This document discusses the relationship between ethics and other fields of study. It begins by defining ethics as the study of human conduct and morality. It then discusses how ethics relates to and differs from other disciplines like logic, psychology, sociology, economics, law, religion, and professional codes of conduct. While ethics investigates human behavior from a moral perspective, these other fields study other aspects of human nature and behavior but are still connected to ethics. The document provides examples of how each field both overlaps with and distinguishes itself from the study of ethics.
This document discusses the relationship between ethics and other fields of study. It begins by defining ethics as the study of human conduct and morality. It then discusses how ethics relates to and differs from other disciplines like logic, psychology, sociology, economics, law, religion, and professional codes of conduct. While ethics investigates human behavior from a moral perspective, these other fields study other aspects of human nature and behavior but are still connected to ethics. The document provides examples of how each field both overlaps with and distinguishes itself from the study of ethics.
This document discusses the relationship between ethics and other fields of study. It begins by defining ethics as the study of human conduct and morality. It then discusses how ethics relates to and differs from other disciplines like logic, psychology, sociology, economics, law, religion, and professional codes of conduct. While ethics investigates human behavior from a moral perspective, these other fields study other aspects of human nature and behavior but are still connected to ethics. The document provides examples of how each field both overlaps with and distinguishes itself from the study of ethics.
This document discusses the relationship between ethics and other fields of study. It begins by defining ethics as the study of human conduct and morality. It then discusses how ethics relates to and differs from other disciplines like logic, psychology, sociology, economics, law, religion, and professional codes of conduct. While ethics investigates human behavior from a moral perspective, these other fields study other aspects of human nature and behavior but are still connected to ethics. The document provides examples of how each field both overlaps with and distinguishes itself from the study of ethics.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 44
THE RELATIONSHIP OF ETHICS
WITH OTHER SCIENCES AND CHAPTER 3
OTHER PHASES OF HUMAN LIFE
INTRODUCTION Ethics is a branch of philosophy that studies the nature and the morality of human conduct. To some extent, Ethics is related to other sciences because it also deals with investigation of the nature of man as a rational being and a being in relation with other beings. But unlike other sciences, the focus and the locus of Ethics is to study man’s nature and his behavior from the standpoint of morality. The material object of Ethics is the human conduct and the formal object is morality. OBJECTIVES At the end of this chapter, the students are expected to: 1. understand the scope of ethics as a science that investigates the nature of the human conduct 2. distinguish ethics from other sciences that study man’s nature and behavior 3. differentiate ethics from etiquette and the professional codes of conduct KEY TERMS: Etiquette Professional Codes of Conduct Sociology Economics Law Religion Moral Theology 1. RELATIONSHIP OF ETHICS WITH OTHER SCIENCES (cf. Felix M. Montemayor, 1994. Ethics the Philosophy of Life. Mandaluyong City: National Book Store, Inc., pp. 8-12 and Ramon B. Agapay, 1991. Ethics and the Filipino. Mandaluyong City: National Book Store, Inc. pp. 4-6.) The following discussion is focused on how Ethics, as a science which studies the nature of man and the human conduct, is especially related to other sciences which likewise deal with the study of human nature and human conduct. 1. ETHICS AND LOGIC Ethics is the study of correct action or doing, while Logic studies the process of correct and organized thinking. Doing follows thinking. Logic therefore is aimed at the right thinking and Ethics is aimed at the right acting or right doing and behaviour. Based on perceiving information, Ethics focuses first and foremost on the demands of the subjective human world, or world of people and relationships. In communication, ethics focuses and studies people’s feelings and emotional states based on nonverbal information and how things are said. Logic is focused on the demands of the material, nonhuman world, or world of “things” in one’s environment. In communication, Logic focuses on the studies what is done and said, or the content of one’s speech. On intellectual qualities, Ethics is people-oriented while Logic is task-oriented. Ethics is focused on enhancing relationships, modifying content and forms of speech to match or contradict what others expect to hear. Logic is focused on not misleading a person and giving him correct information. Lastly, on behavioural relationships, Ethics shows people’s feelings for their partners directly through emotions; while Logic shows their feelings for their partners by doing things for them. 2. ETHICS AND PSYCHOLOGY Both Ethics and Psychology deal with the study of man and his behavior. However, Psychology studies how man behaves, while Ethics how man ought to behave. Psychology is not interested in the morality of human behavior, while Ethics is concerned with man’s moral obligation or the result of his behavior. Ethics is the study of human behavior from the perspective of morality. Psychology, on the other hand, is the scientific study of mental and behavioral characteristics, associated with a particular kind of behavior. 3. ETHICS AND SOCIOLOGY Sociology deals with the study of the social order while Ethics deals with the study of moral order in the society. There is no social order if there is no moral order. Therefore, the foundation of any society depends on the moral values of people and their perspective concept of what is good and bad in human relationships. Society depends on Ethics for its underlying principles. Sociology deals with human relations in a society, but human relations are based on proper order and proper order comes only with the proper observance of moral laws and principles which regulate the actions of men and women in a community. 4. ETHICS AND ECONOMICS Man supports himself by earning a living. Earning a living to support his expenses makes a man an economic being. Economics as a science deals with the study of wages, labor, production and distribution of wealth. The study of these issues also involves relationships among individuals. For example, wages: between employer and employee; production: between seller and costumer. These fiduciary relationships must be governed by human values that can only be understood in the light of moral principles and the nature of values themselves. At the heart of these relationships are moral norms and moral rules that should guide people’s behavior as they relate with others. Without these moral norms and moral values, harmonious relationships between and among parties cannot exist. According to Charles K. Wilber(1986), there are three ways in which Ethics enters economics. First, economists have ethical values that help shape the way they do economics. This builds into the core of economic theory a particular view of how the economy does work and how it should work. Second, economic actors (consumers, workers, business owners) have ethical values that shape their behaviour. Third, economic institutions and policies impact people differentially and thus, ethical evaluations, in addition to economic evaluation, are important. 2. RELATIONSHIP OF ETHICS WITH OTHERS PHASES OF HUMAN LIFE The study of Ethics crosses religious and cultural boundaries and is directed at the question of how critical decisions are to be made so that an organization may work best together, to build a community and social relationships in a positive and productive way. How we live ethically becomes more important as we are required to make complex decisions concerning costumer relations, employer-employee relationships and other business issues. 5. ETHICS AND LAW Ethics and law are closely related. Ethics deals with morality, and when we speak of morality, we mean primarily the moral law. Law may be defined crystallized ethics. Law and morality presuppose the concepts of right or wrong, good and bad, even the rules of conduct. However, there is a difference between what is moral and what is legal. Laws are intended to regulate the external actions of man while ethics investigates and probes the internal disposition of man, such as his motivations and his thoughts. Though law often embodies ethical principles, law and ethics are far from co-extensive. Many acts that would be widely condemned as unethical are not prohibited by law - lying or betraying the confidence of a friend, for example. A man can also commit a thousand adulteries in his mind, yet that same person cannot be legally or criminally be guilty because this exercise is innate and private to the person himself. Though he may not be legally or criminally liable for entertaining adultery in his thoughts, that same person can be morally responsible for entertaining adulterous intent and motives in his thoughts. Law therefore is focused on external regulations of man’s action while ethics is concerned with the investigation of the internal disposition of man from the moral perspective. 6. ETHICS AND RELIGION Ethics is a discipline or set of moral principles and values governing an individual or institutional behavior. Religion generally refers to the service and worship of God (or some other object) and is typically expressed as a personal or institutional set of beliefs, attitudes, and practices. Ethics evaluates the behavior of man against his values regardless of the source of those values. While religion certainly can create an impact on individuals and may actually include mandates for ethical behavior, it is a distinct concept from ethics. It is however, in the practice of religion that ethics and religion may overlap. Religion and ethics are two phases of human activity which are closely related. Both ethics and religion are based on the same postulates, e.g., they both suggest and assume the existence of God who created everything, man’s freewill and the immortality of the soul. Moreover, ethics and religion have the same end or purpose – that is, the attainment of man’s happiness in this life and beyond. Lastly, ethics and religion prescribe right living as the means of attaining the goal of man in this world. Authentic ethics cannot be separated from the existence of God. If there is morality, there must be a moral law; and if there is a moral law, there must be a lawgiver, and this ultimate lawgiver can only be God Himself. Ethics and religion likewise presuppose the concept of immortality of man’s existence, e.g., that there is life after death. For the reason, we believe that the soul of the person which continues to exist even after physical death, is a soul that is immortal. Lastly, ethics and religion both seek the absolute truth. Ethics seeks the absolute truth by using human reason alone, while religion tries to understand this same absolute truth by virtue of one’s faith and his adherence to divine revelation. In this case, faith is our response to God’s disclosure to us. 7. ETHICS AND THE PROFESSIONAL CODES OF CONDUCT The era of globalization has created a need for specialized skills and knowledge. This is brought about by paradigm shifts in almost all facets of human activities that have resulted into a more complex society that we today. Full automation has almost taken over a lot of jobs done by an unskilled labor force that in turn, creates a demand for workers with special skills. The need for specialized skills and knowledge in business has created a trend which prods people and organizations to be identified with a particular profession basically because it brings with it prestige, a sense of respect, personal esteem and status symbol. Based on Webster’s Dictionary, the meaning of professional is relating to or characteristic of a profession; engaged in one of the professions; participating for gain in an activity not engaged in by amateurs. Professionalism on the other hand is the conduct that characterizes a profession or a professional person; or it can also be the pursuit of a profession for gain or livelihood, e.g., as a manager, engineer or as a lawyer. The words “profession” and ‘‘professional’’ imply public declaration with force of a promise. Professions are group which declare in a public manner that their members will act in certain ways according to their profession and that the same group and in some instances, the society may discipline those who fail to conform its prescribed ways. The traditional professions include medicine, law, education, and clergy. Carpenters, plumbers, barbers, athletes, gardeners, beautician and even soldiers may be considered professionals because they have extensive knowledge and training of their crafts and they are also paid for the practice of it. These “professionals,” however, may undergo extensive training but what they do can’t be classified as a profession. Membership of a profession requires sophisticated skills and extensive training as well as advanced education so that they become competent in their line of work. The medical and legal professions fit the description of the word profession because the skills of lawyers and doctors cannot be mechanized and require good judgement to apply the appropriate treatment/advice to their patients/clients. There is also the trust or secrecy that is shared by the doctor/lawyer with their patients/clients that is not observed with other professionals. What makes the job of the medical and legal professions important as they are expected to serve the good of the public or society. This is also the main reason that constitutes to their being in the group of professionals. Members of the profession create their own set of rule; set standards for practice of the profession, and at the same time discipline their own members. This set of standards of the profession is reflected in their own professional codes of conduct. A professional code of ethics is a set of behavioral guidelines that members of a profession are required by their association to observe in the course of their professional practice. These guidelines, in general terms, prescribe responsibilities that members must adhere to and questionable situations in which they must not be involved. In some cases, some members must be sanctioned for violation of the code. These sanctions may include the following: Payment of a fine; Payment of the cost of any investigation; Reprimand; Imposition of conditions of membership; Suspension from membership; and Expulsion from membership. 8. ETHICS AND ETIQUETTE The word etiquette came from a French word which means ticket. During the medieval times , when people visit the palace of their king, they were required to follow in-house instructions that were posted (ticket) in the different areas of the palace. Hence, the word etiquette practically means rules and conduct of behavior that are supposed to be followed in special situations and circumstances, including one’s visit to the palace of the king. Today, the word etiquette refers to a special code of behavior or courtesy, like saying “thank you,” “you are welcome,” and saying “congratulations” to the groom and “best wishes” the bride, and the like. Although the rules of etiquette are generally non- moral in character, the violation of these rules of etiquette however may have moral implications. For example, a boss and his secretary develop a special friendship in the workplace and the boss, because of this closeness to the secretary now fondly calls the same secretary as “sweetheart.” This scenario in the workplace may have tacit moral implications if, for example, the wife of the boss may drop by one day at her husband’s office and discovers that her husband calls his secretary “sweetheart.” This definitely will create a suspicion on the part of the wife. However, the scrupulous observance of the rules of etiquette will not make a person moral. In fact, it can even hide or camouflage important moral issues. For instance the Civil Rights issue of racial discrimination in the U.S. in the late 1950s and 1960s when the white Americans claimed superiority over the African Americans and other minorities. During this time, the Americans were taught, as part of their etiquette, that when a white man enters a bus with no available seat for him, it was imperative for the black person or the minority to offer his seat to the white man because people thought it was a proper thing to do during those times. The black Americans and the other minorities were made to believe it was the proper etiquette. The real moral issue, however, was racial discrimination. 9. ETHICS AND EDUCATION Education is defined as an instruction or training by which people learn to develop and use their mental, moral and physical powers and abilities. It is also one way of gaining experience about human life. Since man however, is primarily a rational moral being, the purpose of education is to perfect the moral character in man. A great educator once said “education is coextensive with life.” Hence, we can say that ethics is life because it is the one that gives life its direction, purpose, and meaning. 10. ETHICS AND ART Art is concerned with the use of imagination to make things of aesthetic significance. Ethics is aimed at conforming to an accepted standard of good behavior. Ethics also stands for moral goodness, art, and beauty.
It may be difficult to ascertain whether a piece of art
which is offensive to morals can be considered beautiful. Both true art and true ethics have same aim: That is, to arouse and to inspire the noble emotions of man, thereby creating no conflict at all. Consequently, an art which arouses the lower impulses of man defeats the very purpose of art.