Win18_Phil302 Cyberethics’s Updates

Lesson 3: Consequentialism and Deontology

Consequentialism is an ethical stance that claims that what makes an action right is that the action produces the best outcome of all the other possible actions that one might contemplate. So even if the action might feel wrong, it is the outcome that matters. For instance, if you could stop a murder from happening but it required that you kill the attacker, then the wrongness of your killing would be counterbalanced by the beneficial outcome of the life or lives you saved. There are a number of consequentialist ethical theories but the most influential at this time is known as Utilitarianism. We will see that there is a bit of complexity to this idea but for our purposes here, we can say that the consequence that a Utilitarian cares about the most is creating outcomes that benefit as many people as possible. Using our example above, stopping one killer is clearly good for the potential victim, but if we could. Perhaps, find ways of keeping people from becoming violent in the first place we could save even more potential victims and that would be an even better outcome. Let’s look at this idea in more detail.

Watch this video and then read this this detailed article on Utilitarianism.

Assignment 5: Writing reflection 200-400 words posted in the comments section below (Please lable this comment as "Assignment 5"—Imagine you are writing a program but you wanted to do so in a way that expresses utilitarianism in the way you distribute the program to users. How might you achieve this?

Deontology: As we have seen, utilitarianism makes some people nervous beciase it seems to allow for actions that seem unethical to be done in the name of maximising good outcomes for the most people. If we could make the lives of many people better at the expense of the lives of a very few, then a utilitarian would have to accept that, if there were no better alternatives. this kind of cost-benifit analysis is done all the time. We know that around fortythousand people will be killed in automobile accidents this year and another large amout due to disease that is caused by thier emmissions but we do not ban cars becuase of the other ways that they benifit society outways this cost. We do not know exactly who these victims will be until after the damage is done so we can't do much to prevent this damage. The victims just ahve to take one for the team, but of course if you are the one that is directly effected, you may begin to seriously question this calculus.

Science fiction is full of wonderful examples of utilitarian logic gone bad. One truely great one is the short story, "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas," by Ursula K. Le Guin. In this story we are told of a beautiful idylic town called Omelas, whose citizens are happy, well fed, and content. Later we learn that all this goodness comes at the cost of one small child who is locked in a closet and caused to suffer its entire life. The citizens of Omelas all know that the child is there but console themselves in the knowledge that the childs suffering brings them all so much good so they have come to accept it. But some of the citizens can not bear the injustice of the suffering child and they walk away from the town. A philosopher who would be leading the march away from Omelas would be Immanuel Kant. Kant formed a very diferent set of ethical belifes based on the idea that the consequences of ones actions do not matter, what makes an action ethical is that it proceedes from a good will that is motivated by logically defensible moral commands. This kind of ethical theory is known as "deontology" which is just a greek work that means the science of duty.

Please watch this video and then read this article on Deontology.

Kant's Ethics

Assignment 6: Writing reflection posted in the comments section below (pleae label this "Assignment 6"—Give an example of deontological thinking that you have witnessed either in your own actions or the actions of others close to you. 

Please comment on at least two other posts from your community. For these comments just label them with the community member's name who's work you are commenting on.

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