Conscience AO2 Flashcards
Christopher Reeve
“if we shut out all the noise and clatter from our lives and listen to that voice, it will tell us the right thing to do”
St Paul
‘what the law requires is written in the human heart’
‘whatever is not from faith is sin’
St Jerome
‘scintilla conscientia’= spark of morality
Augustine
saw conscience as the voice of GOd speaking to us from within, law of God is what our hearts use for moral decisions
John Henry Newman
“I shall drink to the pope, if you please- still to conscience first and the Pope afterwards’
Joseph Butler
no
Fletcher
- No conscience, it is a verb: “merely a word for our attempts to make decisions creatively, constructively, fittingly’
- Function, not as a faculty
Piaget
- Prior to age 11 we have ‘heteronymous morality where ‘right conduct’ is enforced by expectation of punishment and reward
- As our ability to think abstractly develops, we develop a more ‘autonomous’ morality, which draws on social norms and an appreciation of consequences, but it is autonomous because we now have the cognitive ability to think through the consequences ourselves
Schleirmacher
logical contradiction in a perfect world that can go wrong
Aquinas feelings
view does not take into consideration feelings making it less realistic to use our reasoning particularly in the issue of medical and sexual ethics