Dictionary Definition
conscience
Noun
1 motivation deriving logically from ethical or
moral principles that govern a person's thoughts and actions [syn:
scruples, moral sense,
sense of right and wrong]
2 conformity to one's own sense of right conduct;
"a person of unflagging conscience"
3 a feeling of shame when you do something
immoral; "he has no conscience about his cruelty"
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- IPA:/kɒnʃɛns/
Noun
Derived terms
Translations
moral sense
- Afrikaans: gewete
- Chinese: 良心
- Croatian: savjest
- Czech: svědomí
- Dutch: geweten
- Finnish: omatunto
- French: conscience
- German: Gewissen
- Hebrew: מצפון
- Hungarian: lelkiismeret
- Italian: coscienza
- Japanese: 良心(りょうしん, ryōshin)
- Polish: sumienie
- Portuguese: consciência
- Romanian: conştiinţă
- Serbian: savest
- Slovene: vest
- Swedish: samvete
- Telugu: అంతరాత్మ
French
Pronunciation
Noun
Extensive Definition
Conscience is a hypothesised ability or faculty
that distinguishes whether our actions are right or wrong. It leads
to feelings of remorse
when we do things that go against our moral values,
and to feelings of rectitude or integrity when our actions
conform to our moral values. It is also the attitude which informs
our moral judgment before performing any action. The extent to
which such moral judgements are based in reason has been a matter
of controversy almost throughout the history of Western
philosophy.
Commonly used metaphors refer to the "voice of
conscience" or "voice within."
Differing Views of Conscience
Views of conscience are not mutually exclusive.
Although there is no generally accepted definition of what
conscience is or what its role in ethical
decision-making is, there are three main factors that determine
which stance is adopted.
- Religious views (including the Divine Command Theory, the works of John Henry Newman, Aquinas, Joseph Butler, Dietrich Bonhoffer and others).
- Secular views (including the psychological, physiological, sociological, humanitarian and authoritarian views.)
- Philosophical views (including Hegel's Philosophy of Mind)
Religious views of conscience
According to some religious perspectives, your
conscience is what bothers you when you do evil to your neighbour, or which
informs you of the rightness or wrongness of an action before
committing it. Doing good to your neighbor does not arouse the
voice of conscience, but wickedness inflicted upon the innocent is
sure to make the conscience scream. This is because in these world
views, God has
commanded all men to "love
their neighbor". Insofar as a man fails to do this, he breaks
God's law and thus his conscience bothers him until he confesses
his sin to God and repents of that sin, clearing
his conscience. If one persists in an evil way of life for a long
period of time, it is referred to as having one's conscience seared
with a hot iron.
Many churches consider following one's
conscience to be as important as, or even more important than,
obeying human authority. This can sometimes
lead to moral quandaries: "Do I obey my church/military/political
leader, or do I follow my own sense of right and wrong?" Most
churches and religious groups hold the moral teachings of their
sacred texts as the highest authority in any situation. This
dilemma is akin to Antigone's
defiance of King
Creon's order, appealing to the "unwritten
law" and to a "longer allegiance to the dead than to the
living"; it can also be compared to the trial of Nazi war criminal
Adolf
Eichmann, in which he claimed that he had followed Kantian philosophy by
simply "doing his job" instead of entering a state of civil
disobedience .
In popular
culture, the conscience is often illustrated as an angel standing on a person's right
shoulder, the good side; on the left shoulder stands a devil. These entities will then
'speak out' to you and try to influence you to make a good choice
or bad choice depending on the situation.
Biblical references often cited regarding conscience
- Bible verse |Hebrews|9:14: "How much more, then, will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself unblemished to God, cleanse our consciences from acts that lead to death, so that we may serve the living God!"
- Bible verse 1|Timothy|4:1,2: "Now the Spirit speaks expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron."
- Bible verse |Romans|2:14-15: " When Gentiles who do not possess the law carry out its precepts by the light of nature, then, although they have no law, they are their own law; they show that what the law requires is inscribed on their hearts, and to this their conscience gives supporting witness, since their own thoughts argue the case, sometimes against them, sometimes even for them."
Conscience in Catholic theology
Conscience, in Catholic theology, is "a judgment of reason whereby the human person recognizes the moral quality of a concrete act he is going to perform, is in the process of performing, or has already completed" (Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph 1778). Catholics are called to examine their conscience daily, and with special care before confession.In current Catholic teaching, "Man has the right
to act according to his conscience and in freedom so as personally
to make moral decisions. He must not be forced to act contrary to
his conscience. Nor must he be prevented from acting according to
his conscience, especially in religious matters" (ibid., paragraph
1782). In certain situations involving individual personal
decisions that are incompatible with church law, some pastors rely
on the use of the internal
forum solution.
However, the Catholic Church has warned that
"rejection of the Church's authority and her teaching...can be at
the source of errors in judgment in moral conduct" (ibid.,
paragraph 1792)
Secular views of conscience
Modern day scientists in the fields of ethology, neuroscience and evolutionary
psychology seek to explain conscience as a function of the
brain that evolved to
facilitate reciprocal
altruism within societies .
Psycho-Analytical views
The psychologist Sigmund Freud regarded conscience as originating in the superego, which takes its cue from one's parents during childhood. According to Freud, the consequence of not obeying our conscience is "guilt," which can be a factor in the development of neurosis. One's conscience is a societal construction which keeps one operating under the social ideology through the negative-feedback system of guilt.Bio-Psychological views
Conscience can prompt different people in quite different directions, depending on their beliefs, suggesting that while the capacity for conscience is probably genetically determined, its subject matter is probably learned, or imprinted, like language, as part of a culture. For instance, one person may feel a moral duty to go to war, while another feels a moral duty to avoid war under any circumstances.Numerous case studies of brain damage have shown
that damage to specific areas of the brain (e.g. the anterior
prefrontal
cortex) results in the reduction or elimination of inhibitions,
with a corresponding radical change in behaviour patterns. When the
damage occurs to adults, they may still be able to perform moral
reasoning; but when it occurs to children, they may never develop
that ability.
Conscience as society-forming instincts
The human animal has a set of instincts and drives which enable us to form societies: groups of humans without these drives, or in whom they are insufficiently strong, cannot form cohesive societies and do not reproduce their kind as successfully as those that do. They either cannot survive in nature, or are defeated in conflict with other, more cohesive groups.Behavior destructive to a person's society
(either to its structures, or to the persons it comprises) is bad
or "evil." Evil or wrong acts provoke either fear or disgust/contempt. Thus, one
who threatens people with a chainsaw and one whose sexual practices
we ourselves find revolting might both be labeled "bad."
Conscience is what we call those drives that
prompt us to avoid provoking fear or contempt in others. We
experience the operation of conscience as guilt and shame. We feel
guilt when we perceive that others might rightly fear us, and shame
when we perceive that others might rightly find us disgusting or
contemptible. To avoid these negative and unpleasant feelings, we
modify our behavior: thus "conscience" prompts us to behave
"rightly."
Guilt and shame differ from society to society,
and person to person. This both in the content of what acts might
provoke these feelings, and the general degree of how strongly
these feelings are felt. Indeed, an individual can feel guilt or
shame retrospectively for past acts, as one's ideas about right
behavior change. A person's circumstances will also alter their
ideas of what is "bad." Persons in nations, religious groups,
gangs, or other types of groups will - if their group and another
are engaged in physical conflict - view members of the other group
as "bad," and view members of that gang harming members of their
own as wrong acts.
A requirement of conscience, then, is the
capacity to see ourselves from the point of view of another person.
Persons unable to do this (psycopaths, sociopaths,
narcissists) therefore often act in ways which are
"evil."
Another requirement is that we see ourselves and
some "other" as being in a social relationship. Persons trying to
resolve conflict between groups try (and sometimes succeed) to
create a feeling that a social relationship exists, that the groups
in conflict all belong to some larger encompassing group. Thus,
nationalism is
invoked to quell tribal
conflict, and the notion of a Brotherhood
of Man is invoked to quell national conflicts. There are even
appeals to relationships between ourselves and the animals in
society (pets, working
animals, even animals grown for food), or between ourselves and
nature as a whole. The
goal is that once people perceive a social relationship, their
conscience will begin to operate with respect to that former
"other", and they will change their actions.
Conscience, then, and ideas of right and wrong,
are a result of the kind of animals we are. We even see this in
nonhuman animals .
Philosophical views of conscience
As science means knowledge, conscience
etymologically means with-knowledge. But the English word implies a
moral standard of action in the mind as well as a consciousness of
our own actions. Conscience is the reason, employed about questions
of right and wrong, and accompanied with the sentiments of
approbation and condemnation. Any consideration of conscience must
consider the estimate or determination of conscience and the
resulting conviction or right or duty. For further and wider view
of knowing the philosophical view of conscience one must know the
prominent ethical philosophers particularly (Socrates,Plato and
Aristotle)and 1. Aquinas 2. Kant 3. Confuscios 4. Buddhism 5. and
then also the entire school of thoughts of Philosophy that deals on
Moral issue like the Utilitarian, Pragmaticism, etc.
Medieval conceptions of conscience
The medieval schoolmen made a distinction between conscience and a closely related concept called synderesis. However, there is evidence that this is an artificial distinction, and that the two terms originally meant the same thing.Aquinas
St. Thomas Aquinas claimed that conscience was “reason making right decisions”. He still argued that, if one is doing good, then it must come from God.For Aquinas, our God-given reason, by synderesis,
has an innate awareness of good and evil that cannot be mistaken
– we all have this ability to distinguish from good and
evil in the same quantity, and feel a moral obligation to avoid
evil and pursue goodness. Aquinas also described synderesis as an
awareness of the five primary precepts as proposed in his theory of
Natural
Law.
Aquinas referred to the conscience as the
conscientia and defined it as the acting out of the information
given by synderesis,
or the process of judgment which acts upon synderesis - the
"application of knowledge to activity."
Aquinas also discussed the virtue of prudence to
explain why some people appear to be less 'morally enlightened'
than others. Prudence is the
most important of all virtues, as it helps us balance our own needs
with those of others and to reason out the knowledge of synderesis.
Our conscience may be mistaken if we haven't acquired enough of the
virtue of prudence, which can lead to a breakdown of communication
between synderesis and conscientia.
To clarify things, take the analogy of a locked
safe. The safe itself is the moral knowledge of synderesis, the key
to the safe of moral knowledge is the virtue of prudence, and the
hands of practical application apply the key to unlock the safe is
the conscientia.
Aquinas reasoned that acting contrary to your
conscience is an evil action, since although it may be mistaken at
times it is our only guide. The 'erring conscience' as Aquinas
termed it, explains the differences that may arise in different
people's conscientia. You have an erring conscience if you are
mistaken or confused about the moral course of action. The question
could be raised however: is an erring conscience blameworthy? For
Aquinas, an erring conscience is only blameworthy if it is the
result of culpable or vincible
ignorance of factors that are within one's duty to have
knowledge of. If however, an erring conscience is the result of an
invincible ignorance of factors that are beyond your control, your
actions are not culpable. One must also be aware of Aquinas’
distinction between real and apparent goods. Although real goods
are from God, apparent goods (when we follow the wrong path
believing it to be a real good) are not. An erring conscience may
lead us down the path of an apparent good, which will not lead to
human flourishing.
Aquinas reasoned that we should educate our
consciences in order to act well and align our actions towards the
highest good. Although conscience should be applied before an
action, it may also retrospectively cause feelings of guilt or
satisfaction.
Joseph Butler
Joseph Butler argued that conscience is God-given and should always be obeyed. Butler also said that it is intuitive, as we have the ability to perceive things beyond empirical evidence, and therefore it is considered the ‘constitutional monarch’ and the ‘universal moral faculty’. It would appear that Butler is in striking accordance with Situation Ethics – Fletcher was also an Anglican Priest, which may have played some part in this. Butler refers to the use of ‘self-love’ and ‘benevolence’ in conscience, which can be attributed to the Agape of Situational ethics. As Situational ethics is teleological and assesses each scenario on an individual basis, it would stand to reason that it supports the use of conscience in every decision. However, as Vardy claims, there is no such thing as a conscience in Situational ethics – only the attempts of making appropriate decisions in situations. One could argue that these ‘attempts’ are in fact the conscience itself, and it therefore does support its use in decision-making.Simon Soloveychik
According to Simon Soloveychik the truth distributed in the world, as the statement about human dignity, as the affirmation of the line between good and evil - lives in people as conscience. Millions of people for thousands of years sought the truth and reached it, and so, gradually the common knowledge (science), the common message about the truth was defined - con-science. In many languages this word is constructed the same way as in Russian (message is весть and conscience is со-весть). In German Wissen - is knowledge, and Gewissen - is conscience,He stated that conscience - is a common, one for
all, knowledge about what good is and what evil is for humankind.
Not for a man, not for his time, not for a group of men, but for
humankind as a whole.
As language, conscience is individual in each person and it is
common for all.
He explained that the truth-conscience enters the
man not with genes and not
by upbringing: if
conscience depended on upbringing then many people would not have
known about it at all. It enters the man with a bearer of the
common knowledge of good and evil, of the truth - with a common
thing - human language.
To his opinion, the answer about human conscience is as follows: a
man obtains the moral law,
which is conscience, through his native language. His consciousness, his
self-consciousness, and his soul are forming during the
obtaining of speech,
his consciousness and his speech - are practically the same thing.
In speech and in the language all major images of good and evil,
the concept of the truth as well as a concept of the law is
available; these concepts and images are becoming a child's own
consciousness similar to language. Studying language, its lively
phrases, its proverbs, perceiving the folklore, art and literature
of his nation, a child is absorbing a common message of good and
evil, - his conscience - and besides, he doesn't notice that, it
seems to him that conscience occurred somehow by itself.
Soloveychik wrote, "A child sinking in a moral
atmosphere of language and culture absorbs drops of the ocean of
public consciousness. Genius people by their immense life work
raises to such highs of the truth, that these great people are
called the conscience of humankind. But both a two year old child,
who feels something similar to a sense of guilt for the first time,
and a well-known writer, who is called a guardian of human
conscience, drink from the same source of common human knowledge of
the truth." .
Conscientious acts
A conscientious objector is an individual whose personal beliefs are incompatible with military service, or sometimes with any role in the armed forces. The reasons for refusing to serve are varied. Many conscientious objectors are so for religious reasons—notably, members of the historic peace churches are pacifist by doctrine. Other objections can stem from a deep sense of responsibility toward humanity as a whole, or from simple denial that any government should have that kind of moral authority.Amnesty
International has created the term prisoner
of conscience to mean a person imprisoned for their
conscientious beliefs.
Law
In law, a conscience clause is a clause in a law that relieves an individual from complying with the law if it is incompatible with religious or conscientious beliefs.World Conscience
World conscience is the idea that with global communication we as a people will no longer be estranged from one another, whether it be culturally, ethnically, or geographically. Instead, we will approach the world as a place in which we all live, and with newly gained understanding of each other we will begin to make decisions based on what is beneficial for all people.Related to this idea is the idea of world
consciousness. It too, looks at people in terms of the collective,
but refers more to the universal ideas of the cosmos, instead of
the interconnectedness of choice. In other words, conscience is
'inner voice'.
Endnotes
See also
- Consciousness
- Conscientiousness
- Moral value
- Guilt
- Ethics
- Freedom
- Inner light
- John Locke, in particular An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, chapter XXVII "Of Identity and Diversity" where he defines consciousness
- Morality
- Moral philosophy
- Moral repugnance
- Reason
External links
- A chapter on Conscience From Parenting For Everyone, by S.Soloveychik, 1986
- Quotations about Conscience at Liberty-tree.ca
- The Defining Moment for Creating the Culture of Conscience
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Medieval Theories of Conscience
- Taqwa: The concept of conscience in the Quran
- The neural basis of human moral cognition.
conscience in Czech: Svědomí
conscience in Danish: Samvittighed
conscience in German: Gewissen
conscience in Spanish: Conciencia
conscience in French: Conscience
conscience in Italian: Coscienza
conscience in Hebrew: מצפון
conscience in Dutch: Geweten
conscience in Japanese: 良心
conscience in Polish: Sumienie
conscience in Portuguese: Consciência
(moral)
conscience in Russian: Совесть
conscience in Slovak: Svedomie
conscience in Albanian: Ndërgjegjja
conscience in Finnish: Omatunto
conscience in Swedish: Samvete
conscience in Vietnamese: Lương tâm
conscience in Ukrainian: Совість
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
anima,
censor, coconscious, collective
unconscious, compunction, conscientiousness,
conscious self, death instinct, demur, ego, ego ideal, ego-id conflict,
ethical self, ethics,
fairness, foreconscious, grace, honor, id, inner arbiter, inward monitor,
judgement, libidinal
energy, libido, mind, moral censor, morality, morals, motive force, persona, personality, pleasure
principle, preconscious, primitive
self, principles,
psyche, psychic
apparatus, racial unconscious, scruple, scruples, self, social conscience, standards, subconscious, subconscious
mind, subliminal,
subliminal self, submerged mind, superego, tender conscience,
twinge of conscience, unconscious, unconscious
mind, vital impulse, voice of conscience