CS305 Topic Introduction to Ethics

Similar documents
Introduction to Ethics

Lecture 6 Workable Ethical Theories I. Based on slides 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley

Lecture 6 Kantianism. Based on slides 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley

Lecture 6 Workable Ethical Theories I. Based on slides 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley

Chapter 2 Ethical Concepts and Ethical Theories: Establishing and Justifying a Moral System

Basics of Ethics CS 215 Denbigh Starkey

Introduction to Ethics

Computer Ethics. Normative Ethics Ethical Theories. Viola Schiaffonati October 4 th 2018

Tools Andrew Black CS 305 1

(i) Morality is a system; and (ii) It is a system comprised of moral rules and principles.

Chapter 2 Reasoning about Ethics

Chapter 3 PHILOSOPHICAL ETHICS AND BUSINESS CHAPTER OBJECTIVES. After exploring this chapter, you will be able to:

Lecture 12 Deontology. Onora O Neill A Simplified Account of Kant s Ethics

Q2) The test of an ethical argument lies in the fact that others need to be able to follow it and come to the same result.

PROFESSIONAL ETHICS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

Philosophy of Ethics Philosophy of Aesthetics. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology

MGT610 Business Ethics

Short Answers: Answer the following questions in one paragraph (each is worth 5 points).

24.02 Moral Problems and the Good Life

Making Decisions on Behalf of Others: Who or What Do I Select as a Guide? A Dilemma: - My boss. - The shareholders. - Other stakeholders

Philosophical Ethics. The nature of ethical analysis. Discussion based on Johnson, Computer Ethics, Chapter 2.

5. John Akers, former chairman of IBM, argued that ethics are not important to economic competitiveness.

Take Home Exam #2. PHI 1700: Global Ethics Prof. Lauren R. Alpert

Computer Ethics. Normative Ethics and Normative Argumentation. Viola Schiaffonati October 10 th 2017

Ethical Theory for Catholic Professionals

In the Fall PEs many people who wrote about ethics as an Area of Knowledge indicated that ethical perspectives were always a matter of personal

SUMMARIES AND TEST QUESTIONS UNIT 6

Computer Ethics(1) IT Engineering II Instructor: Ali B. Hashemi

Computer Ethics(1) Computer Ethics. Main Points. Communities Some General Comments(2) Communities Some General Comments(1)

Courses providing assessment data PHL 202. Semester/Year

An Introduction to Ethics / Moral Philosophy

Deontology: Duty-Based Ethics IMMANUEL KANT

Chapter 2: Reasoning about ethics

Lecture 2: What Ethics is Not. Jim Pryor Guidelines on Reading Philosophy Peter Singer What Ethics is Not

Quote. Analyzing Ethical Dilemmas. Chapter Two. Determining Moral Behavior. Integrity is doing the right thing--even if nobody is watching

-- did you get a message welcoming you to the cours reflector? If not, please correct what s needed.

Wednesday, April 20, 16. Introduction to Philosophy

PHIL 251 Varner 2018c Final exam Page 1 Filename = 2018c-Exam3-KEY.wpd

Department of Philosophy. Module descriptions 2017/18. Level C (i.e. normally 1 st Yr.) Modules

PHI 1700: Global Ethics

PH 101: Problems of Philosophy. Section 005, Monday & Thursday 11:00 a.m. - 12:20 p.m. Course Description:

Deontology & Social Contract Theory

Honors Ethics Oral Presentations: Instructions

Philosophy Courses Fall 2016

Journalists have a tremendous responsibility. Almost every day, we make

Is euthanasia morally permissible? What is the relationship between patient autonomy,

Ethical Theories. A (Very) Brief Introduction

ETHICAL THEORIES. Review week 6 session 11. Ethics Ethical Theories Review. Socrates. Socrate s theory of virtue. Socrate s chain of injustices

Course Syllabus. Course Description: Objectives for this course include: PHILOSOPHY 333

Chapter Summaries: Introduction to Christian Philosophy by Clark, Chapter 1

KANTIAN ETHICS (Dan Gaskill)

Categorical Imperative by. Kant

Chapter Summaries: A Christian View of Men and Things by Clark, Chapter 1

Units. Year 1 Unit 1: Course Overview. 1:1 - Getting Started 1:2 - Introducing Philosophy SL 1:3 - Assessment and Tools

Introduction to Philosophy Philosophy 110W Spring 2011 Russell Marcus

Let us begin by first locating our fields in relation to other fields that study ethics. Consider the following taxonomy: Kinds of ethical inquiries

ACCAspace ACCA P1. Provided by ACCA Research Institute. Governanace, Risk and Ethics (GRE) 公司治理, 风险管理及职业操守 ACCA Lecturer: Cindy Li

GS SCORE ETHICS - A - Z. Notes

Chapter 2 Normative Theories of Ethics

Humanities 4: Lectures Kant s Ethics

The Pleasure Imperative

PHILOSOPHY. Chair: Karánn Durland (Fall 2018) and Mark Hébert (Spring 2019) Emeritus: Roderick Stewart

CHAPTER 2 Test Bank MULTIPLE CHOICE

Philosophy Courses-1

Critical Reasoning and Moral theory day 3

Please answer the following questions, saving your answer before proceeding to the next question.

LDSP : Leadership Ethics

Ethical universal: An ethical truth that is true at all times and places.

FORMING ETHICAL STANDARDS

Autonomous Machines Are Ethical

A Review on What Is This Thing Called Ethics? by Christopher Bennett * ** 1

Ethics (ETHC) JHU-CTY Course Syllabus

Instructor contact information

Philosophy Courses-1

Philosophical Ethics. Consequentialism Deontology (Virtue Ethics)

Course Text. Course Description. Course Objectives. StraighterLine Introduction to Philosophy

A primer of major ethical theories

Introduction to Philosophy Philosophy 110W Fall 2013 Russell Marcus

Kant's Moral Philosophy

Our responsibility towards future generations. Lars Löfquist, Theology Department

Do you have a self? Who (what) are you? PHL 221, York College Revised, Spring 2014

Teleological: telos ( end, goal ) What is the telos of human action? What s wrong with living for pleasure? For power and public reputation?

Thinking Ethically: A Framework for Moral Decision Making

NORTH SOUTH UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY DHAKA, BANGLADESH

Challenges to Traditional Morality

Ethics. PHIL 181 Spring 2018 SUMMARY OBJECTIVES

A Framework for Thinking Ethically

AS Religious Studies. RSS02 Religion and Ethics 2 Mark scheme June Version: 1.0 Final

Virtue Ethics. I.Virtue Ethics was first developed by Aristotle in his work Nichomachean Ethics

Chapter 2 Determining Moral Behavior

HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE SYSTEM Northeast College NOLN

Psychological Aspects of Social Issues

Philosophy & Religion

Short Answers: Answer the following questions in one paragraph (each is worth 4 points).

Legal Positivism: the Separation and Identification theses are true.

CHAPTER 5. CULTURAL RELATIVISM.

good philosopher gives reasons for his or her view that support that view in a rigorous way.

Introduction to Philosophy Crito. Instructor: Jason Sheley

DEONTOLOGICAL ETHICS

Philosophy Courses Fall 2011

Transcription:

CS305 Topic Introduction to Ethics Sources: Baase: A Gift of Fire and Quinn: Ethics for the Information Age CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 1

What is Ethics? A branch of philosophy that studies priciples relating to right and wrong. It seeks to address questions such as What do people think is right? What does do the right thing mean? How should people act? What rules or laws should we have? CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 2

What is Ethics (cont.) Goal: To help people to make moral decisions. It assumes that people are rational and free to choose how they will act. It can be used to describe how people do act or how people should act. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 3

But... Negative Arguments: There are no universal norms of right and wrong. Ethical debates are disagreeable and pointless. We are all well-meaning and intelligent people Each person may decide right and wrong for himself or herself: What s right for you may not be right for me We can disagree on moral issues CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 4

Why Study Ethics? Positive Arguments: Not everyone can do what they want Must respect other people and their values. Common wisdom not always adequate; need to be prepared to face future ethical decisions. Everybody shares the core values of life. Ethics provides bases to make best rational decisions. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 5

Ethical Theories Many of them: Approximately 2,000 years of organized literature concerned with ethics Many famous philosophers contributed: Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Kant, etc. Kenneth Laudon [1995] categorized ethical theories with Three questions, six answers. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 6

Question One: What is Goodness"? Answer 1 (Phenomenologist) It is a higher order, and it is given. One must understand the abstract concepts of right and wrong, and act accordingly. Answer 2 (Positivist) It is whatever we make of it. We have to derive ethical principles for ourselves according to our observations of the real world. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 7

Question Two: What does Acting Ethically Mean? Answer 1 (Deontologist) Acting ethically means respecting one's duties and obligations. Each single act is itself good or bad, regardless of its consequences. Answer 2 (Teleologist) Acting ethically means acting in such a way that the outcome is good. An act can be judged only by its consequences. No act is a priori good. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 8

Question Three: What is the Scope of Morality? Answer 1 (Collectivist) Ethical standards make sense only if they equally apply to everyone. Answer 2 (Individualist) Nobody should be committed to accepting ethical standards; individuals should set their own rules through self-analysis and reflection. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 9

A Few Ethical Systems Kantianism Utilitarianism Ethical Egoism Subjective Relativism Cultural Relativism Social Contract Theory Divine Command Theory CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 10

Kantianism Attributed to Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). Focus on the rightness of moral rules ( good will ); disregard emotional feelings and consequences. Founded on the view that all people are fundamentally rational beings, and can derive moral rules from the logic of the situation and act according to the rules. Kant s Criteria: Can the rule be universally applied to everyone? Does the rule treat people as ends, not means? CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 11

Examples Some Valid Rules: Do not kill, Do not lie, Do not steal, Follow the laws. An Invalid Rule: Get this work done, whatever it takes. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 12

Examples (cont.) Question: Can a person in an extreme situation make a promise with the intention of breaking it later? Proposed Rule: I may make promises with the intention of later breaking them. Analysis: Universalizing the Rule: Everyone may make and break promises. This rule would make promises unbelievable, contradicting desire to have promise believed. The rule is flawed. The answer is No. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 13

Critiques on Kantianism Arguments For: Rational Produces universal moral guidelines Treats all persons as moral equals Arguments Against: It allows no exceptions to moral rules Sometimes no rule adequately characterizes an action There is no way to resolve a conflict between rules CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 14

Examples Revisit Rule: Do not kill. What if it s on a battlefield? Rule: Do not lie. What if not lying will lead to bad consequences? CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 15

Utilitarianism A consequentialist theory. Utilitarianism decides whether an act or rule is "right" depending on whether it results in the increase of the aggregate happiness (or utilities ). Act utilitarianism Judging the benefits of an single act. Rule utilitarianism Judging the benefits of all actions that follow the rule. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 16

Example Problem: State wants to replace a curvy stretch of highway: 150 houses would have to be removed Some wildlife habitat would be destroyed Analysis: Costs: $31 million (compensation for homeowners and wildlife habitat, plus construction cost) Benefits: $39 million savings in driving costs Conclusion: Benefits exceed costs. It s a good action. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 17

Example 2 August 2003, Blaster worm infected thousands of Windows computers. Soon after, someone wrote a good worm Nachi, which Took control of vulnerable computer Located and destroyed copies of Blaster Downloaded software patch to fix security problem Used computer as launching pad to try to infect other vulnerable PCs Proposed Rule: If I can write a helpful worm that removes a harmful worm from infected computers and shields them from future attacks, I should do so. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 18

Example 2 Evaluation Who would benefit: People who do not keep their systems updated Who would be harmed People who use networks People who s computers are invaded by buggy antiworms System administrators Conclusion: Harm outweighs benefits. The action is wrong. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 19

Critiques on Utilitarianism Arguments For: Focuses on practical goodness Comprehensive; can include exceptional situations Arguments Against: Requires aggregating all consequences on a single scale Does not recognize or respect individual rights. (A minority group could be sacrificed for the greater happiness of the majority.) CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 20

Subjective Relativism The idea: There are no universal moral norms. Each person defines right/wrong independently. If I think it is right, then that makes it right. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 21

Subjective Relativism Arguments for: Gives everyone a right to define goodness. Eliminates all further moral debate. Arguments against: No distinction between doing what is right and doing whatever you want. We can never judge the acts of another person. Ethics is not based on reason or principle. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 22

Cultural Relativism What is right and wrong depends upon a society s actual moral guidelines. These guidelines vary from place to place and from time to time. A particular action may be right in one society at one time and wrong in other society or at another time. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 23

Cultural Relativism Arguments For: Different social contexts demand different moral guidelines; it is arrogant for one society to judge another. Arguments Against: Doesn t explain how moral guidelines are determined. Provides no way out for cultures in conflict. Because many practices are acceptable does not mean any cultural practice is acceptable. Societies do, in fact, share certain core values. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 24

Ethical Egoism The Idea: Each person acts out of self-interest. Ayn Rand wrote Atlas Shrugged & The Fountainhead Focus on your long-term best interest. What keeps society from falling into anarchy with everyone screwing everyone? Personal character traits become important Reputation, trust, reliability, virtue, etc. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 25

Ethical Egoism Arguments For: Most people naturally act in their own self-interest. Society as a whole benefits when each individual puts self-interest first. Capitalism: The baker sells bread out of self-interest. Each individual knows what is in his best interest, so he/she should decide. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 26

Ethical Egoism Arguments Against: Many people do not act in their own long-term best interest. Examples Other ethical systems might save us from our ourselves. Some people tend to gain power. They use their power to get more power. Some people are naturally superior. The weaker people resent the successes of the strong, superior winners. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 27

Social Contract Theory Individuals implicitly accept a Social Contract, on the condition that others follow the rules as well. Individuals act within a sphere of freedom, as long as the set of rules are respected. The social contract rules are established simply to enable everyone the benefits of social living. They center on respecting natural rights to life, liberty, and property. Everyone benefits when everyone bears the burden of following certain rules. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 28

Kinds of Rights According to John Locke (1632 1704), there are three natural rights: life, liberty, and property. Other Classifications: Negative Rights (Liberties) The right to act without interference. Positive Rights (Claim-Rights) An obligation of some people to provide certain things for others. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 29

Example Bill owns a chain of DVD rental stores. He collects information about rentals from customers and sells customer profiles to direct marketing firms. Are Bill s actions wrong? Evaluation: Bill s rights vs. customers rights vs. marketing firms rights Who owns information about transaction? CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 30

Critiques on Social Contract Theory Arguments For: Framed in the language of rights. Without common agreement, rational people may act out in self-interest. Provides clear analysis of certain government actions. E.g. Those who do not follow the rules will be punished. Arguments Against: Conflicting rights problem May be unjust to people who are incapable of following (not deliberately breaking) the rules CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 31

Divine Command Theory Based on the idea that good actions are those aligned with the will of God and bad actions are those contrary to the will of God. God s will has been revealed to us We can use the holy books as moral decision-making guides. Judaism: Torah Christianity: Bible Islam: Koran CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 32

Divine Command Theory Arguments For: God is all-good, all-knowing, all-powerful We d better do what he says! God s authority is higher than human-made ethical system CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 33

Divine Command Theory Arguments Against: There are many different interpretations of God s word who is right? We live in a multicultural, secular society. The holy books don t apply to modern technological issues. Bible doesn t mention Internet Based on obedience, duty and not reason. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 34

Discussion Questions What are some examples of contemporary technology issues for which our society s moral guidelines seem to be nonexistent or unclear? (Ethical vs Legal) Can you give examples where an action may be legal but unethical, or vise versa? Do (or should) organizations have ethics? If so, who make them? And who are affected employees? customers? the society? CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 35

Discussion Questions Which of the following rights should be considered legitimate positive rights by our society? The right to a minimum standard of living The right to housing The right to health care The right to education (K-12 or higher ed?) The right to a paying job The right to two months of vacation each year CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 36

Discussion Questions Examples of conflicts between positive rights of one person and negative rights of another person. CS305-Spring 2010 Ethics 37