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Introduction to Ethics ( Quinn Chapter 2)

Introduction to Ethics ( Quinn Chapter 2). CS4001 Kristin Marsicano. What theories does Quinn reject?. Briefly define each of the four rejected theories and why they are rejected. What theories does Quinn reject?. Subjective Relativism Cultural Relativism Divine Command Theory

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Introduction to Ethics ( Quinn Chapter 2)

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  1. Introduction to Ethics(Quinn Chapter 2) CS4001 Kristin Marsicano

  2. What theories does Quinn reject? • Briefly define each of the four rejected theories and why they are rejected.

  3. What theories does Quinn reject? • Subjective Relativism • Cultural Relativism • Divine Command Theory • Ethical Egoism

  4. Quinn’s Criteria • A “workable” theory allows its proponents to • examine moral problems • reach conclusions based on reasoning from facts or commonly accepted values • defend these conclusions in front of a skeptical yet open minded audience

  5. Subjective Relativism • Each person decides what is right/wrong for them • What’s right for you may not be right for me • Self-defeating – letting everyone decide for themselves means we can’t determine the morality of actions

  6. Cultural Relativism • Each society decides what is right/wrong for them • E.g. Would you testify that your friend was going slow in a court of law? • 90% of Norwegians say no • 75% Americans and Canadians say no • 50% of Mexicans say no • 10% of Yugoslavians say no

  7. Cultural Relativism • Not workable because… • it suggests that there are no universal moral guidelines • gives more weight to traditions than facts and reason • not useful for making persuasive ethical evaluations for a large audience • Shouldn’t always discount though…e.g. consider data protection across international boundaries

  8. Divine Command Theory • God says what is right/wrong • Moral guidelines are not the result of a logical progression from a set of underlying principles • Does not produce arguments that can persuade skeptical listeners with differing religious beliefs • Does not work for ethical debate in a secular society

  9. Ethical Egoism • Each person should focus exclusively on his/her own self-interest. • Does not recognize that in order to reap the benefits of living in community, individuals have some obligations to other people.

  10. Workable Theories • Kantianism • Act Utilitarianism • Rule Utilitarianism • Social Contract Theory

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