Glossary
- A posteriori
- A statement which is knowable after experience.
- A priori
- A statement which is knowable without reference to any experience.
- Abortion (procured abortion)
- The termination of a pregnancy by artificial means.
- Absolute
- A principle that is universally binding.
- Absolutism
- An objective moral rule or value that is always true in all situations and for everyone without exception.
- Act Utilitarianism
- A teleological theory that uses the outcome of an action to determine whether it is good or bad.
- Active euthanasia
- The intentional premature termination of another person’s life.
- AI (artificial insemination)
- The injection of sperm into a woman.
- Analytic statements
- Statements which are true by definition.
- Anthropocentric
- An approach to the environment that places human interests above those of any other species.
- Apparent good
- Something which seems to be good or the right thing to do but which does not fit the perfect human ideal.
- Aretaic ethics
- Another name for Virtue Ethics, from the Greek word arete, which simply means any kind of excellence or virtue.
- Assisted dying/suicide
- When a person takes their own life with the assistance of another person. When the other person is a doctor, it is called physician-assisted suicide.
- Authoritarian conscience
- Our sense of moral right and wrong formed in us by authority figures whom we want to obey.
- Autonomous moral agent
- Someone who can make a moral decision freely; someone who is totally responsible for their actions.
- Autonomy
- Self-directed freedom, arriving at moral judgement through reason.
- Benevolence
- Butler saw this as wanting the well-being of others.
- Biocentric
- An approach to the environment that considers the biological nature and diversity of the Earth to be of supreme importance.
- Biodiversity
- The variety of living things on Earth.
- Blastocyst
- A fertilised egg at about four to five days of development.
- Cardinal Virtues
- Originated in Plato – prudence, justice, temperance, courage. Added to with three theological virtues of faith, hope and charity.
- Categorical imperative
- A command to perform actions that are absolute moral obligations without reference to other ends.
- Celibacy
- Not having sexual relations with another person.
- Christian Realism
- The belief that Christianity may use violence to bring about the Kingdom of God and secure peace on Earth.
- Cloning
- A form of genetic engineering by which a plant, an animal or a human is created with the same genetic identity as another.
- Compatibilism
- The belief that it is possible to be both free and determined, as some aspects of our nature are determined, but not our ability to make moral decisions.
- Conscience
- Our sense of moral right and wrong.
- Conscientia
- The actual judgement or decision a person makes which leads to a particular course of action based upon those principles.
- Consciousness
- Awareness of self as an independent being, the ability to feel pain and pleasure.
- Consequentialism
- The rightness or wrongness of an act is determined by its consequences.
- Consequentialist
- Someone who decides whether an action is good or bad by its consequences.
- Conservation ethics
- The ethics of the use, allocation, protection and exploitation of the natural world.
- Copernican Revolution
- Belief that the solar system revolves around the sun.
- Cultural relativism
- Deep ecology
- An approach to environmental ethics that sees all life forms as of value and human life as just one part of the biosphere. It rejects anthropomorphism.
- Deontological ethics
- Ethical systems which consider that the moral act itself has moral value (e.g. telling the truth is always right, even when it may cause pain or harm).
- Descriptive relativism
- Different cultures and societies have differing ethical systems and so morality is relative.
- Determinism
- The view that every event has a cause and so, when applied to moral decisions, we do not have free will.
- Divine Command theory
- Actions are right or wrong depending on whether they follow God’s commands or not.
- Divine Law
- The Bible – this reflects the Eternal Law.
- Doctrine of double effect
- An action where the main intention is to do good, but which may have a bad side-effect. The good intention makes the action right.
- Dominion
- The Judaeo-Christian idea that humans have a special place in the natural world and have responsibility for it.
- Duty
- A motive for acting in a certain way which shows moral quality.
- Ecosophy
- A word formed by contracting the phrase ‘ecological philosophy’. It refers to philosophies which have an ecocentric or biocentric perspective such as deep ecology.
- Embryo
- The developing bundle of cells in the womb up to eight weeks’ gestation.
- Emotivism
- A theory which says that moral statements are just expressions of feelings.
- Ensoulment
- The moment when the soul enters the body – in traditional Christian thought this was at forty days for boys and ninety days for girls. The Church now believes that life begins at conception.
- Eternal Law
- The principles by which God made and controls the universe which are only fully known by God.
- Ethical naturalism/ethical cognitivism
- A theory that moral values can be derived from sense experience.
- Ethical non-naturalism/ethical non-cognitivism
- A theory that ethical statements cannot be derived from sense experience.
- Eudaimonia
- The final goal of all human activity – happiness, well-being, human flourishing.
- Euthyphro Dilemma
- The dilemma first identified by Plato - is something good because God commands it or does God command it because it is good?
- Feminism
- A way of thinking that seeks to emancipate women in society and give them equal opportunities.
- Foetus
- An organism in the womb from nine weeks until birth.
- Gaia hypothesis
- A theory of James Lovelock.
- Gender
- Cultural and psychological characteristics which determine whether a person is male or female.
- Genetic engineering
- The technology involved in cloning, gene therapy and gene manipulation.
- Geocentric
- An approach to the environment which considers the geological nature and diversity of the Earth to be most important.
- Germ line engineering
- Changes in the parent’s sperm or egg cells with the aim of passing on the changes to their offspring.
- Golden Mean
- The balance of extremes of virtues and vices. A balance between excess (having too much of something) and deficiency (having too little of something).
- Good will
- Making a moral choice expresses a good will.
- Hard determinism
- The belief that people do not have any free will and that all moral actions have prior causes. This means that nobody can be held morally responsible.
- Harm principle
- The belief that an act or consequence is morally permissible if no harm is done.
- Hedonic calculus
- Bentham’s method for measuring the good and bad effects of an action.
- Hedonism
- The view that pleasure is the chief ‘good’.
- Hippocratic Oath
- Written in the fifth century BCE, it became the basis for doctors’ ethics. Other promises now replace it, but it is specifically against abortion.
- Holistic
- An approach to the environment that considers a range of factors, including the importance of balance within the ecosystem.
- Human genome
- A map of the human genes.
- Hypothetical imperative
- An action that achieves some goal or end.
- Incompatibilism
- The belief that determinism is logically incompatible with free will. Thus some incompatibilists will say that determinism is a fact and so we are not free, but most take the opposite view that free will is a fact and so determinism is false.
- Instrumental value
- Something’s value lies in its usefulness for others.
- Intellectual virtues
- Characteristics of thought and reason – technical skill, scientific knowledge, prudence, intelligence and wisdom.
- Intrinsic value
- Something’s value lies in itself.
- Intrinsically good
- Something which is good in itself, without reference to the consequences.
- Intuitionism
- A theory that moral truths are known by intuition.
- Involuntary euthanasia
- This term is used when someone’s life is ended to prevent their suffering, without their consent, even though they are capable of consenting.
- IVF (in-vitro fertilisation)
- The procedure by which sperm and eggs from a couple are fertilised in a laboratory dish (in vitro = in glass; test-tube babies).
- Jus ad bellum
- Justice in the decision to wage war.
- Jus in bello
- Justice in the conduct of war.
- Jus post bellum
- Justice in the ending of the war.
- Just War theory
- The belief that war is morally justified if it meets certain criteria.
- Kingdom of Ends
- A world in which people do not treat others as means but only as ends.
- Law
- Objective principle, a maxim that can be universalised.
- Libertarianism
- The belief that determinism is false and people are free to make moral choices and so are responsible for their actions.
- Logical positivism
- The view that only those things which can be tested are meaningful.
- Maxim
- A general rule in accordance with which we intend to act.
- Meta-ethics
- The analysis of ethical language.
- Moral absolutism
- There is only one correct answer to every moral problem.
- Moral objectivism
- Truth is objectively real regardless of culture.
- Moral relativism
- There are no universally valid moral principles and so there is no one true morality.
- Moral virtues
- Qualities of character such as courage, friendliness, truthfulness.
- Natural Moral Law
- The theory that an eternal, absolute moral law can be discovered by reason.
- Naturalistic fallacy
- The claim that good cannot be defined.
- Negative Utilitarianism
- The principle of minimising pain.
- Normative ethics
- A term used to describe different moral codes of behaviour; rules by which we make moral decisions (e.g. Utilitarianism, Natural Moral Law, Kantian Ethics, Virtue Ethics).
- Ordinary and extraordinary means
- According to Natural Law moral duties apply in ordinary situations. A patient may refuse certain treatments on the grounds that they are ‘extraordinary’ (i.e. over and above the essential).
- ‘Ought implies can’
- The idea that someone cannot be blamed for what he could not do, but only for what he was capable of doing but did not do.
- Pacifism
- The belief that violence is wrong.
- Passive euthanasia
- Treatment is either withdrawn or not given to the patient in order to hasten death. This could include turning off a life-support machine.
- Personhood
- Definition of a human being as a person – having consciousness, selfawareness, ability to reason and self-sufficiency.
- Phronesis (practical wisdom)
- According to Aristotle the virtue most needed for any other virtue to be developed. Balancing self-interest with that of others. Needs to be directed by the moral virtues.
- Predestination
- The belief that God has decided who will be saved and who will not.
- Preference Utilitarianism
- Moral actions are right or wrong according to how they fit the preferences of those involved.
- Prescriptivism
- A theory that ethical statements have an intrinsic sense so other people should agree with the statement and follow it.
- Primary precepts
- The fundamental principles of Natural Moral Law.
- Principle of utility
- The theory of usefulness – the greatest happiness for the greatest number.
- Proportionality
- In war, weapons should be proportionate to the aggression.
- Purpose
- The idea that the rightness or wrongness of an action can be discovered by looking at whether or not the action agrees with human purpose.
- PVS (persistent vegetative state)
- Qualitative
- Looking at the quality of the pleasure.
- Quality of life
- The belief that human life is not valuable in itself; it depends on what kind of life it is.
- Quantitative
- Looking at the quantity of the happiness.
- Queer theory
- The idea that there can be no fixed rules about what is or is not a legitimate sexual relationship. Being queer is the freedom to define oneself according to one’s nature.
- Real good
- The right thing to do – it fits the human ideal.
- Realism
- Normal moral rules cannot be applied to how states act in time of war.
- Relativism
- Nothing may be said to be objectively right or wrong; it depends on the situation, the culture and so on.
- Rule Utilitarianism
- Establishing a general rule that follows Utilitarian principles.
- Sanctity of life
- The belief that human life is valuable in itself.
- Secondary precepts
- These are worked out from the primary precepts.
- Self-love
- Butler thought of this as wanting the well-being of self or enlightened self-interest, not selfishness.
- Sentience
- The ability to feel pleasure and pain.
- Sex
- Biological characteristics that determine whether a person is male or female.
- Shallow ecology
- The Earth is cared for to make conditions better for humans.
- Situation Ethics
- The morally right thing to do is the most loving in the situation.
- Slippery slope
- This means that when one moral law is broken others will also be gradually broken and there will be no moral absolutes.
- Soft determinism
- The belief that determinism is true in many aspects, but we are still morally responsible for our actions.
- Somatic cell engineering
- Changes in somatic (body) cells to cure an otherwise fatal disease. These changes are not passed on to a person’s offspring.
- Stem cell
- A ‘master’ cell that can become any kind of material.
- Stewardship
- A way of interpreting the use of dominion, which sees humans as caretakers of the natural world.
- Subjectivism
- Each person’s values are relative to that person and so cannot be judged objectively.
- Summum bonum
- The supreme good that we pursue through moral acts.
- Super-ego
- Freud’s idea is that the super-ego reinforces ideas of correct behaviour implanted in us when we were young.
- Synderesis
- Aquinas’ idea of what he termed ‘right’ reason by which a person acquires knowledge of basic moral principles and understands that it is important to do good and avoid evil.
- Syneidesis
- Syneidesis means ‘to know with’. St Paul uses it to explain the human ability to know and choose what is good. He seems to suggest a moral consciousness which compares an action to a standard. Used by St Jerome to mean ‘gleams (or sparks) of conscience by which we discern that we sin’.
- Synthetic statements
- Statements that may be true or false and can be tested using experience or senses.
- Teleological
- Moral actions are right or wrong according to their outcome or telos (end).
- Teleological ethics
- The morally right or wrong thing to do is determined by the consequences.
- Therapeutic cloning
- A method of producing stem cells to treat diseases such as Alzheimer’s.
- Universalisability
- If an act is right or wrong for one person in a situation, then it is right or wrong for anyone in that situation.
- Utilitarianism
- Only pleasure and the absence of pain have utility or intrinsic value.
- Viability
- Where a foetus is considered capable of sustaining its own life, given the necessary care.
- Vices
- The direct opposite of virtues – habitual wrong action.
- Virtue
- Habitually doing what is right-being good requires the practice of a certain kind of behaviour.
- Voluntary euthanasia
- The intentional premature termination of another person’s life at their request.
None
None
None
- Zygote
- A ‘proto-embryo’ of the firsttwo weeks after conception – a small collection of identical cells.