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Utilitarianism Vs Deontological Ethics

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Deontology:
Deontology is the study of the nature of duty and obligation. It comes from the Greek word “deon” that means duty. Deontology ethics is the views of moral that make decisions. It is the ethics that focuses whether actions are right or wrong themselves, but not the right or wrong of the consequences of those actions. An example of deontology is the action of killing someone, even if it was in self-defense, is wrong by moral standard.
Immanuel Kant was an 18th-century German philosopher and defines deontological principles. He made a moral system for deontological actions so they can be considered morally good. The first one is a categorical imperative saying that all actions are “good” if they perform a duty. The second is the formula of universal law saying that actions apply to everyone and the result must always be good. The third is the formula of humanity is saying never treat anyone bad or use people for your own advantage. The fourth is the formula of autonomy saying you can’t manipulate people if it goes against their moral right. Lastly is the kingdom of ends that says the actions result in a justice end that results in perfect peace. Kant’s system did not tell people what to do, but if an action was right.
Libertarianism: …show more content…

By utilitarian theory harming the healthy person save the greater number of lives is right. By utilitarian standard, more people are being affected for the good so harming that one person is justified. For the same situation for a Deontologist, it is considered wrong to harm the healthy person because by a moral standard killing is wrong because of. It is focused on the action and not what would happen after. A Libertarian would say it would be up to the healthy person if they wanted to sacrifice themselves for these random people because this person has a self-ownership of their

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