3B Situation Ethics: the principles as a means of assessing morality Flashcards
Explain how agape is the “boss principle” of situation ethics.
- Agape = most imp. type of love
- As long as an action creates an agape outcome, it is the morally right thing to do
- “What a difference it makes when love, understood agapeically, is boss.”
Which Old Testament teachings make it clear that agape is the most important principle of the Bible?
- Hebrew, “chesed”, describes G’s steadfast love for his ppl; the Hebrew ppl were often reminded to consider this love of G in terms of the action it produced when G intervened in Exodus
- Leviticus 19:18 - Hebrew, “aheb” = impulsive love towards G + fellow humans
How did St. Augustine develop agape?
- Stated that it was the ultimate virtue
- Fletcher: “Augustine was right to make love the source principle […] upon which all other ‘virtues’ hang”
- Aquinas later developed this through NL: love = superlative virtue
What did C.S Lewis say about agape?
• It is the highest level of love known to humanity
Why did Fletcher develop the four working principles? What is their purpose?
∵ he understood that the boss principle can be vague
• If you follow them, you can be reasonably sure that your actions will produce the most loving consequences
List the four working principles.
1) Pragmatism
2) Relativism
3) Positivism
4) Personalism
Elaborate on the working principle of pragmatism.
• The solution to any ethical dilemma had to be practical (the idea = influenced by William James)
• F: “The key measure of the success of an ethical solution lay not in its thought but in its application”
- This does not mean that reason ≠ imp., but that pragmatic posture is at the head of the conference table.”
Elaborate on the working principle of relativism.
- No action is right/wrong in itself
- “the situationist avoids words like ‘never’, ‘perfect’, ‘always’, ‘complete’, and […] absolutely”
- “agapeic love” = the measurement of relativity
- Although every sit. = unique, this does not mean that the response is antinomian and archaic; the sit. = always relative to agape, not its own circumstance
Elaborate on the working principle of positivism.
- Give preference to faith: “The Christian […] understands love in terms of God”
- Statements of faith are accepted voluntarily and reason is used to work out one’s faith
- “Only the divine being […] is love substantive: […] God is love. Men […] only do love.”
Elaborate on the working principle of personalism.
- People come first
- “Situation ethics puts people at the centre of concern”
- Ethics deals primarily w/ ppl rather than r. rules
- The disciples were given a command to love G’s ppl, not laws
List the six fundamental principles.
1) Love is the only intrinsic good
2) Love is the ruling norm of Christianity
3 Love equals justice
4) Love for all
5) Loving ends justfiy the means
6) Love decides situationally
Elaborate on the fundamental principle: love is the only intrinsic good.
- Actions can only be morally good if they promote the most loving outcome
- “intrinsically good regardless of the context”
- Agape = a verb - “Love is […] something we do”
Elaborate on the fundamental principle: love is the ruling norm of Christianity.
- R. moral laws have been given false high status in C.tian ethics
- J. broke several r. rules: “the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath” - the rules serve the person instead of the rules becoming a dictator
- “Jesus ad Paul replaced the precepts of the Torah with the living principle of agape.”
Elaborate on the fundamental principle: love equals justice.
- “Love and justice are the same, for justice is love distributed”
- Justice = true love at work in society
- Any injustice = a lack of love (e.g. a starving child or a person falsely arrested)
- If everyone worked towards creating loving outcomes there would be no injustices
- Justice = selfless love on a community scale
Elaborate on the fundamental principle: love for all.
• Love wills the neighbour
- “love your neighbour”, “love your enemies”
• Act in a loving way to everyone
• Pure love = indiscriminate in its application
• Love = kenotic