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KANTIAN ETHICS To Understand Kant’s ideas about Duty and moral law. Starter: Complete your ‘ought implies can’ worksheet. Friday 20 th September 2013.

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Presentation on theme: "KANTIAN ETHICS To Understand Kant’s ideas about Duty and moral law. Starter: Complete your ‘ought implies can’ worksheet. Friday 20 th September 2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 KANTIAN ETHICS To Understand Kant’s ideas about Duty and moral law. Starter: Complete your ‘ought implies can’ worksheet. Friday 20 th September 2013

2 Kant asserts that we give the most praise to people who perform an action simply because they are required to. They act from duty alone. Write down 3 examples Kant would find morally praiseworthy Write down 3 examples Kant wouldn’t find praiseworthy Explain why.

3 Examples: A carer who dedicates 10 years of their life to care for a sick and paralysed parent. A soldier who risks his/her life for his/her country. Both act from a sense of duty.

4 Kant argued that this sense of moral duty can be converted into a series of universal laws that all humans ought to follow. Kant says that it is like the duty to preserve your life

5 Your duty is done at a cost to self. It rejects happiness as a basis for moral decision- making. Kant’s theory is deontological, so it recognises the universality of morality. Are there any rules you can universalise? See whether you and the person next to you can come up with 10 between you. Strengths and weaknesses? However, sometimes duties conflict.

6 EXAMPLE: Imagine you are a young man or woman with a partner and a young baby. One day you are walking along the street and you see someone being attacked. You recognise the attacker as a criminal who the police have warned the public not to approach. What do you do?

7 Do you confront the violent attacker? Or, do you stand aside and watch the attack whilst phoning for police assistance? It is praiseworthy to act. You have a duty to act, but you also have a duty to your family.

8 You tackle the assailant but you are killed in the encounter. You have done your duty and the media praise you, but you have left behind a partner and a baby.

9 Kant did not accept this problem. He argued that a conflict of duties is ‘inconceivable’, as duties are universal and do not discriminate. Also, emotions or family ties should not get in the way. Answer the 4 questions on your sheet. ‘What would Kant do?’

10 Imagine that you are in the middle of a bush fire. Forest fires are ablaze around you and you can see a row of houses in flames. From the attic of the nearest house you hear a person calling for help. You are duty-bound to respond but you know your mother is stuck in a burning house at the other end of the street. What do you do?

11 Kant is firm. You must try to save the person in the nearest house. Your mother will have to wait. Why? Kant argued that the duty to save life is universal and therefore should not discriminate in favour of a loved one.

12 Conclusion To act morally is do to ones duty, and one’s duty is follow moral law. Kant argued that we should not be side-tracked by feeling and inclination. We should not act out of compassion. But it can only be our duty if we can physically do it. ‘Ought implies can’


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