Title: Moral Reasoning and Ethical Theories
1Moral Reasoning and Ethical Theories
- Good engineering, good business, and good ethics
work together in the long run.
2What is Morality?
- It concerns conduct right and wrong, good and
bad, the rules that ought to be followed - It is associated with consequences to ourselves,
others, and the environment - The right or good is linked to value
judgements generally thought to promote fairness,
health, and safety while minimizing injustice
3Ethical TheoriesUtilitarianism
- Utilitarianism - the view that we ought to
produce the most good for the most people, giving
equal consideration to everyone affected - Rule-Utilitarianism is applying those rules that
if generally adopted would produce the most good
for the most people - Act-Utilitarianism is applying rules in order to
produce the most good for the most people
involved in the particular situation (rules
become at most rules of thumb)
4Ethical Theories Utilitarianism Theories of
Good
- Deeply satisfying pleasures mixed with some
inevitable pains a pattern of activities and
relationships that one can affirm as valuable
overall (Mill) - Things that satisfy rational desires, e.g., love
and creativity. Rational desires are those we
would approve of if we scrutinized our desires in
light of all relevant information about the world
and our own psychology (Brandt)
5Ethical TheoriesRights Ethics
- Rights Ethics - the view that human rights - not
good consequences - are fundamental. - Acts of respect for human rights are obligatory,
regardless of whether they always maximize good - Truthfulness important in terms of its
contribution to liberty, especially within
relationships based on trust - Complex in that there are many types of rights
that may conflict and must be balanced
6Ethical TheoriesRights Ethics Liberty Rights
- Liberty Rights (Locke) - places duties on other
people not to interfere with ones life. - To be a person entails having human rights to
life, liberty, and the property generated by
ones labor - property thought of as whatever we gain by
mixing our labor with things - Views reflected by todays Libertarians
7Ethical TheoriesRights Ethics - Liberty
Welfare Rights
- Liberty Welfare Rights (Melden) - having moral
rights presupposes the capacity to show concern
for others and to be accountable within a moral
community - extent of rights determined in terms of
interrelationships among persons - recognizes right to community benefits for
living minimally decent human life
8Ethical TheoriesDuty Ethics
- Duty Ethics - the focus on duties which
correspondence to and sustain fundamental rights - List of duties based on respect for persons and
belief in human capacity for moral autonomy - For example, if you have a right not to be
deceived, then I have a duty not to deceive you.
To deceive you is to undermine your ability to
carry out your plans based on available truths
and within relationships based on trust
9Ethical TheoriesDuty Ethics - List of Duties
- Kant
- Be truthful
- Be fair
- Make reparation for harm done
- Show gratitude for kindness extended
- Seek to improve ones own character and talents
- Gert
- Dont
- cause pain
- disable
- deprive of freedom
- deprive of pleasure
- deceive
- cheat
- Do
- keep your promises
- obey the law
- do your duty
10Ethical TheoriesDuty Ethics - A Closer Look at
Duties
- Are duties universally applicable and
exceptionless? Is duty absolute? - What about when duties conflict with each other,
e.g., do not deceive versus protect innocent
life - Prima facie duties - those that have justified
exceptions or limits
11Summary
- Morality - good is linked to value judgements
- Ethical Theories - attempt to provide perspective
on moral responsibilities - Utilitarianism
- Rule-Utilitarianism
- Act-Utilitarianism
- Rights Ethics
- Duty Ethics
12Testing and Refining Ethical Theories
- Is it applicable and coherent?
- Is it consistent?
- Is it based on valid information?
- Is it sufficiently comprehensive to provide
guidance? - Is it compatible with our moral convictions?
13Example of Refining a Theory
A Theory of Justice (John Rawls) (1) Each person
is entitled to the most extensive amount of
political liberty compatible with an equal amount
for others
(2) Differences in social power and economic
benefits are justified only when they are likely
to benefit everyone, including members of the
most disadvantaged groups
14Virtue Ethics
- Primary focus on the kinds of persons we should
aspire to be - Virtues are
- desirable way of relating to others (individuals
or groups) - desirable habits or tendencies of motive,
attitudes, and emotion as well as conduct - Vices are
- undesirable habits and tendencies
- By extension, virtues and vices apply to
organizations
15Aristotle Virtue and the Golden Mean
- Defined the moral virtues as tendencies, acquired
through habit formation, to reach a proper
balance between extremes in conduct, emotion,
desire, and attitude (balance between excess and
deficiency) - Example Truthfulness is the mean between
revealing all information in violation of tact
and confidentiality (excess) and being secretive
or lacking in candor (deficiency) in dealing with
truth
16Gandhi Seven Social Sins (Vices)
- Politics without principle
- Wealth without work
- Commerce without morality
- Pleasure without conscience
- Education without character
- Science without humanity
- Worship without personal sacrifice
17MacIntyre Virtue and Practices
- Internal goods define what the practices are all
about (external goods are money and prestige) - virtues defined by reference to its internal good
- professional responsibility
- Self-direction virtues
- understanding, cognition (as grounded in moral
concern) - commitment and putting understanding into action
(courage, self-discipline, honesty) - Public-spirited virtues
- Team-work virtues
- Proficiency virtues
18Pragmatism
- A theory about morality that emphasizes the
limitations of abstract rules (anti-theory) - Not to be confused with crass expediency
- Good consequences emphasized, but so too are
rights, duties and virtues within a given context - Flexibility emphasized
- Like act-utilitarianism, there is danger of
paying insufficient attention moral principles
through immersion in specific contexts.
19Can We Reduce Moral Reasoning to Custom,
Religion, or Self-Interest?
- Customs or ethical relativism is view that values
are reducible to conventions, customs, or laws - would we accept bribes, cruelty, and intolerance?
- Religion and divine command ethics
- who are those among us who know precisely what
Gods commands are or are not on each issue? - Self-interest and ethical egoism is view that the
sole duty of each individual is to maximize his
or her own good - is everything act reducible to personal gain,
alone?
20Meaningful Work and Professionals Commitments
- Craft Motives
- attraction to challenging work
- wanting to create objects and systems
- Moral Motives
- contributing to the well-being of other human
beings - Compensation and Self-Interest
- money, power, and recognition motivate and guide
human conduct - reasonable regard for ones self-interest can be
a moral virtue (prudence) as long as it does not
crowd out other virtues