Term
|
Definition
1. You shall have no other Gods before me 2. You shall not make for yourself a graven image 3. You shall not the the name of the Lord your God in vain 4. Remember the Sabbath Day and keep it holy 5. Honor your father and your mother 6. You shall not kill 7. You shall not commit adultery 8. You shall not steal 9. You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor 10. You shall not covet your neighbor's house, wife, male servant, female servant, ox, donkey, or anything else |
|
|
Term
10c: A moral theory based on the ten commandments |
|
Definition
an action is morally right iff it can be performed without violating any of The Ten Commandments--morality requires obeying the Ten Commandments and nothing more |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
ones where the premises are supposed to guarantee the truth of the conclusion--can be represented using numbered sentences |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
both valid and factually correct |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
ones where the premises are supposed to render the conclusion very likely--can illustrate using a diagram |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a strong inductive argument |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
iff it is such that the truth of the premises would guarantee the truth of the conclusion. If all the premises were true then the conclusion would have to be true |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1. If P, then Q 2. P 3. Therefore, Q |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1. If P, then Q 2. Not Q 3. Therefore, not P |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1. Either P or Q 2. Not P 3. Therefore, Q |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1. If P, then Q 2. If Q, then R 3. Therefore, if P, then R |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
An action is morally right iff in performing the action, the agent treats all others as he or she would have them treat him or her--morally requires treating others as you would have them treat you, and nothing more |
|
|
Term
The Divine Command theory |
|
Definition
An action is morally right iff it does not violate any one of God's commands |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
An action is morally right in virtue of the fact that it doesn't violate God's commands. Morally right acts are morally right because-and merely because-they are the acts that God commands. Before God commanded them, they were neither right nor wrong. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
If an act is right, it will have been commanded by God. If an act is commanded by God, it will be right. But being commanded by God isn't what makes right acts right. Rather they are right, because they meet some independent standard. God uses this standard to identify the right acts, and then he commands us to perform those. |
|
|
Term
omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent |
|
Definition
all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-loving |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Saying that God exists doesn't really explain why were here: for we can also ask why God exists, and no one has ever given a good answer to that |
|
|
Term
Cosmological ("first cause") argument |
|
Definition
maybe no one created the universe: maybe it is eternal |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Just because we have an idea of God doesn't mean that He exists: we have ideas of unicorns too |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
There are scientific explanations for the amount of natural order that we find in the world |
|
|
Term
According to Aquinas, humans have... |
|
Definition
1. An instinct for survival 2. A desire for sexual relations with members of the opposite sex 3. A natural curiosity about the world and about God 4. A desire to live in society with others |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
An action is morally right iff it preserves and promotes life, procreation, knowledge, and sociability better than any alternative action available to the agent. 1. Life 2. Procreation 3. Knowledge 4. Sociability |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Just because something is the case, doesn't mean that it ought to be. Just because humans have a capacity for procreation, that doesn't mean we all ought to have the maximum number of children we can financially support! |
|
|
Term
James Rachels: Cultural Relativism as six theses |
|
Definition
1. Different societies have different moral codes. 2. The moral code of a society determines what is right within that society. 3. There is no objective standard that can be used to judge one society’s code as better than another’s. 4. The moral code of our own society is merely one among many. 5. There is no “universal truth” in ethics. 6. It is mere arrogance for us to try to judge the conduct of other peoples; we should adopt an attitude of tolerance toward the practices of other cultures. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a collection of people living in close proximity one to another, who share many beliefs and values, political and economic institutions, and many social customs. Sometimes, the members of a society will share a language, a cuisine, and/or a style of dress. |
|
|
Term
The moral code of a society |
|
Definition
beliefs about what behavior is morally acceptable and/or morally forbidden that are widely shared within a society; what the vast majority of people believe about morality. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a group of people concentrated in small towns in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana. They all speak Pennsylvania Dutch, belong to the Mennonite faith, live simply, eat the same German American cuisine, and dress plainly. Their moral code is based on their religious tradition. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
An action is morally right iff it is permitted by the moral code of the society in which it is performed |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
occurs when a group of people go from having false beliefs about what is morally right and wrong to having true beliefs about what is morally right and wrong |
|
|
Term
Simples Subjectivism (SS) |
|
Definition
“x is morally right” just means “I approve of x” “x is good” just means “I approve of x” “x ought to be done” just means “I approve of x “x is morally wrong” just means “I disapprove of x” “x is bad” just means “I disapprove of x” “x ought not to be done” just means “I disapprove of x” ----a theory about what moral words mean |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the view that moral judgments lack cognitive meaning, but retain expressive meaning. Moral statements do not attempt to describe the world, so they cannot even be true or false; rather, they express the speaker’s emotions. |
|
|
Term
Objection 1 against Theological Voluntarism |
|
Definition
This conception of morality conflicts with out common-sense moral judgement |
|
|
Term
Objection 2 against Theological Voluntarism |
|
Definition
This conception of morality makes all God's commands arbitrary; for if moral rightness depends on his will alone, he cannot be basing his commands on any kind of standard |
|
|
Term
objection 3 against Theological Voluntarism |
|
Definition
This conception of morality provides the wrong reasons for the moral statuses of acts |
|
|
Term
objection 4 against theological voluntarism |
|
Definition
This conception of morality implies that, without God, nothing would be right or wrong |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1. If DC is true, then either theological voluntarism is true, or else DC is merely a criterion of right action, and God commands acts that are right by some independent standard. (p --> (q v r)) 2. It’s not the case that theological voluntarism is true. (~q) 3. Therefore, if DC is true, then DC is merely a criterion of right action, and God commands acts that are right by some independent standard. (p --> r) 4. If DC is merely a criterion of right action, then religion is irrelevant to ethics: we can look for the standard that God himself uses and apply it directly. (r --> s) 5. Therefore, if DC is true, then religion is irrelevant to ethics: we can look for the standard that God himself uses and apply it directly. (p --> s) |
|
|
Term
Problem of evil argument for God's non-existence |
|
Definition
1. If God exists, then he is the all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-loving creator of our world. (“Omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent.”) 2. If God is an all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-loving creator, then he would not create a world where tsunamis terrorize and destroy thousands of people. 3. But our world is one where tsunamis do terrorize and destroy thousands of people. 4. Therefore, our world was not created by an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-loving creator. 5. If our world was not created by an all-powerful, all- knowing, all-loving creator, then God does not exist. 6. Therefore, God does not exist. |
|
|
Term
1st argument against the case of cultural relativism |
|
Definition
The case of Fauzlya-- “In 1996, a 17-year-old girl named Fauziya … fled her native country of Togo, a small west African nation, to escape what people call ‘excision’ [surgical removal of the clitoris and labia minora to deny women sexual pleasure]. Fauziya … was the youngest of five daughters in a devoutly Muslim family. Her father, who owned a successful trucking business, was opposed to excision, and he was able to defy the tradition because of his wealth. His first four daughters were married without being mutilated. But when Fauziya was 16, he suddenly died. Fauziya then came under the authority of her aunt, who arranged a marriage for her and prepared to have her excised. Fauziya was terrified, and her mother and oldest sister helped her to escape …” (p. 27) 1. If CR is true, then it is morally permissible for the doctor in Togo to mutilate Fauziya against her will. 2. But it is not morally permissible for him to do this. 3. Therefore, it is not the case that CR is true (i.e., CR is false). |
|
|
Term
2nd argument against cultural relativism |
|
Definition
• It is 1840. Bob has just moved to Alabama from New Hampshire, where he has bought a hotel. Bob notices that some of the white people in Alabama own slaves. They work the slaves hard, and sometimes even beat them. The white slave owners also sometimes have sex with their female slaves, and then fail to provide for the children. • From talking to people, Bob learns that all this is completely accepted by the people of Alabama. Sadly, the moral code of Alabama society permits owning slaves and treating them quite cruelly. Bob is quite worried and concerned by this. Even after knowing all about the moral code of Alabama society, he asks himself, “I wonder if it is really morally okay for people to behave like this?” 1. If CR is true, then Bob can find out everything relevant to the answer of his question by finding out what the moral code of Alabama society says about slavery. 2. Bob cannot find out everything relevant to the answer of his question in this way. 3. Therefore, CR is false. |
|
|
Term
3rd argument against cultural relativism |
|
Definition
* Moral progress occurs when a group of people go from having false beliefs about what is morally right and wrong to having true beliefs about what is morally right and wrong (and acting in accordance with these improved beliefs). * Most Americans would acknowledge that our country has made moral progress over the last 150 years. When blacks gained the right to vote in 1870, when women gained the right to vote in 1919, when segregation was dismantled from 1954-1968, it counted as moral progress! * But if CR is true, when the moral code changes on some such issue, people do not go from having false beliefs to having true beliefs. Before the change in the moral code, their old beliefs were true. Afterwards, their new beliefs are also true! 1. If CR is true, then it never counts as moral progress when the moral code of a society changes. 2. But sometimes, when the moral code of a society changes, there has been moral progress. 3. Therefore, CR is false. |
|
|
Term
the relation between CR and tolerance |
|
Definition
According to CR, the local culture’s moral code determines the moral status of an action. So when it comes to being tolerant, what CR implies is this: if the moral code says “Be tolerant!”, then one should be tolerant; if the moral code says “Kill all the infidels!”, then one should be intolerant. |
|
|
Term
argument against SS based on falibility |
|
Definition
“[C]onsider Falwell, who says that homosexuality is immoral. [If Simple Subjectivism is true, then] if he is speaking sincerely – if he really does disapprove of it – then what he says is true. So long as he is honestly representing his own feelings, his judgments will always be correct. But this contradicts the plain fact that none of us is infallible. Therefore, Simple Subjectivism cannot be correct.” (pp. 38-9) 1. If SS is true, then so long as a person sincerely represents their feelings, no moral opinion that they express can ever be false. 2. But sometimes, people are mistaken in their moral opinions. 3. Therefore, SS is false. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
normative study of human conduct |
|
|
Term
descriptive study of human conduct |
|
Definition
studies the way things are or were; aim to describe the world (history, sociology) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
describes how things ought to be; it aims to guide human action conduct (ethics) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the attempt to achieve a systematic understanding of the nature or morality and what it requires from us (how we ought to live and why) |
|
|
Term
fundamental project of moral philosophy |
|
Definition
To discover, properly formulate, and defend a criterion or moral rightness for act-tokens (a single, concrete action with a single agent and unique time of performance). |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A situation x is a necessary condition for situation y =df. In order for y to occur or obtain, x must also occur or obtain. (y only if x; if not x, then not y) In order to get into the pool at the Los Altos YMCA, you must be wearing a swimsuit. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A situation x is a sufficient condition for a situation y =df. If x occurs or obtains, then y must also occur or obtain. (if x, then y). If you’re in Long Beach, you must be in Los Angeles County. |
|
|
Term
necessary and sufficient conditions |
|
Definition
A situation x is necessary and sufficient for a situation y =df. if x occurs or obtains, then y must also occur or obtain; and if y occurs or obtains, then x must also occur or obtain. (x if and only if [iff] y) A geometrical figure is a circle iff it is a two-dimensional, closed planar figure with all points equidistant from a given point. |
|
|
Term
What is a criterion for the application of a concept? How does it relate to necessary and sufficient conditions? |
|
Definition
A criterion is one form of definition. Instead of providing a synonym for a term, a criterion states necessary and sufficient conditions for the application of the term. In effect, a criterion of morally right action would explain what all and only morally right acts have in common. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a series of considerations that are supposed to support a conclusion |
|
|