Ethics Modulei
Ethics Modulei
Ethics Modulei
Definition
1
human acts make human conduct: Ethics is therefore a science of
human conduct.
Ethics is the study of man as moral being, one who is rationally able to
distinguish between right and wrong. It examines how man is accountable
for his actions and its consequences. It proposes how man ought to live his
life - meaningfully.
Ethics is concerned with morality, the quality which makes an act good
or evil, correct or wrong. Ethics examines and explains the rational basis
why actions are moral or immoral. In other words, Ethics is concerned with
the norms of human behavior.
Looking into these definitions we can say that they are similar to each
other. The definitions speak of the field of study of ethics as human conduct;
and of the investigation of such human conduct in terms of its morality. The
important terms that can be seen in them are:
2
1. Science-systematic study or a system of scientific conclusions
clearly demonstrated, derived from clearly established principles and duly
coordinated
2. Morality – the quality of human acts as right, wrong or indifferent,
moral immoral or amoral.
3. Human acts –acts done with knowledge, freedom and free will or
consent.
As practical science,
❖ Ethics deals with a systematized body of knowledge that is applicable to
human action.
❖ The primary consideration of Ethics is the application of human
knowledge and its practicality to human experience.
❖ Thus, ethics is an indispensable part of man’s daily existence.
As a normative science,
❖ Ethics sets a basis or norm for the direction and regulation of human
actions.
❖ It sets rules and guidelines to maintain a sense of direction to human
actions
❖ It aids man in distinguishing whether one’s action can be considered good
or bad.
ETHICS…
❖ Is based on REASON. All ethical theories and all moral decisions must
have its basis from the power of reason.
3
The Object of Ethics
Material Object of Ethics refers to the subject matter to be studied
namely, the human acts.
Formal Object is the morality of the human act. It is which is learned
and to be applied.
Formula Object Quo is the human reason employed in the study of
the course.
Importance of Ethics
Montemayor (1994) proclaims that the importance of the study of
ethics follows immediately from the importance of ethics itself. His idea is
manifested in the following:
4
The Three Approaches to Ethics (Branches of Ethics)
DIVISION OF ETHICS
5
HUMAN ACTS
A. DEFINITION
Ethics deals with the study of man and particularly with his actions.
But not every act which proceeds from man is a human act, as used and
understood in ethics. By human act acts in ethics, we mean:
• The free voluntary acts of man
• The acts with knowledge and consent
• Acts which are proper to man as man; because, of all animals,
he alone has knowledge and freedom of will.
• Acts which, we are conscious are under our control and for
which we are responsible.
• Human acts are those which man is master, which he has the
power of doing or doing as he pleases.
A human act is an act which proceeds from the deliberate free will of
man. In a wide sense, the term human act means any sort of activity, internal
or external, bodily or spiritual, performed by a human being. Ethics,
however, employs the term in a stricter sense and calls human only those
acts that are proper to man as man. Now man is an animal, and he has many
activities in common with brutes. Thus, man feels, hears, sees, employs the
senses of taste and smell, is influenced by bodily tendencies or appetites.
But man is more than an animal; he is rational, that is to say, he has
understanding and fee will. Hence it is only the act that proceeds from the
knowing and free willing human being that has the full character of a
human act. Such an act alone is proper to man as man. And therefore Ethics
understands by human acts only those acts that proceed from a deliberate
(i.e., advertent, knowing) and freely willing human being.
Ethics is not concerned with acts of man, but only with human acts.
Human acts are moral acts. For human acts man is responsible, and they are
imputed to him as worthy of praise or blame, or reward or punishment.
Human acts tend to repeat themselves and form habits. Habits coalesce into
6
what we call a man’s character. Thus, we find verified the dictum of ethics:
“A man is what his human acts make him.”
I. The Adequate Cause of Human Acts. – While all human acts have their
source in man’s free rational nature, some acts begin and are perfected in
the will itself, and the rest begin in the will and are perfected by other
faculties under the control of the will.
Thus, some human acts find their adequate cause in the will alone
(always remembering that we speak of the will of the advertent, knowing
man, i.e., of the deliberate will); and these are called elicited acts.
Other human acts do not find their adequate cause in the simple will-
act, but are perfected by the action of mental or bodily powers under the
control of the will, or, so to speak, under orders from the will; and these acts
are called commanded acts.
7
• Election is the selection of the will of those means effective enough
to carry out the intention. A salesman shows election when he opts to visit
a client instead of just writing him a letter. The selection by the will of the
precise means to be employed (consented to) in carrying out an intention.
• Use is the command of the will to make use of those means elected
to carry out the intention. It is this act of the will which moves the salesman
to dress up and take a ride to see his client. The employment by the will of
powers (of body, mind, or both) to carry out its intention by the means
elected. True, the movement itself is a commanded act, but the
commanding, the putting to employment of bodily action, is the elicited
will-act of use.
• Fruition is the enjoyment of the will derives from the attainment of
the thing he had desired earlier. The joy of the woman on being
complimented for her attractiveness, or the satisfaction of the salesman in
closing a deal with his client is fruition. The enjoyment of a thing willed and
done; the will’s act of satisfaction in intention fulfilled.
Of the elicited acts listed, three appertain to the objective thing willed,
and three to the means of accomplishing it. Suppose the thing willed is a
trip to Europe. Then:
I wish ……………………………………..
I intend ………………………….
I enjoy when accomplished ……
I consent …………………………..
I elect ………………………………………
I use my faculties ……………….
8
Commanded acts are those done either by man ‘s mental or bodily
powers under the command of the will. Commanded acts are either internal
or external actions. Examples of internal actions are conscious reasoning,
recalling something, encouraging oneself, controlling aroused emotions and
others. Examples of external actions are walking, eating, dancing, laughing,
listening, reading and others. Some actions are combinations of internal and
external actions such as listening, studying, reading, driving a car, writing
a letter or playing chess.
II. The Relation of Human Acts to Reason. – Human acts are either in
agreement or in disagreement with the dictates of reason, and this relation
(agreement or disagreement) with reason constitutes their morality. On the
score of their morality, or relation to reason, human acts are:
(a) Good, when they are in harmony with the dictates of right reason;
(b) Evil, when they are in opposition to these dictates;
(c) Indifferent, when they stand in no positive relation to the dictates
of reason. Indifferent human acts exist in theory, but not as a matter of
practical experience. A human act that is indifferent in itself becomes good
or evil according to the circumstances which affect its performance,
especially the end in view (or motive or purpose) of the agent.
9
iii. Voluntariness. The Latin word for will is voluntas, and from
this word, we derive the English terms, voluntary and voluntariness.
To say, therefore, that a human act must be voluntary, or must have
voluntariness, is simply to say that it must be a will -act. This we
already know by the very definition of the human act. Voluntariness
is the formal essential quality of the human act, and for it to be
present, there must ordinarily be both knowledge and freedom in the
agent. Hence, the term voluntary act is synonymous with human act.
10
interpretative intention) is that voluntariness which, in the
judgment of prudence and common sense, would be
actually present if opportunity or ability for it were given.
B) Indirect Voluntariness
Indirect voluntariness, or voluntariness in cause, is present in that
human act which is an effect, foreseen or foreseeable, of another act directly
willed.
We have seen that human acts are acts under the free control of the
will. It is clear that, since the will controls such acts, the will is responsible
for them. In other words, human acts are imputable (as worthy of praise or
blame, reward or punishment) to their author.
Two supremely important ethical questions present themselves in the
matters of indirect voluntariness and imputability.
ii. The Second Question: When may one perform an act, not evil in itself,
which has two effects, one good, one evil?
One may perform such an act when three conditions are fulfilled, viz.,
(1) The evil effect must not precede the good effect.
(2) There must be a reason sufficiently grave calling for the act in its
good effect.
(3) The intention of the agent must be honest, that is, the agent must
directly intend the good effect and merely permit the evil effect as a
regrettable incident or “side issue.”
11