law and morality (P2+3) Flashcards

1
Q

what are laws?

A

rules and regulations that are objective and not necessarily fault-based

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2
Q

what are morals?

A

subjective personal codes of values/beliefs that are based on levels of fault and determine what is right or wrong

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3
Q

what does the Uk being a pluralist society mean?

A

there is more than one culture, language, ethnicity, religion, social class, political party etc

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4
Q

what are some examples of law and morals conflicting?

A

-breaking laws requires sanction, breaking morals just results in social condemnation
-laws are obligatory, morals are subjective
-laws are made by formal institutions, morals have no formal creation

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5
Q

what are the 4 key principles defined by Lord Devlin that decide whether moral offences should be prohibited?

A

-the individual freedom to be allowed must be consistent with the integrity of society
-the limits of such tolerance are not static, but lawmakers should be slow to change laws that protect morality
-privacy must be respected as far as possible
-the law is concerned with minimum rather than maximum standards of behaviour

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6
Q

what are the two philosophies?

A

-positivism
-natural law theory

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7
Q

what is positivism?

A

holds the idea that law and morality should be kept seperate

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8
Q

who are some key thinkers for positivism?

A

-Aristotle - law should be ‘reason, free from passion’
-Bentham - natural law theory is ‘nonsense upon stilts’

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9
Q

what are some key cases on positivism?

A

-R v Wilson - branded his initials on his wife’s buttocks, got infected, doctor reported it to police, charged with ABH
-Evans v UK - evans wanted to use embryos fertilised by her ex-partner, he refused, consent was necessary in law despite emotional issues

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10
Q

what is the natural law theory?

A

believes the law should be used to enforce moral values

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11
Q

who are some key thinkers for the natural law theory?

A

-St Thomas Aquinas - natural law theory is a ‘dictate of right reason’
-Lord Devlin - ‘it is an error of jurisprudence to separate crime from sin’

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12
Q

key cases on the natural law theory

A

-R v Dudley and Stephens - shipwrecked, drew straws, ate the cabin boy to survive, charged with murder
-R v Cox - doctor that administered a fatal injection when his patients condition worsened and she begged him to end her life, found guilty of murder but given a suspended sentence

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