Ethics - Answers sustained and intentional reflection on morality and the moral life with analysis,
discernment, reasoning, and argument
Bioethics - Answers an interdisciplinary field of applied ethics that engages the complex moral problems
emerging from developments in medical science, biotechnology, and health care
Utiliarianism - Answers most prominent consequentialist theory. concentrates on the value of well-being
(analyzed in terms of pleasure, happiness, welfare, preference satisfaction, and the like). accepts only
one of the basic principles of ethics: the principle of utility = we ought always produce the maximal
balance of positive value over disvalue. greatest good for the greatest number. often disagree about
which values should be maximized
deontological ethics (Kantian) - Answers Also referred to as nonconsequentialist- theory of duty holding
that some features of actions other than or in addition to consequences make actions right or wrong
Natural law - Answers form of deontology. right actions are those that conform to the moral standards
embedded in nature and all reasonable people can discover, discern, and affirm them through human
reason. both theistic and naturalistic versions. overrides considerations of utility. supplies general moral
principles that can be applied to various situations
rights theory - Answers protect against oppression, unequal treatment, intolerance, insecurity, invasion
of privacy, and the like. many people now regard rights theory as the most important type of moral
theory. derived from modern democratic thinking and discourse. the positive rights that persons bear
are essential or primary for considering what is ethical action
casuistry/ethical pragmatism - Answers disenchanted with the idea of abstract ideas. attention to detail
of particular circumstances. moral accent should be on analyzing specific cases and then analogical
reasoning from paradigmatic cases. claims we tend to be more confident of judgments reached in
particular circumstances
divine command - Answers this is how most of the people on the ground of religious traditions
understand morality. 10 Commandments. clear ground of ethics beyond the self and the group. binding
on all people. source of most of the historic and long-standing moral norms in many societies. God/the
divine gives shape to the moral order as an expression of his reality/being/will
Revelation - Answers God as a communicator for human flourishing
Covenant - Answers made by God to the people of Israel
Prophets - Answers Abraham as first prophet, Malachi as last
Torah - Answers teaching/instruction, says very little about medical care
, Talmud - Answers 600 CE compilation of Mishna combined with Rabbinic commentary and decisions,
two versions (Palestinian and Babylonian)
Halakhah - Answers Jewish law as applied to Jewish living (responsorial, conversational, casuist, porous,
open-ended)
divine body ownership - Answers respect for life is fundamental. body belongs to God and is on a loan =
duty to care for the body and duty not to harm the body. body can be used for good or evil = bodily
pleasures are basically good as long as conformed to the constraints of the mitzvot. moral obligation to
heal self and others
creation - Answers God is the world's origin and source, all of it, including matter and the body. originally
created good
redemption - Answers deliverance from sin
image of God - Answers created in God's image and thus bears an indelible human dignity as a gift of
God. not dependent on any action, achievement, or status of the person
Islamic five pillars - Answers declaration of faith, daily prayers, charity, fasting, and pilgrimage
Qu'ran - Answers the words of God, final revelation of God
Shari'a - Answers Islamic law governing behavior = Qur'an + Sunnah + qiya's + ijma' . fundamental goals
= preservation of faith, life, mind, offspring, honor, and property
Fiqh - Answers human judicial decisions of Islamic scholars
Islamic Juridical Council's bioethics fatawa - Answers a formal ruling or interpretation on a point of
Islamic law given by a qualified legal scholar. usually issued in response to questions from individuals or
Islamic courts
the common morality - Answers "norms about right and wrong and human conduct that are so widely
shared that they form a stable social compact." the set of universal norms shared by all persons
committed to morality. applicable to all persons in all places. we appropriately judge all human conduct
by its standards
moral dilemma - Answers ethical realism holds that there do exist morally ambiguous cases, in which
different, justifiable moral norms are in conflict. has to be distinguished from: generally hard decisions,
practical conflicts with self-interest, and moral self-deception. moral resolution through a process of
discernment of the weightiest moral norm in a given situation. there still might be moral residue in ways
that require post-decision moral action
balancing/weighing - Answers the interplay between the four principles and the process of deciding
which one prevails in a given situation. the different principles have to be balanced, but reasons must be
adduced to determine the prevailing principle