Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Situation Ethics
- Situation ethics was most
famously championed by
Joseph Fletcher
(1905-1991).
- He believed that we should follow the
rules until we need to break them for
reasons of love.
- It is based on agape love (Christian
unconditional love), and says that
we should always do the most
loving thing in any situation.
- Fletcher rejected following
rules regardless (legalism)
and also the idea that we
should not have any rules
(antinomianism) and said
that we need to find a
balance between the two.
- Four Working Principles - when establishing his
version of situation ethics, Fletcher used four
key principles which he aimed to fulfil in writing
his theory:
- Pragmatism - it has to
work in daily life: it has
to be practical
- Relativism - there
should be no fixed
rules
- Positivism - it must put
faith before reasoning: "I
am a Christian, so what
should I do?"
- Personalism - people
should be at the
centre of the theory
- Six Fundamental Principles -
there are six fundamental things
that underlie Fletcher's Situation
Ethics:
- Love is the only
absolute - it is
intrinsically good
- Christian decision
making is based on
love
- Justice is love
distributed
- Love wants the
good for anyone,
whoever they are
- Only the end
justifies the
means
- Love is acted out
situationally not
prescriptively
- Advantages
- It uses rules to provide
framework but allows
people to break rules
to reflect life's
complexities
- Disadvantages
- It does not provide a
clear definition of what
love actaully is
- Some might say it is too subjective -
because decisions have to be made
from within the situation
- Agape love is too much to
aspire to and may be
polluted by a selfish
human tendency
- It is human
nature to love
family more than
strangers
- We do not
know whose
rules to follow