ETHICS
ETHICS
ways in which we could or should act and the wrong ways of acting.
Aesthetics – derived from the Greek word “aesthesis” (“sense” or “feeling”) and
Etiquette – concerned with right and wrong actions, but those considered not
Technical Valuation – derive from the Greek word “techne” the English words
techniques and technical which are often used to refer to a proper way (or right
Morals – used to refer specific beliefs or attitudes that people have or to describe
Ethics- the discipline of studying and understanding ideal human behavior and
Descriptive Ethics – reports how people, particularly groups, make their moral
valuations without making any judgement either for or against these valuations.
questions “What could or should be the right way of acting? In other words, a
Moral issue – used to refer to those particular situations that are often the source
of considerable ad inclusive debates
Moral Decision – when one is faced in a situation and confronted by the choice
actions or behavior.
Moral Dilemma – Going beyond the matter of choosing right over wrong, or
good over bad, and considering instead the more complicated situation wherein
one is torn between choosing one of two goods or choosing between the lesser
of two evils; When an individual can choose only one from a number of possible
actions and there are compelling ethical reasons for the various choices.
Moral Theory/Framework
It is a structure which can evaluate our reasons for valuing a certain decision or
judgement.
It is a system of rules that are created and enforced through social and governmental
institutions to regulate behavior. It has been defined as the science of Justice or the Art
of Justice.
Divine Command Theory - the divinity called God, Allah, or Supreme Being commands and one is
obliged to obey her Creator.
Culture - is the integrated pattern of human knowledge belief and behavior that depends upon
Cultural Relativism – From the reality of diversity, it is possible for someone to jump to the
further claim that sheer variety at work in the different ways of valuation means there is no
single universal standard for such valuations, and that this holds true as well in the realm of
ethics. Therefore, what is ethically acceptable or unacceptable is relative to, or that is to say,
2. We realize that we are in no position to render any kind of judgement on the practices
of another culture.
3. We realize that we are in no position to render any kind of judgement on the practices
Positive Points- Promotes sense of humility, that is, urging us not to imagine that our own culture is
superior to another. Such humility, however, should go hand in hand with a capacity for a
Weak Points - It basically renders us incapable of discerning about what values we may wish to
maintain as we are forced to simply accept whatever culture gives us. It keeps us from exploring
whether there are values that are shared between cultures; keeps us from comparing and
judging- either positively or negatively – the valuations that are made by different cultures.
Strong Points
1. Simplicity – when an idea is marked by simplicity, it has unique appeal to it; a theory
that conveniently identifies a single basis that will somehow account for all actions is a
motivation behind many of the actions one perform which are obviously self-serving;
it could very well also be the motivation behind an individual’s seemingly otherdirected actions.
challenge that, whatever one might say, there is the self-serving motive at the root of
everything.
ETHICAL EGOISM - It does not suppose all actions are already inevitably self-serving. Instead, ethical
egoism prescribes that we should make our own ends, our own interests, as the single
overriding concern. We may act in a way that is beneficial to others, but we should do
- It is not just some pleasant pursuit of one’s own desires, but the imposition of a will to
power that is potentially destructive of both the self and the others. One can take on this
view, if one wishes, but it is also possible to wonder whether there is a way of
recognizing our being in the world with others, of thinking of our own wellbeing
UTILITARIANISM
- It is an ethical theory that argues for the goodness of pleasure and the determination of
- It claims that one’s actions and behavior are good inasmuch as they are directed toward
the experience of the greatest pleasure over pain for the greatest number of person.
- Its root word is “utility” which refers to the usefulness of the consequences of one’s
actions.
Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
- He argued that our actions are governed by two sovereign masters – which he calls
“pleasure and pain”. These masters are given to us by nature to help us determine what
is good or bad and what to be done and not; they fasten our choices to their throne.
- He provided a framework for evaluating pleasure and pain commonly called Felicific
Calculus.
that some actions can produce. In this framework, an action can be evaluated on
o In measuring the tendency to choose these actions we need to consider two more
dimensions:
kind, and purity of the chance it has not being followed by sensations of
considered.
o Felicific calculus allows the evaluation of all actions and their resultant
pleasure.
o This means that actions are evaluated on this single scale regardless of
preferences and values. In this sense pleasure and pain can only quantitatively
differ but not qualitatively differ from other experiences of pleasure and pain.
- Refers to the motivation of our actions as guided by our avoidance of pain and our
desire for pleasure.
- Refers to pleasure is only good if and only if, they produce more happiness than
unhappiness. This means that it is not enough to experience pleasure, but to also inquire
According to John Stuart Mill, equating happiness with pleasure does not aim to
describe the utilitarian moral agent and independently from others. This not only
about our individual pleasures, regardless of how high, intellectual, or in other ways
noble it is, but it is also about the pleasure of the greatest number affected by the
John Stuart Mill understands JUSTICE as respect for rights directed toward society’s pursuit
for the greatest happiness of the greatest number. MORAL RIGHTS is a valid claim on
Hailed as a doctor of the Roman Catholic Church. A Dominican friar who was the
to the doctrine of the faith more than any other figure of his time. His Summa
ESSENCE
There are many possible desirable ends or goods, and we act such ways as to
pursue them. However, just because we think that a certain end is good and is
own good.
VARIETIES
ETERNAL LAW- refers to what God wills for creation, how each participant in it is
NATURAL LAW- refers to the natural inclination to its proper act and end.
HUMAN LAW- refers to all instances wherein human beings construct and enforce
NATURAL LAW
In Aquinas view, we have to consider how we human beings are both unique and at
In Aquinas view, we human beings has a desire to do with sexual intercourse and the
UNIQUELY HUMAN
We have a natural inclination to know the truth about God and to live in the society.