C
Charlemagne_II
Guest
In 1956 Professors Richard Popkin and Avrum Stroll wrote an introduction to philosophy text. In the chapter on Objective and Subjective Ethics they lay out the respective case for each school of thought.
Subjective ethics involves the personal approach to ethics, whereby we assign a good or bad value to certain acts based on our personal preference. In the subjective view, all judgments originate in the individual ego, and have no objective or intrinsic source in the world at large. For example, if there were no humans on the planet, there would be no good or bad, because there would be no one to assert a personal preference. This presumes there is no mind other than the human mind. One notices that the subjectivist position leans toward, or even affirms, atheism.
Objective ethical judgments are presumed to be made based on the acts themselves, whether they are good or bad in themselves, rather than good or bad because we like them or dislike them. The moral objectivist affirms an objective standard by which acts can be judged. These standards are found in the natural law, in conscience, in reason and common sense, and in the authority of revelation. The ethical objectivist says that even if there is no human being to assert a good or bad value, good would still be intrinsic in the world because God, when He created the world, saw that it was good. The bad that is in the world only arrives when man tries to evade the designs of God.
I think it fair to say that the Catholic Church and certain other institutions stand for objective ethical values.
It is equally fair to say that those who stand against the Church do so (at least in part) because they are ethical subjectivists.
Where do you stand? And why?
Subjective ethics involves the personal approach to ethics, whereby we assign a good or bad value to certain acts based on our personal preference. In the subjective view, all judgments originate in the individual ego, and have no objective or intrinsic source in the world at large. For example, if there were no humans on the planet, there would be no good or bad, because there would be no one to assert a personal preference. This presumes there is no mind other than the human mind. One notices that the subjectivist position leans toward, or even affirms, atheism.
Objective ethical judgments are presumed to be made based on the acts themselves, whether they are good or bad in themselves, rather than good or bad because we like them or dislike them. The moral objectivist affirms an objective standard by which acts can be judged. These standards are found in the natural law, in conscience, in reason and common sense, and in the authority of revelation. The ethical objectivist says that even if there is no human being to assert a good or bad value, good would still be intrinsic in the world because God, when He created the world, saw that it was good. The bad that is in the world only arrives when man tries to evade the designs of God.
I think it fair to say that the Catholic Church and certain other institutions stand for objective ethical values.
It is equally fair to say that those who stand against the Church do so (at least in part) because they are ethical subjectivists.
Where do you stand? And why?