WEEK 6: DIVINE COMMAND THEORY & NATURAL LAW THEORY - Jews - Christians Divine Law Theory: St. Augustine He is also called as Saint Augustine of Hippo One of his works left a lasting influence – the City of God was widely read in Augustine’s time and throughout the Middle Ages and still demands attention today. The City of God The City of God was written in response to pagan claims that the collapse of the Roman Empire by barbarians was one of the consequences of the abolition of pagan worship by Christian emperors. The collapse of the Roman Empire gave rise to Christianity to become the official religion. St. Augustine responded by asserting, to the contrary, that Christianity saved the city from complete destruction and that Rome’s fall was the result of internal moral decay. DIVINE COMMAND THEORY It proposes that an action is morally good if it is commanded by God. The theory asserts that what is moral is determined by what God commands, and that for a person to be moral is to follow his commands. That the source of Morality is God. God is Moral and Good. What To Do?! READ THE BIBLE! THE BIBLE Leviticus 19:28; Do not cut your bodies for the dead or put tattoo marks on yourselves Timothy 2:9; I also want the women to dress modestly, with decency and propriety adorning themselves, not with elaborate hairstyles or gold or pearls or expensive clothes Leviticus 19:16; do not go about spreading slander among your people On Reading the Bible: OLD TESTAMENT The Euthyphro Problem This problem or dilemma presents two questions to ponder. 1. Is an action morally right because God commanded them? Or 2. Is an action commanded by God because it is morally right? Analysis of the Euthyphro Problem Is an action morally right because God commanded them? Is an action commanded by God because it is morally right? NATURAL LAW THEORY THOMAS AQUINAS Thomas Aquinas is also known as the “Angelic Doctor” He lived at a critical juncture of western culture when the arrival of the Aristotelian corpus in Latin translation reopened the question of the relation between faith and reason TRANS: MICHAEL GABRIEL JIMENEZ NATURAL LAW THEORY A theory which believes that the nature of man is Good. Accordingly, “Good” is the natural goal of man and that our actions are driven towards this “Good”. What is consistent with the Natural Law is right and what is not in keeping with the Natural Law is wrong. Hence evil deeds are unnatural and immoral. The goal of man is to exercise the nature of being “Good” by following his nature. HOW DOES A MAN UNDERSTAND HIS NATURE? Aquinas believed that God imbued everyone with the right scope of knowledge to fully tackle life and understand our nature. These are the instinctive knowledge that promotes good because God supposedly promotes good. We are provided “reason”, for us to act and pursue the good. Laws of Nature are discernible by human reason. Thus, humans are morally obliged to use their reasoning to discern what the laws are and to act in conformity with them. Humans have a natural drive to eat, drink, sleep and procreate. These actions are in accord with a natural law for species to survive and procreate. Thus activities in conformity with such a law are morally good. Activities that work against that law are morally wrong. BASIC GOODS LIFE REPRODUCTION EDUCATING OFFSPRING SEEK GOD LIVE IN SOCIETY AVOID OFFENSE SHUN IGNORANCE BASIC GOODS WITH REASON PROHIBITION POSITIVE INJUNCTION WEEK 7: CATEGORICAL IMPERATIVE AND UTILITARIANISM CATEGORICAL IMPERATIVE Objective: Understand the theory of Categorical Imperative Key Concepts: Duty and Good Will Three Axioms 1. Principle of Universalizability 2. Principle of Humanity 3. Principle of Autonomy Immanuel Kant German philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) was an opponent of utilitarianism. Immanuel Kant argued that the supreme principle of morality is a standard of rationality that he dubbed the “Categorical Imperative” . HYPOTHETICAL IMPERATIVES VS CATEGORICAL IMPERATIVES Hypothetical Imperatives If; Then Categorical Imperatives Categorical Imperative states that doing good is an obligation. We are doing good because we must! (GOOD as a DUTY). It is the product of rational insight and as rational agents we can understand and know them as the great truths that they are. Moral law consists entirely of categorical imperatives. Hence, moral statements/actions falling under categorical imperative are universal. It is an absolute act that needs to be followed without exemptions. Good Will A moral agent has to act from good will. To act from good will is to act with a desire to do your duty for duty’s sake. Regardless of the consequence. Actions without good will have no moral worth. Categorical Imperative: Duty & Good Will Simply put, moral action must be understood as in the nature of duty and done out of good will. It must be done, regardless if it will benefit the moral agent or not. In categorical imperative, the nature of a man is rational, as he is aided by reason. The rational man’s goal is to do his DUTY. In doing so, these moral acts must fall under categorical imperatives. Thus, it must adhere to the 3 formulations as morality is a set of Maxims or Axioms. (Constant Principles) TRANS: MICHAEL GABRIEL JIMENEZ The Three Axioms 1. Principle of Universalizability An action is right, if and only if you could rationally will it to be universal. One must, “Act only on that maxim through which you can at the same time will that should become universal law without contradiction” “Act only on that maxim through which you can at the same time will that should become universal law without contradiction” Act becomes a Maxim = Rule and/or a principle of action Maxim as universal law, means to have everyone in a similar situation to always act according to the same rule. 2. 3. - - Principle of Humanity Ends in Themselves Principle of Humanity – Act as to treat humanity/man as an end, not as a means only. It is about treating people (& ourselves) as an end in themselves – as a being of intrinsic value, NEVER MERELY as THINGS or TOOLS to be used for your own purpose or satisfaction. Principle of Autonomy Principle of Autonomy – When a moral agent acts, he must understand that he is not only a follower of universal law (moral law). He is also a giver of universal law. Every single act is a permission to universalize it and to become the moral law. Hence if you cheat on an exam, you are allowing it to be the act of all, which makes cheating morally right. Video Link Kant & Categorical Imperatives: Crash Course Philosophy #35 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bIys6JoEDw&list=PL8d PuuaLjXtNgK6MZucdYldNkMybYIHKR&t=0s Readings (See attached files) Reading 9.1Kantian Ethics https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1wc7r6j.6?seq=1#metadata_i nfo_tab_contents Reading 9.2 Immanuel Kant: Moral Theory https://www.iep.utm.edu/kantview/ UTILITARIANISM Objective Comprehend the concept of Utilitarianism Principle of Utility TRANS: MICHAEL GABRIEL JIMENEZ - Consequential Hedonism Act Utilitarian vs. Rule Utilitarian John Stuart Mill John Stuart Mill was the most influential English language philosopher of the nineteenth century. He was a naturalist, a utilitarian, and a liberal whose work explores the consequences of a thoroughgoing empiricist outlook. Utilitarianism It states that the Good should coincide with the Common Good, or that which gives benefit for man, both for individuals or in certain groups. Principle of Utility - moral actions are those which would produce the greatest good for the greatest number of people. It likewise promotes the greatest number of pleasures for the greatest number of people and the least amount of pain for the greatest number of people. Utilitarianism is both hedonistic and consequential. Consequential, because the intention in doing the act is immaterial so long as the result of the act produces the greatest good for the greatest number of people. Hedonistic, because hedonism puts emphasis on how man is a pleasure seeking animal by nature driven by what is pleasant for his well-being. Its goal is to attain Ataraxia or bliss thus man decides or acts based on his indulgent pleasure i.e. attaining what is pleasant. Act Utilitarian vs. Rule Utilitarian Act Utilitarian An act is morally right if it produces at least as much happiness as any other acts that the person could perform at that time. SHORT TERM Rule Utilitarian - An act is morally right if it conforms to a rule that leads to the greatest good in the long run, hence the correctness of the rule is determined by the amount of good it brings about when followed. LONG TERM Readings (See attached files)(See attached files) Reading 10.1UtilitarianismReading 10.1Utilitarianism https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1wc7r6j.5?seq=1#metadata_i nfo_tab_conthttps://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1wc7r6j.5?seq= 1#metadata_info_tab_contentsents Reading 10.2 Utility and HappinessReading 10.2 Utility and Happiness https://reasonandmeaning.com/utilitarianism-in-detail/https://r easonandmeaning.com/utilitarianism-in-detail/ Video Link Utilitarianism: Crash Course Philosophy #36 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=- WEEK 8: EGOISM AND ALTRUISM EGOISM Selfishness At the end of this presentation YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO: HAVE AN UNDERSTANDING OF ETHICAL EGOISM CLEAR MISCONCEPTIONS ON THE TOPIC OF ETHICAL EGOISM DIFFERENTIATE ACTIONS THAT ARE EGOISM AND RATIONAL EGOISM SEE EGOISM AS A PRACTICAL ETHICAL OUTLOOK EGOISM You see it as bad. Example; Friend:Pa-print paps?! Me: Hindi ko kaya(state reason here) Friend:“Selfish mo naman bro!” Misconception on egoism Traditionally we see egoism as an ethical theory that must be frowned upon. Being an egoist (someone who practices egoism as their ethical theory) is someone that is bad Being selfish is an outlook that we must not have and we must be selfless. What Is Ethical Egoism? The pursuit of living is striving for the goal which is directed by our self-interested values. One of the leading proponent of ethical egoism is Ayn Rand Rand on altruism “Altruism declares that any action taken for the benefit of others is good, and any action taken for one's own benefit is evil. Thus the beneficiary of an action is the only criterion of moral value - and so long as that beneficiary is anybody other than oneself, anything goes.” – Ayn Rand For Ayn Rand altruism it promotes self-sacrifice and its end goal is death hence she sees it as evil. ALTRUIST IS EVIL FOR EXAMPLE – in the case of survival; you and a stranger on a deserted island and both of you are hungry you have a coconut that you can eat the stranger doesn’t know about; what do you do? Ethical Altruism would posit that you give up the coconut to the stranger, compromising your survival. (your death) And if both of you with an altruistic outlook, no one would ever eat the coconut. (both dead) Eating the coconut would be egotistical because you would promote yourself over the other. Egoism vs rational egoism Egoism is bad in the sense that we would act on our own impulse and act on a whim. As a rational being one must use their rational capability. RAND ON EGOISM She claimed that as a human being that is capable of using reason it’s only rational to be an egoist. TRANS: MICHAEL GABRIEL JIMENEZ - Hence she coined the term “rational egoism” and this is what is morally good HOW IS RATIONAL EGOISM GOOD? A RATIONAL MAN WOULD HOLD HIS/HER OWN LIFE AS THE HIGHEST VALUE, HIS RATIONALITY AS THE HIGHEST VIRTUE THE HAPPINESS AS THE FINAL GOAL AND PURPOSE OF HIS/HER LIFE VIRTUE ARE STANDARDS OF RATIONAL BEINGS On man and living “Man—every man—is an end in himself, not a means to the ends of others; he must live for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself to others nor sacrificing others to himself; he must work for his rational self-interest, with the achievement of his own happiness as the highest moral purpose of his life.” – Ayn Rand “The purpose of morality is to teach you, not to suffer and die, but to enjoy yourself and live.” – Ayn Rand What is ethical or morally good is the action that would promote oneself and living with the guidance of reason – egoism. ALTRUISM Or popularly known as SELFLESSNESS. Objectives At the end of this powerpoint presentation you should be able to: Define what is altruism Who coined the term and its etymology Determine if charlet is a good or bad moral agent. Determine whether an action is ethically altruistic What is ALTRUISM? - - ALTRUISM - ETYMOLOGY THE WORD ALTRUISM CAME FROM THE LATIN WORD “ALTER” MEANING “OTHER” AND IT WAS COINED BY “AUGUSTE COMTE” Altruism for Auguste Comte can simply be summarized by “living for the other” in other words it’s about the “selfless concern for the welfare of the other” Popularly known as the Father of Sociology WHEN CAN WE SAY AN ACTION IS ALTRUISTIC? Who Or What Determines An Action To Be Altruistic, Is It The Motives Of The Individual? Is It The Means Or Action Taken By The Individual Or Maybe The Benefactor Of The Action Determines It To Be Altruistic? Is It Altruistic? Charlet is driving into a school zone. And so she started slowing down her car. She passed by the school zone and no student was hurt in the process. IS CHARLET, AN ALTRUIST? CHARLET, AN ETHICAL ALTRUIST? Yes? No? Is It Altruistic? What Determines An Action To Be Altruistic? IS IT THE MOTIVES OR INTENTION? IS IT THE MEANS OR ACTION CHOSEN? IS IT BENEFACTOR THE ACTION? CHARLET A BAD PERSON – NOT AN ALTRUIST IF CHARLET IS MOTIVATED BY THE MERE CONSEQUENCES OF HITTING A CHILD WITH A CAR - THAT IS ALTRUISTIC BUT SLOWING DOWN AS MOTIVATED BY THE FINANCIALLY, EMOTIONALLY AND LEGAL CONSEQUENCES OF SUCH AN EVENT – IS SELF-INTERESTED. SO WHAT IS ETHICAL ALTRUISM? BUT THE RESULT OF NOT HITTING A CHILD (benefitted the child) NOT HAVING ANY NEGATIVE LIABILITIES (benefitted Charlet) SLOWING DOWN BENEFITTED THE TWO PARTIES (Charlet and the Child) BUT A TRULY ALTRUISTIC BEHAVIOR SHOULD ONLY BENEFIT THE CHILD AND NOT CHARLET. EVERYDAY ALTRUISM WE HAVE DIFFERENT EXAMPLES OF ALTRUISM IN THE BIBLE WHERE IN SOME CHARACTERS ARE DEPICTED TO LEAVE THEIR JOBS, FAMILIES AND SHOWN UNWAVERING DEVOTION ON HELPING THE OTHER. AND TRADITIONALLY, BEING A SELFLESS PERSON IS SEEN AS SOMEONE WITH THE HIGHEST REGARD. ETHICAL ALTRUISM FOR ALTRUISM THE MORAL ACTION IS THE ACTION THAT IS DONE DIRECTED TO OTHERS. Actions that directly benefited the “other” are the actions that are good. Altruism Behavior that is normally described as altruistic when it is motivated by a desire to benefit the other than oneself for that person’s sake. ETHICAL ALTRUISM ALTRUISM IS A FORM OF CONSEQUENTIALIST ETHICAL THEORY. IT IS SIMILAR TO UTILITARIAN ETHICAL THEORY TRANS: MICHAEL GABRIEL JIMENEZ From the word, consequence. The result determines if the action is good or not DIFFERENT FORMS OF ALTRUISM Who is benefitted by the action determines its moral value, normally an action that benefitted and is favorable to anyone else other than the self is good, Altruism for auguste comte The Catholic Encyclopedia says that for Comte's altruism, "The first principle of morality...is the regulative supremacy of social sympathy over the self-regarding instincts." Author Gabriel Moran, (professor in the department of Humanities and the Social Sciences, New York University) says "The law and duty of life in altruism [for Comte] was summed up in the phrase : Live for others." Living for an altruist is living not for oneself but for the other. Such view is supported by Martin Luther King JR. in this statement “Every man must decide whether he will walk in the light of creative altruism or in the darkness of destructive selfishness. -Martin Luther King, Jr. WEEK 9: VIRTUE THEORY Objectives: Understand the concept of Virtue Ethics Reflect on the significance of VIRTUE THEORY Understand how Virtue Ethics in honing one’s character Key Concepts of Virtue Ethics The Function Theory (Telos) Eudaimonia and Virtue Virtue as Moderation Virtue as Habit Aristotle (384–322 BC) was a scholar in disciplines such as ethics, metaphysics, biology and botany, amongst others. It is fitting, therefore, that his moral philosophy is based around assessing the broad characters of human beings rather than assessing singular acts in isolation. Indeed, this is what separates Aristotelian Virtue Ethics from both Utilitarianism and Kantian Ethics. The Function Theory (Telos) Aristotle was a teleologist because he believed that every object has what he referred to as a final cause. The Greek term telos refers to what we might call a purpose, goal, end or true final function of an object. Aristotle claims that “...for all things that have a function or activity, the good and the ‘well’ is thought to reside in the function”. Aristotle’s claim is essentially that in achieving its function, goal or end, an object achieves its own good. Every object has this type of a true function and so every object has a way of achieving goodness. The Function Theory (Telos) Humans have an essence and we must adhere to the function of being a human and develop it in the process of being virtuous. Aristotle identifies what the good for a human being is in virtue of working out what the function of a human being is, as per his Function Argument. Function Argument All objects have a telos. An object is good when it properly secures its telos. Given the above, Aristotle directs his thinking towards human beings specifically. The telos of a human being is to reason. The good for a human being is, therefore, acting in accordance with reason. The Function Theory (Telos) Virtue as Moderation Aristotle refers to virtues as character traits or psychological dispositions. Virtues are those particular dispositions that are appropriately related to the situation and, to link back to our function, encourage actions that are in accordance with reason. For Aristotle, virtue is not a feeling itself but an appropriate psychological disposition in response to that feeling; the proper response. The correct response to a feeling is described as acting on the basis of the Golden Mean, a response that is neither excessive nor deficient. The table below makes it more apparent. COURAGE VIRTUE Virtues are not feelings, but characteristic dispositional responses that, when viewed holistically, define our characters and who we are. If we act in accordance with reason and fulfill our function as human beings, our behavior will generally reflect our virtuous personality traits and dispositions. To be virtuous will help you attain the pinnacle of Humanity or attain Eudaimonia. Ergo: Essence = Golden Mean = Eudaimonia TRANS: MICHAEL GABRIEL JIMENEZ Virtue as Habit Cultivating a virtuous character is something that happens by practice. Aristotle compares the development of the skill of virtue to the development of other skills. He says that “...men become builders by building” and “... we become just by doing just acts”. We might know that a brick must go into a particular place but we are good builders only when we know how to place that brick properly. Building requires practical skill and not merely intellectual knowledge and the same applies to developing virtuous character traits. Ethical characters are developed by practical learning and habitual action and not merely by intellectual teaching. Eudaimonia and Virtue Aristotle uses the Greek term eudaimonia to capture the state that we experience if we fully achieve a good life. According to Aristotle, eudaimonia is the state that all humans should aim for as it is the aim and end of human existence. To reach this state, we must ourselves act in accordance with reason. Properly understanding what Aristotle means by eudaimonia is crucial to understanding his Virtue Ethical moral position. Eudaimonia has been variously translated and no perfect translation has yet been identified. While all translations have their own issues, eudaimonia understood as flourishing is perhaps the most helpful translation and improves upon a simple translation of happiness. Eudaimonia and Virtue Aristotle concludes that a life is eudaimon (adjective of eudaimonia) when it involves “... the active exercise of the mind in conformity with perfect goodness or virtue”. Eudaimonia is secured not as the result of exercising our physical or animalistic qualities but as the result of the exercise of our distinctly human rational and cognitive aspects. According to Aristotle, virtues are character dispositions or personality traits. Thus, Aristotelian Virtue Ethics is about an individual's character rather than following a set of rules. It is about being rather than doing. Videos • Aristotle's Ancient Greek Virtue Ethics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tE7yEJdUU7g • Aristotle & Virtue Theory: Crash Course Philosophy #38 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrvtOWEXDIQ Readings • Reading 7 Aristotelian Virtue Ethics https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1wc7r6j.7