Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Christian Ethics
- Sources of moral authority
- The bible
- The church
- God
- 10 Commandments
- Conscience
- Natural Moral Law
- 10 Commandments
- Situation ethics
Anmerkungen:
- Joseph Fletcher has the idea that you need to relativise the absolute. This all came to him from a cabbie who said "sometimes you have to put your principles aside to do the right thing". This all came from the principles of Jesus and agape - doing the most loving thing.
- 4 working principles:
-Positivism
-Pragmatism
-Personalism
-Relativism
- 6 fundamental principles
-Nothing is intrinsically good except love.
-Replace the torah with the principle of love.
-Justice is love at work in the community.
-Love wills the good for the neighbour.
-Only the end (love) justifies the means.
-Loves decisions are made in the circumstances of each situation.
- Euthyphro
Anmerkungen:
- Is x good because God commanded it or does God command x because it is good?
- Relative
- God commands X
because it is good.
- Strengths
- Can be
adapted to
different
situations
- If everyone uses
relative morality, it
becomes absolute.
- Explains the
differences
between
cultures.
- Weaknesses
- The most
loving thing is
not always
clear.
- Decisions
take a long
time.
- Consequences
are unpredictable.
- Absolute
- X is good
because God
commands it
- Divine command theory
- Strengths
- Fixed.
Everyone
knows what
they're doing.
- Decisions are
made quickly.
- The majority can
agree with it.
- Weaknesses
- Different situations
- Unrealistic for
modern society
- Cultural relativism:
Different rights and
wrongs.
- Ethical Principles
- Jewish Law
- Old testament
- 10 Commandments
- Normally deontological
and absolute
- Jesus
- "Love thy neighbour"
- Agape
- St. Paul
- Puts Jesus'
teachings of
love into
action.
- Relative