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The Basic Criteria

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What criteria and approaches are most effective in examining moral issues? ... Failing Roger/ineligibility for crucial game. Other courses could keep him eligible ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Basic Criteria


1
The Basic Criteria
2
Questions Before Us
  • What is really good for us?
  • What criteria and approaches are most effective
    in examining moral issues?
  • What pitfalls other than relativism and
    absolutism should we be aware of and strive to
    avoid?

3
Review
  • The Principle of Right Desire provides the
    necessary foundation for logic, and
  • Together with the Principle of Contradiction,
    enables us to approach ethical analysis with
    confidence.
  • We now build upon that foundation

4
A Fundamental Good Respect for Persons
  • What is really good for us?
  • Respect for persons

5
Categorical Imperative Respect for Persons
  • First, that each and every person should be
    regarded as worthy of sympathetic considerations,
    and should be so treated
  • Secondly, that no person should be regarded by
    another as a mere possession, or used as a mere
    instrument, or treated as a mere obstacle, to
    anothers satisfaction
  • And thirdly, that persons are not and ought never
    to be treated in any undertaking as mere
    expendables.
  • Errol E. Harris, Respect for Persons, Daedalus,
    Spring 1969, p. 113

6
Three Basic Criteria
  • Along with Respect for Persons, there are three
    basic criteria
  • Obligations
  • Ideals
  • Consequences

7
Obligations
  • Many kinds of obligations
  • Friendship
  • Citizenship
  • Family
  • Business
  • Professional
  • Obligations bind morally they exist to be
    honored.
  • To honor them is right to dishonor them is wrong

8
Ideals
  • Are notions of excellence, goals that bring
    greater harmony in ones self and between self
    and others
  • Assists us in achieving respect for persons in
    moral judgments
  • E.g. of Ideals (contained in Scriptures Church
    Teachings)
  • Fairness - Tolerance - Compassion
  • Loyalty - Forgiveness - Amity
  • Peace - Courage - Honesty

9
Consequences
  • Are the beneficial or harmful effects that result
    from an action and affect the people involved,
    including the person performing the action.
  • Some consequences are
  • Physical
  • Emotional
  • Immediate
  • Passing of time
  • Intended by the person performing the act
  • Unintended
  • Obvious
  • Subtle and hidden by appearances

10
Analyzing Ethical Issues
  • Study the Details of the Case
  • Act
  • Intention
  • Circumstances
  • Identify the Relevant Criteria
  • Obligations?
  • Ideals?
  • Consequences?
  • Determine Possible Courses of Action
  • Possible choices of action
  • Greater good?
  • Lesser evil?
  • Decide Which Action Is Most Ethical
  • Act on ones deliberation

11
Case 1 Agathas Relationship
12
1. Details of the Case
  • How old are the children?
  • How satisfying and mutually nourishing is her
    relationship with her husband before she began
    the relationship with the minister?
  • If there are problems in her relationship with
    her husband, have they been discussed or
    attempted to be solved?
  • Has she discussed this with the minister?
  • Are there other possibilities for her to have a
    social life and intellectual fulfillment?

13
Analysis 2 Apply Basic Criteria
  • Consequences
  • Of continuing the relationship?
  • Her own marriage?
  • Her sexual thoughts can lead to actions?
  • Affect the ministers vocation?
  • Lead to tension between her husband, children,
    congregation?
  • Obligations
  • To herself
  • To her husband
  • To her children
  • To the minister
  • Ideals
  • Marital fidelity honesty with self and friends

14
Analysis 3 Determine Possible Courses of Action
  • Consider possible actions open to Agatha
  • End the platonic relationship with minister,
    explaining she wants to save her marriage
  • See him less frequently and never alone or in his
    or her home
  • Renew her relationship with her husband and find
    other social and intellectual outlets
  • Obtain a legal separation from her husband

15
Analysis 4 The Most Ethical Action
  • Continue the relationship as it is
  • Ask for separation and divorce from her husband
  • Break up the relationship with the minister
  • Given obligations, ideals, and consequences,
    which action is the most ethical? Why?

16
The Case of Horaces House
17
Analysis 1 The Details of the Case
  • Details are straightforward
  • No significant questions remain unanswered.

18
Analysis 2 Relevant Criteria
  • Obligations
  • Legal between broker and the owner of the house
  • Did broker give info so he could use it against
    her?
  • Did she trust him with the info?
  • Ideals
  • Fairness
  • Consequences
  • Broker lost his commission
  • Horace lost his house they almost bought

19
Analysis 3 Possible Courses of Action
  • He can continue as he has planned
  • Barker did have an alternative to outbidding
    Horace he could have asked the broker who
    mentioned the house, to show him and his wife,
    other houses

20
Analysis 4 The Most Ethical Action
  • Consequences, though unfortunate, are not
    sufficiently harmful to make the action wrong
  • Yet his action is morally wrong because it
    violates the moral ideal of fairness

21
Professor Woebegone
22
Analysis 1 Details of the Case
  • Identify important questions
  • Has he checked with other professors about
    Rogers progress? Has Roger earned passing grades
    in their classes?
  • What are Prof. Woebegones chances of getting a
    position at another college?

23
Analysis 2 Relevant Criteria
  • Obligations
  • To be diligent in helping students meet course
    objectives
  • To his profession, set a reasonable grading
    standard apply it impartially honestly
  • Ideals justice, courage, fairness
  • Consequences
  • Failing Roger/ineligibility for crucial game
  • Other courses could keep him eligible
  • Prof. Woebegone will be fired
  • Lawsuit against college
  • Be an example of integrity for his colleagues

24
Analysis 3 Possible Courses of Action
  • To violate his obligations and moral ideals and
    give Roger a higher grade than he deserves
  • Fail Roger and quietly accept his almost certain
    dismissal
  • Fail Roger and let the administration know that
    he will file a lawsuit for wrongful dismissal of
    most unwelcome publicity

25
Analysis 4 The Most Ethical Action
  • Although consequences are mixed, both obligations
    and moral ideals suggest that Prof. Woebegone
    should fail Roger
  • He should also try to preserve his teaching
    position, but be willing to be dismissed rather
    than compromise his integrity

26
Other Pitfalls in Ethical Decision-Making
  • Oversimplifications
  • Exists whenever our treatment of a case goes
    beyond reducing to manageable proportions and
    distorts it.
  • Happens when criteria is ignored
  • Hasty Conclusions
  • Refers to embracing a judgment before we have
    examined it fully
  • Ask if then questions to become more
    objective.
  • Generalizations
  • Use the 4 step process
  • Double Standards
  • Consists of using one set of criteria for judging
    cases that concern us or someone we identify with
    and another set for judging other cases.
  • Unwarranted Assumptions
  • Consists of taking too much for granted. (occurs
    subconsciously)
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