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KANTIANISM
• What makes a right act right?
• -it is certain features in the act itself or the rule of which the act
is a token or example that determine the rightness or wrongness
of an act
• -the end never justifies the means
2 kinds of deontological theories
i) act deontological system
ii) rule deontological system
ACT DEONTOLOGICAL SYSTEM
• -right and wrong based on conscience or our intuitions or a choice
apart from any rules
• -conscience-to discover the morally right or wrong to do
• -or nothing is right or wrong until we choose for ourselves what is
right or wrong
Its disadvantages
• -it is hard to see how any argument could take place with an
intuitionist
• -the act of abortion
• 2-it seems that rules are necessary to all reasoning, including moral
reasoning
• 3-different situations seem to share common features, so it would be
inconsistent for us to prescribe different moral actions
RULE DEONTOLOGICAL SYSTEM
• -it accepts the principle of universality as well as the notion that,
in making moral judgments, we appealing to principles or rules
• It comprises of 2 types :
-rule intuitionism & rationalism or objectivism & absolitism
KANT’S RULE DEONTOLOGICAL
SYSTEM
INTRODUCTION
• -1724-1804
• -was an absolutist as well as rationalist
• -reason can be use to work out a consistent, non overridable
sets of moral principles
• -the parents were Pietists in the Lutheran church
• --who emphasized sincerity, deep feeling, & moral life rather
than theological doctrine
• --it is the religion of the heart, not the head
• --Kant emphasized the head as much as the heart
3 FACTORS INFLUENCES
1- Pietism
2- the work of Rousseau (1712-1778) on human freedom
• --the importance of man’s dignity
• --the intrinsic value of man apart from any function they might
perform
• --it is not correct belief/ result that really matter but inner
goodness
• --the idea is that God judges us not on how successful we are in
accomplishing our tasks but how earnestly we have lived
according to our principle
• --the good will as the sole intrinsic good in life
3- the debate bet. Rationalism & empiricism
• -rationalist claimed that pure reason could tell us how the world is,
independent of experience
• -empiricist denied that man has any innate ideas and argued that all
k/ledge comes from experience
• -with regard to moral k/ledge,
• -the rationalist-man’s k/ledge of moral principles is a type of metaphysical
k/ledge, implanted in us by God, and discoverable by reason as it deduces
general principles about human nature
• -the empiricist-morality is founded entirely on the contingencies of
human nature and based on desire
• -as for Kant, it is not desire that ground morality but our rational will
• -the removal of moral truth from contingencies & empirical observation to
the necessary, absolute, universal truth
Kant’s CI
3 formulations of CI
1) THE PRINCIPLE OF MAXIM AND UNIVERSAL LAW
• -act only according to that maxim (general rule that one intends to act) by
which u can at the same time will that it would become a universal law
(an objective principle)
• --if u could consistently will that e/one would act on given maxim-that
shows moral responsibility of action
• -if not then the type of action is morally wrong
• -for Kant,
• --what make a person morally good is to have a good will.
• --what kind of intention makes a person morally good is the notion of duty
• --what does it mean for a person to act “from duty” is to resolve to do
whatever the moral law obligates one to do, out of respect for the law
2) THE PRINCIPLE OF END
• -act as to treat humanity, whether in your own person or in that
of any other, in every case as an end & never as a means
• --man as a rational being is having value which entails that he
never be exploited
3) THE PRINCIPLE OF AUTONOMY
• -every rational being is able to regard oneself as a maker of
universal law; that is, we do not need an external authority-be it
God, the state, the culture, an individual- to determine the
nature of the moral law
• In other words, someone who is ideally rational will legislate
exactly the same universal moral principle
ISLAMIC CRITICISM
1) Man as an independence source of moral values
• -human rationality is central to the whole idea of morality
• -though he is not the only rational, others are not human
2) Its moral principles/ maxims is subjective
• -any type of action in any type of circumstances for a reason( be acted on
by all rational being in similar circumstances) doesn’t reflect the
universality
3) Good will as the universal of lawgiver
• -to act morally is to freely choose n make the moral decision
• -without look to society, gov, religious
• leader, God for our moral decision, desire, preference for these will end
up to self love
INTENTION – ISLAMIC VIEW
a) It include of 3 elements :
i) to u/stand of what one is doing(knowledge)
ii) to want to do it(will)
iii) to want it precisely bcoz it is comanded
b) Intention as a condition of validity
• (x knowledge) X (x will) = x responsibility
• unconscious X involuntary act= x qualified for good or bad
• conscious X involuntary act=x qualified for good or bad
c) Intention and nature of moral action
• good/bad intention rely on its agreement /disagreement
with the law
• -it disregard the absolute good without restriction (to
justify error as virtue)good intention X bad action= ?
• Bad intention X good action= ?
d) Its prevalence (commonness) over the action
• -Intention = 2maintain purity of the heart
• -Act =2 develop the wellbeing of the fellow man
• ---decision making faculty + power of execution
CONCLUSION
• Does it enough by itself????????
• Action X (intention-x)=?
• Action X (intention-flawed)=?
• Bad action X (intention-good)=?
• Action X (

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Kantianism

  • 1. KANTIANISM • What makes a right act right? • -it is certain features in the act itself or the rule of which the act is a token or example that determine the rightness or wrongness of an act • -the end never justifies the means 2 kinds of deontological theories i) act deontological system ii) rule deontological system
  • 2. ACT DEONTOLOGICAL SYSTEM • -right and wrong based on conscience or our intuitions or a choice apart from any rules • -conscience-to discover the morally right or wrong to do • -or nothing is right or wrong until we choose for ourselves what is right or wrong Its disadvantages • -it is hard to see how any argument could take place with an intuitionist • -the act of abortion • 2-it seems that rules are necessary to all reasoning, including moral reasoning • 3-different situations seem to share common features, so it would be inconsistent for us to prescribe different moral actions
  • 3. RULE DEONTOLOGICAL SYSTEM • -it accepts the principle of universality as well as the notion that, in making moral judgments, we appealing to principles or rules • It comprises of 2 types : -rule intuitionism & rationalism or objectivism & absolitism
  • 4. KANT’S RULE DEONTOLOGICAL SYSTEM INTRODUCTION • -1724-1804 • -was an absolutist as well as rationalist • -reason can be use to work out a consistent, non overridable sets of moral principles • -the parents were Pietists in the Lutheran church • --who emphasized sincerity, deep feeling, & moral life rather than theological doctrine • --it is the religion of the heart, not the head • --Kant emphasized the head as much as the heart
  • 5. 3 FACTORS INFLUENCES 1- Pietism 2- the work of Rousseau (1712-1778) on human freedom • --the importance of man’s dignity • --the intrinsic value of man apart from any function they might perform • --it is not correct belief/ result that really matter but inner goodness • --the idea is that God judges us not on how successful we are in accomplishing our tasks but how earnestly we have lived according to our principle • --the good will as the sole intrinsic good in life
  • 6. 3- the debate bet. Rationalism & empiricism • -rationalist claimed that pure reason could tell us how the world is, independent of experience • -empiricist denied that man has any innate ideas and argued that all k/ledge comes from experience • -with regard to moral k/ledge, • -the rationalist-man’s k/ledge of moral principles is a type of metaphysical k/ledge, implanted in us by God, and discoverable by reason as it deduces general principles about human nature • -the empiricist-morality is founded entirely on the contingencies of human nature and based on desire • -as for Kant, it is not desire that ground morality but our rational will • -the removal of moral truth from contingencies & empirical observation to the necessary, absolute, universal truth
  • 7. Kant’s CI 3 formulations of CI 1) THE PRINCIPLE OF MAXIM AND UNIVERSAL LAW • -act only according to that maxim (general rule that one intends to act) by which u can at the same time will that it would become a universal law (an objective principle) • --if u could consistently will that e/one would act on given maxim-that shows moral responsibility of action • -if not then the type of action is morally wrong • -for Kant, • --what make a person morally good is to have a good will. • --what kind of intention makes a person morally good is the notion of duty • --what does it mean for a person to act “from duty” is to resolve to do whatever the moral law obligates one to do, out of respect for the law
  • 8. 2) THE PRINCIPLE OF END • -act as to treat humanity, whether in your own person or in that of any other, in every case as an end & never as a means • --man as a rational being is having value which entails that he never be exploited 3) THE PRINCIPLE OF AUTONOMY • -every rational being is able to regard oneself as a maker of universal law; that is, we do not need an external authority-be it God, the state, the culture, an individual- to determine the nature of the moral law • In other words, someone who is ideally rational will legislate exactly the same universal moral principle
  • 9. ISLAMIC CRITICISM 1) Man as an independence source of moral values • -human rationality is central to the whole idea of morality • -though he is not the only rational, others are not human 2) Its moral principles/ maxims is subjective • -any type of action in any type of circumstances for a reason( be acted on by all rational being in similar circumstances) doesn’t reflect the universality 3) Good will as the universal of lawgiver • -to act morally is to freely choose n make the moral decision • -without look to society, gov, religious • leader, God for our moral decision, desire, preference for these will end up to self love
  • 10. INTENTION – ISLAMIC VIEW a) It include of 3 elements : i) to u/stand of what one is doing(knowledge) ii) to want to do it(will) iii) to want it precisely bcoz it is comanded b) Intention as a condition of validity • (x knowledge) X (x will) = x responsibility • unconscious X involuntary act= x qualified for good or bad • conscious X involuntary act=x qualified for good or bad
  • 11. c) Intention and nature of moral action • good/bad intention rely on its agreement /disagreement with the law • -it disregard the absolute good without restriction (to justify error as virtue)good intention X bad action= ? • Bad intention X good action= ? d) Its prevalence (commonness) over the action • -Intention = 2maintain purity of the heart • -Act =2 develop the wellbeing of the fellow man • ---decision making faculty + power of execution
  • 12. CONCLUSION • Does it enough by itself???????? • Action X (intention-x)=? • Action X (intention-flawed)=? • Bad action X (intention-good)=? • Action X (