1 / 0

Historical origins of Ethics

Historical origins of Ethics . aka – Noteworthy moral philosophers. Plato. Socrates was his teacher Taught Aristotle “knowledge is virtue” Three parts of the soul: reason spirit appetite When all three parts of the soul operate under the rule of reason, the result is harmony .

ondrea
Download Presentation

Historical origins of Ethics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Historical origins of Ethics

    aka – Noteworthy moral philosophers
  2. Plato Socrates was his teacher Taught Aristotle “knowledge is virtue” Three parts of the soul: reason spirit appetite When all three parts of the soul operate under the rule of reason, the result is harmony .
  3. Plato - continued Appetite – animal part containing primitive lusts & irrational desires These are manifested in our dreams as “those which are aroused in sleep” These must be contained if peace is going to be achieved
  4. Plato - continued Constant struggle between reason & lust for the allegiance of the spirit – Spirit is the source of all action
  5. Aristotle Teacher of Alexander the Great Happiness can be achieved by applying the “golden mean” – Which is… To achieve happiness we must: Always strive for harmonious balance between two extremes Happiness is not static, but is an activity, a way of living that must be worked on
  6. The Doctrine of the Mean Deficiency mean extreme/excess fear courage foolhardiness dishonor proper pride arrogance excessive abstinence temperance self-indulgence
  7. Aristotle (continued) In other words, we must work at being happy. Without experimentation & trial and error, through reason alone, one can not determine what is best
  8. Epicurus “Live moderately & pleasurably, but without pain.” (Ataraxia) Dynamic pleasures – cause pain – lust, gluttony, fame, drunkenness, marriage – accompanied by pain Passive pleasures – avoids pain & suffering – friendship, eating moderately, exercising moderately
  9. Immanuel Kant Moral law requires rewards in direct proportion to one’s virtue Not necessarily on earth, but rather in heaven “Essence of Morality” – morality is gauged by intention, not consequence
  10. Kant - continued An act is moral if separate from its consequences (aka deontological approach to ethics) “Categorical Imperative” – All should act in a righteous manner as if each action was to become a universal law
  11. John Stuart Mill & Utilitarianism An action is good if it produces the greatest good for the greatest number Stresses the effects of actions rather than their motives (opposite of Kant) Majority rules Results-oriented approach to ethics (aka teleological approach to ethics)
More Related