The Metaphysics of Ethics (PHIL30054)
Undergraduate level 3Points: 12.5Not available in 2025
About this subject
Overview
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People drawn to metaphysics can sometimes have the view that ethics is messy, imprecise, and not sufficiently rule-governed. People drawn to ethics can sometimes have the view that metaphysics is abstract, technical, and insufficiently attentive to real-world issues and concerns. But metaphysics and ethics are more interconnected than these views suggest. In this subject, we explore the relation between metaphysics and ethics, using social ontology as the bridge between the two. Topics include objects, persistence, modality, mereology, and causation, and their relations to individual and collective moral obligation and moral responsibility. These discussions have real-world implications for tax laws, the value of historical artefacts, cultural group membership, the relation between the individual and her community, moral truth, surrogacy, gender identification, reparations for historical injustice, moral luck, and culpability for what we fail to do.
Intended learning outcomes
Students who successfully complete this subject should be able to:
- Explain the philosophical intersection of ethics and metaphysics, as well as of the metaphysical underpinnings of central ethical views
- Engage with contemporary philosophical research concerning the scope of metaphysics and ethics and, in particular, the role metaphysical facts play in the evaluation of ethical theories
- Apply metaphysical concepts to analyze and resolve complex ethical dilemmas in real-world scenarios, demonstrating an integrated understanding of both fields
- Critically evaluate one's own presuppositions and biases concerning ethics and metaphysics.
Generic skills
Students who successfully complete this subject should be able to:
- Think critically
- Analyse and evaluate concepts, theories, and arguments
- Develop and present arguments for or against a position
- Consider multiple viewpoints and arguments for those viewpoints
- Articulate ideas, concepts, and interpretations with clarity and coherence
- Engage in critical reflection, synthesis, and evaluation of research-based and scholarly literature.
Last updated: 4 March 2025