situation ethics Flashcards
WHAT IS SITUATION ETHICS
Fletcher explains nothing is intrinsically good except love. Rules can help us, but they cannot tell us what to do, they are subservient to love
Its a telelgolocial experiences reaching a goal
he believes we didnt need law to live our lives.
Situation ethics takes the situation into account, give people clear guidance and avoids moral chaos. It does this by claiming that love is the one single absolute principle which should be applied to all situations.
The action that is good is the one which has the most loving consequence in the situation you are in
Six Fundamental Principles
S.E. = middle ground road to moral decision making and Fletcher gave 6 propositions as an overview of this theory.
1.Love only is always good: Everything else has conditional value depending on whether it helps or hurts people, but love is always unconditionally and therefore intrinsically good
2.Love is the only norm (rule) e.g. Love is the ultimate guiding principle in Christian decision-making, replacing absolute laws. Examples include Jesus’ actions on the Sabbath
3.Love and justice are the same: maximising agape is the only ethical goal. justice reduces to love, it is merely the question of how widely and fairly love is distributed. It involves calculating duties and obligations for the well-being of the whole community.
4.Love is not liking: agape must apply to everyone. Jesus called on us to love our neighbour no matter who they are, which includes people we don’t like. Love desires the good of others, regardless of personal feelings. It’s not based on preference but on benevolence and goodwill, extending even to those considered unlikable
6.Love justifies the means: (about the outcome)Fletcher’s consequentialism. If the consequence of an action is the most loving possible then it is good, it doesn’t matter what the action is
5.Love decides there and then
strengths of the 6 propositions
- Gives humans to decide what is best in each situation
- it does not give big rules and regulation what to do & how to act but instead it appreciates the grey areas of life
- gives humans the ability to use their reason = a flexible/practical approach to ethics.
weakness of the 6
the end justifies the means = does any human rights matter if they can be broken at any time just to genertae more love? e.g. killing innocents to save others
Fletcher’s views on conscience
- Traditionally conscience is treated as noun- it is a thing. For example some view it as the voice of God within- eg. Cardinal Newman.
- means you can look back at previous decisions and make judgment on them
- Fletcher, on the other hand, thinks conscience should be understood as a verb.
- Conscience is just you performing an act in a particular way
- thought that the conscience was what enabled you to figure out the requirements of agape in your situation,
- indicating he disagreed with the traditional view that we have the mental ability to intuitively know what is right or wrong.
The four working principles
- Pragmatism. An action that must be able to achieve and must be practical.
- Relativism; rejection of absolute moral standards such as laws e.g. breaking the rules for the right reasons = stealing food to save a starving child.
- Positivism: faith in love. Proposing something as good or true without demonstrating
- Personalism: Person-centred. People first over the law.
Three approaches to Morality
- Legalistic ethics
- Situational ethics : moral decisions should serve love, even if it means from deviating from traditional rules or principles
- Antominianism
Legalistic ethics
Has a set of pre-existing moral rules and regulations that govern how people approach ethical dilemma
Follows the law (Bible = scripture and Aquinas)
But Fletcher says that theres provlems with this. E.G. Bonhoeffer on breaking the law to maximise love = its too strict/rigid.
May not be applicable in modern times
Antinomian
Anti-law
Complete opposite of legalistic ethics
- Entering decision making with spontaneity, as if each situation is unique
- It’s a form of awareness
However, fletcher criticised this as he believes that this it not ethical = its lawless/unprincipled
He believe both legalistic and Anti-law is too extreme
Joseph fletcher :1905
American philosopher
His work focused on Christian and medieval ethics
Book called “situation ethics” published 1966
involved in the areas of abortion + euthanasia
“Love is a deep feeling of respect and caring of another, no betrayal”
“All you need is love”
To him, SE was the only way forward = promoted agape, uncondicationally
Greek word of ‘love’
Agape: unconditional love - given freely.
Eros: physical/sexual love & desires
Storage: love for animals or things
Philos: strong love between friends and family but not sexual love
strengths
humanity has come of age
Fletcher and Robinson argue (influenced by Bonhoeffer) that humanity has ‘come of age’. meaning that humanity has become more mature
In medieval time, when humanity had not come of age, people in general were less educated and less self-controlling. = needed the rules
Now people are more civilised, to the point that granting them more autonomy will increase love without risking the stability of society.
strengths
the bible teachings (love)
Fletcher focuses on what is arguably the most prevalent ethical theme of the Bible – love.
This is the approach of many liberal Christians, that the Bible, especially the teachings of Jesus and ethics of St Paul are mainly focused on love and things which follow from love like forgiveness.
“God is love.” 1 John 4:8
based on the NT
strengths
relativist + personalist
its flexible, allowing response to be from different context
“sometimes you have to push aside your principles and do the right thing”
personal: puts people before rules
jesus said ‘sabbath was made for man, not man for sabbath’
strengths
Fletcher’s situation ethics is justified by the approach of Jesus
Situation ethics fits with the approach to ethics taken by Jesus, who did seem to overturn rules (like that of Moses’ eye for an eye), allow us to break rules like the sabbath and said that the greatest rule was to love your neighbours as yourself