THEO 20605 Lecture Notes: Does Notre Dame have a Moral Theology?
Deals with the question of why, if at all, we should care about the issue at hand. How we describe the issue influences what goods we identify and what principles we judge to be relevant in helping us think through the situation. Reveals how our past prejudices (our "effective histories" to use Gadamer's formulation) influence how we think about the moral issues that confront us.
Examples from last time:
The normative dimension deals with the question of the goods that we ought to pursue and the rules or laws we ought to use to guide our lives. We call it normative because it is difficult to think about what our lives would look like if we had absolutely no sense of what is good, or proper or obligatory. In other words, we live as if we are guided by some norms or standards. The difficult part is examining whether what we let guide our lives is really what ought to guide our lives. In this dimension of analyzing a case or situation, we are looking to sort out the difference between real goods and binding laws and only apparent or illusory goods or conventional and unjust laws. [Example: Consider anorexia or bulimia-is thinness of body a real good or is it really just a socially constructed and illusory good which actually destroys people; or think about the meth addict (or in the less extreme case, casual drinker--is the drug a real or false good?] On what basis does one argue that something is a real as opposed to a false good? Is it arbitrary preference? Or intensity of delight? Or the result of a life spent pursing such goods (resulting in happiness or self-destruction)? Or the closeness of one's friends or family? Or how much suffering one has helped to eliminate from the world?
Examples from last class:
Here, the overriding concern is how we move from a judgment about what we ought to value and what we ought to do in general (that is, given ideal circumstances) to what we ought to do here and now. How, if at all, should the particular situation affect our choice of action, or should our prior judgments about the good and the right always be realized in our actions, even if these hurt people to some extent? Is it even possible to measure the results of our moral decisions? What would such a measurement look like? (More money? More smiling faces? More charitable action in the world? More agency for the oppressed?) What constitutes practical wisdom in this situation?
Examples from last class:
We call this the fundamental dimension for the following reason: any decision we make, any action we undertake, must be free if it is to qualify as moral. So fundamental to any moral analysis is whether we are free to choose one option instead of another. So for example, even though we speak of natural disasters sometimes as natural evils or acts of God, and label them good or bad, helpful or harmful, these are not moral strictly speaking because nature is not free to make choices.
The problem is that even when we think we are free to make a decision, we are always in many ways we do not recognize influenced by our past history and our habits. So we can speak of the freedom of an alcoholic, but more likely than not the person is not free to choose not to drink, but only what to drink. Similarly, one who has been sexually abused might think they are free with respect to their own choices, but more likely than not they are actually affected by events that happened to them.
Freedom that is compromised in various ways goes to the issue of moral culpability-that is, even if we analyze an action and pronounce it to be immoral, we might want to say that the person is only partly to blame (moderately culpable). Or if one is in a situation of conflicting goods, we might not agree with their choices but we can at least understand the pressures that led to a decision.
So too, institutions, based on their past policies and actions, have different degrees of freedom.
Examples from last class:
We are going to be returning to this in more detail over the next four classes, but a few comments on how these work in the case analysis. People are probably familiar with the notion of "proof-texts". This category is intended to take you back through the previous four dimensions to ask what sources are being used to formulate those judgments. Do these sources provide adequate reasons? Why are these sources convincing or why not? How are sources for discernment different from proof-texts?
Analyze and Discuss Case #2: The Notre Dame Paradox