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How We Decide in Moral Situations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 July 2014
Abstract
The role normative ethics has in guiding action is unclear. Once moral theorists hoped that they could devise a decision procedure that would enable agents to solve difficult moral problems. Repeated attacks by anti-theorists seemingly dashed this hope. Although the dispute between moral theorists and anti-theorists rages no longer, no decisive victor has emerged. To determine how we ought to make moral decisions, I argue, we must first examine how we do decide in moral situations. Intuitionism correctly captures the essence of the moral element in such situations, finding itself located somewhere between moral theory and anti-theory. In order that intuitionism may constitute an improvement over predecessors in normative ethics we must proceed with awareness of the limits imposed by the still dominant framework of modern moral theory. I argue that the deliberatively open system of intuitionism, interlocked in practice with prudential considerations, allows us to constructively move normative ethics beyond those limits.
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References
1 Representative works of the current debate are, on the particularist side, Dancy, Jonathan's Moral Reasons (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993)Google Scholar and his Ethics Without Principles (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004)Google ScholarPubMed and, on the generalist side, McKeever, Sean and Ridge, Michael's Principled Ethics: Generalism as a Regulative Ideal (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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5 Kant, Immanuel, Critique of Practical Reason, 3rd ed. trans. Beck, Lewis White (Upper Saddle River, N. J.: Prentice Hall, 1993), 8Google Scholar (emphasis added).
6 Utilitarianism will not be at the center of my discussion. This theory has numerous deliberation problems of its own. In fact, at one point these problems were so plentiful that utilitarians basically bowed out of the deliberation business, with Bales, R. Eugene' paper, ‘Act-utilitarianism: Account of Right-making Characteristics or Decision-making Procedure?’ American Philosophical Quarterly 8 (1971), 257–265Google Scholar taking the lead. Previously, everyone, including all utilitarians, thought the principle of utility afforded both an account of right making and provided a decision procedure. He claimed it need only be regarded as having the former. This soon became the consensus consequentialist position. See Pettit, Philip, Introduction to Consequentialism, Pettit, Philip (ed.) (London: Dartmouth Press, 1993), xviGoogle Scholar.
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31 Note that anti-theorists too are content letting the scene fade to black.
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36 When we ask what means serve the end of doing right, two broad ways of answering are likely to occur to us. We'll think of a satisficing solution, one that merely gets the job done: it enables one to do right. And we'll also think of an optimizing solution, a way to, yes, do right, but also do so with the best results practically possible.
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39 Op. cit. note 23, 22.
40 Ross, Op. cit. note 23, 4 is aware of this point.
41 Audi, Op. cit. note 20, 85. Ross says that for imperfect duties, following Aristotle, ‘The decision rests with perception’, Op cit. note 23, 42.
42 For my previous arguments for the agential form of this thesis, one cannot be a moral person without being prudent, see Kaspar, David, ‘Can Morality Do Without Prudence?’ Philosophia 39 (2011), 311–326CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Op cit. note 32, Chapter 8.
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44 Tactics are ways to satisfy a chosen end that might be realized within a situation. In themselves tactics are morally neutral. But either an immoral end or an immoral means for realizing a moral end, can make a tactic immoral. Here I only consider morally permissible tactics.
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46 To forestall a common objection here, I am not claiming that she must consciously and deliberately follow these principles at this time, just follow them. If she is a prudent agent by the time of the interview she has internalized them.
47 As Jonsen, Albert and Toulmin, Stephen state, two doctors ‘may offer different diagnoses and treatment proposals for one and the same case. When this happens no conclusive evidence or arguments need be available to choose between their “readings”; but this does not mean that their judgments are subjective or uncheckable’, The Abuse of Casuistry: A History of Moral Reasoning (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988), 41Google Scholar.
48 Hämäläinen, op. cit. note 2, 541.
49 For a way of doing this see my Op. cit. note 32, Chapter 6.
50 I draw here from Thomas Hurka, who makes the distinction between external and inherent, or internal, moral explanation and notes the recent dominance of the former in ethics, ‘Common Themes from Sidgwick to Ewing’, in Hurka, Thomas (ed.), Underivative Duty: British Moral Philosophers from Sidgwick to Ewing (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), 20–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
51 If it is agreed that morality indeed does depend on prudence, then for modern moral theories to be normatively complete there would need to be phronetic Kantianism, phronetic utilitarianism, etc.
52 I would like to thank the audience members at the 2013 Northern New England Philosophical Association Conference, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH for their helpful comments on an early draft of this paper.
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