Title: U14 What Makes a Humane Society
1U1-4 What Makes a Humane Society?
- 1 How religious beliefs affect modern societies,
e.g. secular systems of government, religion and
government? - 2 Issues of human rights and responsibilities
and their influence on modern societies?
2A Society Might Be In-Humane
Jews walking to the Gas Chamber
So, What Makes a Humane Society?
3What Makes a Humane Society?
- Humane means
- Marked by sympathy, compassion or concern for
other humans and/or animals - A humane society
- Acts in human-like ways
- Regards human welfare
- Especially the weakest and most vulnerable but
- Problematic, e.g. abortion
- Protect rights of unborn?
- Protect rights of woman?
4What Makes a Humane Society?
- Historically, many societies based their ethics
on religious values - In the Modern Age, many favour secular
alternatives - but the Enlightenment (Age of Reason) has failed
to provide a uniting vision - Democracy or Economic Rights? Freedom to exploit?
- Post-Modernists retreat from -
Truth - - uncertainty about God ? Good ? Justice ? Truth
- - disinterest
- How will you answer? Your choices shapes what
society becomes
?
5Anthropology Simple Societies Shared Values
- Anthropologists say people in tribal societies
usually share similar wealth, roles and values - Tribal people can be good or bad
- But they have less choice about ethics
6Complex Societies Varied Values
More choice about ethics different views about
what makes a humane society
7Sociology Values Reflect Group Needs
- berserkr (Old Norse) "wild warrior or champion."
- Sociologists say societys needs create our
values - Vikings valued wild berserker warriors like
Thor - But West Bridgford School would find berserker
behaviour troublesome
- Berserkers became frenzied in battle, howling
like animals, foaming at the mouth, and biting
the edges of their iron shields.
8Values Might Also Reflect Individual Choices
Its Up To Us!
- Values are what we consider important - what
matters to us - The ideals accepted by individuals or groups
9Our Values and Choices Shape Us
- Human beings have many needs
- But actualising / realising our values is
important
10History Origins of Western Values 1
Ancient Greece
- Historians say Western ways of thinking began in
Ancient Athens - These were copied by the Romans and spread over
Europe by the Roman Empire
11History Origins of Western Values 2
Christianity
- Historically, the Ethical Base for Society Came
From Religion - God could be the ultimate source of all Goodness
- But, Is God real?
- And, How do we know what God wants?
- What about the treatment of minorities?
12Christianity Influenced Western Values
- Christianity has been the major influence on
Western values - Despite growing secularisation, the influence of
Christian values is still evident today in
Western societies and individuals - E.g. Names
Yes, its a cross!
13What if Islam had shaped Europe?
- Charles the Hammer stopped the northward spread
of Islam into Europe in 732, Battle of Tours - Some historians say he stopped Islam becoming
Europes religion
14Christianity and Western Values
- Christianity influenced European values - God,
Jesus, Bible, Heaven - Christianity spread from Europe into the
Americas, Africa and Australia - Christianity helped shape Western values
15Page 2 Human Rights and Responsibilities
16Secularism e.g. Christmas Continues, But Without
the Religious Meaning
Christmas continues, but secular UK no longer
celebrates the Birth of Jesus New Christmas
traditions
17Rise of Free Thinking - Secularism
- Medieval Christendom Church and State built
around allegiance to Christianity, centred on
Rome (Roman Catholic Church) punish heretics - Reformation Protestants reformed the Church
broke up Christendoms unity, allowing - Enlightenment Free thinking in religion
encouraged free thinking without religion
Descartes, I think, therefore I am rise of
rationalism guided by the light of reason - Rise of Science knowledge by empirical method
18Seeking a New Basis for Ethics 1 Thomas
Hobbess Social Contract
- Hobbes claimed without society, life would be
nasty, brutish and short - Natural greed for power led to anarchy and war of
all against all - So agree social contract out of self-interest
1588-1679
Leviathan (1651)
19Ethics Based on Social Contract
- Societys ethics based on the Social Contract
- Good is whatever society says
- You get the benefits of society if you give up
total freedom
202 Kant Do the Right Thing
- Kants Belief ethics is about doing your duty.
- Use reason to identify your duty
- Kant Do what any rational agent should do
21Kant Deontological Ethics (Duty-Based)
- Kants Categorical Imperatives
- Universalisability can your behaviour be a rule
for everyone (the same for everyone)? - Treat People as an End in Themselves dont use
people
223 Utilitarianism
- Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
- wanted usefulness to be our main value do
whatever produced the greatest happiness for the
greatest number (GHP) - Equal rights for everyone, including women, and
the abolition of slavery - Rich people should not count more than others
23Good Greatest Happiness Principle
- Do whatever is best for the most people
- BUT
- What about minorities?
Jeremy Benthams Utilitarianism
Winners
Losers
Ethnic Cleansing
244 Economics Marxs Revolution for a Humane
Society
- Karl Marx (1818-1883) said, What society is like
depends on economics - The Bosses (Bourgeois) use their power to
establish the society that favours them - Proletarians learn a false consciousness - a
false understanding that prevents their class
struggle for change
For Marx a humane society ends exploitation of
the workers people no longer feel alienation
goods are shared by need not greed
25Who Decides What Makes a Society Humane?
- Hobbes What society says
- Utilitarians What benefits the majority
- Marx what benefits the powerful
265 Politics Making a Humane Society
- Interest groups combine to promote their concerns
- E.g. Liberal, Conservative or Labour values
Nick Clegg
David Cameron
Gordon Brown
27What Makes a Humane Society?
28Humane Values The Big Question
- Do we invent values?
- Are values nothing more than just our own
preferences?
- Do we find values?
- Are there some true values?
29Is There an Absolute Standard?
- As far as Moral Relativists are concerned
- Right and wrong are not absolute
- Just reflects socially accepted attitudes at a
particular time/place
30Seeking an Absolute Standard?
- Religious Yes God!
- Many secularists good is whatever we think
society? or individual? - Nietzsche will to power replaces slave
mentality - Nazi activity was legal crimes against humanity
- Is Goodness a discovery or human invention?
- Problem if society attacks its own citizens
Is goodness just My preference is
different?
31Humane Society Human Rights
- One basic assumption of many modern societies is
treat everyone equally - The UN Declaration of Human Rights, 1948 suggests
a set of rights for all people, no matter where
they live - The European Convention on Human Rights, 1950
designed to protect human rights and freedoms
32A Modernism Valued Technology
- Modernism optimistic belief in Progress
- that science and human reason would fill
remaining gaps in knowledge, - find out everything, uncover the fundamental
truth underpinning 'reality - and build utopia
- If science and technology were reshaping the
world - In time we would reach Utopia
33Modernism in Crisis
- Modern technology also brought mass killing and
destruction - Disillusionment
34B Disillusionment with Modernism
- Disillusionment
- WWI Trenches
- WW2 Holocaust
- Environmental catastrophe
- Loss of Community
- Alienation
- Spiritual Emptiness
35C Post-Modernism
- Loss of Hope
- loss of trust in Reason
- no longer searching for Truth, God, nor Good
- Image is everything
- Values Style (whatever you decide)
- Confusing? Liberating! It does not matter - just
choose!
36Post-Modernism
- Post-Modernism incredulity towards
meta-narrative rejection of all grand theories
loss of the search for Truth
- Excessive scepticism can undermine moral responses
37What Makes a Humane Society?
You do! You and Your Choices, Decisions and
Commitments