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Ethics Notes: A2 Religious Studies (OCR)

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This is a comprehensive set of notes covering all of the Ethics content in A2 Level Religious Studies (OCR). Alongside the taught content, there are detailed arguments to use in exam essays, with full names of scholars to back up these arguments. There are also logical counter-arguments that can be used to support/disprove arguments in exam essays. I created these notes, which helped me to achieve an A* in Religious Studies, which included receiving a mark of 117 out of 120 in one of the papers. While these notes are specific to this particular exam and exam board, the information can be used to supplement learning in other exam boards. All A2 Ethics content is covered in these notes, which are: Meta ethics Conscience Sexual Ethics

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Meta-ethics
Ethical standpoints:
 Absolutism – morals are fixed and unchanging
 Relativism – moral truths are not fixed, changes according to time/place etc.
 They don’t disagree about what is moral, but what it means to make a moral statement
 Meta ethics – focuses on the language of ethics
o Concerned how we come to know morals
 Cognitive statements – when a moral can be shown to be true or false
o Generally something that is uncontroversial
 Non-cognitive – a moral statement that is subjective to one’s feelings
 Moral Realism – view that moral properties (good/bad) exist
 Moral anti-realism – the view that moral properties do not exist
Naturalism:
 Everything arises from natural properties and causes
 Morals are fixed absolutes
o Can be observed as part of the universe
 Aristotle – goodness is eudaimonia
o Flourishing is a factual feature of natural organisms – clear to see there is a difference
between a plant that flourishes and one that doesn’t
 Bentham – goodness = pleasure – it is a natural property of natural creatures
o Agreed w Aristotle -just removed telos as it is an unscientific concept
 F.H. Bradley and Phillipa Foot – morals can be perceived in the world the same way other features
are identified
 Good and Bad are absolute facts of the natural world
 Morals are not a matter of opinion
o They are objectively true
 Expressing a moral truth is a part of the reality of the universe
o Therefore not an opinion
 Link: Natural Law and Aquinas
o God-given natural order can be discovered through reasoning and observation
o Telos – goodness comes from fulfilling a natural purpose
 Bradley – morals are observable in the world
o Ethics are explained by concrete in reality
 Ethical statements and non-ethical statements are the same
o Non-ethical statement – Hitler was the leader of the Nazis
o Ethical statement – Hitler was a bad man
 Ethical statements are facts because of the empirical evidence
 A statement can only have meaning if it can be verified empirically
 Bertrand Russell – took Moore to have refuted naturalism
o Moral truths exits but nothing extraordinary is required for them to be true
David Hume’s criticisms:
 Moral good and evil cannot be distinguished through reason (reason is the slave of the passions)
 Factual statement based on observations cannot lead to a subjective moral statement
 The Is/Ought problem
o No amount of fact is sufficient to lead to an ethical decision
o Naturalism is not a valid deduction – doesn’t mean pleasure is good thus we ought to
maximise pleasure
Phillipa Foot’s defence:
 When we call a person ‘just’ or ‘honest’ we refer to something

, o Evidence backs these up
 Virtues are observed by watching how a person acts
o Honest person does honest things – thus we can perceive moral absolutes
 Draws on Kropotkin’s example
o Anthropologist who studied Malayan people under strict instructions to not take photos
o Anthropologist has the opportunity to do it but stops himself because of his promise
 Rules are natural and absolute
o Humans have developed ways to live well together and established rules to ensure people
live happily
Weaknesses of naturalism:
 Right and wrong are subjective not objective
o Humans must exist to determine how we should live
 Regardless of whether a situation may have evidence support that it is right, it may break the law
 Do ethical/moral situations have evidence?
 J.L Mackie – rules are not hard facts, accepted to varying degrees by all inside an institution
Intuitionism:
 G.E. Moore – believed that we should do the things that causes most good to exist
o If naturalism were true, the result would be illogical
o If goodness = pleasure, that is essentially saying pleasure = pleasure
 Moral truths are indefinable but self-evident through intuition
o Rejected utilitarianism – can’t quantify and define good
 Good is a simple notion – it is as simple as yellow
o Cannot break down good to anything more than good – ceases to be simple
o Good is indefinable – ‘good is good’
 Intrinsically good things exist for their own sake and can be recognised
 Attempts to define good as something that can be verified/falsified is to commit the naturalistic
fallacy
o Influenced by Is/Ought
 Cannot identify goodness with a natural quality
 H.A. Prichard – reason collects facts and intuition determines which course of action to follow
 Distinguished between
o General thinking (reasoning) – assesses the facts of a situation
o Moral thinking – immediate intuition about the right thing to do
 Recognised that different people have different intuitions about what is right
 W.D. Ross – what is right is unique
o One can never know all the facts of a situation – use intuition to make judgements
 Certain types of actions are right
o Prima Facie Duties – fidelity, reparation, justice and beneficence
Weaknesses:
 Moore doesn’t explain nor prove how we know good through intuition alone
 How can we be sure our intuitions are correct – what if they conflict
 J.L. Mackie – argues that morality is not about what a person believes is intuitively right
o Is focused around doing something about it
Emotivism:
 A.J. Ayer and the Vienna Circle
o Drew on the thinking of Hume
 Ayer believed there are three types of statements
o Logical (analytical), factual (synthetic) and moral
o Moral language doesn’t have absolute meaning
 Emotivism is ethical non-naturalism – rejects the view that morals tell you about the external world
 Morals cannot be verified through science or maths

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