Unit 1: Applied Ethics

Table of Contents

Introduction to Applied Ethics

What is Ethics? The Three Main Branches

Before understanding Applied Ethics, it's helpful to see where it fits. Ethics, or Moral Philosophy, is broadly divided into three main areas:

Branch Guiding Question Explanation
1. Meta-Ethics "What *is* goodness?" This is the most abstract branch. It doesn't ask what is right or wrong, but asks about the *nature* of morality itself. (e.g., Are moral truths objective? What do the words "good" and "bad" mean?)
2. Normative Ethics "What *should* I do?" This branch creates general theories and principles to guide moral action. (e.g., Utilitarianism: "Do whatever creates the most happiness." Deontology: "Follow your moral duties.")
3. Applied Ethics "How do I apply ethics to *this* situation?" This is the most practical branch. It takes the theories from Normative Ethics and applies them to specific, concrete, and often controversial real-world problems.
[Diagram Placeholder]

A funnel or pyramid diagram showing Meta-Ethics at the top (most abstract), Normative Ethics in the middle (theories), and Applied Ethics at the bottom (concrete problems).

Defining Applied Ethics

Applied Ethics is the branch of philosophy that attempts to apply general ethical theories to specific moral problems, issues, and fields of human activity.

The goal is not just to talk *about* problems, but to find a path *through* them. It's the "boots on the ground" part of moral philosophy. It moves ethics from the textbook into the hospital, the courtroom, the boardroom, and the newsroom.

Example of the process:

  1. The Problem: A patient with a terminal illness is in great pain and asks a doctor to help them die. (This is the topic of Euthanasia, Unit 3).
  2. The Applied Ethicist's Job:

Different Branches of Applied Ethics

Applied Ethics is a vast field. This paper's syllabus covers several key branches. Other major branches also exist.

Exam Tip: For an "Introduction" question, be prepared to clearly define the three branches of ethics (Meta, Normative, Applied) and show how Applied Ethics is different. Use a specific example (like abortion or euthanasia) to show *how* a normative theory (like utilitarianism) is "applied" to a real-world problem.