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PHIL 2525 Lecture 17

Chapter 10: Kant and Respect for Persons. PHIL 2525 Lecture 17. Mirandola puts words into the mouth of God:. We have made you neither of heavenly nor of earthly stuff, neither mortal nor immortal, so that with free choice and dignity, you may fashion yourself into whatever form you choose.

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PHIL 2525 Lecture 17

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  1. Chapter 10: Kant and Respect for Persons PHIL 2525 Lecture 17

  2. Mirandola puts words into the mouth of God: • We have made you neither of heavenly nor of earthly stuff, neither mortal nor immortal, so that with free choice and dignity, you may fashion yourself into whatever form you choose. NASA image called ‘The Eye of God’

  3. Pico de la Mirandola: from Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486)... • Imagine! The great generosity of God! The happiness of man! To man it is allowed to be whatever he chooses to be!

  4. Pico de la Mirandola: from Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486)... Mirandola’s take: • As soon as an animal is born, it brings out of its mother’s womb all that it will ever possess..... • Man, when he entered life, the Father gave the seeds of every kind and every way of life possible. Whatever seeds each man sows and cultivates will grow and bear him their proper fruit.

  5. Pico de la Mirandola: • Who could not help but admire this great shape-shifter?

  6. Where does that feeling of superiority and specialness come from? • The Bible tells us so... • Says we have dominion • Says that the world was created for us • For our food and medicine • For our welfare

  7. Only God has the right to play God... Belief that underpins arguments against • Suicide • Euthanasia • Abortion But what about…. • The death penalty? • War?

  8. The sanctity of life... But which life counts? • Christianity has a variety of answers... Genesis 1:26: • And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.

  9. The sanctity of life... • But which life counts? • Christianity has a variety of answers... Psalm 139:13-16  •  You made all the delicate, inner parts of my body      and knit me together in my mother’s womb. Thank you for making me so wonderfully complex!      Your workmanship is marvelous—how well I know it. You watched me as I was being formed in utter seclusion,      as I was woven together in the dark of the womb. You saw me before I was born.      Every day of my life was recorded in your book.  Every moment was laid out      before a single day had passed.

  10. The sanctity of life... But which life counts? • Christianity has a variety of answers... • Some beautiful...

  11. The sanctity of life... But which life counts? • Christianity has a variety of answers... • Some (not so) beautiful...

  12. The sanctity of life... But which life counts? • Albert Schweitzer’s answer.... • All life... • Insects • Flowers • Leaves • All Life...

  13. The sanctity of life... But which life counts? • Jainism’s answer... • All life... • Insects • Flowers • Leaves • All Life...

  14. The sanctity of life... Descartes’ take: Animals are automatons ...they can’t speak and they don’t have souls....

  15. The sanctity of life... Kant’s take: “But so far as animals are concerned, we have no direct duties. Animals...are there merely as means to an end. That end is man...”

  16. The sanctity of life... Judeo-Christian background • Life with a divine soul • Life created in the image of God Still problems, though… • Is all human life equally worthwhile?

  17. What if we take religion out of the picture? • Which religion is true anyway? • Where does the sacredness come from...or go? • Recent neuroscience....neurophilosophy

  18. The sanctity of life... So ‘Sanctity of Life’ refers to human life... • Life with a divine soul? • Life created in the image of God? But still just words in the mouths of many.....

  19. The sanctity of life... • Perhaps it’s quality of life that counts instead of mere quantity... • Sanctity of life values any life above no life • Quality of Life values life from very positive to very negative (no life is neutral)

  20. 10.1 The Dignity of Life • The ‘dignity of humans’ comes from rationality.... • Our rationality makes us ‘intrinsically’ worthwhile...

  21. 10.1 The Dignity of Life p 137 Rachels interprets Kant: • Human beings are the only rational agents that exist on Earth... • If people disappeared, then so would the moral dimension of the world...

  22. 10.1 The Dignity of Life • You’re rational because you’re human! • You’re human because you’re rational!

  23. Problems with Kant’s formulation? • What about irrational humans?

  24. Problems with Kant’s formulation? • What about irrational humans? • At both ends of life?

  25. Problems with Kant’s formulation? • What about irrational humans? • At both ends of life? • If autonomy gives us moral standing…? • What of ‘thinking’ computers?

  26. Problems with Kant’s formulation? • If rationality is what counts.. • Does more rationality count more?

  27. Kant’s Categorical Imperative(2 formulations) • Act only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law. • Act so that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or in that of another, always as an end and never as a means only.

  28. Treating others as ends involves.... • A strict duty of beneficence.... • Helping (and not hindering) their plans, dreams, safety.... • Respecting their rationality.... • They are the arbiters of what is best for them... • Their rationality serves them like yours serves you...

  29. 10.2: Utilitarians on Retributive Justice...

  30. Two kinds of justice: Distributive and Retributive.... Distributive: dividing up what there is....perks and burdens… Retributive: an eye for an eye…a tooth for a tooth...

  31. 10.2: Utilitarians on Retributive Justice... • Retributivism increases the sum total of misery in the world....but we don’t want criminals out on the street .... so....we better think fast...

  32. 10.2: Utilitarians on Retributive Justice... Bentham: • “If [punishment] ought at all to be admitted, it ought to be admitted in as far as it promises to exclude some greater evil.”

  33. 10.2: Utilitarians on Retributive Justice... • Comfort to the victims... • Victim impact statement: • “The universe has brought about • balance...I have closure”

  34. 10.2: Utilitarians on Retributive Justice... • Comfort to the victims... • Public safety...

  35. 10.2: Utilitarians on Retributive Justice... • Comfort to the victims... • Public safety... • Deterrent effect...

  36. 10.2: Utilitarians on Retributive Justice... • Comfort to the victims... • Public safety... • Deterrent effect... • Rehabilitation...

  37. American Prison Statistics...

  38. Comparative Prison Statistics...

  39. World Prison Statistics...

  40. Warehousing mentality...p 141

  41. Bertrand Russell… • Orthodoxy is the grave of intelligence…no matter what orthodoxy it is.

  42. 10.3 Kant’s Retributivism... Kant finds Utilitarian Retributivism incompatible with human dignity for two reasons... • It uses prisoners as means to an end... • It messes with prisoners’ autonomy... (Rehabilitation is really ‘re-education’)

  43. 10.3 Kant’s Retributivism... Instead....Kant says.... • We have the right to lock them up just because they deserve it... • As long as the punishment is proportional to the crime...

  44. 10.3 Kant’s Retributivism... We want to hold criminals morally responsible.... But...we can only do that when we allow them (in hindsight) the dignity of choice....

  45. 10.3: At the end...this little delight... • Justice in kind plays out the Categorical Imperative for the criminal...

  46. The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment...

  47. The Experience Machine....

  48. The Experience Machine....

  49. Cypher and the experience machine... • http://whatisthematrix.warnerbros.com/rl_cmp/new_phil_mov_experience.html • http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7BuQFUhsRM

  50. Ethics in the news… • Toddlers and Tiaras

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