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Ethics

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views5 pages

Ethics

Uploaded by

Amjay Alejo
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Ethics | Final Term-Reviewer

NORM- standard of measurement; like measuring the size, weight, length, duration, intensity,
quantity, and/or depth.

TYPES OF NORM

- Eternal Divine Law(Objective) It is the ultimate and absolute norm of morality;


independent of any standard.
- Human Reason(Subjective) It is related to the person's conscience

LAW AS THE OBJECT NORM

- general notion of law


- moral law defined
- division of law

GENERAL NOTION OF LAW

• law is a norm which governs nature and action of things


• law of nature - principles that governs natural phenomena
• natural law - refers to the free acts of rational being

MORAL LAW DEFINED - law is an ordinance of reason for the common good, promulgated by a
leader of community moral

DIVISION OF LAW: THE ETERNAL LAW

Attributes of Eternal Law

Eternal law is eternal and unchangeable and is absolutely universal

DIVISION OF LAW:THE NATURAL LAW

Refers to the operational tendencies of the human nature - the chemical, biological,
physiological, and rational properties of man as an organism

Natural law is the tendency of human nature towards growth and self-fulfillment
HUMAN POSITIVE LAW AND THE MORAL LAW

Derived from the natural law and promulgated for the common good by a human agency
which has a charge of a society; a sovereign one; juridical order of the society human.

LAW AS THE SUBJECT NORM OF MORALITY

- conscience -ethics

MEANING OF CONSCIENCE

Derived from the Latin words

Cum – together

Scientia - to know

A choice of a particular good in a given situation

People refer to conscience as the “voice of God” - a whisper of admonition


CONSCIENCE

• as an act of intellect
o an act of practical judgment of reason deciding upon in individual act as good
or bad
o can only be applied to intellect
o only intellect can detect
• as the proximate norm of morality
o allows a person to have a direct and personal access in his conscience
o must conform to a higher norm (eternal divine law)
• as a practical moral judgment
o dictates the person to perform what is
good and what is bad
o extension of the natural law

CONSCIENCE VS CIVIL AUTHORITY

whenever there is a conflict between civil authority and divine law, the person has to

obey GOD rather than men

MORAL PRETENSION- do good without having a good character.


ETHICAL FRAMEWORKS

meta-ethics - the subdiscipline of ethics concerned with the nature of ethical theories and moral
judgments.

normative ethics - what should be considered morally acceptable and unacceptable. It seeks
to define criteria for judging the morality of behaviors, personality attributes, and other aspects
of human conduct. Through normative ethics, people can develop guiding rules and standards

applied ethics - the application of normative ethical theories; the application of ethics to real-
world problems

DEONTOLOGY -IMMANUEL KANT

- From the greek word “deon” which means “duty”


- Bases morality on independent moral rules or duties deontology

GOOD WILL - freely act because of duties or obligations

IMPERATIVES- Kant focuses on maxims that are moral and has imperative force

TWO KINDS OF IMPERATIVES

- categorical (no matter what) - hypothetical (certain end)

FORMULA OF UNIVERSALITY - act only on that maxim through which you can at the same time
will that it should become a universal law

FORMULA OF HUMANITY - act in such a way that you treat humanity, whether in your own person
or in the person of any other, never merely as a means to an end, but always at the same time
as an end

STRENGTHS OF DUTY-BASED ETHICS

- real of duty, free from utility - respect for people


- golden rule - Mathew 7:12 - Reason based

WEAKNESSES OF DUTY-BASED ETHICS

- hyper-rationally and lack of emotions - irrelevance of inclination


- overly formal and universal - inflexibility
- supererogation

RIGHT THEORY - it is not merely the outcome of actions that is significant but also the reasoning
behind them, because the intent is evil, then the outcome is all likelihood, is bad as well.

- Legal Rights - Moral Rights

TELEOLOGY

- from the greek word "telos" which means


- most famous form is consequentialism

UTILITARIANISM

- a teleological ethical System focusing on the rightness of the act


- from the latin term "utilis" which means “useful”
- what is useful is good
- cause and effect

BIOETHICS - ethical issues pertaining to life, biomedical research medicines, and medical
profession

ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS - moral issues concerning nature, ecosystem, and nonhuman contents

BUSINESS ETHICS - involve issues Concerning corporate practices

SEXUAL ETHICS - moral issues regarding sexuality and human sexual behaviors

SOCIAL ETHICS - tackles what is right for the society as a whole

PLURALISM - several means of approaching truths about the world

MORAL PLURALISM - an idea that there can be conflicting moral views that we have to respect

MORAL ABSOLUTISM - there is only one right answer

MORAL RELATIVISM – there is no wrong answer

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