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Chapter 13: Objectives
Following are the main learning objectives from the chapter.
To help you coordinate your studies, these objectives are organized into sub-sections
(13-1, 13-2, etc.) and listed with the relevant page numbers from the textbook.
13-1 (pgs. 457-458)
Understand that moral reasoning is reasoning done in response to a moral
issue.
- Recognize that a moral issue is most often a normative one; arising
when one wonders what should be done.
- Understand that moral reasoning is often concerned with arguments for
a claim that that a person should do something.
- Recognize that moral reasoning is important even when morality is
considered to be a matter of opinion
13-2 (pgs. 458-463)
Understand that the conclusions of moral arguments about actions are
prescriptive claims and that these arguments must have at least one prescriptive claim as
a premise.
- Differentiate between prescriptive and descriptive claims.
- Recognize the words that are commonly contained within prescriptive
claims.
- Understand what the naturalistic fallacy is and why it is a fallacy.
13-3 (pgs. 463-466)
Recognize that inconsistency is a common fault in moral reasoning regardless
of the moral framework being used.
- Understand the different ways that inconsistency can apply to moral
reasoning.
13-4 (pgs. 466-472)
Understand that moral reasoning does not typically rest on straightforward
principles such as a burden of proof, rather people use a framework or perspective to
ground their arguments.
- Understand what moral relativism is and how its principles affect
moral reasoning.
- Differentiate between moral relativism and moral subjectivism.
- Understand what utilitarianism is and how its principles affect moral
reasoning.
- Understand what Kant's duty theory is and how its principles affect
moral reasoning.
- Understand what the categorical imperative is and its role in Kant's
duty theory.
- Understand the key differences between utilitarianism and Kant's duty
theory.
- Understand what divine command theory is and how its principles
affect moral reasoning.
- Understand what virtue ethics is and how its principles affect moral
reasoning.
13-5 (pg. 472)
Understand that moral deliberation uses the insights of the various moral
perspectives to clarify the ethical meaning of an act or situation.
13-6 (pgs. 472-480)
Realize that legal reasoning is interested in both the foundations of all law
and the interpretation of specific laws.
- Note the differences and similarities between moral and legal
reasoning.
- Understand the aspect of legal reasoning concerned with determining
what the law should be, how it should be formed, and what principles it should rest on.
- Understand what legal moralism is and how it applies to legal
reasoning.
- Understand what the harm principle is and how it applies to legal
reasoning.
- Understand what legal paternalism is and how it applies to legal
reasoning.
- Understand what the offense principle is and how it relates to legal
moralism.
- Understand the aspect of legal reasoning concerned with asking what
the law says and how it should be interpreted.
- Understand what an appeal to precedent is and how it applies to legal
reasoning.
13-7 (pgs. 480-490)
Understand how aesthetic reasoning employs one or more of the eight
principles in an attempt to produce reliable grounds for an aesthetic judgment.
- Realize that more than one of the eight principles can sometimes be
employed in a single argument.
- Understand what makes a good aesthetic argument.
- Understand how aesthetic principles are related to inductive
generalizations.
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