Kantian Ethics vs Utilitarianism
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 2 votes and with the same amount of points on both sides...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 4
- Time for argument
- Two weeks
- Max argument characters
- 30,000
- Voting period
- Two weeks
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
BOP is evenly shared.
Pro will argue for Kantian Ethics.
Con will argue for Utilitarian Ethics.
Free will is assumed.
The crux of the discrepancy in these moral theories is the focus on consequences in determining the moral value of an action.
The judges should look to determine which moral theory is more persuasive.
I hope this turns out to be a fun debate!
- The good will is the only thing that is good without qualifications - the good will is good in itself. Taken just in itself, it is to be valued more highly than the satisfaction of any preference it could achieve. It sparkles like a jewel even in the darkest of situations, regardless of how fruitful it may be.
- The proper use of reason is to create a will that is good in itself, rather than good as a means.
- Hypothetical imperatives - oriented to ends/inclinations. Are not unqualifiedly good.
- Categorical imperatives - without qualification, tells you what's right.
- Universalizability principle
- Principle of respect for persons
- The autonomous will
- Act as though the maxim of your action were to become, through your will, a universal law of nature.
- Always treat persons as ends in themselves, rather than mere means.
- Autonomous Will - Will governed by itself
- Heteronomous Will - Will governed by another
- Perfect duties - Duties that can be completed in a single action (i.e. duty not to murder, not to commit suicide)
- Imperfect duties - Cannot possibly be completed in a single action (i.e duty of self-improvement, helping others, etc.)
The core problem of Kantian ethics lies in its inability to tell you what you *should* do, only what you should *not* do. The Universalism test only tells you we shouldn't do something when we reach a logical contradiction. But there may be multiple actions where, no matter what you do, you reach an impasse and it becomes impossible to know what is the correct decision. The vagueness of "goodwill" clashes with the idea that you must evaluate the consequences within universalism. For example, let us say I have goodwill to learn computer programming to improve goodwill thinking. But others' will clash against mine. Under universalism, everyone learns programming. Terrorists would want to try to hack into NASA and use the programming for malicious means. Despite my goodwill, and others being completely irrelevant to my personal decision, Kantian ethics may dictate that me--or even more generally, everyone--should not learn to program, because it will result in a contradiction. But if I do not learn programming, with everyone having never learned to program, computers cannot exist. Our world would go back to the older ages where communication was slow, countless companies would go out of business due to lack of online interaction, and the coronavirus would stilt the entire world. So should we learn programming, or not? Kant doesn't know. This leads to my second argument.
II. Everything in Moderation
It seems ridiculous that Kant asks us to visualize what would happen if *everyone* did something. This is impractical as there is nearly no law that would be safe when you apply to all people in the world. There are always specific extenuating circumstances and situations where you must consider everything around you to resolve the problem. It is commonly said that if everyone gave to the poor, there would be no poor to give to, causing a contradiction with Kantian ethics. It seems more reasonable with Utilitarianism considering your actual impact on the people to determine if you did good, or did wrong. As Mill believes, "good action is proportional to the greatest good it may produce". Utilitarianism is more flexible, hence allowing Act Utilitarianism to tell us two different actions in two situations. Kant would have us act the same way no matter what is at stake because the action itself would somehow be "moral" or "immoral". This leads to my third argument.
III. Lesser vs Greater Evils
Unfortunately, Kant gives us a dichotomous view of the world. Something is either moral or immoral, despite the contradiction laid out in point I. Utilitarianism offers a balance that allows us to weigh ideas against each other. For example, Kant might say that killing and lying are both immoral, but when it decides between the two, you would likely find him out of ideas. Kant is not sure whether there are lesser or greater evils. But clearly, the merely logical contradiction cannot tell us how moral or immoral something is. For example, physical pleasure is one of the lower goods in utilitarianism, while your life is a higher good. You would rather save a life rather than merely have sex with someone. On the other hand, everyone having sex is not contradictory, and neither is everyone saving lives. Kant can't tell us which is more significant.
IV. Universalism is Utilitarianism
I already noted how universalism is consequentialist but here I will show you why the logical contradiction highlights that Kant is vouching for utilitarianism. Look at the proposed situations-- there is hardly any difference compared to utilitarianism. If everyone lied nobody could trust one another and even utilitarianism would note the detrimental effect and say not everyone should lie to each other. Or if everyone stole from one another there is no "greater good"; therefore it's pointless to have everyone steal from one another. The assessment of whether the world is worse for wear sounds a lot like "assessing the consequences" to me. The universality test would fail itself when pitted against intentions! Pro must point out why Universalism is not Utilitarianism to prove it superior, otherwise, they are the same and equally persuasive.
"The core problem of Kantian ethics lies in its inability to tell you what you *should* do, only what you should *not* do."
" The vagueness of "goodwill" clashes with the idea that you must evaluate the consequences within universalism. For example, let us say I have goodwill to learn computer programming to improve goodwill thinking. But others' will clash against mine. Under universalism, everyone learns programming. Terrorists would want to try to hack into NASA and use the programming for malicious means. Despite my goodwill, and others being completely irrelevant to my personal decision, Kantian ethics may dictate that me--or even more generally, everyone--should not learn to program, because it will result in a contradiction. But if I do not learn programming, with everyone having never learned to program, computers cannot exist. Our world would go back to the older ages where communication was slow, countless companies would go out of business due to lack of online interaction, and the coronavirus would stilt the entire world."
- Person learns programming to improve good will thinking. But terrorists use it for hacking. This means that universalism cant universalize actions.
- Person does not learn programming because of the terrorists. But universalize not learning programming, then computers aren't gonna work or exist.
"It seems ridiculous that Kant asks us to visualize what would happen if *everyone* did something. This is impractical as there is nearly no law that would be safe when you apply to all people in the world."
"There are always specific extenuating circumstances and situations where you must consider everything around you to resolve the problem."
"It is commonly said that if everyone gave to the poor, there would be no poor to give to, causing a contradiction with Kantian ethics"
"Unfortunately, Kant gives us a dichotomous view of the world. Something is either moral or immoral"
"The assessment of whether the world is worse for wear sounds a lot like "assessing the consequences" to me."
"Utilitarianism's goals may seem ironic as "good" is not truly defined..."
"Kantian ethics are very vague and ill-defined..."
"good action is proportional to the greatest good it may produce".
- Duty
- Inclination
- Imagine a shopkeeper who considers shortchanging his customers. He thinks to his prudence, that if he does shortchange his customers, then his business will lose reputation and ultimately lose profits. This reasoning leads him to deal honestly with his customers and give them the correct change.
"Here pro points out that some flawed proponents of utilitarianism put a value on human life."
"They can sometimes result in unexpected good. But most times it would still result in bad and Rule Utilitarianism would say that society as a whole should not do the action. It was merely in the specific case that it becomes a moral result. So you can still look at the case by case basis, advocating for the specific scenario where the coincidence occurred. You can also still impose the general rule that people should not do it. "
Pro states that the maxim of the moral principle is different from the action itself, but fails to tell us why or how. Intending to learn to program will ultimately still result in the same contradictions in the two different worlds. He has not told us what Kant would think when it comes to the maxim "desire to learn program" or "desire to not learn program" as a universal rule.
"For example, now I could have the reason for exterminating humanity, and everyone kills each other."
"However, by the fact that the maxim is applied to everyone, we have to see what happens in the world where this reason is applied. Due to the cause-and-effect relationship, it seems unavoidable that intentions are only a slice of the pie in Kantian ethics. If Kant was correct about reason being the sole idea necessary, he could ground intention on itself rather than the results of applying the maxim. "
For example, he would say that the desire to be homosexual, or being homosexual, is universally undesirable.
"Kant would try to apply this as a maxim to all people and ask us, "what happens if everyone was mediocre"? "
Pro has dropped consideration of motivations. He has also dropped consideration of persons. Extend both arguments.
- Suppose I push someone down with the intention to hurt them, and they land on their head. But their injury causes them to become a virtuoso at the Piano overnight, making millions as a composer.
- Suppose I push someone down with the intention to hurt them, but I'm weak, they land softly, and there is a $100 bill on the ground where they fell that they wouldn't have seen otherwise.
- Suppose I'm walking down the street and I trip and fall. When I stretch out my arms, I catch a baby that fell from the third story.
"...If, for instance, a woman cannot preserve her life anylonger except by surrendering her person to the will ofanother, she is bound to give up her life rather thandishonour humanity in her own person, which is whatshe would be doing in giving herself up as a thing tothe will of another"."
"...Categorical Imperative cannot come to a clear decision about many real life actions...."
" ...So we may let you get off easy due to pure coincidence for the act, while harshly forbidding violence as a society."
In fact, under the perfect universalized universe, small white lies would work fine.
First of all, they were discussing ETHICS, not MORALITY. Ethics is the set of principles on which a society bases their actions. Morality on the other hand is how individuals and groups actually act. A morally good action is one that acts according to the ethical principles. In the context of this debate, the two words were uses interchangeably.
THE THEORIES:
Ethics need to propose two things: A. principles of how to act and B. reason, motivation or authority backing up the principles.
Pro arguably nailed point B, by actually providing a universal set of principles on which all humans should be able to agree. He successfully proved that ethics is about DUTY - a point which is shared by the Judeo Christian values on which human rights and western morality is based upon. When it comes to point A, con arguably put up a more flexible set of principles - effectively making it possible for individuals to make completely different decisions and still be called morally good. However as Pro pointed out that ethical systems are to create coherence and an objective standard rather than being a mathematical equation. Con failed to explain in a sufficient manner what a "greater good" is as compared to a lesser good. Thus undermining his argument. Cons argument that Kantian ethics make impossible individual variation was successfully rebutted by Pro - when he said that there is a difference between an action and a moral action. However Pro failed to explain what the difference what. The arguments from con definitely felt more convincing at the time I read them, but I thought about it and the ultimate victor with regards to arguments was Pro. Well done both of you.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nI2dj8PYgMlyZz7w29IA1_GvMOODv_PHznT0AfwgA1k/edit?usp=sharing
Good debate. This was close
I'll get to it, I wanted to let my mind kind of refresh that way I wasn't voting biasedly against kant
You guys are philosophy buffs. Please consider voting on this.
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maybe you'd like to vote.
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Lately I've been listening to my arguments in a text to speech reader before posting. It helps a lot. Might help with your "always spell check before posting" rule
oop, I meant that the action increased utility in that one scenario (as exampled from my self defense vs murder idea)
I'm currently having problems with my internet. I'll just save this debate offline and read them in my free time. I should note that my feedback will be restricted to the first three rounds and I will only publish them after R4. Great work!
I forgot to edit a part in the examples, the third one is to demonstrate an amoral action, not a bad one, that produces good consequences.
Apologies.
Bump.
I think the debate looks like it deserves to be on the front page (especially when compared with everything else).
You're good
sorry. I forgot to type the extra "I"s. It's VIII
I did make a mistake in the description when I said "moral theory(ies)"
Are morality and ethics the same thing? Both terms are used in apparent acceptance that this is so in the resolution v. the description. I don't agree, and is one reason I passed on the debate.
Very interesting counter-examples to Kant in R1.
how did I miss this chance...
Awesome, I hope you can be patient though, because it will take me a few more days to get everything together in a logical flow.
I think this is great. I can't vote but I will review the debate.
I'm sure I will
You will regret the day you gave Undefeatable 30,000 characters
Bump
Yeah he is difficult to read. But I've been working on it so we'll see
I find it excruciatingly difficult to read Kant's work, let alone paraphrasing them. Granted this is easier for me since I could take the utilitarian side but I'm more interested in Kant than Mill. I think this is a really creative debate to watch.
bump
I'm greatly torn, because Utilitarian's ideals are weaker, but ironically the world that employs Utilitarian would be better off than Deontology. If no one accepts, I may do so. (plus, I don't want to help Jarrett in my debate against him, lol)
I pmed it to him before putting it here. But he didn't log in
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