Philosophy & Ethics
Module 4: Virtue ethics and Care ethics
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Learning outcomes
At the end of this module, you should be able to:
• Describe the ethical theories of virtue ethics and care ethics
• Contrast these theories with utilitarianism and deontology
• Begin to apply these ethical theories to a case study involving AI
Images herein: Unsplash, Wiki
Ethics theories
1. Utilitarianism – consequence based
2. Deontology – rule based
3. Virtue ethics – character based
4. Ethics of care – relationship based
Principlism – simplified integration of 1-4
Images herein: Wiki commons and unsplash
Essay: questions?
Task 1: Argue in favour of the proposed use of AI (psychiatric hospital or child tracking) using either U or D (not both)
Task 2: Argue against (rebut) the argument in Task 1 (as if you written by a different person) using either VE or CE (not both)
Deontology – rules
Don’t lie or deceive Don’t steal
Show gratitude
Respect autonomy Don’t harm
Be beneficent Respect privacy
Can clash – if prima facie: which duty is more compelling?
E.g. white lie vs. major lie; small harm vs. big harm
© : Financial Times Virtue signalling
Who are your ‘moral heroes’?
: Perfection of moral character (śīla pāramitā)
Exemplary person, uprightness or right- seeing
Ethical models?
Virtue Ethics
Ethics of character
Duties and consequences too narrow:
more to ethical life
: vestige of religious rules (Christian commandments)
Ancient West: Aristotle (384-322 BCE)-
Nichomachean Ethics
Ancient East: Confucius, Buddha (both 6- 5th BCE)
Being a kind of person — praiseworthy, warrants respect, emulation
Ethics: aims not just at right action, but good way of being
Deontology/consequentialism: ignore centrality of feeling/emotion/attitude
Aretaic ethics: excellence of character (cf. intellect)
Kant: shopkeeper not ripping-off customers: pure duty/good will vs. caring about
Responsible Wellbeing https://medium.com/age-of-awareness/focusing-on-virtues-and-character-strengths-probably-the- smallest-but-most-decisive-step-towards-c36baaff6325
Justice Generosity Compassion Courage Temperance Gratitude Honesty Trustworthy Love
Glad for others’ success Humility
Stingy Callousness/cruelty Cowardice
No self-control/greed Ingratitude Mendacity Untrustworthy Hate/Indifference Envy
Impatience
Aristotle: Virtues (and Vices)
Dispositions or traits
Cultivated over time
Habit – settled dispositions
Trained as children – reward/punish/modeling
Can learn these traits
Can get better (towards perfection) or worse (corrupted)
Right feeling, right action, right way, right amount, to right people
Kant: ‘good will’/follow duty (NOT feeling/inclination) Aristotle: right attitudes/motivations/emotions Example: Visit sick friend
Good friend
Aristotle: Doctrine of Golden Mean
Right feeling/action/thoughts
Character traits: on a spectrum Virtues: the sweet spot
Excess and deficiency = vice Affected by context
Example: lazy student steals your hard work
How should you react and feel? What is the virtue here? The vice(s)?
Indifference—Righteous indignation—Spite
Trust in AI?
Gullible—-Right trust—Cynical
Affected by situation/context
https://www.itpro.com/technology/34263/can-you-trust-ai
productiveflourishing.com
Relation to duty
Criticism: VE doesn’t tell us what to do, only how to be
• Practicalwisdom(virtue)
• Applymoralideas/rulescontextually
• VEversatile,flexible,sensitivetosituations
What a virtuous person would do?
• Howdoweknowthat?
• Wefirstlearnfromeducation,training,school, parents
• Aristotle:youngpeopleandethics
• Andwebegintolooktomoralexemplars
• Moralrulesfollowfromthis
RosalindHursthouse(1943-)
Virtuous exemplars?
/ Stood up to Big Tech
Called for fairness, transparency, diversity in AI development
What virtues might they have? Just? Honest? Courageous?
Assessing tech: What would a virtuous person do or think about this?
Bloomberg. https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2018-bloomberg-50/
Flourishing: the good life
Aristotle: virtues are constitutive of good life Example:
Ben – pretends to be virtuous, but is greedy, callous, unjust, dishonest, unfaithful and has loads of fun
Lei – virtuous and good, but is poor and struggles with chronic illness
Without virtues: your life goes badly, even if rich, famous, successful
Ethical relationships part of good life Aristotle: happiness = flourishing =
eudaimonia
Socrates: ‘better to suffer evil than to do it’
: Techno-virtues
• “technological convergence: discrete technologies merging…magnify[ing] their scope and power”
• Need “context-adaptive moral reasoning”
• Phronesis. Not broad rules e.g. Kantian/U
• Technology
• Growing techno-social opacity
• Unpredictable consequences
• Future individuals – human, nonhuman
Need techno-social wisdom Has trans-cultural resonance
Will social media make us more or less ethical? What could a virtue ethicist say?
Vallor: avoid techno-utopianism, dystopianism, determinism
Criticism of VE (from U and D)
Virtuous people still need to act on/for reasons
Reasons include rules, duties, principles, concern for consequences/utility
No specific guidance on moral dilemmas
Duty or consequences are primary Character only valuable instrumentally
Care Ethics
Feminist ethics
: Moral development of children
Heinz’ wife: terminally ill
A chemist has life-saving drug
Overpriced at $20,000
Heinz cannot afford; can’t get a loan
Should he steal the drug from chemist?
Male vs female responses
Some boys: Steal drug!
• Human life more basic value than property
• Fairness
Some girls: Relationships and caring
• Talk to chemist and emphasize dire situation of wife – empathy
• Stealing>jail>wife left alone
Masculine vs feminine perspective Masculine: “ethics of justice” and “rights”
Kholberg: Masculine higher – based in detached thinking, rules, principles, consequences
In a Different Voice (1982)
Feminine voice – not equal to “gender”
Cf. rationalism, principles, severe impartiality, lack of emotion
Very critical of U and D!
Relational and interpersonal – emotions and actions
Attending, listening, loving, feeling, taking responsibility
Recognising vulnerability, powerlessness Protecting relationships
Joan Tronto
Care involves:
• (1) attentiveness: inclination to become aware of need
• (2) responsibility: willingness to respond to need
• (3) competence: skill providing good successful care
• (4) responsiveness: consideration of the position of others as they see it [empathy] and recognition of the potential for abuse in care
Care begins in close relations e.g. family Often face to face and embodied
Relationship: carer and cared-for – interdependence
All: might suddenly need care
Self-sufficiency myth (cf. Kant’s autonomous person)
Essential – healthy society
Part of VE?
But care central to good character/action
Criticisms of CE
Too vague (like VE)
CE: can also use principles, rules
Romanticises motherhood? Slave morality?
– Depicts carers (often women) as too self- sacrificing?
CE: Care should be mutual, not women only; carers need care too
Criticisms
Feminine perspective a stereotype?
– Manywomenstressimpartialjustice;men who stress care
CE: not saying that care is completely gendered
Parochial to own people/circle? Need impartial justice?
• To strangers, third-world, intersectional oppressions (e.g. black women)
CE: True, care often stronger for those we are in special relations with.
But: Care can lead to and be involved in justice (e.g. view others as children, parents, brothers, sisters in need of care)
And: other times of caring relations beyond one’s immediate circle
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