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UNIT 1
The Ethical Dimension
of Human Existence Lesson 4 Senses of the Self At the end of this lesson, you are expected to: • Recognize the problem with taking subjectivist stance towards ethics • Recognize the irrefutability but also the usefulness of the descriptive ethical theory called psychological egoism • Assess the challenge to ethics raised bu ethical egoism Understanding of SELF vs ETHICS Three Theories about ETHICS 1. Subjectivism 2. Psychological Egoism 3. Ethical Egoism Subjectivism
“No one can tell me what is right and wrong.”
“No one knows my situation better than myself.” “I am entitled to my own opinion.” “It is good if I say that it is good.” Subjectivism • The point of subjectivism is the recognition that the individual person (the subject) is at the heart of all moral valuations. • She is the one who is confronted with the situation and is burdened with the need to make decision or judgment. • Leaps to the more radical claim that the individual is the sole determinant of what is morally good or bad. vid Subjectivism
“No one can tell me what is right or wrong”
• No one can compel another to accept a certain statement or value judgment is she herself does not agree with it. • We realize that we can be mistaken and that we can be corrected by others. Subjectivism
“No one knows my situation better than myself”
• This particular person who is put in a certain situation, which calls for a decision, is the one who has the best knowledge of the factors that surround her situation. Subjectivism
“I am entitled to my own opinion.”
• A valid point that us often misused. • Each person has the right to believe what she believes and has the right to express this. • To insist on one’s right in to having opinions is to exhibit a closed-mindedness. Subjectivism
“It is good if I say it is good.”
• With this line, we get to the heart of the problem with subjectivism. • This statement implies that “it is my personal consideration of X as good that makes X good.” Psychological Egoism
“Human beings are naturally self-centered, so
all our actions are always already motivated by self-interest.” Psychological Egoism • A theory that describes the underlying dynamic behind all human actions as a matter of a pursuit of self-interest. • It does not direct one to act in any particular way, instead it points out that there is already a basis for how one acts. • The ego/self has its desires and interests, and all our actions are geared toward satisfying these interests. Psychological Egoism
• This theory is less problematic since we do
things in pursuit of our own self-interest. • But what about the other types of behavior that we would commonly say are directed toward the other, like generosity? A psychological egoist would believe that this behavior is a self-serving desire. Psychological Egoism • This is a convincing theory because there is no way to try to answer it without confronted by the challenge that there is the self-serving motive at the root of everything. “A woman spends her money on expensive clothes and shoes for herself, and another woman donates to charity.” Psychological Egoism “How are we supposed to decide on the right thing to do?” -it does not matter. We only think that we have a choice but actually, in whatever way we end up acting, our minds have determined what serves our interests best, maybe without our being conscious of it. Ethical Egoism • This theory differs from psychological egoism in that it does not suppose that all our actions are already inevitably self-serving. • Instead, ethical egoism prescribes that we should make our own ends, our own interests, as our single overriding concern. • We may act in a way that is beneficial to others, but we should do that only if it ultimately benefits us. Ethical Egoism • This theory acknowledges that it is a dog-eat- dog world out there and given that, everyone ought to put his/her own self at the center. • Once should consider the self as the priority and not allow any other concerns, such as the welfare of other people, to deviate or detract from this pursuit. Ethical Egoism
“Why should I have any concern about the
interests of others?”
“Why not just look after one’s own self?”
Activity
Search for the story of Rings of Gyges. Explain
how the story becomes a warning on the possibilities of ETHICAL EGOISM.