ETHICS
ETHICS
INTRODUCTION:
ETHICS - is the branch of philosophy that studies morality or the rightness or
wrongness of human conduct. Morality speaks of a code or system of behaviour in
regards to standards of right or wrong behaviour. The two (2) terms (ethics and
morality), especially their adjective form (ethical and moral), are often times used
interchangeably.
As a branch of philosophy, ethics stands to queries about what there is
reason to do. Dealing with human actions and reasons for action, ethics is also
concerned with character. In fact, the word ethics’ is derived from the Greek word
‘’ETHOS’’ means ‘’character’’, or in plural ‘manners’.
Clearly, ethics and morality necessarily carry the concept of moral standards
or rules with regard to behaviour. So as way of introducing moral rules, let me
discuss why rules are important to social beings.
FREEDOM AND MORAL ACTS
In Kant philosophy, freedom is defined as a concept which is involved in
moral domain, at the question: what should I do?
In summary, Kant says that the moral law is only that I know myself as a free
person. Kantian freedom is closely linked to the notion of autonomy, which means
law itself: thus, freedom falls obedience to a law that I created myself. It is
therefore, respect its commitment to compliance with oneself. Practical reason
legislates (make laws and requirements) of free being, or more precisely the
causality of free beings.
Phenomena, in the Kantian thought, are subject to the law of natural
causality; each event is the effect of another, and so on to infinity. Unlike the
phenomenon of man, the moral rule is free, ie, it has the power to self-start
condition. Kant ethics is mainly based on the concept of free will and autonomy.
Kant’s Morality and Freedom
To act freely is to act autonomously. To act autonomously is to act
according to a law I give myself. Whenever I act according to the laws of
nature, demands of social convention, when I pursue pleasure and comfort,
I am not acting freely. To act freely is not to simply choose a means to a given
end. To act freely is to choose the end itself, for its own sake.
This is central to Kant’s notion of freedom. For Kant, acting freely
(autonomously) and acting morally are one and the same thing.
The capacity to act autonomously in this manner gives humans that
special dignity that things and animals do not have. Respecting this dignity
requires us to treat others not as means to an end, but as ends in themselves.
To arrive at a proper understanding of Kant’s notion of moral law and
the connection between morality, freedom and reason, let’s examine these
contrasts:
1. Duty vs. Inclination (morality)- Only the motive of duty, acting
according to the law I give myself confers moral worth to an action. Any other
motive, while possibly commendable, cannot give an action moral worth.
2. Autonomy vs. Heteronomy (freedom)- I am only free when my will
is determined autonomously, governed by the law I give myself. Being part
of nature, I am not exempt from its laws and I’m inclined or compelled to act
according to those laws (act heteronomously/the state or condition of being
ruled). My capacity for reasons opens another possibility that of acting
according to laws other than the laws of nature: The laws I give myself. This
reason, “pure practical reason”, legislates a priori- regardless of all empirical
ends.
3. Categorical vs. Hypothetical Imperatives (reason)- Kant
acknowledges two ways in which reason can command the will, two
imperatives. Hypothetical imperatives uses instrumental reason: If I want x,
I must do Y. ( If I want to stay out of jail, I must be a good citizen and not rob
banks). Hypothetical imperative is always conditional. If the action would be
good solely as a means to something else, the imperative is hypothetical. If
the action is represented as good in itself, and therefore necessary for a will
which of itself accords with reason, the imperative is categorical.
Categorical Imperative is non-conditional. It is concerned with the
matter of the action and its presumed results, but with its form, and with the
principle from which it follows. And what is essentially good in action consists
in the mental disposition, let the consequences be what they may.
What is Categorical Imperative?
This question can be answered from the idea that binds us as rational
beings regardless of any particulars ends.
Two main formulations of the Categorical Imperative:
1. Act only on that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it
should become a universal law. Maxim is a rule, a principle that gives reason to
action. This is a universalizing test that checks whether my action puts my interests
and circumstances ahead of everyone else’s. My action will fail the test if it results
in a contradiction.
Example: I want a loan, but I know I won’t have money to repay it. I’m
considering making a promise I know I can’t keep. Can I make this a universal law,
the law that says that every time one needs a loan and has no money to repay it,
one should make a false promise? Imagine everyone then acting according to this
maxim. We quickly realize that this would result in negating the whole institution
of promise-keeping. We arrive at a contradiction.
2. Act in such a way that you always treat humanity, whether in your own
person or in the person of any other, never simply as means, but always at the same
time as an end.
For Kant, human existence has in itself an absolute value-it is an end in itself
and the only ground of a possible categorical imperative.
The Role of Freedom in Morality
The personal aspect of morality-which might more properly be called ethics
is about the cultivation of virtue: the development of character traits so that
choosing the good becomes a matter of habit. But a person in order to be truly
asset, must be free to cultivate the qualities, or not.
There is no virtue in being temperate when you are being forced not to
indulge. There is no virtue in being charitable when someone is forcing you to give
up what is yours. Virtue can be guided by cultural traditions and social institutions,
but it cannot be coerced. A virtuous man must also be a free man.
The interpersonal aspect of morality is more about rule following. These
rules are important because, they prevent us from colliding with each other. They
permit us to live together in harmony, and they also make us recognize, apart from
the mere consequences to ourselves, the rights of others. Here too, liberty is
essential.
1. – The Importance of Rules to Social Beings
Rules – refer to explicit or understood regulations or principles governing
conduct within a specific activity or sphere. Rules tell us what is or is not allowed in
a particular context or situation. In many ways, rules serve as a foundation for any
healthy society. Without rules, society would likely fall into anarchy/disorder.
RULES BENEFIT TO SOCIAL BEINGS IN VARIOUS MANNERS
a. Rules protect social beings by regulating behavior. Rules build boundaries
that place limits on behaviour. Rules are usually coupled with means to
impose consequences on those who violate them. One of the reasons
people follow accepted rules is to avoid negative consequences.
b. Rules help to guarantee each person certain rights and freedom. Rules
form frameworks for society. Nations are generally nations of laws and
the governing principles are outlined in what is called constitution.
c. Rules produce a sense of justice among social beings. Rules are needed in
order to keep the strong from dominating the weak, that is, to prevent
exploitation and domination. Without rules, schemes in which those with
the power control the system, would take over.. In effect, rules generate
a stable system that provides justice, in which even the richest and most
powerful have limitations on what they can do.
d. Rules are essential for a healthy economic system. Without rules
regulating business, power would centralize around monopolies and
threaten the strength and competitiveness of the system. Rules are
needed to ensure product safety, employee safety, and product quality.
Copyright and patents help protect people’s intellectual property.
In short, society cannot soundly function without rules and regulations.
Rules are necessary to protect the greater good. Even the freest societies
ought to have rules in order to avoid exploitations and tyranny while
upholding the common welfare.
MEANING OF CULTURE
Culture - is so complex that is not easy to define. In one sense, culture is used
to denote that which is related to the arts and humanities. But in a broader sense,
culture denotes the practices, beliefs, and perceptions of a given society.
Culture – refers to the cumulative deposit of knowledge, experience, beliefs,
values, attitudes, meanings, hierarchies, religion, notions of time, roles, spatial
relations, concepts of the universe, and material objects and possessions acquired
by a group of people in the course of generations through group or individual
striving.
2.1Ethical Subjectivism. This theory basically utterly runs contrary to the principle
that there is objectivity in morality. Fundamentally a meta-ethical theory,
Ethical Subjectivism is not about what things are bad. It also does not tell how we
should live or what moral norms we should practice. Instead, it is a theory about
the nature of moral judgements.
That's the sort of question that only a philosopher would ask, but it's actually
a very useful way of getting a clear idea of what's going on when people talk
about moral issues.
The different 'isms' regard the person uttering the statement as doing
different things.
We can show some of the different things I might be doing when I say
'murder is bad' by rewriting that statement to show what I really mean:
Subjectivism
Subjectivism teaches that moral judgments are nothing more than
statements of a person's feelings or attitudes, and that ethical statements do
not contain factual truths about goodness or badness.
In more detail: subjectivists say that moral statements are statements about
the feelings, attitudes and emotions that that particular person or group has
about a particular issue.
If a person says something is good or bad they are telling us about the
positive or negative feelings that they have about that something.
These statements are true if the person does hold the appropriate attitude or
have the appropriate feelings. They are false if the person doesn't.
Emotivism
Emotivism is the view that moral claims are no more than expressions of
approval or disapproval.
This sounds like subjectivism, but in emotivism a moral statement
doesn't provide information about the speaker's feelings about the topic
but expresses those feelings.
When an emotivist says "murder is wrong" it's like saying "down with
murder" or "murder, yecch!" or just saying "murder" while pulling a horrified
face, or making a thumbs-down gesture at the same time as saying "murder
is wrong".
So when someone makes a moral judgement they show their feelings about
something. Some theorists also suggest that in expressing a feeling the
person gives an instruction to others about how to act towards the subject
matter.
Prescriptivism
Prescriptivists think that ethical statements are instructions or
recommendations.
Ethicists today generally divide the study of morality into three general
subject areas: (1) meta-ethics, (2) normative ethics, and (3) applied ethics. Under
these respective areas are various moral theories or frameworks.
1. Meta-Ethics
Normative ethics is the branch of ethics that studies how man ought to act,
morally speaking. As of the name suggests, it examines ethical norms, that is, those
guidelines about what is right, worthwhile, virtuous, or just.
This branch evaluate standards for the rightness and wrongness of actions
and determines a moral course of action. Prescriptive in nature, it addresses
specific moral questions about what we should do or believe. We do normative
ethics if we justify norms like “Discrimination is wrong” or “We must always act in
accordance with our duty”. Just for easy distinction, whereas meta-ethics tackles
questions such as “What is goodness?” normative ethics deals with issues like
“What ought one to do?”
Socrates (470-399 BC), Plato (427-348 BC), and Aristotle (384-322 BC) are
Greek philosophers in the ancient period who deeply affected Western philosophy.
The contemporary theory in Ethics called Virtue Ethics is said to have started
with these three great philosophers. In the medieval era, the Italian philosopher
and theologian Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) revived, enhanced, and
‘Christianized’ the Greek Virtue Ethics. In this lesson, we will discuss these Greek
philosophers and Aquinas’ ethical theories and attempt to philosophically analyse
them.
Basically, the virtues are the freely chosen character traits that people praise
in others. People praise them because: (1) they are difficult to develop; (2) they
are corrective of natural deficiencies (for instance, industriousness is corrective
of one’s tendency to be lazy): and (3) they are beneficial both to self and society.
Virtue Ethics defines a moral person as someone who develops the virtues
and unfailingly displays them overtime. The ancient Greeks list four “cardinal
virtuous” namely, wisdom, courage, moderation, and justice. The Christian
teaching, on the other hand, recommends faith, hope, charity, and love. Others
suggest virtues which are associated with ‘humanity’ namely grace, mercy,
forgiveness, honor, restraint, reasonableness and solidarity.
In dialog Gorgias written by Plato, Socrates indicates that pleasure and pain
fail to provide an objective standard for determining moral from immoral since
they do not exist apart from one another, while good and evil do.
Circularity and squareness are good examples of what Plato meant by Forms.
A thing in the physical world may be called a circle or a square insofar as it
resembles or participates the Form “circularity” or “squareness”. (Baird, 2009)
3. Aristotle’s Ethics
Like Plato’s and most of the other ancient philosopher’s ethical theories,
Aristotle’s view is also of a type known as eudaimonistic. As such, it focuses on
happiness (eudaimonia), or the good for man, and how to obtain it.
3.1 Aristotle ‘Telos’. A ‘telos’ is an end or purpose. Aristotle believes that the
essence or essential nature of beings, including humans, lay not at their cause (or
beginning) but at their end (‘telos’).
Aristotle does not agree with Plato’s belief in a separate realm of Forms.
Aristotle, instead, argues that natural beings can discover the ‘essences’ of things
and that a being’s essence is its potential fulfilment or ‘telos’ (as the being’ is
rationally and, thus, a life of an acorn is to become an oak tree). The essence or
‘telos’ of ‘human being’ rationality and, thus, a life of contemplation (a.k.a
Philosophy) is the best kind of life for true human flourishing.
“All humans seek happiness (“well being”), but in different ways. True
happiness is tied to the purpose or end (telos) of human life. The
essence [or ‘telos’] of human beings (that which separates and
distinguishes them as a species) is Reason. Reason employed in
achieving happiness (human ‘telos’) leads to moral virtues [e.g.
courage, temperance, justice and prudence] and intellectual virtues
(e.g., ‘science,’ art, practical wisdom, theoretical wisdom).”
(“Aristotle,” n.d.)
In terms of his ethics, Aristotle thus believes in the excellence of
philosophical contemplation and virtues actions stemming from virtuous persons.
By virtuous actions, he means those which the person with wisdom would choose
because what is good is obvious to such a person.
3.2 Happiness and Virtues. Aristotle believes that the ultimate human goal is self-
realization. This entails achieving one’s natural purpose by functioning or living
consistently with human nature. Accomplishing it, in turn, produces happiness;
whereas inability to realize it leads to sadness, frustration, and ultimately to poor
life. It therefore, behoves us to act in accordance with our nature so as to be
content and complete. In detail, what does Aristotle mean by human nature?
Ethics, for Aristotle, is the inquiry into the human good. This is to say that
the purpose of studying ethics is to make ourselves good, though Aristotle assumes
that we already want to become good. This human good is eudomonia or
happiness.
Aristotle observed that wise persons seek an end that is self-sufficient, final,
and attainable over one’s life. This end is happiness which all human beings want.
Aristotle also considers happiness as the summum bonum – the greatest good of
all human life. He adds that it is the only intrinsic good, that is, the good that is
pursued for its own sake. While all other things, such as pleasure, wealth, and
honor are merely means to an end, happiness is man’s ultimate goal as it is an end
in itself.
3.3 Virtue as Habit. Aristotle’s idea of happiness should also be understood in the
sense of human flourishing. This flourishing is attained by the habitual practice of
moral and intellectual excellences, or ‘virtues’.
Aristotle employs the word ‘hexis’ to refer to moral virtue. One denotation
of the term ‘hexis’ is an active state, a condition in which something must actively
hold itself. Virtue, thus, manifests itself in action. More explicitly, an action counts
as virtuous, according to Aristotle, when a person holds oneself in a stable
equilibrium of the soul, in order to select the action knowingly and for its own sake.
This stable equilibrium of the soul is what constitutes character.
3.4 Virtues and the Golden Mean. Virtue refers to an excellence of moral or
intellectual character. As mentioned earlier, Aristotle distinguishes two kinds of
virtue: virtues of intellect and moral virtues. The first corresponds to the fully
rational part of the soul, the intellect; the second pertains to the part of the rational
soul which can ‘obey reason’. Moral virtue is an expression of character, formed by
habits reflecting repeated choices, hence is also called virtue of character.
For Aristotle, moral virtues follow from our nature as rational beings—they
are the traits or characteristics that enable us to act according to the reason. But
what is acting according to reason?
Happiness and its opposite play a role I the determination of the golden
mean, since we tend to do actions that bring delight and avoid actions that bring
agony. The virtuous person is brought up to find enjoyment in virtuous actions and
sorrow in vices.
3.5 ‘Phronesis’ and Practice. In using the golden mean to become virtuous, we
must recognize not only that the mean is neither too much nor too little but also it
is ‘relative to us’ as moral agents. What constitutes the right amount of something
may differ from person to another. Aristotle knows that the right amount of food
for a 6-footer basketball player is different from he right amount of food for a 3-
footer, thin 12-year old boy. In learning to avoid excess and defect, we thus have
to find out for ourselves what the right amount is in our perspective unique case
and situation. But what determines what is appropriate for us in a particular
circumstance?