Lesson 1 of 20 ยท Ethical Thinking
LessonadvancedRight or Wrong?
What You'll Learn
Key Concept: Basic moral reasoning
Think About This
Apply first-principles thinking to a common assumption about basic moral reasoning. Decompose it to fundamental truths, question every layer of convention, and reconstruct your understanding from the ground up. Does the conventional wisdom survive scrutiny?
Thinking Steps
Deconstruct
Break basic moral reasoning to first principles. What are the foundational truths? What's assumed vs. proven?
Survey the Landscape
What does evidence say? Where does expert consensus lie? Where do experts disagree, and why?
Steelman the Opposition
Construct the strongest possible argument AGAINST your initial position. What evidence supports it?
Multi-Framework Analysis
Apply multiple lenses: cost-benefit, systems thinking, ethical frameworks, game theory. What does each reveal?
Quantify Uncertainty
Express confidence as probability. Identify key uncertainties. What information would most shift your assessment?
Synthesize
Formulate your thesis with reasoning, evidence, limitations, and falsification criteria.
Trace Implications
What second and third-order effects follow? What predictions does your position make?
Audit Your Process
Which biases operated? Which frameworks did you use? What would a domain expert critique about your reasoning?
Key Points
Master basic moral reasoning
Apply ethical thinking in real situations
Build habits of ethical thinking
Key Vocabulary
Complex Adaptive System
A system composed of many interacting parts that can change and learn from experience
Falsificationism
Karl Popper's principle that scientific theories must be testable and potentially disprovable
Information Asymmetry
When one party in a transaction has more information than the other
Dialectical Synthesis
Integrating thesis and antithesis to reach a higher truth that transcends both
Why This Matters in Real Life
Advanced ethical thinking is the cornerstone of academic research, policy analysis, strategic consulting, and intellectual leadership.
Talk About It
Discuss these questions with a friend, parent, or classmate.
- 1What are the philosophical assumptions underlying basic moral reasoning? Are those assumptions justified?
- 2How does this concept interact with other mental models and thinking frameworks you've learned?
- 3Under what conditions might this approach produce misleading or harmful conclusions?
- 4If you were writing a textbook chapter on this topic, what's the single most important insight you'd want readers to take away?
- 5How has your understanding of this topic changed from when you first encountered it?
Check Your Understanding
Question 1
1 of 3What is the main idea of basic moral reasoning?
