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Normative ethics?
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4.1.18 cards
Normative ethics?
Working out which actions are right and why — not just describing how people behave.
The three families of ethical theory?
Character (virtue), rules (deontology), results (teleology).
Virtue ethics in one line?
A right act is what a good person would do — it flows from good character.
Deontology in one line?
A right act keeps a duty or rule, whatever the results.
Teleology in one line?
A right act brings about the best outcome — the most good, the least harm.
Why does one act split three ways?
Each family measures the SAME act by a different standard, so they can reach different verdicts.
What question does each family really ask?
Virtue: what person to be? Deontology: what am I required to do? Teleology: what should I aim at?
When do the three families matter most?
When they clash over the same act — then you must decide which measure wins.
4.1.28 cards
The core move of virtue ethics?
Grow the right character, and the right actions follow — 'what should I BE?' before 'what should I DO?'.
Aristotle's 'golden mean'?
Each virtue is the healthy middle between too little and too much — e.g. courage between cowardice and recklessness.
How do you become virtuous (Aristotle)?
By practice — acting the right way repeatedly until it becomes second nature, like a skill.
Character (in virtue ethics)?
The settled habits and traits that make you the kind of person you are.
MacIntyre on virtue?
Virtues only make sense inside a practice and a community with a shared story of the good life.
Confucian ren?
Warm human-heartedness, grown by practising your roles well — a non-Western character ethics.
Buddhist character (Dīgha Nikāya)?
The good life is shaped by cultivating calm, compassion and honesty and rooting out craving.
Why cite Confucius and Buddhism here?
They show 'character first' ethics arose across very different traditions — not just one culture.
4.1.38 cards
Deontology?
The view that some acts are right or wrong in themselves, as a matter of duty — regardless of results.
The core deontological move?
Judge the ACT, not the outcome: keep your duty even when the results would be better if you broke it.
Kant's categorical imperative?
Act only on a rule you could will everyone to follow — a command that holds whatever you happen to want.
How does lying fail Kant's test?
If everyone lied when it helped, promises would mean nothing and collapse — so you can't will that rule for all.
'Categorical' vs 'hypothetical' imperative?
Categorical holds whatever you want ('don't lie'); hypothetical only if you want something ('if you want trust, don't lie').
Divine command theory?
An act is right because God commands it, wrong because God forbids it — duty grounded in God, not reason.
The Euthyphro dilemma (Go further)?
Does God command things because they're good, or are they good because God commands them? Neither answer is comfortable.
Kant vs divine command?
Both are duty-based; Kant grounds duty in reason, divine command grounds it in God's will.
4.1.48 cards
Teleological / consequentialist ethics?
The right act is the one with the best results — the most good, the least harm.
Utilitarianism?
The right act produces the greatest happiness for the greatest number, counting everyone equally.
Bentham's principle?
The greatest happiness for the greatest number — add up pleasure and pain, everyone counts equally.
Mill's higher vs lower pleasures?
Higher (thought, art, friendship) beat lower (food, comfort): 'better a human dissatisfied than a pig satisfied'.
Why did Mill add pleasure-quality?
To answer the worry that pure pleasure-counting makes ethics just about simple thrills.
Mohist consequentialism?
An early Chinese ethics judging acts by benefit to society — order, wealth, welfare of all, not individual pleasure.
The classic objection to utilitarianism?
Pure results-counting could justify sacrificing one innocent person to make many others happier.
Why cite the Mohists here?
They show results-based ethics arose independently in ancient China, centuries before Bentham.
4.1.58 cards
Why doesn't one ethical theory simply win?
Each captures something real (character, duty, results) but each has a blind spot — so the skill is weighing them.
Virtue ethics: strength and blind spot?
Strength: realistic and human. Blind spot: vague when you're stuck — 'be good' doesn't say what to do.
Deontology: strength and blind spot?
Strength: protects the individual. Blind spot: can be rigid and cold — keep the rule even when it causes disaster.
Consequentialism: strength and blind spot?
Strength: takes outcomes seriously. Blind spot: can sacrifice one innocent person for the many.
Dharma?
One's moral duty, fixed by one's role and situation (Indian thought) — closest to deontology.
How might the three theories combine?
Good character to read the situation, duties to protect the vulnerable, an eye on outcomes — different parts of one ethical life.
What does Section B (Evaluate) reward?
Arguing the claim both ways with more than one theory and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing.
The topic's arc in one line?
What makes an act right? → virtue (character) → duty (rules) → results (teleology) → weigh all three.
Topic 4.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Normative ethics
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