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Study Guide for the 1st Ethics Quiz
The quiz will consist of a number of
short answer questions. For each of the philosophers we have covered, you should
be able to give an account of their basic claims and the arguments that
they give for these claims. You
should be able to apply their ethical theories to a concrete situation.
You should also know some major criticisms that can be offered of each
philosopher. I may give you a
quotation from one of the philosophers that we have studied and ask you to
explain that quotation. If you have had any difficulties with the main text,
Palmer's Does the Center Hold? will be of great help.
What follows is a list of major ideas that may help with your review.
1.
Hobbes
- People are self-interested and rational.
- The state of nature equals a war of all against
all.
- It is rational to end this state of nature with a
social contract.
- A strong centralized government (preferably a
monarchy) is needed to maintain social order.
- The laws of the state define justice.
- Revolution can never be justified.
- In conflicts between states, no appeal to justice
makes sense, because there is no social contract.
2.
Locke
- Even in the state of nature, there are natural
rights.
- The purpose of the social contract is protecting
the natural rights of its citizens.
- There is a right to revolution under certain
circumstances.
- The best government is a representative democracy
with branches of government that check and balance one another’s powers.
- In the state of nature something unclaimed
becomes property when someone mixes his labor with it. Certain conditions apply on how much can be claimed
until money is in common use.
- Only certain people have full rights of
citizenship.
- War between states does not negate the natural
rights.
3.
Kant
- The only intrinsic good is the good will, the
disposition to act out of rational duty.
- Reason enables us to discover the the supreme
principle of morality: the categorical imperative. There are two
formulations of the categorical imperative that you should know.
- The social contract added to this structure.
- Reason requires a social contract to end the
state of nature among nations.
- Aggressive war and colonialism are wrong.
4.
There will also be questions on the material on Iraq, Iran, and
Afghanistan that we covered in class.
There will be 10 points on this quiz. If
you are a U.S. citizen, you will receive 1 point of extra credit for showing me
proof of voter registration. If you
are a citizen of another country, you may write a brief comparative essay or
attend a relevant event to receive this 1 point of extra credit.
There may be an extra credit question on current events on the quiz as
well.
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