hre 4m1 – grade 12m religion chapter 10 – free to be fully alive

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HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M Religion Chapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

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Page 1: HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M Religion Chapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M ReligionChapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

Page 2: HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M Religion Chapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

Stages of Moral ReasoningLEVEL 1 (Pre-Conventional) – FOCUS ON THE

SELFStage 1: Punishment and ObedienceStage 2: Personal Usefulness

LEVEL 2 (Conventional) – FOCUS ON OTHERSStage 3: Conforming to the Will of the GroupStage 4: Authority and Social Order (Law and Order)

LEVEL 3 (Post-Conventional) – FOCUS ON PRINCIPLES

Stage 5: Social Contract and Human RightsStage 6: Universal Ethical Principles (Personal

Conscience)

Page 3: HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M Religion Chapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

Kohlberg’s Heinz Dilemma ExampleA woman was near death from a special kind of cancer. There was one drug that the doctors thought might save her. It was a form of radium that a druggist in the same town had recently discovered. The drug was expensive to make, but the druggist was charging ten times what the drug cost him to produce. He paid $200 for the radium and charged $2,000 for a small dose of the drug. The sick woman's husband, Heinz, went to everyone he knew to borrow the money, but he could only get together about $ 1,000, which is half of what it cost. He told the druggist that his wife was dying and asked him to sell it cheaper or let him pay later. But the druggist said, "No, I discovered the drug and I'm going to make money from it." So Heinz got desperate and broke into the man's store to steal the drug for his wife. Should Heinz have broken into the laboratory to steal the drug for his wife? Why or why not?

Page 4: HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M Religion Chapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

Pre-Conventional ExamplesSTAGE DESCRIPTION

Examples of Moral Reasoning Favouring Heinz’s Theft

Examples of Moral Reasoning Opposing Heinz’s Theft

Punishment and Obedience

- He should steal the drug, because he offered to pay for it and because it is only worth $200, not the $2000 the druggist was charging- He should steal it because if he let’s his wife die, he would get in trouble

-He shouldn’t steal because it is a big crime- He shouldn’t steal the drug, because he might get caught and sent to jail

Personal Usefulness

- It is alright to steal the drug, becasue his wife needs it to live and he needs her companionship- He should steal the drug, because his wife needs it and he isn’t doing any harm to the druggist because he can pay him back later

- He shouldn’t steal the drug, because he might get caught and his wife would probably die before he gets out of jail – it wouldn’t do much good- He shouldn’t steal, because the druggist was not doing a bad thing by wanting to make a prophet

Page 5: HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M Religion Chapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

Conventional ExamplesSTAGE DESCRIPTION

Examples of Moral Reasoning Favouring Heinz’s Theft

Examples of Moral Reasoning Opposing Heinz’s Theft

Conforming to the Will of the Group

- He should steal the drug, because society expects a loving husband to help his wife regardless of the consequences- He should steal the drug, because if he didn’t his family would think he was an uncaring human

- He shouldn’t steal the drug, because he will bring dishonour on his family and they will be ashamed of him- He shouldn’t steal the drug, because no one would blame him for doing all he could legally (The druggist would be the heartless one)

Law and Order

- He should steal the drug, because if he did nothing, he would be responsible for his wife’s death. He should take it with the idea of paying the druggist back- He should steal the drug, because if people like the druggist are allowed to get away with being greedy and selfish, society would eventually break down

- He should not steal the drug, because if people are allowed to take the law into their own hands, regardless of how they justify it, social order would break down- He shouldn’t steal the drug, because it’s still always wrong to steal and his law-breaking would cause him to feel guilty

Page 6: HRE 4M1 – Grade 12M Religion Chapter 10 – Free to be Fully Alive

Post-Conventional ExamplesSTAGE DESCRIPTION

Examples of Moral Reasoning Favouring Heinz’s Theft

Examples of Moral Reasoning Opposing Heinz’s Theft

Social Contract and Human Rights

- The theft is justified, because the law is not set up to deal with the circumstances in which obeying it would cost a human life.- It is not reasonable to say that stealing is wrong, because the law should not allow the druggist to deny someone access to a life saving treatment

- You can’t really blame him for stealing the drug, but even such extreme circumstances do not justify a person taking the law into their own hands- He shouldn’t steal the drug, because eventually he would pay the price of loss of self-respect for disregarding the rules of society

Universal Ethical Principles

- He must steal the drug, because when a choice must be made between disobeying a law and saving a life, one must act in accordance with the higher principle of preserving and respecting life- He is justified in stealing the drug, because if he had failed in this action to save his wife, he would not have lived up to his own standards of conscience

- Heinz must consider the other principle who need the drug just as much as his wife. By stealing the drug he would be acting in accordance with his own particular feelings with utter disregard for the value of all the lives involved- He should not steal the drug, because though he would probably not be blamed by others, he would have to deal with his own self-condemnation, because he did not live up to his own conscience and standards of honesty.