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Universalism
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a concept that there are
universal values or set moral rules that apply to all creatures that can think.
Some basic values are universal. Some core norms are used in different
circumstances. It may lead to cultural imperialism.
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Relativism
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there are no universal
norms. All moral judgment have their origins either in societal or in
individual standards, and no single standard exists by which once can assess
the truth of a moral proposition. It is more respecting of diverse culture.
Human nature is so complex that we cannot say what moral systems fir best.
Diversity is too huge to unite people’s views about morality.
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Cultural relativism
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Culture dictates
values
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Subjective relativism
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All norms are
subjective.
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Ethical Objectivism
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(Ayn Rand) holds that
reality exists
independently of consciousness and that individual persons are in direct
contact with reality through sensory perception. Human being can gain
objective
knowledge from perception through inductive and deductive logic.
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Ethical Subjectivism
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the belief that all ethical thought and
judgments
about human conduct are shaped by an in many ways limited to perception.
Ethical statements express the feelings, beliefs, preferences, and
attitudes of
the persons or groups making those statements.
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Hedonism
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the highest value is
pursuing pleasure. Pleasure
of happiness is the highest good.
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Descriptive (psychological) hedonism
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only pleasure and pain
motivate us. All human
motivation is ultimately aimed at maximizing the net hedonic value of
one’s own
life.
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all and only
pleasure has value or worth and all and only pain has disvalue.
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Eudemonism
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a system of ethics that evaluates actions
in terms of their capacity
to produce happiness. Places human happiness and the complete life of
the
individual at the center of ethical concern.
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Utilitarianism
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moral worth of an action is determined
solely by its utility in
providing happiness or pleasure as summed among all beings. It is a form
of
consequentialism which suggests that the moral worth of an action is
determines
by its outcome.
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Hedonic calculus
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a theory proposed by
Jeremy Bentham. A correct
utilitarian decision procedure begins by considering the person most to
be
affect by the action in question, and then considering the pleasures or
pains
to be felt by that person along the first six parameters (the extent or
number
of persons involved, the purity or the suffering linked to labor, the
intensity
of pleasure, the durability, the fruitfulness, remoteness and
certainty).
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Rule utilitarianism
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following rules that would bring more
happiness.
Evaluating which rule to follow.
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Act utilitarianism
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individual actions performed in specific
circumstances. Evaluating an action.
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Consequentialism
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normative properties of an action depend
only on
consequences, which are the basis for any valid moral judgment about
that
action. The belief that there are no stable values and they constantly
change.
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