Lesson 2
Lesson 2
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The Individual and Society
As what we have seen in the history of Mores, the morality of
one’s conduct is inevitably tied to the society. To fully illustrate
how this works, Plato’s The Republic once again gave an allegory
that further investigates upon the nature of morality. In Book II
where the famous Ring of Gyges story was narrated, Gyges was a
shepherd who found a golden ring that, whenever the gem of
the said ring was turned inward, could make him invisible. With
this power he seduced the queen, killed the king, and ruled over
Lydia. This allegory became the inspiration for stories such as The
Lord of The Rings and Hollow Man (2000).
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The Individual and Society
The continuation (and variation) of the tale in The
Republic was that given two people, a righteous
one and a not-so righteous one, and each having
their own ring of invisibility, would they continue
doing what they do even if no one is watching
them? This additional twist goes to show that what
we usually think of what is “good” is always tied to
what we expect other people or society as a whole
to approve or not. 1
The Individual and Society
Reiterating Plato’s philosophy such that the soul, for it to
gain immortality or to “reach the realm of wisdom,” must
not let itself be influenced by things that are temporary,
corruptible, and illusory, such is the physical world which
hinders us from reaching the higher level of reality (like
the chains in the Allegory of the Cave). Instead of relying
on mere perception, reason alone is sufficient to live a
good life. As influenced by the teachings of Socrates, to
“know thyself” is the true way in gaining wisdom and
living an ethical life. 1
Reasoning and Its Role in Ethics
Reasoning comes in various forms. We reason either theoretically
or practically. The former focuses on understanding and
manipulating ideas and concepts to form knowledge (deals with
abstract thought). The latter focuses on the conduct we decide to
project into the world (deals with moral evaluation). As how
Aristotle defined them, we use Theoretical Wisdom in pursuit of
our intellectual aspect while we use Practical Wisdom in purist of
our moral aspect. The latter is thus the type of reasoning
employed in Ethics. Who are qualified in the practice of both
types of wisdom (particularly the latter since our subject is
Ethics)? 1
Reasoning and Its Role in Society
Human Beings are the primary agents of concern in Ethics
due to their capacity to reason. This could be narrow
down further to Moral Agents who possess the freedom
and ability to choose and make rational decisions. On the
contrary, Moral Patients pertain to entities incapable of
making their own rational decision, thus the moral agent
makes the decision on their behalf. Moral patients include
children, elderly, mentally challenged, animals, plants,
even the environment.
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Reasoning and Its Role in Society
Going back to Moral Agents, freedom and obligation
are said to be the necessary conditions in making
moral decisions. Freedom entails that an individual
is fully conscious and responsible for the outcome of
one’s decision and actions. Obligation on the other
hand concerns one’s duty to oneself to exercise
freedom in planning for one’s future. As a whole,
these two key elements help us in making moral
decisions. 1
Reasoning and Its Role in Society
In making moral decisions there are two basic
models. The first model, referred to as Deductive
Model of Moral Reasoning (DMMR), follows a
deductive scheme that starts from a general rule
(Ethical Framework or Theory) that dictates what
should be considered as ethical or not, proceeded by
a specific example (human conduct), then concluded
with the evaluation of the example based on the
rule being used 1
Reasoning and Its Role in Society
Example:
General Rule According to Immanuel
Kant, all acts of lying are
immoral
Specific act to be Rudy lied to his
evaluated constituents
Evaluation of act based on Rudy is immoral
general rule
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Reasoning and Its Role in Society
The second model, referred to as Reflective Equilibrium
Model (REM), follows an inductive scheme that starts
from a specific scenario evaluated alongside relevant pre-
existing beliefs, eventually arriving at one‟s judgment of a
particular conduct, and in turn that decision formulated
by the individual could be revised and adjusted through
time due to the inclusion of new facts in order to apply to
new cases. This process aims to arrive at a coherent
decision making
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Reasoning and Its Role in Society
Example:
Conflicting Rules Leni believes that lying is bad, yet she
does not want to hurt her friends
Arriving at a She lied (white lie) to her friend to not
compromise hurt her.
Newly adjusted rule Leni now believes that it is immoral to
lie except for some instances
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Ethics in Everyday Life
Here are some examples:
Other examples are Business Ethics (deals with
intrapersonal relationship, team building, corporate
duties and responsibilities, fair trade, business
confidentiality), Cyber Ethics (deals with the modern
age of the internet, focusing on data privacy, identity
theft, cyberbullying, cyberpornography, other forms of
cybercrimes), Journalism and Media Ethics (deals with
the delivery of truth void of any bias).
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