Unformatted text preview:

PHI 2630 Final Exam Study Guide 1 What is applied ethics Applied ethics is when someone applies philosophical methodology to a specific ethical theory It tries to convince people of conclusions based on theory netural premises 2 What are theory neutral premises and what is their relevance to applied ethics These are claims that are thought to be ones that everyone will admit to regardless of their theoretical commitments 3 What are moral slippery slope arguments and how should they be evaluated What is a conceptual slippery slope argument and what phenomenon do they tend to ignore Moral slippery slopes have the following format You should not do A because doing A will eventually lead to B and B should be avoided Example the DirecTV commercial These should be evaluated based on the reasoning of A leading to B Conceptual slippery slopes have the following format If A and be lie on a continuum with respect to the property x and there is no cut off point between things that do and do not have X then either A and B both have X or they both do not have X Ex Difference between an acorn and an oak tree When does an acorn become an oak tree 4 What is moral luck When the morality of an action or a decision depends on factors outside our control Ex Is drunk driving worse if someone runs a red light and makes it back safely or if they run a red light and hit a child 5 What is the doctrine of double effect It says that if your goal is worthwhile you are sometimes permitted to act in ways that foreseeably can cause certain harms though you must never intend to cause those harms Ex Death of an innocent person 6 According to Rachels and many others why can t you solve applied ethical issues by simply consulting the law Because there are certain situations where actions such as euthanasia can be deemed appropriate even though they are ruled illegal by law Animal Rights and Welfare 7 Give some examples of widely accepted uses of non human animals NHAs and examples of some widely condemned uses Accepted uses drug testing on animals use of animals as goods sports gaming zoos and circuses Condemned uses ivory poaching vivisections animal fighting private collections 8 Though they both agree that many accepted uses of NHAs should be changed explain the difference between animals rights proponents eg Regan and animal welfare proponents eg Singer Animal rights proponents say that it is wrong to violate rights whether it is human or animal rights Animal welfare proponents say that it is wrong to cause unnecessary suffering whether it be with humans or animals i e factory farms 9 What are Regan s arguments against indirect duty and utilitarian views on NHAs Indirect duty some people argue that we don t have any direct duties to non human animals However this is false because it also fails to account for the direct duties we have to certain humans i e infants mentally challenged elderly Utilitarian views some utilitarians claim that animals cannot feel pain others claim that the pain of animals does not matter Regan says that animals display obvious behaviors of being in pain just like humans He also says that the pain of animals does matter positive value is decided by pleasure and negative value by pain This view completely leaves out who is having the pleasure pain 10 Why does Regan think the Rights View is the correct one He believes that the rights view gets around the two problems listed above in number 9 11 What is the criterion for having inherent value according to Regan According to Regan some individuals have inherent value which means they are not mere receptacles This entails the right that they be treated with respect 12 What is speciesism Do not get confused by Cohen s misuse of the term Speciesism is having a prejudice or attitude in bias in favor of the interests of members of your own species and against those members of other species Regan says this is comparable to racism and sexism 13 What reason does an aesthetic vegetarian give for not eating meat Aesthetic vegetarians do not eat meat because they are literally disgusted by the thought of eating non human animals 14 Briefly summarize the following philosophers objections to animal rights animal welfare views Frey and Cohen Frey claims that NHAs do not linguistic ability sufficient for having beliefs and desires He also denies that all individuals with inherent value have the same amount of inherent value The value of life is a function of its quality i e severe mental handicaps senile dementia etc Cohen says that since NHAs cannot understand moral claims they are not part of the moral community Because of this they do not have any moral rights making it impossible to violate NHA rights Abortion 15 In the debate over moral permissibility of abortion what do abortion and fetus mean What are the two main questions in the debate Abortion the intentional termination of pregnancy resulting in the death of a human fetus Fetus a developing or unborn human between the stages of conception and birth Two main questions that are asked are does a fetus have a right to life If the fetus has the right to life does that make abortion morally impermissible 16 What is Marquis theory neutral premise in his argument against abortion How does he argue from that premise to claim that abortion is nearly always wrong He gives the theory neutral premise that killing is wrong because of its effect on the victim it deprives them of their future He then argues that since it is wrong to a kill person it is also wrong to kill a future person Future like ours argument 17 Why does Marquis think that the desire account of the wrongness of killing fails The desire account states what makes killing wrong is that it interferes with the fulfillment of a strong and fundamental desire and since fetuses lack the desire to live abortions do not interfere with this desire However Marquis has two objections 1 Some people have little or no desire to live but that doesn t mean that killing them is okay unconscious suicidal and sleeping people 2 We desire life because we value the goods of this life The goodness of life is not secondary to our desire for it 18 Briefly summarize the following philosophers objections to Marquis Paske Norcross and McInerney Norcross he fails to distinguish morally between contraception and abortion Paske even if someone lacks a future like ours it is still wrong to kill them Fetuses have certain social rights those fundamental to the functioning


View Full Document

FSU PHI 2630 - Final Exam

Documents in this Course
RSL

RSL

29 pages

Exam 1

Exam 1

5 pages

Test 1

Test 1

14 pages

Fallacies

Fallacies

13 pages

Test 1

Test 1

5 pages

Exam #2

Exam #2

8 pages

Liberty

Liberty

9 pages

Exam 2

Exam 2

7 pages

Load more
Download Final Exam
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view Final Exam and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view Final Exam 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?