Applied Ethics: Theory to Practice
It may seem a large leap that theory would have an actual and pragmatic impact on real life, but explore this
Learning Activity to see just how practical theory can be in applied ethics.
From Many, Two Important Theoretical Perspectives
Because all ethical analysis and decision-making (for instance, analysis for applied ethical situations such as in business
and leadership) are grounded in foundational ideas, you should be familiar with two theoretical perspectives related to
the questions of ethics: the Deontological perspective and the Teleological perspective. These two categories of theories
offer some understanding and explanation about how one locates the rightness or wrongness of an action.
Lets replace the word teleological with the term consequentialism for a moment (granted some nuances are being
suspended for applied illustration purposes). The perspective of the consequentialist indicates that the morality of an
action is located in the outcome(s) or consequences of the action. Another way to think of this perspective is looking
toward Jeremy Benthams idea of Utilitarian ethics, which in substance, indicates that action is good if it results in good
utility for many or more (as weve heard it said the greatest good for the greatest number). In light of a teleological
perspective, one might do bad or harm by truth telling if the outcome is bad. You can hear in this perspective the
substantiation for the white-lie answer. It may be said that in the Teleological perspective, consequences or outcomes
are prime for locating morality.
In contrast, the Deontological perspective locates the rightness or wrongness in particular actions, generally
irrespective of outcomes/consequences. Immanuel Kants Categorical Imperative (obligation, duty, rightness,
wrongness regardless of context) indicates that actions are unconditionally right or wrong. For the duty-bound, there isIn the Learning Activity titled “Applied Ethics: Theory To Practice, (attached) we reviewed some principles and their lead theorists/ You will now apply what you learned in this activity/
Using the key principles discussed in the Learning Activity mentioned above, design a story where a fictional character in the spirit of Kant (Deontological perspective) and character in the spirit of Bentham (Utilitarian/Teleological perspective) discuss an ethical issue (you select the issue) in an informal setting/ This should be between 350-500 words/
The story should follow the following outline:
The Bartender presents the ethical issue/
The Kantian character presents an explanation of what the key factors are and offers a response/
The Bentham character counters with objections and a different explanation of what the key factors are and offers a response/
End with the Bartender returning to the duo, and summarizing each perspective (one sentence)/ Finally the Bartender prefers which perspective is preferable/
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