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Philosophical ethics Based mainly on “Computer Ethics”, D. Johnson, Prentice Hall 2001 and Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia CS480 Computer Science Seminar Fall, 2002 A little background: the origin of ehtics • Ethics: a branch of philosophy that – attempts to define what is good for the individual and for society. – tries to establish the nature of obligations, or duties, that people owe themselves and each other. • Human nature – people do not willingly do what is bad for themselves but may do what is bad for others if it appears that good for themselves will result. It has always been difficult to define what is good and how one should act to achieve it. Some have said that pleasure is the greatest good (see Epicureanism). Others have pointed to knowledge, personal virtue, or service to one's fellow human being. Individuals, and whole societies, have performed outrageous criminal acts on people, and they have found ways to justify doing so on the basis of some greater "good." • Ethical relativity versus ethical absolutism – Difficulty in deciding what good and obligation are has led moral philosophers to divide into two camps: ethical relativity and ethical absolutism – One camp says that there are no definite, objective standards that apply to everyone. People must decide what their duties are in each new situation. – Others have said that there are standards that apply to everyone, that what is good can generally be known. If the good is known, the obligation to pursue it becomes clear. Absolutism solution • The lack of standard for what is good – • Aristotle solution – • • • Aristotle realized that what people desire they regard as good but there can be no standards at all. two types of desire: natural and acquired. Natural desires: are those needs that are common to all human beings such as food and shelter. Beyond these, people also have a desire for health, knowledge, and a measure of prosperity. By being natural, these desires, or needs, are good for everyone. Since there can be no wrong basic needs, there can be no wrong desire for these needs. Desires other than natural: These are not needs but wants. It is at the level of wants that the nature of good becomes clouded. People with sound judgment should be able to decide what is good for them, and this sound judgment comes with experience. Young children have little experience of what is good or bad for them, so they must be guided by parents and other adults. Mature adults (as a rational being), however, should be able to decide what is good for them, though history demonstrates that this is not always the case. Need to decide what is good for others as well as for themselves. That is, they expect that goods for them apply equally to other people. To be able to treat others in the same way one treats oneself, Aristotle said it is necessary to have the three virtues of practical wisdom: temperance (moderation and self-restraint), courage, and justice. Relativist solution • Relativist views – Relativists do not believe that there are self-evident moral principles that are true for everyone. They say that people's moral judgments are determined by the customs and traditions of the society in which they live. These may have been handed down for centuries, but their age does not mean they are true standards. They are simply norms that a certain society has developed for itself. What is right is what society says is right, and whatever is considered good for society must be right. – The pragmatism view: One of the leading pragmatists, John Dewey, claimed that moral problems arise out of a conflict of impulses or desires, and the goal of moral deliberation is to find a course of action that will turn this conflict into harmony. A choice is right if it leads to a solution of the specific conflict, but there is no absolute right or good, as every successful solution gives rise to new problems that must be evaluated on their own terms. – The existentialism view: All individuals have their own life situations. No two are identical, for everyone else is part of the environment in which decisions must be made. All choices involve risk. There are no principles or standards that are right for all people at all times. New situations demand new approaches. What was once valid may be inappropriate now. Common Moral Elements • Most societies--from the ancient to the modern period--share certain features in their ethical codes. Some of these have applied only within a society, while others have been more universal. – customs or laws forbidding murder, bodily injury, or attacks on personal honor and reputation. Property rights also exist in some form almost everywhere. – rules that define elementary duties of doing good and furthering the welfare of the group. Within the family, mothers look after their children, and men support and protect their dependents. In turn, grown-up children are expected to provide care for their aging parents. Helping more distant relatives is also considered a duty in some places, depending on the extent of kinship ties. – In societies where the major religions--Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism--are predominant, the duty of helping the needy and the distressed has been implanted. These obligations extend beyond family to acquaintances and even strangers. Telling the truth and keeping promises are also widely regarded as duties, though they are sometimes withheld from strangers. In the last 200 years, modern nations have evolved a kind of universal ethic that originated with ideas about human rights to life, liberty, and property that developed during the period of the Enlightenment. Whether honored in practice or not, there is at least an acceptance of the notion that the lives of human beings are meant to be improved by abolishing disease, poverty, and ignorance. Interesting articles this week BusinessWeek, 10-14-2002, “digital Media: “don’t Clamp down too Hard” by H. Green • Entertainment companies want the government to mandate technology that would control how digital TV shows are copied and distributed. • Lots of armor on CDs, books, and movies could spook buyers and stifle innovation. • Since the defunct of Napster, file-sharers are installing Kazaa, a neo-Napster, at a rate of 4 copies per second! http://www.Digital-consumer.org Functions of ethics • ETHICS AND MORALITY: – How to behave toward oneself and toward other individuals is a matter of making choices – Aristotle had a better term--practical wisdom: it was concerned with action, both on the part of the individual and on the part of society. – Aristotle divided practical wisdom into two parts: moral philosophy and political philosophy. He defined them together as a "true and reasoned state of capacity to act with regard to the things that are good or bad for a man." Why study philosophical ethics: • Concepts and theories of philosophical and ethical analysis can – help articulate the reasons for moral beliefs. – these beliefs can be critically evaluated in terms of plausibility, coherence, and consistency. – provide common grounds for rational discussion. Philosophical analysis is an iteration/ongoing process • It involves the process known as dialectic: – Expressing a claim. – Putting forward an argument or reasons for the claim. – Critically examining the argument. – Reformulating and critiquing claim and arguments until they become coherent and consistent. Dialectic illustrated with a simple example • Claim: euthanasia is wrong. • Argument: human life has the highest value, it should never be ended intentionally. • Articulation: What if the person is terminally ill and in extreme pain or what if the person suffers from severe brain damage? Is intentional taking a human life wrong in war situation? What about capital punishment? • Reformulation of the claim and arguments: under certain circumstances, euthanasia may be acceptable, e.g., if the case of brain death. Branches of Moral Philosophy • Descriptive ethics: examines and evaluates ethical behavior of different peoples or social groups. • Normative, or prescriptive ethics: is concerned with examining and applying the judgments of what is morally right or wrong, good or bad. It examines the question of whether there are standards for ethical conduct and, if so, what those standards are. • Comparative ethics: is the study of differing ethical systems to learn their similarities and contrasts. In modern developed societies the systems of law and public justice are closely related to ethics. It is possible for law to be neutral in moral issues, or it can be used to enforce morality. The prologue to the United States Constitution says that insuring domestic tranquility is an object of government. This statement is morally neutral. Such laws as those passed to enforce civil rights, however, promote a moral as well as legal commitment More on descriptive ethics • Descriptive statements are statements that describe a state of affairs; they are empirical claims that can be verified or proven true or false by examining the state of affairs described. • Descriptive ethics examine morality as an empirical phenomenon; it does not tell us what is right or wrong; nor does it tell us what to do or not to do. More on normative, or prescriptive ethics • Normative, or prescriptive ethics is concerned with examining and applying the judgments of what is morally right or wrong, good or bad. It examines the question of whether there are standards for ethical conduct and, if so, what those standards are. • Empirical facts are not alone sufficient to justify normative claims, e.g., the observation that many people copying proprietary software does not such an act is morally acceptable. Ethical relativism • “What is right for you may not be right for me”, suggesting that there is no universal moral norm. • Ethical relativists often cite a number of descriptive facts – Cultures vary in what is considered right or wrong. – Moral norm for a given society changes with time. – A person’s view on right or wrong is the result of the upbringing of the person. • Problems with ethical relativism – It is not possible to use relativism to guide one’s action. – It is not easy to judge the impact of one’s action on the society. – It is not easy to resist or rebel against evil actions of individuals. Utilitarianism • What make the behavior right or wrong depends wholly on the consequences. • The basic principle: Everyone out to act so as to bring about the greatest amount of happiness (consequence) for the greatest number of people. • happiness: Enjoying, showing, or marked by pleasure, satisfaction, or joy. Utilitarian principle • Happiness is the ultimate intrinsic good, because it is valuable in its own sake; everything else has only secondary or derivative (instrument) value. • Morality must be based on creating as much of this good as possible. All action should be evaluated in terms of their utility for bringing about overall happiness of the society, not just maximize one’s own happiness. • Legislators and policy makers should seek policies that produce good consequences. • Utilitarianism captures part of the idea of relativism: decision may depend on situation, e.g., to ban lawn watering when the water becomes scarce or to hide the true situation (lie) to a person suffering a terminal disease. Critique of utilitarianism • Is sacrificing the happiness of a few justifiable for the greater amount of overall happiness? (e.g., killing one and uses his/her organs to save ten?) • Some utilitarians asserts that long term consequences must be taken into account. The practice mentioned above would produce fear in people that net happiness is diminished rather than increased. • But others utilitarians concede that there are going to be some repugnant practices for the sake of greater overall happiness. • Utilitarianism is inadequate in handling the distribution of benefits and burdens, e.g., distributing body organs to patients waiting for transplant (who has the priority? Should those who seem to have more social values?) • Despite its deficiency, utilitarianism does provide a systematic account of many of our moral notions. Deontological theories • Deontology: the study of moral obligations. • The principle inherent (motive) in the action determines right or wrong morally. If the action is done in a sense of duty and if the principle of the action can be universalized, then the action is right, e.g., if one tells the truth out of respect for others, the action is moral; if one tells the truth for fearing of getting caught or for an award, then the action is morally unworthy. • Kant’s moral theory: “categorical imperative” --- human beings is the ends and should not be treated as means to an end, e.g., intentional killing is wrong even in extreme situations because it means using person merely as a means and does not treat the human beings as valuable in and of himself. (Self-defense is unintentional, thus is excused from being immoral.) • Instead or happiness, the capacity for rational decision making is the most important quality of human beings. People could be moral beings without the capacity of being rational. What morality requires is that we respect each other as valuable. Implication of deontological theory: rights • Since individuals must be respected as valuable, each must have rights such as not to be killed, enslaved, or be interfered with in certain ways. • Rights – Negative rights: rights require constraint by others, e.g., right not to be killed. – Positive rights: others have the duty to something to or for the right holder, e.g., feed hungry people from starvation, medical service for the those who cannot afford, etc. (some philosophers have argued that individuals only have negative rights.) – Legal rights: rights created by laws. – Moral rights: as known as natural or human rights are claims independent of laws. Such claims are usually embedded in moral theory of human nature. Rights and social contract theories • Reason (being rational) would lead individuals to live according to certain rules and/or lead to a government to enforce these rules even though this may involve giving up some individual freedom. • The agreement to these rules create obligations which are the basis of moral obligation. John Rawl’s social contract theory in 1971 • Proposed ideas about a just social contract between individuals. • Individuals or groups are self-interested and therefore will be influenced by their own experience and their own situation in thinking about social fairness and justice. As a result, Rawl proposes that justice has to be blind in a certain way. • Rawlsian justice – Each person should have an equal right to the most extensive basic liberty compatible with a similar liberty for others. – Social and economic inequalities should be arranged so that they are both (a) reasonably expected to be to everyone’s advantage and (b) attached to positions and offices open to all. • Rawlsian principles of justice aims to assure each individual would have liberty and opportunity and a fair shot at a decent life. Traditional virtue ethics • Virtues that have been associated with being a “good” person; it addresses the question of moral character. • List of possible virtues – – – – – – – – Temperance Courage Justice Benevolence Generosity Honesty Tolerance … • What are the characteristics of being a good computer professional? – ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct – The Software Engineering code of Ethics and Professional Practice The Software Engineering code of Ethics and Professional Practice Eight principles: • Public: act in the interest of public. • Client and employer: act in the best interest of client and employer. • Product: meet highest professional standards possible. • Judgment: maintain integrity and independence in their professional judgment. • Management: be professional and ethical. • Profession: advance the integrity and reputation of the profession. • Colleagues: be fair and supportive of their colleagues. • Self: participate in lifelong learning and promote an ethical approach to the practice of the profession. Homework • Chapter 2: 1-4, 6, 7, 10, 12, 13, 15 Some interesting quotes about philosophers • “To be a real philosopher all that is necessary is to hate some one else’s type of thinking.” William James (1842–1910), U.S. psychologist, philosopher. • “As an example of just how useless these philosophers are for any practice in life there is Socrates himself, the one and only wise man, according to the Delphic Oracle. Whenever he tried to do anything in public he had to break off amid general laughter. While he was philosophizing about clouds and ideas, measuring a flea’s foot and marveling at a midge’s humming, he learned nothing about the affairs of ordinary life.” Desiderius Erasmus (c. 1466–1536) Some interesting quotes about philosophy • “To have no time for philosophy is to be a true philosopher.” Blaise Pascal (1623–62), French scientist, philosopher. • Unintelligible answers to insoluble problems. Henry B. Adams (1838–1918), U.S. historian. • “Philosophy consists very largely of one philosopher arguing that all others are jackasses. He usually proves it, and I should add that he also usually proves that he is one himself.” H. L. Mencken (1880–1956), U.S. journalist.