Philosophy

Philosophy – Master’s Degree 2014
Normative Ethics
Status: optional
Recommended Year of Study: 1
Recommended Semester: 1
ECTS Credits Allocated: 10.00
Pre-requisites: None

Course objectives: The goal is twofold: first, gaining general knowledge of normative ethical theories (Utilitarianism, Deontological ethics, Intuitionism, Virtue ethics, Doctrine of double effect, etc.), and second, gaining special knowledge from one of these areas.

Course description: Normative ethical theories differ, sometimes radically, in the outcome of what will eventually be a moral evaluation of the same act. Some of these theories are particularly comfortable for specific purposes (eg. for making tough decisions, or for the final decidability, etc.). Therefore, the course content consist of series of lectures on specific normative ethical theories, with a common introductory part that is related to general characteristics of normativity and assumptions that a theory must satisfy in order to be a good normative ethical theory.

Learning Outcomes: The outcome is based primarily on the second goal of the course, gaining special knowledge about one partucular normative ethical theory.

Literature/Reading:
  • I. Kant, Zasnivanje metafizike morala, Beograd 1981
  • I. Kant, Kritika praktičkog uma, Beograd 1979
  • J. Babić, Moral i naše vreme (poglavlja 1-4), Beograd 2005
  • J. Bentham, Introduction to the Principles of the Morals and Legislation, Oxford 1907
  • Dž. S. Mil, Utilitarizam, Beograd 2003
  • H. Sidgwick, Methods of Ethics (7th edition), London 1907
  • J. J. Smart & B. Williams, Utilitaranism: For and Against, Cambridge 1973
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