Week 3 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 3 ethical theories?

A
  1. Utilitarianism
  2. Egoism
  3. dentology
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2
Q

What is utilitarianism? and what principle is it based on? who are 2 people who are utilitarians? what is complicated about this?

A
  • based on the principle of utility
  • one should always act in such a way as to bring the greatest good and the least harm for the greatest number of people
  • Jeremy Bentham & John Stuart Mill
  • could mean that you have to sacrifice for the good of others (ie. killing 300 ppl in a plane crash vs 1000 people in a city)
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3
Q

What is Good? - What is Bentham and what is the Pleasure Principle?

A
  • Bentham - “Good” = Pleasure (Hedonism)

- “Pleasure Principle” = if it feels good, you should do it for the greatest number of people

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4
Q

what is Felicific Calculus

A
  • a way to calculate how to feel good
  • add up the positives (pleasure inducing, “hedons”) and subtract the negatives (pain-inducing, “Delors”) and d if the total is 1 or higher = it is good
  • higher number the better it is
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5
Q

what are the 7 questions that are related to Felicific calculus?

A
  1. intensity
  2. duration
  3. Certainty or uncertainty
  4. propinquity or remoteness
  5. fecundity
  6. purity
  7. extent
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6
Q

define happiness - what does mill think about it

A
  • the sense of well-being, balance, mental and physical joy
  • actions are right if they tend to promote happiness and wrong if they produce the reverse of happiness
  • Mill - “Good” = Happiness (eudaemonia)
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7
Q

how are Bentham and Mill different?

A
  • Bentham: “Good” = Pleasure (Hedonism)

- Mill: “Good” = Happiness (eudaemonia)

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8
Q

what does Mill argue about happiness? secondary mortality?

A
  • by “happiness” he means pleasures that are both intellectual and sensual
  • Mill thinks we have a sense of dignity which has us prefer intellectual pleasures over sensual ones
  • if you let pleasure run your life it undoes any goodness
  • secondary (applied) mortality (don’t steal), can come from the Principle of Utility - tricky bc there’s always exceptions
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9
Q

what are the 2 different ways of Applying the Principle of Utility?

A
  1. Act: determine what is good own each circumstance and then do what is good - commit to promoting the greatest good and minimizing harm
  2. Rule: circumstances are predetermined and less specific - establish rules that create the greatest good most of the time
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10
Q

what is an example of applying the principle of utility? what does the rule and act say?

A

Ex. Homeless person is begging for money - you come to find out they are using the money to drink

  • Rule: give the $$ cause more than half the time you would be promoting good (doesn’t allow for unique circumstances)
  • Act: determine if giving $$ to them will promote the good (evaluate the evidence first hand - gives people the chance to do what is not good thro false claims)
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11
Q

what is Deontology? Who is the most prominent deontologist?

A
  • emphasis on duty and principles, not on outcomes
  • basically like follow duties & principles that if everyone followed them and did their part the world would be a better place
  • obligations are there to promote the good for other people
  • Immanuel Kant
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12
Q

What is categorical imperative? what is practical imperative? and example about lying to a patients family with HIV

A
  • categorical: act only according to that maxim which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law
  • Practical: act so that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or that of another, always as an end and never as a means only

Ex.

  • Categorical: lying is wrong bc you couldn’t universalize lying as good
  • practical: lying deprives the parents of their entitled tole and treats them as a means to the end (supportive family, and comfortable death)
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13
Q

what are the 6 principles that deontologist agree are funded,ental principles for good action?

A
  1. principle of autonomy and respect for persons:
    - you have the right to self- determination
    - only interfere when you use that right to violate others right to self-determination
  2. Principle of impossibility:
    - rights & duties are void id they are impossible (ie. duty to safe the life of a terminally ill patient)
  3. principle of fidelity or right action:
    - you have the duty to discharge your obligations to the best of your abilities
    - fidelity (adhering to the assigned mission)
  4. principle of equality and justice:
    - doing your duty without discrimination to others
  5. principle of beneficence:
    - do good things
  6. principle of non-malfeasance
    - do no harm
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14
Q

what are the 4 codes of ethics that are discussed in terms of principles?

A
  1. autonomy
  2. beneficence
  3. non-malfesceance
  4. justice
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