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Ethical Issues in Computer Science CSCI 328, Fall 2013 Session 3 The Dialectic Method
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Descriptive (Empirical Claims)
Descriptive claims give facts that can be tested or verified. Examples: The car is in the driveway. XX% of the American public favor healthcare reform. All societies consider some domain of life private. (This one would be hard to test). Others?
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Normative (prescriptive) claims
Normative claims state what people should do or what ought to be the case. Examples: Speech on the internet should not be censored. All societies should keep some domains of life private. Others? These cannot be verified by examining societies. They make a recommendation. Empirical evidence may be used to analyze and evaluate them.
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Empirical claims alone are not enough
Normative claims cannot be supported by simply pointing to the facts about what people do: Examples: Throughout history some people have intentionally killed other people. Therefore? Downloading proprietary music is commonly done. These are not adequate arguments.
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The Dialectic Method Normative claims are formed into arguments.
(Argument: A claim and a set of reasons to justify the claim). Arguments are examined for: Consistency Plausibility Coherence Fit with ordinary experience Fit with empirical information
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Importance of the Dialectic Method
First step is to move from unreflective beliefs and gut feelings to claims connected to a value that others accept. Example: "Censorship is wrong." Why? Is it always wrong? Specific cases? 2. Critical examination of beliefs can lead to change in belief OR to a stronger and better understood beliefs. Claims should be consistent from one argument to the next. Example: Views on abortion and capital punishment.
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Example of the Dialectic Method
Euthanasia. Claim: Euthanasia is wrong Reason for claim: Test claim in a variety of cases: Test claim in different types of cases: Modify claim:
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Practical Ethics is like Design
If you give design specifications to several groups of engineers, each group will come up with a different design. There is often more than one good solution. There are also solutions that a clearly wrong.
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Ethical Relativism Claim: Ethical beliefs, rules and practices vary from culture to culture and from time to time. Empirical support: Cultures vary in what they consider right and wrong. Morals change over time Moral beliefs are influenced by how and by whom one is raised. Questions: Is it possible that universal norms underlie the disparate rules/practices? Is this the way things ought to be?
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Problems with Ethical Relativism
Normative claim: One should act in conformance with one's society. What is wrong with this rule? 2. Alternative claim: It is wrong to judge other cultures by the standards of your own. 3. Ethical relativism does not provide much help in making moral decisions. Why?
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