Deck 5: Deontological Ethics

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سؤال
Frankena suggests that Kant's universalization test may not be enough to establish

A) war as a duty.
B) deceitful promising as immoral.
C) benevolence as a duty.
D) work as a duty.
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سؤال
Kant says that through reason and reflection we can derive our duties from

A) hypothetical imperatives.
B) experience.
C) the categorical imperative.
D) utilitarian calculations.
سؤال
Ross says duties that can be overridden by other duties are _______ duties.

A) absolutist
B) not really
C) weak
D) prima facie
سؤال
Ross believes that we can discover true moral principles by consulting our

A) cultural norms.
B) religious codes.
C) utilitarian calculations.
D) intuitions.
سؤال
In "A Horseman in the Sky," Private Druse followed his father's dictum to do his duty at all costs. The result was that Druse

A) was happy.
B) deserted.
C) killed his father.
D) saved his father.
سؤال
According to Fried, lying is bad because it

A) violates the Ten Commandments.
B) fails to respect utility.
C) is unintentional.
D) fails to respect truth.
سؤال
The doctrine that morality depends on religion is called

A) natural law theory.
B) intuitionism.
C) the divine command theory.
D) the categorical imperative.
سؤال
Nagel argues that the Kantian way of viewing morality is

A) superior.
B) simplistic.
C) logical.
D) complete.
سؤال
Nagel thinks that our notion of moral responsibility is

A) plausible.
B) workable.
C) useful.
D) incoherent.
سؤال
According to Rachels, the divine command theory says that "morally right" means

A) producing the greatest happiness.
B) self-evidently permissible.
C) commanded by God.
D) perceived by God.
سؤال
According to Rachels, if right conduct is right because God commands it, then

A) morality is independent of God.
B) God's commands are arbitrary.
C) morality existed before God existed.
D) God is not all-powerful.
سؤال
According to Rachels, if good and bad are defined by God's will, then the notion of God's goodness

A) is coherent.
B) is deprived of any meaning.
C) transcends human knowledge.
D) is a necessary truth.
سؤال
According to Rachels, if God commands us to do certain things because they are right (independent of God's will), then

A) God's commands are not arbitrary, and the idea of the goodness of God is preserved.
B) God's commands are immoral.
C) the divine command theory is true.
D) God's commands are not arbitrary, but the idea of the goodness of God is rendered meaningless.
سؤال
Nagel writes, "[w]here a significant aspect of what someone does depends on factors beyond his control, yet we continue to treat him in that respect as an object of moral judgment, it can be called _______."

A) God's will
B) moral luck
C) absurdity
D) strange
سؤال
Nagel says that our "prior to reflection" intuition is that people cannot be

A) the victim of luck.
B) morally assessed for what is not their fault.
C) guilty.
D) lucky.
سؤال
According to Nagel, the problem of moral luck is based on the conflict between (i) our intuition that someone's moral status cannot be altered by luck and (ii) the possibility that luck

A) can indeed affect someone's moral status.
B) is destructive of moral decision-making.
C) plays no role at all.
D) makes morality obsolete.
سؤال
Kant calls rational beings persons.
سؤال
Kant's categorical imperatives are absolutist.
سؤال
Like Kant, Ross is an absolutist.
سؤال
Ross argues that moral principles have prima facie, or conditional, bindingness.
سؤال
Frankena thinks that Kant's categorical imperative is entirely plausible.
سؤال
According to Frankena, Kant's theory has difficulty dealing with conflicts of duties.
سؤال
Deontological ethics is equivalent to the Golden Rule.
سؤال
Kant accepts Hume's theory of moral sentiments.
سؤال
Kant believes that morality consists of hypothetical imperatives.
سؤال
Kant believes that morality is contingent.
سؤال
Kant endorses the divine right of kings in a kingdom of ends.
سؤال
Kant's theory puts strict limits on what can be universalized.
سؤال
Frankena says there is more to the moral point of view than the universalization of rules.
سؤال
Ross's principles are not absolutes.
سؤال
Ross endorses some types of utilitarianism.
سؤال
In "A Horseman in the Sky," Bierce examines the implications of absolutist values.
سؤال
Kant's ethics is called deontological (from the Greek word for "duty") because he believes that the value of an act is in the act itself rather than in its consequences (as teleologists hold). Deontological ethics has been criticized as being too rigid. Do you think that this is true? Should the notion of consequences be taken into consideration?
سؤال
Kant's categorical imperative has also been criticized for being more wide open than he realized, for it doesn't limit what could be universalized. How would Kant respond to these counterexamples: (1) Everyone should tie his right shoe before his left shoe; (2) All retarded or senile people should be executed by the government (adding, if I should become retarded or senile, I should also undergo this fate).
سؤال
According to Frankena, what difficulty exists in Kant's theory "due to conflicts between duties"?
سؤال
Why does Frankena suggest that Kant's universalization test may not be enough to establish benevolence as a duty?
سؤال
What does Frankena mean by "There is more to the moral point of view than being willing to universalize one's rules"?
سؤال
Do you agree with Frankena's criticisms of Kant's theory? Explain.
سؤال
What is W. D. Ross's argument against all types of utilitarianism?
سؤال
Ross is both an intuitionist and a pluralist. He thinks we can acquire knowledge of the correct moral principles by consulting our deepest intuitions, and he thinks that by so doing we will discover a plurality of principles, not reducible to a single principle, as utilitarians claim. First of all, do you agree with Ross that we can discover the true principles by consulting our intuitions? And second, do you agree that the principles are, in the last analysis, irreducible to one overarching principle? What are the objections to these positions? Suppose you and I consult our intuitions and come to different conclusions. How can we adjudicate the conflict?
سؤال
What does Ross mean by prima facie duty? How does this notion separate his theory from Kant's?
سؤال
In "A Horseman in the Sky," what was Carter Druse's duty in this situation? Was it different from what he thought it to be? What should he have done? What would you have done?
سؤال
How does this story bear upon deontological ethics? How would a Kantian evaluate Carter Druse's action?
سؤال
What would a utilitarian have done in these circumstances?
سؤال
Evaluate Charles Fried's argument against lying. Why is it always wrong-even if only a little wrong? Is his argument sound? Explain.
سؤال
Fried makes several comparisons of lying with other acts: stealing, injuring, counterfeiting, promise-breaking, and violating the social fact of language. Are these good analogies?
سؤال
Fried says lying is exploitative. Is this always the case? Can you think of cases where one lies not to exploit but to help another?
سؤال
Does morality depend on religion for its validity or does it have independent validity? In other words, Is the Divine Command Theory true? What does Socrates seem to believe? What do you believe? Why?
سؤال
What are the implications of holding that ethics depends on religion? Could God make rape and murder morally right actions today? How do you know that He hasn't (and kept it a secret)? If it turns out that no God exists, does that mean that morality is an illusion?
سؤال
If Goodness means simply "what God commands," what do we mean when we say that "God is good?"
سؤال
If the divine command theory is true, how is God different from the devil? Is He simply more powerful?
سؤال
What is Thomas Nagel's criticism of Kant? Why does he think that Kant's notion of the good will as the sole determinant of moral goodness is simplistic?
سؤال
Go over the types of moral luck that Nagel discusses. Are his arguments cogent and persuasive? It might help to examine the main examples. Take the German who becomes a Nazi officer who does great evil, but who in different, more peaceful circumstances would have been an average citizen with no great moral culpability. Is Nagel correct to say that the officer just had bad moral luck? Or can more be said about this assessment that would make sense of the Kantian idea of moral goodness?
سؤال
Why does Nagel think that our notion of moral responsibility is deeply problematic, even incoherent?
سؤال
Nagel believes that the free-will determinist debate is paradoxical. If we are determined by antecedent circumstances, then we are not responsible for what we do; but if we are not determined by these conditions, then everything seems arbitrary-free will seems to presuppose the very causal structure that it attacks. Does this make sense? Do you believe that you have free will? Explain your answer.
سؤال
Do you believe there is moral luck, or can we, in principle, make genuine moral judgments about people and their actions?
سؤال
According to Dennis, should good fortune be viewed as a reward for having good character? Explain.
سؤال
What is Dennis saying about moral luck?
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Deck 5: Deontological Ethics
1
Frankena suggests that Kant's universalization test may not be enough to establish

A) war as a duty.
B) deceitful promising as immoral.
C) benevolence as a duty.
D) work as a duty.
C
2
Kant says that through reason and reflection we can derive our duties from

A) hypothetical imperatives.
B) experience.
C) the categorical imperative.
D) utilitarian calculations.
C
3
Ross says duties that can be overridden by other duties are _______ duties.

A) absolutist
B) not really
C) weak
D) prima facie
D
4
Ross believes that we can discover true moral principles by consulting our

A) cultural norms.
B) religious codes.
C) utilitarian calculations.
D) intuitions.
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5
In "A Horseman in the Sky," Private Druse followed his father's dictum to do his duty at all costs. The result was that Druse

A) was happy.
B) deserted.
C) killed his father.
D) saved his father.
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k this deck
6
According to Fried, lying is bad because it

A) violates the Ten Commandments.
B) fails to respect utility.
C) is unintentional.
D) fails to respect truth.
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7
The doctrine that morality depends on religion is called

A) natural law theory.
B) intuitionism.
C) the divine command theory.
D) the categorical imperative.
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8
Nagel argues that the Kantian way of viewing morality is

A) superior.
B) simplistic.
C) logical.
D) complete.
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9
Nagel thinks that our notion of moral responsibility is

A) plausible.
B) workable.
C) useful.
D) incoherent.
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10
According to Rachels, the divine command theory says that "morally right" means

A) producing the greatest happiness.
B) self-evidently permissible.
C) commanded by God.
D) perceived by God.
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11
According to Rachels, if right conduct is right because God commands it, then

A) morality is independent of God.
B) God's commands are arbitrary.
C) morality existed before God existed.
D) God is not all-powerful.
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12
According to Rachels, if good and bad are defined by God's will, then the notion of God's goodness

A) is coherent.
B) is deprived of any meaning.
C) transcends human knowledge.
D) is a necessary truth.
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13
According to Rachels, if God commands us to do certain things because they are right (independent of God's will), then

A) God's commands are not arbitrary, and the idea of the goodness of God is preserved.
B) God's commands are immoral.
C) the divine command theory is true.
D) God's commands are not arbitrary, but the idea of the goodness of God is rendered meaningless.
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14
Nagel writes, "[w]here a significant aspect of what someone does depends on factors beyond his control, yet we continue to treat him in that respect as an object of moral judgment, it can be called _______."

A) God's will
B) moral luck
C) absurdity
D) strange
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15
Nagel says that our "prior to reflection" intuition is that people cannot be

A) the victim of luck.
B) morally assessed for what is not their fault.
C) guilty.
D) lucky.
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16
According to Nagel, the problem of moral luck is based on the conflict between (i) our intuition that someone's moral status cannot be altered by luck and (ii) the possibility that luck

A) can indeed affect someone's moral status.
B) is destructive of moral decision-making.
C) plays no role at all.
D) makes morality obsolete.
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17
Kant calls rational beings persons.
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18
Kant's categorical imperatives are absolutist.
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19
Like Kant, Ross is an absolutist.
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20
Ross argues that moral principles have prima facie, or conditional, bindingness.
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21
Frankena thinks that Kant's categorical imperative is entirely plausible.
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22
According to Frankena, Kant's theory has difficulty dealing with conflicts of duties.
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23
Deontological ethics is equivalent to the Golden Rule.
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24
Kant accepts Hume's theory of moral sentiments.
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25
Kant believes that morality consists of hypothetical imperatives.
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26
Kant believes that morality is contingent.
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27
Kant endorses the divine right of kings in a kingdom of ends.
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28
Kant's theory puts strict limits on what can be universalized.
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29
Frankena says there is more to the moral point of view than the universalization of rules.
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30
Ross's principles are not absolutes.
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31
Ross endorses some types of utilitarianism.
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32
In "A Horseman in the Sky," Bierce examines the implications of absolutist values.
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33
Kant's ethics is called deontological (from the Greek word for "duty") because he believes that the value of an act is in the act itself rather than in its consequences (as teleologists hold). Deontological ethics has been criticized as being too rigid. Do you think that this is true? Should the notion of consequences be taken into consideration?
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34
Kant's categorical imperative has also been criticized for being more wide open than he realized, for it doesn't limit what could be universalized. How would Kant respond to these counterexamples: (1) Everyone should tie his right shoe before his left shoe; (2) All retarded or senile people should be executed by the government (adding, if I should become retarded or senile, I should also undergo this fate).
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35
According to Frankena, what difficulty exists in Kant's theory "due to conflicts between duties"?
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36
Why does Frankena suggest that Kant's universalization test may not be enough to establish benevolence as a duty?
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37
What does Frankena mean by "There is more to the moral point of view than being willing to universalize one's rules"?
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38
Do you agree with Frankena's criticisms of Kant's theory? Explain.
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39
What is W. D. Ross's argument against all types of utilitarianism?
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40
Ross is both an intuitionist and a pluralist. He thinks we can acquire knowledge of the correct moral principles by consulting our deepest intuitions, and he thinks that by so doing we will discover a plurality of principles, not reducible to a single principle, as utilitarians claim. First of all, do you agree with Ross that we can discover the true principles by consulting our intuitions? And second, do you agree that the principles are, in the last analysis, irreducible to one overarching principle? What are the objections to these positions? Suppose you and I consult our intuitions and come to different conclusions. How can we adjudicate the conflict?
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41
What does Ross mean by prima facie duty? How does this notion separate his theory from Kant's?
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42
In "A Horseman in the Sky," what was Carter Druse's duty in this situation? Was it different from what he thought it to be? What should he have done? What would you have done?
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43
How does this story bear upon deontological ethics? How would a Kantian evaluate Carter Druse's action?
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44
What would a utilitarian have done in these circumstances?
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45
Evaluate Charles Fried's argument against lying. Why is it always wrong-even if only a little wrong? Is his argument sound? Explain.
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46
Fried makes several comparisons of lying with other acts: stealing, injuring, counterfeiting, promise-breaking, and violating the social fact of language. Are these good analogies?
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47
Fried says lying is exploitative. Is this always the case? Can you think of cases where one lies not to exploit but to help another?
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48
Does morality depend on religion for its validity or does it have independent validity? In other words, Is the Divine Command Theory true? What does Socrates seem to believe? What do you believe? Why?
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49
What are the implications of holding that ethics depends on religion? Could God make rape and murder morally right actions today? How do you know that He hasn't (and kept it a secret)? If it turns out that no God exists, does that mean that morality is an illusion?
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50
If Goodness means simply "what God commands," what do we mean when we say that "God is good?"
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51
If the divine command theory is true, how is God different from the devil? Is He simply more powerful?
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52
What is Thomas Nagel's criticism of Kant? Why does he think that Kant's notion of the good will as the sole determinant of moral goodness is simplistic?
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53
Go over the types of moral luck that Nagel discusses. Are his arguments cogent and persuasive? It might help to examine the main examples. Take the German who becomes a Nazi officer who does great evil, but who in different, more peaceful circumstances would have been an average citizen with no great moral culpability. Is Nagel correct to say that the officer just had bad moral luck? Or can more be said about this assessment that would make sense of the Kantian idea of moral goodness?
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54
Why does Nagel think that our notion of moral responsibility is deeply problematic, even incoherent?
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55
Nagel believes that the free-will determinist debate is paradoxical. If we are determined by antecedent circumstances, then we are not responsible for what we do; but if we are not determined by these conditions, then everything seems arbitrary-free will seems to presuppose the very causal structure that it attacks. Does this make sense? Do you believe that you have free will? Explain your answer.
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56
Do you believe there is moral luck, or can we, in principle, make genuine moral judgments about people and their actions?
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57
According to Dennis, should good fortune be viewed as a reward for having good character? Explain.
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58
What is Dennis saying about moral luck?
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