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Philosophical Ethics
an introduction to the course
George Matthews
Fall 2015
Caspar David Freidrich, “Gebirge”
an ethical dilemma
an ethical dilemma
the runaway boxcar
You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a
runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You
notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear
you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If
you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will
hit and kill one man working on the other track.
an ethical dilemma
the runaway boxcar
You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a
runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You
notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear
you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If
you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will
hit and kill one man working on the other track.
" What would you do?
an ethical dilemma
the runaway boxcar
You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a
runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You
notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear
you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If
you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will
hit and kill one man working on the other track.
" What would you do?
" What should you do?
an ethical dilemma
the runaway boxcar
You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a
runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You
notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear
you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If
you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will
hit and kill one man working on the other track.
" What would you do?
" What should you do?
! Why?
approaches to ethics, 1
approaches to ethics, 1
descriptive ethics
! How do people actually respond to ethical
problems?
! What psychological and sociological explanations
account for our ethical thinking and behavior?
! How does ethical thinking and behavior change with
individual development, education, cultural
background?
approaches to ethics, 1
descriptive ethics
! How do people actually respond to ethical
problems?
! What psychological and sociological explanations
account for our ethical thinking and behavior?
! How does ethical thinking and behavior change with
individual development, education, cultural
background?
" Cases like the runaway boxcar dilemma have been
studied extensively by moral psychologists.
approaches to ethics, 1
descriptive ethics
! How do people actually respond to ethical
problems?
! What psychological and sociological explanations
account for our ethical thinking and behavior?
! How does ethical thinking and behavior change with
individual development, education, cultural
background?
" Cases like the runaway boxcar dilemma have been
studied extensively by moral psychologists.
" One result: most people say they would throw the
switch.
approaches to ethics, 2
approaches to ethics, 2
normative ethics
! How should we respond to ethical dilemmas and
problems?
! What justifications are there for our moral claims
and assumptions?
! How can we use critical rationality to establish
ethical norms?
approaches to ethics, 2
normative ethics
! How should we respond to ethical dilemmas and
problems?
! What justifications are there for our moral claims
and assumptions?
! How can we use critical rationality to establish
ethical norms?
" Many of us assume that the consequences of our actions
determine their rightness or wrongness.
approaches to ethics, 2
normative ethics
! How should we respond to ethical dilemmas and
problems?
! What justifications are there for our moral claims
and assumptions?
! How can we use critical rationality to establish
ethical norms?
" Many of us assume that the consequences of our actions
determine their rightness or wrongness.
" Is this a correct assumption – do better consequences
really make an act morally right?
variation on a dilemma
variation on a dilemma
another runaway boxcar
You are standing on a bridge over a railroad track when a runaway
boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice
five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you.
If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. There is a
rather large person next to you and if you push that person off the
bridge in front of the boxcar the car will derail and the children will
be saved, but he will be killed.
variation on a dilemma
another runaway boxcar
You are standing on a bridge over a railroad track when a runaway
boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice
five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you.
If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. There is a
rather large person next to you and if you push that person off the
bridge in front of the boxcar the car will derail and the children will
be saved, but he will be killed.
" Most people would NOT push the person off the bridge to save the
children.
variation on a dilemma
another runaway boxcar
You are standing on a bridge over a railroad track when a runaway
boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice
five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you.
If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. There is a
rather large person next to you and if you push that person off the
bridge in front of the boxcar the car will derail and the children will
be saved, but he will be killed.
" Most people would NOT push the person off the bridge to save the
children.
" Why not, given that the consequences in each case are the same?
approaches to ethics, 3
approaches to ethics, 3
meta-ethics
! How do ethical language and ethical thinking differ
from other ways of speaking or thinking?
! Are ethical statements statements about reality,
expressions of our feelings, something else entirely?
! Is there any hope for rationally settling conflicting
ethical claims?
approaches to ethics, 3
meta-ethics
! How do ethical language and ethical thinking differ
from other ways of speaking or thinking?
! Are ethical statements statements about reality,
expressions of our feelings, something else entirely?
! Is there any hope for rationally settling conflicting
ethical claims?
" When we claim that it is acceptable to throw the switch,
but not to push the large person off the bridge are we
making a statement about a fact?
approaches to ethics, 3
meta-ethics
! How do ethical language and ethical thinking differ
from other ways of speaking or thinking?
! Are ethical statements statements about reality,
expressions of our feelings, something else entirely?
! Is there any hope for rationally settling conflicting
ethical claims?
" When we claim that it is acceptable to throw the switch,
but not to push the large person off the bridge are we
making a statement about a fact?
" Or are we merely expressing our personal feelings about
these scenarios?
basic elements of philosophical ethics
basic elements of philosophical ethics
1. appeal to reason
2. universality
3. impartiality
4. overriding character of ethical principles
basic elements of philosophical ethics
1. appeal to reason
2. universality
3. impartiality
4. overriding character of ethical principles
Philosophers trust reason as a method of discovering the
truth about ethics and for producing genuine conviction.
basic elements of philosophical ethics
1. appeal to reason
2. universality
3. impartiality
4. overriding character of ethical principles
Ethics aspires to find principles that transcend individual
cases and apply to all relevantly similar situations.
basic elements of philosophical ethics
1. appeal to reason
2. universality
3. impartiality
4. overriding character of ethical principles
Right and wrong do not depend on who you are. We are
all presumed equally worthy of consideration.
basic elements of philosophical ethics
1. appeal to reason
2. universality
3. impartiality
4. overriding character of ethical principles
Since ethics is concerned with what is fundamentally
right and wrong, its principles override considerations of
personal preference, customary behavior, law, etc.
basic elements of philosophical ethics
1. appeal to reason
2. universality
3. impartiality
4. overriding character of ethical principles
Yes, all of these claims are subject to debate – that is
part of what philosophical ethics does, it examines its
own assumptions about ethics and ethical thinking.
our plan of attack
our plan of attack
logic
First we will look at what is involved in justifying any claim at all,
whether it has to do with ethics or not.
our plan of attack
logic
First we will look at what is involved in justifying any claim at all,
whether it has to do with ethics or not.
ethical theory
Next we will take a tour of various theories of ethics that have been
advanced to try to answer the question of right and wrong in
general.
our plan of attack
logic
First we will look at what is involved in justifying any claim at all,
whether it has to do with ethics or not.
ethical theory
Next we will take a tour of various theories of ethics that have been
advanced to try to answer the question of right and wrong in
general.
applied ethics
Finally we will see how this all plays out in the real world.
something to think about
What counts as a good
reason to believe or to do
something?

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Introduction

  • 1. Philosophical Ethics an introduction to the course George Matthews Fall 2015 Caspar David Freidrich, “Gebirge”
  • 3. an ethical dilemma the runaway boxcar You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will hit and kill one man working on the other track.
  • 4. an ethical dilemma the runaway boxcar You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will hit and kill one man working on the other track. " What would you do?
  • 5. an ethical dilemma the runaway boxcar You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will hit and kill one man working on the other track. " What would you do? " What should you do?
  • 6. an ethical dilemma the runaway boxcar You are standing next to a switch on a railroad track when a runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. If you throw the switch, the boxcar will not hit the children but will hit and kill one man working on the other track. " What would you do? " What should you do? ! Why?
  • 8. approaches to ethics, 1 descriptive ethics ! How do people actually respond to ethical problems? ! What psychological and sociological explanations account for our ethical thinking and behavior? ! How does ethical thinking and behavior change with individual development, education, cultural background?
  • 9. approaches to ethics, 1 descriptive ethics ! How do people actually respond to ethical problems? ! What psychological and sociological explanations account for our ethical thinking and behavior? ! How does ethical thinking and behavior change with individual development, education, cultural background? " Cases like the runaway boxcar dilemma have been studied extensively by moral psychologists.
  • 10. approaches to ethics, 1 descriptive ethics ! How do people actually respond to ethical problems? ! What psychological and sociological explanations account for our ethical thinking and behavior? ! How does ethical thinking and behavior change with individual development, education, cultural background? " Cases like the runaway boxcar dilemma have been studied extensively by moral psychologists. " One result: most people say they would throw the switch.
  • 12. approaches to ethics, 2 normative ethics ! How should we respond to ethical dilemmas and problems? ! What justifications are there for our moral claims and assumptions? ! How can we use critical rationality to establish ethical norms?
  • 13. approaches to ethics, 2 normative ethics ! How should we respond to ethical dilemmas and problems? ! What justifications are there for our moral claims and assumptions? ! How can we use critical rationality to establish ethical norms? " Many of us assume that the consequences of our actions determine their rightness or wrongness.
  • 14. approaches to ethics, 2 normative ethics ! How should we respond to ethical dilemmas and problems? ! What justifications are there for our moral claims and assumptions? ! How can we use critical rationality to establish ethical norms? " Many of us assume that the consequences of our actions determine their rightness or wrongness. " Is this a correct assumption – do better consequences really make an act morally right?
  • 15. variation on a dilemma
  • 16. variation on a dilemma another runaway boxcar You are standing on a bridge over a railroad track when a runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. There is a rather large person next to you and if you push that person off the bridge in front of the boxcar the car will derail and the children will be saved, but he will be killed.
  • 17. variation on a dilemma another runaway boxcar You are standing on a bridge over a railroad track when a runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. There is a rather large person next to you and if you push that person off the bridge in front of the boxcar the car will derail and the children will be saved, but he will be killed. " Most people would NOT push the person off the bridge to save the children.
  • 18. variation on a dilemma another runaway boxcar You are standing on a bridge over a railroad track when a runaway boxcar is speeding down the tracks in your direction. You notice five children playing on the track ahead, too far away to hear you. If you do nothing they will be hit by the train and killed. There is a rather large person next to you and if you push that person off the bridge in front of the boxcar the car will derail and the children will be saved, but he will be killed. " Most people would NOT push the person off the bridge to save the children. " Why not, given that the consequences in each case are the same?
  • 20. approaches to ethics, 3 meta-ethics ! How do ethical language and ethical thinking differ from other ways of speaking or thinking? ! Are ethical statements statements about reality, expressions of our feelings, something else entirely? ! Is there any hope for rationally settling conflicting ethical claims?
  • 21. approaches to ethics, 3 meta-ethics ! How do ethical language and ethical thinking differ from other ways of speaking or thinking? ! Are ethical statements statements about reality, expressions of our feelings, something else entirely? ! Is there any hope for rationally settling conflicting ethical claims? " When we claim that it is acceptable to throw the switch, but not to push the large person off the bridge are we making a statement about a fact?
  • 22. approaches to ethics, 3 meta-ethics ! How do ethical language and ethical thinking differ from other ways of speaking or thinking? ! Are ethical statements statements about reality, expressions of our feelings, something else entirely? ! Is there any hope for rationally settling conflicting ethical claims? " When we claim that it is acceptable to throw the switch, but not to push the large person off the bridge are we making a statement about a fact? " Or are we merely expressing our personal feelings about these scenarios?
  • 23. basic elements of philosophical ethics
  • 24. basic elements of philosophical ethics 1. appeal to reason 2. universality 3. impartiality 4. overriding character of ethical principles
  • 25. basic elements of philosophical ethics 1. appeal to reason 2. universality 3. impartiality 4. overriding character of ethical principles Philosophers trust reason as a method of discovering the truth about ethics and for producing genuine conviction.
  • 26. basic elements of philosophical ethics 1. appeal to reason 2. universality 3. impartiality 4. overriding character of ethical principles Ethics aspires to find principles that transcend individual cases and apply to all relevantly similar situations.
  • 27. basic elements of philosophical ethics 1. appeal to reason 2. universality 3. impartiality 4. overriding character of ethical principles Right and wrong do not depend on who you are. We are all presumed equally worthy of consideration.
  • 28. basic elements of philosophical ethics 1. appeal to reason 2. universality 3. impartiality 4. overriding character of ethical principles Since ethics is concerned with what is fundamentally right and wrong, its principles override considerations of personal preference, customary behavior, law, etc.
  • 29. basic elements of philosophical ethics 1. appeal to reason 2. universality 3. impartiality 4. overriding character of ethical principles Yes, all of these claims are subject to debate – that is part of what philosophical ethics does, it examines its own assumptions about ethics and ethical thinking.
  • 30. our plan of attack
  • 31. our plan of attack logic First we will look at what is involved in justifying any claim at all, whether it has to do with ethics or not.
  • 32. our plan of attack logic First we will look at what is involved in justifying any claim at all, whether it has to do with ethics or not. ethical theory Next we will take a tour of various theories of ethics that have been advanced to try to answer the question of right and wrong in general.
  • 33. our plan of attack logic First we will look at what is involved in justifying any claim at all, whether it has to do with ethics or not. ethical theory Next we will take a tour of various theories of ethics that have been advanced to try to answer the question of right and wrong in general. applied ethics Finally we will see how this all plays out in the real world.
  • 34. something to think about What counts as a good reason to believe or to do something?