Tools Andrew Black CS 305 1

Similar documents
Lecture 6 Workable Ethical Theories I. 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

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

The Critical Mind is A Questioning Mind

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

CS305 Topic Introduction to Ethics

The Art of Critical Thinking

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

Deontology: Duty-Based Ethics IMMANUEL KANT

Chapter 2 Reasoning about Ethics

Introduction to Ethics

Introduction to Ethics

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

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

Basics of Ethics CS 215 Denbigh Starkey

Benjamin Visscher Hole IV Phil 100, Intro to Philosophy

KANTIAN ETHICS (Dan Gaskill)

Hoong Juan Ru. St Joseph s Institution International. Candidate Number Date: April 25, Theory of Knowledge Essay

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

Ethical Theories. A (Very) Brief Introduction

Backward Looking Theories, Kant and Deontology

Evaluating actions The principle of utility Strengths Criticisms Act vs. rule

24.02 Moral Problems and the Good Life

Introduction to Philosophy Philosophy 110W Spring 2011 Russell Marcus

PHI 1700: Global Ethics

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

Chapter 2 Normative Theories of Ethics

Ethics (ETHC) JHU-CTY Course Syllabus

Kant's Moral Philosophy

Introduction to Ethics

24.01: Classics of Western Philosophy

Deontology & Social Contract Theory

Introduction to Philosophy Philosophy 110W Fall 2013 Russell Marcus

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

Ethics. PHIL 181 Spring 2018 SUMMARY OBJECTIVES

PROFESSIONAL ETHICS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

Deontology. Immanuel Kant ( ) Founder of Deontology

A Framework for Thinking Ethically

Moral Philosophy : Utilitarianism

Thinking Ethically: A Framework for Moral Decision Making

Course Learning Outcomes for Unit III

Autonomous Machines Are Ethical

1. Clarity: Understandable, the meaning can be grasped; free from confusion or ambiguity; to remove obscurities.

ETHICS (IE MODULE) 1. COURSE DESCRIPTION

No Love for Singer: The Inability of Preference Utilitarianism to Justify Partial Relationships

Kant, Deontology, & Respect for Persons

The Pleasure Imperative

SAMPLE COURSE OUTLINE PHILOSOPHY AND ETHICS GENERAL YEAR 11

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

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

AN OUTLINE OF CRITICAL THINKING

PHILOSOPHY IM 25 SYLLABUS IM SYLLABUS (2019)

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

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

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

Philosophy 3G03E: Ethics

Chapter 2: Reasoning about ethics

SUMMARIES AND TEST QUESTIONS UNIT 6

Suppose... Kant. The Good Will. Kant Three Propositions

KANT, MORAL DUTY AND THE DEMANDS OF PURE PRACTICAL REASON. The law is reason unaffected by desire.

Definitions: Values and Moral Values

Deontology: Duty-Based Ethics IMMANUEL KANT

THE CONCEPT OF OWNERSHIP by Lars Bergström

INTRODUCTORY HANDOUT PHILOSOPHY 13 FALL, 2004 INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY---ETHICS Professor: Richard Arneson. TAs: Eric Campbell and Adam Streed.

Oxford Scholarship Online

Moral Theory. What makes things right or wrong?

Hello again. Today we re gonna continue our discussions of Kant s ethics.

LA Mission College Mark Pursley Fall 2016 Note:

Ethics is subjective.

Lecture 8. Ethics in Science

USF MASTERS OF SOCIAL WORK PROGRAM ASSESSMENT OF FOUNDATION STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES LAST COMPLETED ON 4/30/17

Christ-Centered Critical Thinking. Lesson 7: Logical Fallacies

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

GS SCORE ETHICS - A - Z. Notes

Deontological Ethics

National Quali cations

Summary of Kant s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals

LYING TEACHER S NOTES

Undergraduate Calendar Content

Class #14: October 13 Gödel s Platonism

MGT610 Business Ethics

PL-101: Introduction to Philosophy Fall of 2007, Juniata College Instructor: Xinli Wang

Ethics Prof. Vineet Sahu Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur

Categorical Imperative by. Kant

The following is a list of competencies to be demonstrated in order to earn the degree: Semester Hours of Credit 1. Life and Ministry Development 6

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

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

University of New Hampshire Spring Semester 2016 Philosophy : Ethics (Writing Intensive) Prof. Ruth Sample SYLLABUS

GCE Religious Studies. Mark Scheme for June Unit G582: Religious Ethics. Advanced GCE. Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations

Rationalism. A. He, like others at the time, was obsessed with questions of truth and doubt

Mill s Utilitarian Theory

NORTH SOUTH UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY DHAKA, BANGLADESH

Ethical Theory. Ethical Theory. Consequentialism in practice. How do we get the numbers? Must Choose Best Possible Act

Notes on Moore and Parker, Chapter 12: Moral, Legal and Aesthetic Reasoning

Quiz 1. Criticisms of consequentialism and Kant. Consequentialism and Nonconsequentialism. Consequentialism in practice. Must Choose Best Possible Act

Kantian Deontology - Part Two

Kantian Deontology. A2 Ethics Revision Notes Page 1 of 7. Paul Nicholls 13P Religious Studies

#NLCU. The Ethical Leader: Rules and Tools

Justice and Ethics. Jimmy Rising. October 3, 2002

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE IDEA OF CRITICAL THINKING

Transcription:

Tools Andrew Black CS 305 1

Critical Thinking Everyone thinks, all the time Why Critical Thinking? Much of our thinking is biased, distorted, partial, uninformed, or down-right prejudiced. This costs us money, and quality of life 2

Critical Thinking A Definition: Critical thinking is the art of analyzing and evaluating thinking with a view to improving it. [Paul & Elder, Critical Thinking, 2014] 3

A Critical Thinker: raises vital questions and problems gathers and assesses relevant information comes to well-reasoned conclusions and solutions, testing them against relevant criteria keeps an open mind, using multiple systems of thought with different assumptions and implications communicates effectively 4

What point of view am I using? Should I consider another? What would be consequences be if someone accepted my position? Implications and Consequences Assumptions presuppositions, axioms, taking for granted What am I taking for granted? What assumption led to that conclusion? What is the main idea? Can I explain it clearly? Point of View frames of reference, perspectives, orientations Concepts theories, definitions, laws, principles, models Elements of Thought Purpose goals, objectives Interpretation and Inference conclusions, solutions What do I seek to accomplish? What is my purpose? Question at issue problem, issue Information data, facts, reasons, observations, experiences, evidence What question am I addressing? Am I considering the complexities in the question? What information brings me to my conclusion? What information no I need to answer my question? How did I reach this conclusion? Is there another way to interpret the information 5 [Paul & Elder, Critical Thinking, 2014]

Use these Universal Standards to critique your own thinking: Clarity Accuracy Precision Relevance Depth Breadth Logic Significance Fairness Could you elaborate further? Could you give me an example? How could we check on that? How can we find out if that s true? Could we be more specific? Depth: Could you give me more details? Could How does you that be more relate exact? to the problem? How does that help us to decide this issue? What factors make this a difficult issue? Breadth: Breadth: Fairness: Logic: Logic: 6

Controlling technology Technology impacts society, often in unforeseen ways Examples! Digital photography eliminating dark rooms! E-mail reducing snail mail volumes! Laptop computers increasing neck and back pain! Cell phones making users feel safer! Refrigerator freon and the ozone layer! Internet allows us to communicate effectively but enables outsourcing of programming jobs overseas 7

Questions Give examples of how new Internet applications require society to create new rules Have computers made some things possible that you wish had never been created? 8

Ethical frameworks How can we develop rules in a consistent manner to best resolve these issues? 9

Kantianism Reasoning method to determine universal morals ( 1724-1804 )! Immanuel Kant!Often coincide with those in the Bible, but derived via reason Formulation! What is always good without qualification? "Intelligence and courage applied to rob a bank is not good "A good will is! Kant argues for dutifulness "Doing what we ought to do (based on moral rule) versus what we want to do "How does one know if an action is grounded in a moral rule? 10

Kantianism ( formulation Kant s categorical imperative (first!act only from moral rules that you can at the same time will to be universal moral laws! False promises "To determine if this is moral, apply it universally " Fails Kant s categorical imperative by producing a logical contradiction " Promises are meaningless when they are universally false!!contradiction in what I wish to do and what I expect others to do 11

Kantianism ( formulation Kant s categorical imperative (second!act so that you always treat both yourself and other people as ends in themselves, and never only as a means to an end "Empathy!! Chip plant example "Manager must hire employees to finish a job "Manager knows the plant will close in a year " Best candidates are from out-of-state " Should the manager inform the candidates of the pending closure?» No disclosure you treat candidates as a means to an end» With disclosure you treat them as the ends in themselves» From Kant s second formulation, the answer is to disclose 12

Act utilitarianism An action is right (or wrong) to the extent that it increases (or decreases) the total happiness of the affected parties/beings ( 1806-1873 )! Bentham (1748-1832) and Mill ( principle! Based on the principle of utility (greatest happiness ( theory! Focus is on consequences (consequentialist (? Kant " Motive is irrelevant (compared to (? rights " Agreeing on affected parties is an issue (animal 13

Rule utilitarianism Adopt moral rules which, if followed by everyone, will lead to the greatest increase in total happiness! Principle of utility applied to moral rules not individual actions! A workable theory for evaluating moral problems 14

Social contract theory Morality consists of rules governing how people treat one another, that rational people agree to accept, for their mutual benefit, on the condition that others follow those rules as well ( 1603-1679 )! Hobbes! Requires two things " Moral rules to gain the benefits of social living and prevent us from living in a state of nature " Government must be capable of enforcing the rules! Arrangement of giving rights to rational people is the social contract 15

Example: Censorship ( CIPA ) Child Internet Protection Act!Government requirement for installing antipornography filters before receiving federal funds for Internet access "Argument for: Libraries do not provide X-rated magazines or movies so they should not be obliged to provide Internet pornography. Damage to children significant unless filtered. "Argument against: Filters are inaccurate and inconvenient. They restrict freedom of speech from some web publishers!upheld by U.S. Supreme Court in 2003 "Not the role of libraries to provide a public forum for free speech 16

Is CIPA ethical? Kantian evaluation Act utilitarian evaluation Social contract theory evaluation 17

Is CIPA ethical? Kantian evaluation! Protecting children from harm using filters! Assumption is that some non-pornographic web pages are filtered! Filters treat the creators of non-offensive, but blocked web pages solely as a means to the end for restricting children s access to pornographic materials! Up to each of us. Act utilitarian evaluation (+)! Enacting CIPA results in fewer children being exposed (-)! Some legitimate sites filtered Social contract theory evaluation! Private viewing of pornography does not make social living impossible! Public libraries offers arguments on both sides (assumption is that filters ( sites block useful 18

Catching chat-room predators Police sting operations to lure pedophiles!ethical?! Kantian analysis! Utilitarian analysis! Social contract theory analysis 19

Catching chat-room predators Police sting operations to lure pedophiles! Ethical?! Kantian analysis " Is the will leading to the action OK? " Yes and no» Overall goal is good» But, using deceptiveness to do so is always wrong to a Kantian!! Utilitarian analysis " Result is a public benefit (e.g. harm one pedophile so that the rest of society ( benefits " Publicity may deter other pedophiles " Impact on chat rooms as an effective medium for communication if one knows they are being watched?! Social contract theory analysis " Misrepresentation by pedophile should be punished " Police are also misrepresenting themselves " Not a clear cut argument 20