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Standard Form ► 1. State your position ► 2. 1 st Premise (Fact 1: State fact and source) ► 3. 2 nd Premise (Fact 2: State fact and source) ► 4. 3 rd Premise (Fact 3: State fact and source) ► 5. 4 th Premise (Fact 4: State fact and source) ► 6. Counter Argument ► 7. Response to Counter Argument ► 8. Conclusion
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Evaluating Moral Arguments Structure of a Moral Argument about Actions (1) Action A has feature F. (2) It is morally good/bad to do actions that have feature F. Therefore, (3) You should/should not do A.
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Consequentialist Moral Argument Form (1) Some action causes a particular effect (a consequence) (2) Causing this particular effect is right or wrong Therefore (3) People should / should not do the action in question
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Deontological Moral Arguments (1) Action A has intrinsic feature F. (2) It is morally good/bad to do actions with intrinsic feature F. Therefore, (3) H should/should not do A.
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5 Kant’s Moral Theory
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6 Immanuel Kant 1724-1804German Wrote on many subjects Critique of Pure Reason
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7 Requirements for Morality Free Will Rationality Moral Autonomy
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8 Happiness? We are not here to be Happy But To be Worthy of Happiness
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9 If happiness were the goal of human life Then we would be controlled by our instincts not reason The more you know the more pain and suffering you experience
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10 Good Will Only thing in the world that cannot be perverted Although we might not always be able to do the right thing We must always want to do the right thing
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11 Categorical Imperative Absolute Command of of Moral reason
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12 Deontological Ethics Morality based upon duty It is our duty to follow the Categorical Imperative
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13 Hypothetical Imperative ► Possible Command
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14 Moral Worth of an Action Based Upon Our IntentionsNot The Consequences of the Action
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15 Why? 1. Because doing what is right has intrinsic value 2. Since we are not God, we cannot guarantee that what we intent to happen will actually happen
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16 Therefore We are only responsible for what we have complete control over OUR INTENTIONS
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17 Wallet Example
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18 1 st Formulation Act only on the maxim that you could will to be a universal law of nature without contradiction
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19 What is a Maxim? An Intention OrReason for doing something
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20 What is a Universal Law of Nature? Something that must happen whether or not we want it to Example:Gravity
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21 Without Contradiction? Every time we are going to act We are to think about why we want to take that action Then imagine how we might write out a statement expressing our reasons for action
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22 If the action we are thinking about taking is morally wrong Then we will see a contradiction in the sentence stating our intentions
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23 Example We want to borrow money from a bank But we have no intention of paying the money back to the bank What would a statement look like expressing this intention?
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24 It is morally acceptable to sign a promissory note promissory note to pay back the money to pay back the money when I have when I have no intention of keeping my promise to pay the money back to pay the money back
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25 Contradiction? I make a promise with no intention of keeping the promise
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26 2 nd Formulation Always treat people as ends in themselves never as means to an end
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27 Don’t use people Why? Because human beings have intrinsic value Rationality Free Will Moral Autonomy
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28 We use objects not people Pornography?
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29 Conscience? ► We might think of the Categorical Imperative as our conscience ► The sense of what is right or wrong in our behavior and motives
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30 Copernican Revolution Synthetic A Priori Knowledge
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31 “Although all knowledge begins with experience, it by no means follows that all knowledge arises out of experience”
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32 Transcendental Structure of Mind Our minds have a structure that we impose upon all the information we receive thru experience
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33 SpaceTimeCausality Moral Law
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34 Synthetic A Priori Knowledge We know a priori that all our experiences will include SpaceTimeCausality Moral Law
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35 Conscience? ► We might think of the Categorical Imperative as our conscience ► The sense of what is right or wrong in our behavior and motives
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