Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

4 Ethics

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 15

What is ethics?

At its simplest, ethics is a system of moral principles. They affect how


people make decisions and lead their lives.

Ethics is concerned with what is good for individuals and society and is also
described as moral philosophy.

The term is derived from the Greek word ethos which can mean custom,
habit, character or disposition.

Ethics covers the following dilemmas:

 how to live a good life


 our rights and responsibilities
 the language of right and wrong
 moral decisions - what is good and bad?
Our concepts of ethics have been derived from religions, philosophies and
cultures. They infuse debates on topics like abortion, human rights and
professional conduct.

Approaches to ethics

Philosophers nowadays tend to divide ethical theories into three areas:


metaethics, normative ethics and applied ethics.

 Meta-ethics deals with the nature of moral judgement. It looks at the


origins and meaning of ethical principles.
 Normative ethics is concerned with the content of moral judgements and
the criteria for what is right or wrong.
 Applied ethics looks at controversial topics like war, animal rights and
capital punishment

 What use is ethics?


 If ethical theories are to be useful in practice, they need to affect the
way human beings behave.
 Some philosophers think that ethics does do this. They argue that if a
person realises that it would be morally good to do something then it
would be irrational for that person not to do it.
 But human beings often behave irrationally - they follow their 'gut
instinct' even when their head suggests a different course of action.
 However, ethics does provide good tools for thinking about moral
issues.
 Ethics can provide a moral map
 Most moral issues get us pretty worked up - think of abortion and
euthanasia for starters. Because these are such emotional issues we
often let our hearts do the arguing while our brains just go with the
flow.
 But there's another way of tackling these issues, and that's where
philosophers can come in - they offer us ethical rules and principles
that enable us to take a cooler view of moral problems.
 So ethics provides us with a moral map, a framework that we can use
to find our way through difficult issues.
 Ethics can pinpoint a disagreement
 Using the framework of ethics, two people who are arguing a moral
issue can often find that what they disagree about is just one
particular part of the issue, and that they broadly agree on everything
else.
 That can take a lot of heat out of the argument, and sometimes even
hint at a way for them to resolve their problem.
 But sometimes ethics doesn't provide people with the sort of help that
they really want.
 Ethics doesn't give right answers
 Ethics doesn't always show the right answer to moral problems.
 Indeed more and more people think that for many ethical issues there
isn't a single right answer - just a set of principles that can be applied
to particular cases to give those involved some clear choices.
 Some philosophers go further and say that all ethics can do is
eliminate confusion and clarify the issues. After that it's up to each
individual to come to their own conclusions.
 Ethics can give several answers
 Many people want there to be a single right answer to ethical
questions. They find moral ambiguity hard to live with because they
genuinely want to do the 'right' thing, and even if they can't work out
what that right thing is, they like the idea that 'somewhere' there is
one right answer.
 But often there isn't one right answer - there may be several right
answers, or just some least worst answers - and the individual must
choose between them.
 For others moral ambiguity is difficult because it forces them to take
responsibility for their own choices and actions, rather than falling
back on convenient rules and customs.

Ethics and people

Ethics is about the 'other'

Ethics is concerned with other people ©


At the heart of ethics is a concern about something or someone other than
ourselves and our own desires and self-interest.
Ethics is concerned with other people's interests, with the interests of
society, with God's interests, with "ultimate goods", and so on.

So when a person 'thinks ethically' they are giving at least some thought to
something beyond themselves.

Ethics as source of group strength


One problem with ethics is the way it's often used as a weapon.

If a group believes that a particular activity is "wrong" it can then


use morality as the justification for attacking those who practice that
activity.

When people do this, they often see those who they regard as immoral as in
some way less human or deserving of respect than themselves; sometimes
with tragic consequences.

Good people as well as good actions


Ethics is not only about the morality of particular courses of action, but it's
also about the goodness of individuals and what it means to live a good life.

Virtue Ethics is particularly concerned with the moral character of human


beings.

Searching for the source of right and wrong


At times in the past some people thought that ethical problems could be
solved in one of two ways:

 by discovering what God wanted people to do


 by thinking rigorously about moral principles and problems
If a person did this properly they would be led to the right conclusion.

But now even philosophers are less sure that it's possible to devise a
satisfactory and complete theory of ethics - at least not one that leads to
conclusions.

Modern thinkers often teach that ethics leads people not to conclusions but
to 'decisions'.

In this view, the role of ethics is limited to clarifying 'what's at stake' in


particular ethical problems.

Philosophy can help identify the range of ethical methods, conversations and
value systems that can be applied to a particular problem. But after these
things have been made clear, each person must make their own individual
decision as to what to do, and then react appropriately to the consequences.

Are ethical statements objectively true?


Do ethical statements provide information about anything other than human
opinions and attitudes?

 Ethical realists think that human beings discover ethical truths that already
have an independent existence.
 Ethical non-realists think that human beings invent ethical truths.
The problem for ethical realists is that people follow many different ethical
codes and moral beliefs. So if there are real ethical truths out there
(wherever!) then human beings don't seem to be very good at discovering
them.

One form of ethical realism teaches that ethical properties exist


independently of human beings, and that ethical statements give knowledge
about the objective world.

To put it another way; the ethical properties of the world and the things in it
exist and remain the same, regardless of what people think or feel - or
whether people think or feel about them at all.

On the face of it, it [ethical realism] means the view that moral qualities
such as wrongness, and likewise moral facts such as the fact that an act was
wrong, exist in rerum natura, so that, if one says that a certain act was
wrong, one is saying that there existed, somehow, somewhere, this quality
of wrongness, and that it had to exist there if that act were to be wrong.

R. M Hare, Essays in Ethical Theory, 1989

Four ethical 'isms'

When a person says "murder is bad" what are they doing?

That's the sort of question that only a philosopher would ask, but it's actually
a very useful way of getting a clear idea of what's going on when people talk
about moral issues.

The different 'isms' regard the person uttering the statement as doing
different things.

We can show some of the different things I might be doing when I say
'murder is bad' by rewriting that statement to show what I really mean:

 I might be making a statement about an ethical fact


 "It is wrong to murder"
 This is moral realism
 I might be making a statement about my own feelings
 "I disapprove of murder"
 This is subjectivism
 I might be expressing my feelings
 "Down with murder"
 This is emotivism
 I might be giving an instruction or a prohibition
 "Don't murder people"
 This is prescriptivism
Moral realism
Moral realism is based on the idea that there are real objective moral facts
or truths in the universe. Moral statements provide factual information about
those truths.

Subjectivism

Subjectivism teaches that moral judgments are nothing more than


statements of a person's feelings or attitudes, and that ethical statements do
not contain factual truths about goodness or badness.

In more detail: subjectivists say that moral statements are statements about
the feelings, attitudes and emotions that that particular person or group has
about a particular issue.

If a person says something is good or bad they are telling us about the
positive or negative feelings that they have about that something.

So if someone says 'murder is wrong' they are telling us that they


disapprove of murder.

These statements are true if the person does hold the appropriate attitude or
have the appropriate feelings. They are false if the person doesn't.

Emotivism
Emotivism is the view that moral claims are no more than expressions of
approval or disapproval.

This sounds like subjectivism, but in emotivism a moral statement


doesn't provide information about the speaker's feelings about the topic
but expresses those feelings.

When an emotivist says "murder is wrong" it's like saying "down with
murder" or "murder, yecch!" or just saying "murder" while pulling a horrified
face, or making a thumbs-down gesture at the same time as saying "murder
is wrong".

So when someone makes a moral judgement they show their feelings about
something. Some theorists also suggest that in expressing a feeling the
person gives an instruction to others about how to act towards the subject
matter.

Prescriptivism
Prescriptivists think that ethical statements are instructions or
recommendations.

So if I say something is good, I'm recommending you to do it, and if I say


something is bad, I'm telling you not to do it.

There is almost always a prescriptive element in any real-world ethical


statement: any ethical statement can be reworked (with a bit of effort) into
a statement with an 'ought' in it. For example: "lying is wrong" can be
rewritten as "people ought not to tell lies".

Where does ethics come from?

Philosophers have several answers to this question:

 God and religion


 Human conscience and intuition
 a rational moral cost-benefit analysis of actions and their effects
 the example of good human beings
 a desire for the best for people in each unique situation
 political power
God-based ethics - supernaturalism
Supernaturalism makes ethics inseparable from religion. It teaches that
the only source of moral rules is God.

So, something is good because God says it is, and the way to lead a good
life is to do what God wants.

Intuitionism
Intuitionists think that good and bad are real objective properties that
can't be broken down into component parts. Something is good because it's
good; its goodness doesn't need justifying or proving.

Intuitionists think that goodness or badness can be detected by adults - they


say that human beings have an intuitive moral sense that enables them to
detect real moral truths.

They think that basic moral truths of what is good and bad are self-evident
to a person who directs their mind towards moral issues.

So good things are the things that a sensible person realises are good if they
spend some time pondering the subject.

Don't get confused. For the intuitionist:

 moral truths are not discovered by rational argument


 moral truths are not discovered by having a hunch
 moral truths are not discovered by having a feeling
It's more a sort of moral 'aha' moment - a realisation of the truth.

Consequentialism

This is the ethical theory that most non-religious people think they use every
day. It bases morality on the consequences of human actions and not on
the actions themselves.

Consequentialism teaches that people should do whatever produces the


greatest amount of good consequences.

One famous way of putting this is 'the greatest good for the greatest number
of people'.

The most common forms of consequentialism are the various versions of


utilitarianism, which favour actions that produce the greatest amount of
happiness.

Despite its obvious common-sense appeal, consequentialismturns out to


be a complicated theory, and doesn't provide a complete solution to all
ethical problems.

Two problems with consequentialism are:

 it can lead to the conclusion that some quite dreadful acts are good
 predicting and evaluating the consequences of actions is often very difficult
Non-consequentialism or deontological ethics
Non-consequentialism is concerned with the actions themselves and not
with the consequences. It's the theory that people are using when they refer
to "the principle of the thing".

It teaches that some acts are right or wrong in themselves, whatever the
consequences, and people should act accordingly.

Virtue ethics
Virtue ethics looks at virtue or moral character, rather than at ethical
duties and rules, or the consequences of actions - indeed some philosophers
of this school deny that there can be such things as universal ethical rules.

Virtue ethics is particularly concerned with the way individuals live their
lives, and less concerned in assessing particular actions.

It develops the idea of good actions by looking at the way virtuous people
express their inner goodness in the things that they do.

To put it very simply, virtue ethics teaches that an action is right if and only
if it is an action that a virtuous person would do in the same circumstances,
and that a virtuous person is someone who has a particularly good
character.

Situation ethics
Situation ethics rejects prescriptive rules and argues that individual ethical
decisions should be made according to the unique situation.

Rather than following rules the decision maker should follow a desire to seek
the best for the people involved. There are no moral rules or rights - each
case is unique and deserves a unique solution.

Ethics and ideology


Some philosophers teach that ethics is the codification of political ideology,
and that the function of ethics is to state, enforce and preserve particular
political beliefs.

They usually go on to say that ethics is used by the dominant political elite
as a tool to control everyone else.

More cynical writers suggest that power elites enforce an ethical code on
other people that helps them control those people, but do not apply this
code to their own behaviour.

Are there universal moral rules?

One of the big questions in moral philosophy is whether or not there are
unchanging moral rules that apply in all cultures and at all times.

Moral absolutism
Some people think there are such universal rules that apply to everyone.
This sort of thinking is called moral absolutism.

Moral absolutism argues that there are some moral rules that are always
true, that these rules can be discovered and that these rules apply to
everyone.

Immoral acts - acts that break these moral rules - are wrong in themselves,
regardless of the circumstances or the consequences of those acts.

Absolutism takes a universal view of humanity - there is one set of rules for
everyone - which enables the drafting of universal rules - such as the
Declaration of Human Rights.

Religious views of ethics tend to be absolutist.

Why people disagree with moral absolutism:

 Many of us feel that the consequences of an act or the circumstances


surrounding it are relevant to whether that act is good or bad
 Absolutism doesn't fit with respect for diversity and tradition
Different cultures have had different attitudes to issues like
war ©
Moral relativism
Moral relativists say that if you look at different cultures or different periods
in history you'll find that they have different moral rules.

Therefore it makes sense to say that "good" refers to the things that a
particular group of people approve of.

Moral relativists think that that's just fine, and dispute the idea that there
are some objective and discoverable 'super-rules' that all cultures ought to
obey. They believe that relativism respects the diversity of human societies
and responds to the different circumstances surrounding human acts.

Why people disagree with moral relativism:

 Many of us feel that moral rules have more to them than the general
agreement of a group of people - that morality is more than a super-
charged form of etiquette
 Many of us think we can be good without conforming to all the rules of
society
 Moral relativism has a problem with arguing against the majority view: if
most people in a society agree with particular rules, that's the end of the
matter. Many of the improvements in the world have come about because
people opposed the prevailing ethical view - moral relativists are forced to
regard such people as behaving "badly"
 Any choice of social grouping as the foundation of ethics is bound to be
arbitrary
 Moral relativism doesn't provide any way to deal with moral differences
between societies
Moral somewhere-in-between-ism
Most non-philosophers think that both of the above theories have some good
points and think that

 there are a few absolute ethical rules


 but a lot of ethical rules depend on the culture
Types of Ethical Theories
Each moral theory holds a specific approach in how to handle life’s
decisions. Throughout history, a few moral theories have surfaced and
have been analyzed for their strengths and weaknesses. A moral theory
often shapes a person’s attitude toward others, belief system and life
choices.

Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism is a moral theory that implements fair choices in an effort
to ensure the least amount of harm is done to all parties involved. The
utilitarianism approach requires that you decide what course of action
needs to be done and evaluate the outcomes of each action. By focusing
on the outcome of each action, utilitarianism demands that you decide
on what course of action based on the benefits or harm of the actions
without regard to the cost of the action. For example, Julie walks into a
hostage situation. There are 20 hostages and she is told that if she
shots one hostage, she will save the lives of the other 19. Utilitarianism
would support Julie’s killing of one of the hostages because the other 19
lives are a greater benefit, regardless of the fact that the cost would be
one person’s life.

Denotology
Deontology focuses on the consequences of your actions and believes
that when faced with life choices, you should operate according to
responsibility and obligations. A deontologist believes that morality is a
responsibility for everyone as well as a duty. For example, if a m an
steals three loaves of bread and a gallon of milk to feed his family, it
would be supported by deontology because of the moral responsibility
and obligations of the man to care for his family. Sometimes
deontologists are unable to determine certain courses of action as moral
or not. A coffee shop owner who requires his employees to dress in
black cannot be identified with the deontology theory simply because
the requirement is the owner’s preference and whatever governs such
preference is neither moral nor immoral.

Virtue
Virtue is very distinct from other ethic theories in that it looks at a
person’s individual character, not necessarily his actions. When
observing an unethical position, the virtue theory considers the person's
reputation and purpose for committing the act. If a high school student
is temperate, modest, witty and intelligent and plagiarized on a class
writing assignment, the virtue theory would analyze the student's past
personality traits and interpersonal skills in order to determine wh ether
the student is truly guilty.

Relativism
Relativism is a theory that deems your moral obligations and beliefs to
be based on the individual environment. For example, in American
culture cannibalism is considered taboo, while in other cultures the act
of consuming other human flesh is accepted as a sacrifice or ritual.
Relativism determines morals and ethics according to the society that is
being observed. Relativism argues that every society and culture
believes differently and thus, each culture must be evaluated according
to its particular cultural patterns and influences.

Role of Ethics in Our Society Today


Morality and ethics

Morality refers to the social norms and values that guide both individuals
and their interaction with their fellow human beings and communities, and
with their environment. In all of these types of interaction there are
important values at stake; rules and norms that are to protect these values;
duties implied in social roles and positions that can foster these values and
further these rules; and human virtues or capabilities that enable us to act
accordingly. These moral factors are usually interwoven with religious
practices and social power structures.

Ethics is a systematic and critical analysis of morality, of the moral factors


that guide human conduct in a particular society or practice. As fisheries
represent an interaction between humans and the aquatic ecosystem,
fisheries ethics deals with the values, rules, duties and virtues of relevance
to both human and ecosystem well-being, providing a critical normative
analysis of the moral issues at stake in that sector of human activities.

When actual moral values, rules and duties are subjected to ethical analysis,
their relation to basic human interests shared by people, regardless of their
cultural setting, is particularly important. Moral values may change, and
moral reasoning asks whether the practices that are traditionally and
factually legitimated by religion, law or politics are indeed worthy of
recognition. Indeed, the development of ethics in the past century has been
characterized by a tendency to revalue and overthrow the moral conventions
that have guided the interaction between the sexes, between human beings
and animals and between human beings and their environment. A more
recent task of ethics is to resist those tendencies of globalization,
marketization and technologization that erode both biodiversity and valuable
aspects of cultural identity - and may even have effects that threaten human
rights. Although these tendencies are often presented as value-neutral, they
carry with them hidden assumptions that are potential sources of inequity
and abuse.

Basic human interests

· Welfare implies material well-being, as well as the conservation of a


productive ecosystem, and relates to fisheries as a provision of food and
livelihood.

· Freedom, or human self-determination, relates to access to fishing


resources, fishers' self-control and other life options related to fisheries.

· Justice relates to the distribution of the benefits of fishing and to the


ownership of scarce resources.

In attempting to identify which traditional and innovative practices are


worthy of recognition, a moral argument asks whether - and how - actual
moral factors further the well-being of human and non-human creatures.
Moral reasoning always relates to the basic interests of humans and other
sentient beings and to the value of the environment that sustains both
human and non-human life.

An ethical analysis can play an important part in identifying human and


nonhuman interests and the value of the ecosystem as a whole. It also asks
how these values and interests may be threatened or undermined and how
they may be furthered or protected. Ecosystem well-being is of crucial
importance both in itself and for basic human interests and long-term social
benefits. In this document, the main focus is on the way in which fishing
policies and practices affect the living conditions, interests and well-being of
fishers and fishing communities, as well as the well-being of the ecosystem.
This is in keeping with sustainable development, the dominant concept of
environmental ethics, enshrined in the FAO concept of responsible fisheries.
Basic human interests

A major aspect of an ethical analysis of fisheries must be to clarify the


human interests and social benefits that can be considered necessary
conditions for leading a decent human life. Basic human interests are related
to the main tasks that humans need to undertake in life in order to satisfy
their needs and lead their lives in coexistence with others. In line with
classical ethical thought, these interests can be divided into three main
categories: (i) Welfare: People need basic goods to survive and care for their
offspring; (ii) Freedom: People seek to regulate their own affairs and realize
their life plans in accordance with their own or culturally defined values;
(iii) Justice: People need to find ways to share social benefits and burdens
and facilitate peaceful coexistence.

In this context, moral analysis aims to show, for example, how the human
interests in welfare, freedom and justice are relevant and how they relate to
social benefits in the management of fisheries.

These basic interests are intricately connected to the capabilities necessary


for leading a decent human life and, thus, to the vulnerabilities against
which people must be protected. They constitute the moral values that moral
reasoning aims to defend, e.g. by framing fundamental principles that serve
to guide our moral interaction and to protect basic moral interests.

At the most general level, the related vulnerabilities against which people
must be protected are: poverty, domination and injustice.

Fundamental principles of bioethics

Although different ethical theories may have different priority principles and
reasoning behind them, a consensus has been forming about the main
principles of bioethics:[1]

 Human dignity, human rights and justice, which refers to the duty to
promote universal respect for the human person. In the context of
fisheries, this principle relates, for example, to fishers' self-
determination, access to fishing resources and the right to food. It is
best represented by a rights-based approach in ethics that emphasizes
the protection of the personal domain of each individual. It may
require, however, the establishment of individual or community rights,
the exact nature of which will depend on local conditions.

 Beneficence, which concerns human welfare, reducing the harms and


optimizing the benefits of social practices. In the context of fisheries,
this principle needs to be observed when the effects of policies and
practices upon the livelihoods of fishing communities are evaluated.
The principle relates to working conditions (safety on board), as well
as food quality and safety. The issue of genetically modified organisms
should also be addressed in this context (FAO, 2001b). This principle
invites an ethical approach to fisheries that puts consequences to
general welfare in focus.

 Cultural diversity, pluralism and tolerance, which relates to the need to


take different value systems into account within the limits of other
moral principles. The pressing moral issues in fisheries take different
shapes across different cultures, and it is an important moral demand
that people themselves define how their interests are best served in a
particular cultural setting. This principle squares well with dialogical
ethics, which stresses the actual participation of those concerned.

 Solidarity, equity and cooperation, which refers to the importance of


collaborative action, sharing scientific and other forms of knowledge,
and nondiscrimination. In the context of fisheries, this principle
underpins the moral imperative to eradicate poverty in developing
countries and ensure equity within fisheries and between sectors. It
also requires transparent policies and stresses the need to reduce the
gap between producers and consumers. This principle is relevant at
the level of policy as well as at the individual level of virtues and
professional duties to further trust and tolerance among stakeholders.

 Responsibility for the biosphere, which concerns the interconnections


of all life forms and the protection of biodiversity. This principle
stresses that ecosystem well-being is a sine qua non condition of
sustainable fisheries providing for the needs of future generations, as
well as for the lives of those who currently rely on the natural
environment and are responsible for its use. This principle combines
ethical reasoning based on rights and on consequences for human
welfare, as well as on individual virtues and duties to respect the
environment.

You might also like