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Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy
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Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Apr 02, 2015

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Page 1: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Ethical Theories: Conclusion

Nanoethics Lecture III

Roderick T. Long

Auburn Dept. of Philosophy

Page 2: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Utilitarianism A consequentialist theory: standard for the

rightness of actions is beneficial consequences

Differs from ethical egoism (another consequentialist theory) in appealing to beneficial consequences for everybody, not just oneself

Claims the virtue of simplicity

Page 3: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Utilitarian SimplicityWe ordinarily think beneficial results are one

ethical consideration among others.Utilitarianism offers to explain the same

range of ethical phenomena equally well by appealing solely to such results.

This would make it a superior theory – IF in fact it explains them EQUALLY WELL.

Does it?

Page 4: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Remember Our Problem Case for Utilitarianism

Five patients need five

different organ transplants Should we kill healthy

patient and redistribute

organs? Clash between ethical theory (might seem

to say yes) and particular judgment (no)

Page 5: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Three Approaches to Solving Conflicts

1. Top-down: stick with the theory no matter what particular judgments it yields

Page 6: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Three Approaches to Solving Conflicts

2. Bottom-up: stick with particular judgments no matter what ethical theory they imply

Page 7: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Three Approaches to Solving Conflicts

3. Reflective equilibration: mutual adjustment

Whatever they may say, in practice philosophers choose RE

Page 8: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Analogy With ScienceTop-down science (sticking with theory no

matter what observations say) is bad science

But bottom-up science is bad too: freshman chemist gets boiling water at 90º

Mutual adjustment in science tooDifference: philosophy conceptual, not

empirical

Page 9: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Problem Case for Utilitarianism

Three possible moves for utilitarian:

1. Reject utilitarianism (in favor of, say, Kantianism – respecting persons as ends)

2. Bite the bullet (accept killing the patient)

3. Reformulate utilitarianism so as to avoid the undesirable implication

Page 10: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Option 3Distinguish act-utilitarianism from rule-utilitarianismAct-utilitarianism: choose each action in light of

social utilityRule-utilitarianism: choose general rules in light of

social utility; then choose each action in light of the rules

Page 11: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Rule-UtilitarianismSometimes more effective to

pursue goals indirectlyExample: referees in sports –

even if the purpose of the game is to give pleasure to the spectators, if the referee makes calls based on what will please the spectators, the spectators will soon be displeased

Page 12: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Rule-UtilitarianismAnother example: Francis Bacon on

“experiments of fruit” vs. “experiments of light”

Value of science is technological goodies, not general insight for its own sake – but the best way to get the goodies is to pursue the insight

Act as though the end doesn’t justify the means even though it does!

Page 13: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Rule-Utilitarian Solution to ODC

A general policy of sacrificing few to many would make all of society nervous

Make society better off by committing ourselves to a principle prohibiting such sacrifices

We produce better results by acting as if we care about something other than results

Page 14: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Rule-EgoismIncidentally, Ethical Egoists

can (and do) make this same move – which is why the conduct they recommend is usually not radically different from ordinary morality

Page 15: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Rule-EgoismSome ethical egoists

combine rule-egoism with virtue ethics, advising us to choose the act that expresses the virtues that it is in our self-interest to cultivate

Page 16: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

More Moves for the Anti-Utilitarian

Is rule-utilitarianism stable? If you try to treat means as though they were ends – well, do you really regard them as ends, or don’t you?

If you do, you’re no longer a utilitarian. If you don’t, what keeps you from sliding

back into act-utilitarianism?

Page 17: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

More Moves for the Anti-Utilitarian

Does rule-utilitarianism identify the right reasons that killing the patient is wrong?

Even if killing the patient would indirectly be bad for society, is that the main reason it’s wrong?

Or is it what it does to the patient?

Page 18: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

More Moves for the Anti-Utilitarian

Does it even make sense for a benefit to some people to make up for a harm to others – when they’re different people?

Does utilitarianism treat society as though it were on big person?

Page 19: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

More Moves for the Anti-Utilitarian

And so the dialectic

continues ….

Page 20: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Immanuel Kant Perhaps the most

influential philosopher of the 18th century

A deontologist A leading opponent of

all forms of consequentialism

Page 21: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Immanuel Kant

Page 22: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Immanuel Kant Morality is a set of imperatives

(commands, instructions) There are two kinds of imperatives:

hypothetical (“conditional”) and categorical (“unconditional”)

Page 23: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Hypothetical and Categorical Imperatives

A hypothetical imperative is one that is rationally binding on you only if you happen to have a certain goal (example: recipes, driving directions)

A categorical imperative is one that is rationally binding on you regardless of what goals you happen to have

Page 24: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Hypothetical and Categorical Imperatives

It’s part of the concept of morality that moral imperatives are categorical: you can’t get off the hook for a moral duty because you happen not to care about a certain goal

But if consequentialism were true, then morality would be a recipe for producing good consequences – and so there’d be no reason to care about morality if you happened not to care about those consequences

Page 25: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Hypothetical and Categorical Imperatives

1. If consequentialism were true, morality would be a hypothetical imperative.

2. But morality is a categorical imperative, not a hypothetical one.

3. Therefore: consequentialism is false.

So concludes Kant.

Page 26: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Immanuel KantWhenever I act for a given reason, I’m

showing that I regard it as OK to act that way for that reason.

So I’m endorsing a general practice of acting that way for that reason.

Suppose I lie to get money. I’m thereby endorsing a general practice of lying to get money.

Page 27: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Immanuel KantBut the point of lying is to deceive

someone, and lying can be a successful means of deceit only because truth-telling is the norm.

So in order to lie I have to want most people most of the time to tell the truth.

Thus by lying I’m committing myself simultaneously to lying being the rule and lying being the exception.

Page 28: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Immanuel KantSo by lying my will contradicts itself.Self-contradiction is irrational,

regardless of what one’s goals are.So a prohibition on lying is rationally

binding regardless of what one’s goals are – it’s a categorical imperative.

Page 29: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Immanuel KantIn general: it’s contrary to reason to make

special exceptions for ourselves to rules we expect everyone else to follow.

When you do that, you’re simultaneously endorsing the rule and endorsing the exception – and so contradicting yourself.

Page 30: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Kant’s Answer to the ODCIf I seek the general welfare by sacrificing individuals, I thereby authorize anybody to do likewise – I authorize sacrifice as a general policy.

But it wouldn’t work as a general policy – it would frustrate the goal.

Therefore killing the one patient is contradictory.

Page 31: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Kant’s Answer to the ODCNote: what’s wrong with killing the one patient

is not that a general policy of doing so would have bad results.

Kant’s moral theory doesn’t depend on the goodness or badness of results.

Rather, what’s wrong with it is that there’s an internal contradiction involved in willing it – you simultaneously affirm two mutually inconsistent principles.

Page 32: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Kant’s Answer to the ODCAnalogy: what’s wrong with believing that 2 + 2 = 5?It’s not that believing 2 + 2 = 5 has bad

results (even though it probably would) but rather that it’s inherently illogical, even apart from its results.

Page 33: Ethical Theories: Conclusion Nanoethics Lecture III Roderick T. Long Auburn Dept. of Philosophy.

Who’s Right?