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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Philosophy, Terms And Concepts > ethics
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ethics, Philosophy, Terms And Concepts

Related Category: Philosophy, Terms And Concepts

Another major difference in the approach to ethical problems revolves around the question of absolute good as opposed to relative good. Throughout the history of philosophy thinkers have sought an absolute criterion of ethics. Frequently moral codes have been based on religious absolutes. Immanuel Kant, in his categorical imperative, attempted to establish an ethical criterion independent of theological considerations. Rationalists (Plato, Baruch Spinoza, Josiah Royce) founded their ethics on a metaphysics.

All varying methods of building an ethical system pose the question of the degree to which morality is authoritative (i.e., imposed by a power outside the individual). If the criterion of morality is the welfare of the state (G. W. Hegel), the state is supreme arbiter. If the authority is a religion, then that religion is the ethical teacher. Hedonism, which equates the good with pleasure in its various forms, finds its ethical criterion either in the good of the individual or the good of the group. An egoistic hedonism (Aristippus, Epicurus, Julien de La Mettrie, Thomas Hobbes) views the good of the individual as the ultimate consideration. A universalistic hedonism, such as utilitarianism (Jeremy Bentham, James Mill), finds the ethical criterion in the greatest good for the greatest number.



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Aristippus
Sir Alfred Jules Ayer
Pierre-Simon Ballanche
Jeremy Bentham
bioethics
conscience
custom
John Dewey
Epicurus
hedonism
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Claude Adrien HelvEtius
Thomas Hobbes
Francis Hutcheson
Immanuel Kant
Julien Offray de La Mettrie
John Locke
Alasdair C. MacIntyre
James Mill
John Stuart Mill
George Edward Moore
norm
philosophy
Plato
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Josiah Royce
Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3d earl of
sin, in religion
Baruch Spinoza

Related Categories:

Philosophy and Religion > Philosophy


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