes pleasure in doing evil.
  • Bestial Subhumanly wicked.

10
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
  • Defends a deontological approach to morality.
  • Everyone must admit that if a law is to be
    morally validthen it must carry with it absolute
    necessity. The ground of obligationmust be
    sought apriori in the concepts of pure reason.

11
Kantian Ethics
  • Morality is a sacred duty, not a means to
    happiness. (A good will is more important than a
    good life.) Reason can discern the moral law.
    The will chooses which actions to perform.
    Inclination reflects how one feels about ones
    options. When reason (not inclination) directs
    the will, one does ones duty.

12
The motive of duty.
  • Acting from inclination or acting from duty. An
    action has moral worth if and only if it is done
    from the motive of duty. The prudent shopkeeper
    acts honestly because it is good policy. Such
    acts have no moral worth. Nor do the kind acts of
    helpful people.
  • The cold, uncaring person who helps others
    because duty commands it, has moral worth.
  • Hypothetical imperative, if you want x, do j.
    Conditional.
  • Categorical imperative Unconditional commands.
    Do X! (Whether you like it or not.)

13
The Categorical Imperative
  • Act only on a maxim which you could (at that
    time) will to become a universal law.
  • Act as if the maxim of your action would
    instantly become a general law of nature.
  • Maxim I do action x in circumstances C to
    obtain end E.
  • 1. Find the maxim 2. Universalize 3. Imagine
    the universalized
  • maxim as a natural law 4. Ask Is this a
    possible law of nature?
  • 5. Ask Can one will this to be a law of
    nature?
  • CI 3 Act so as to treat humanity (yourself and
    others) always as
  • an end, never merely as a means.

14
Consequentialism
  • Consequentialist theories hold that the goodness
    or badness of actions resides in the consequences
    those actions produce. J.S. Mills
    Utilitarianism is the leading theory.

15
Mills Utilitarianism
  • Greatest Happiness Principle Actions are right
    in proportion as they tend to promote happiness,
    wrong as they tend to promote the reverse of
    happiness. Happiness is pleasure and freedom
    from pain. Unhappiness is pain and the privation
    of pleasure. Not an invitation to indulgence A
    beasts pleasures do not satisfy a human beings
    conception of happiness.

16
Ways to Measure Pleasure Quantity and Quality.
  • Pleasure is not just a matter of quantity.
    Higher quality pleasures (like using ones mind,
    creativity, doing good deeds, having friends) are
    more desirable and make life more worth living
    than mere bodily sensations.
  • Aim of utilitarianism An existence exempt as far
    as possible from pain, and as rich as possible in
    enjoyments, both in point of quantity and
    quality. Morality consists in the rules which, if
    followed, would secure this end for all sentients.

17
Utilitarianism and Justice
  • A standard objection to utilitarianism alleges
    that the theory will require the use of unjust
    means whenever doing so is likely to produce a
    greater balance of pleasure. This would permit a
    policy of punishing the innocent to avert a riot,
    to deter wrongdoers, etc.
  • Utilitarians may respond by pointing out that, in
    fact, no society which falsely accuses innocent
    citizens will promote a greater balance of
    pleasure in the long run. The greater good can
    only be attained in a society that upholds basic
    principles of justice (e.g.. the guilty are
    punished and the innocent acquitted).

18
Alfred Jules Ayer 1910- 1989
  • Language, Truth, and Logic.
  • A defense of radical empiricism.
  • Logical Positivism
  • Argues that metaphysical, theological, and moral
    propositions are meaningless.

19
Ayers Critique of Utilitarianism
  • Verificationism An empirical hypothesis is
    significant (legitimate) only if some possible
    sense experience is relevant for determining its
    truth or falsity.
  • Utilitarianism claims actions are good if they
    produce pleasure or reduce pain.
  • We cannot agree that to call an action right is
    to say...it would cause...the greatest balance of
    pleasure...because it is not self-contradictory
    to say it is....wrong to perform the action that
    would...cause the greatest happiness.

20
Ayers Emotivism
  • Since absolutist theories are unverifiable, and
    naturalistic theories violate linguistic
    convention, moral propositions are simply
    expressions of approval or disapproval.
  • Adultery is wrong just means I disapprove of
    adultery, or Boo! adultery!
  • Realist response Moral propositions may express
    emotions but it is still legitimate to ask about
    the sorts of conditions that appropriately evoke
    approval or disapproval.
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