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... antidoping messages. However, the results were inconclusive. The authors found an increase in attitudes’ scores even though they had predicted a decrease. Further, Barkoukis et al. (2011) found that sportspersonship beliefs did not affect intention directly, but through the effect on the variables o ...
... antidoping messages. However, the results were inconclusive. The authors found an increase in attitudes’ scores even though they had predicted a decrease. Further, Barkoukis et al. (2011) found that sportspersonship beliefs did not affect intention directly, but through the effect on the variables o ...
Climate Change, Individual Emissions, and Foreseeing Harm
... Sinnott-Armstrong seems to amend our original harm principle in something like the following way: Modified Harm Principle (1): An action is morally wrong if and only if it causes harm. Furthermore, an action is a cause (or part of a cause) of a harm if and only if: (i) it is either a necessary or ...
... Sinnott-Armstrong seems to amend our original harm principle in something like the following way: Modified Harm Principle (1): An action is morally wrong if and only if it causes harm. Furthermore, an action is a cause (or part of a cause) of a harm if and only if: (i) it is either a necessary or ...
A Comparative Study of the Efficacy of Group versus Individual
... Table 1.8: Overview group psychotherapy format studies in panic disorder ........................... 87 Table 1.9: Overview of group versus individual psychotherapy format in panic disorder .... 94 Table 3.1: Descriptive Statistics and ANOVA results for Age .......................................... ...
... Table 1.8: Overview group psychotherapy format studies in panic disorder ........................... 87 Table 1.9: Overview of group versus individual psychotherapy format in panic disorder .... 94 Table 3.1: Descriptive Statistics and ANOVA results for Age .......................................... ...
Testing the human superorganism approach to morality
... The most recent transition recognized by major transition theory is that to ultra-society. [23] The human species is unique in living in ultra-social groups – that is, large groups of cooperative members who are essentially unrelated to one another (e.g., in tribal groups, or cities). [24] Recall th ...
... The most recent transition recognized by major transition theory is that to ultra-society. [23] The human species is unique in living in ultra-social groups – that is, large groups of cooperative members who are essentially unrelated to one another (e.g., in tribal groups, or cities). [24] Recall th ...
Durkheim and the Moral Fact
... became questionable whether the discipline had the least relevance any longer. Durkheim had formulated his critique early on, during his 1886 trip to Germany—well before writing The Division of Labor in Society. He meant not only to make the point that mores varied by particular society but also to ...
... became questionable whether the discipline had the least relevance any longer. Durkheim had formulated his critique early on, during his 1886 trip to Germany—well before writing The Division of Labor in Society. He meant not only to make the point that mores varied by particular society but also to ...
Chapter 1
... and shows students that the ethical principles and tests are relevant. The article also illustrates that the principles actually serve as the basis for many decisions made by management. A particular strength of this chapter is the authors’ emphasis on the ethical climates within organizations, and ...
... and shows students that the ethical principles and tests are relevant. The article also illustrates that the principles actually serve as the basis for many decisions made by management. A particular strength of this chapter is the authors’ emphasis on the ethical climates within organizations, and ...
AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF DEFENSE MECHANISMS IN PANIC
... Panic disorder is present in 2.9% of females and 1.3% of males in the Mexican urban population; about two thirds of these patients have an associated depressive disorder. Genetics and psychosocial factors are intertwined in the etiology of this disorder. There are several studies related to the role ...
... Panic disorder is present in 2.9% of females and 1.3% of males in the Mexican urban population; about two thirds of these patients have an associated depressive disorder. Genetics and psychosocial factors are intertwined in the etiology of this disorder. There are several studies related to the role ...
Artificial moral agents: an intercultural perspective
... I will stop pointing to different issues that may be raised by AAs for now, since the purpose of this paragraph was to demonstrate that AAs are a fitting subject for intercultural information ethics. It is important not to mistake them as too much of “high tech” even when most of the research in thi ...
... I will stop pointing to different issues that may be raised by AAs for now, since the purpose of this paragraph was to demonstrate that AAs are a fitting subject for intercultural information ethics. It is important not to mistake them as too much of “high tech” even when most of the research in thi ...
WHAT WE CHOOSE: ETHICS FOR UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS A
... Because Unitarian Universalists have many different theologies and draw spiritual inspiration from a broad range of sources, what is the basis for Unitarian Universalist religious ethics? Many Unitarian Universalists would point to our Principles as a statement of values we uphold and to our Sources ...
... Because Unitarian Universalists have many different theologies and draw spiritual inspiration from a broad range of sources, what is the basis for Unitarian Universalist religious ethics? Many Unitarian Universalists would point to our Principles as a statement of values we uphold and to our Sources ...
WHAT WE CHOOSE: ETHICS FOR UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS A
... Because Unitarian Universalists have many different theologies and draw spiritual inspiration from a broad range of sources, what is the basis for Unitarian Universalist religious ethics? Many Unitarian Universalists would point to our Principles as a statement of values we uphold and to our Sources ...
... Because Unitarian Universalists have many different theologies and draw spiritual inspiration from a broad range of sources, what is the basis for Unitarian Universalist religious ethics? Many Unitarian Universalists would point to our Principles as a statement of values we uphold and to our Sources ...
The Role of Morality in Creating Cognitive Dissonance and
... consistently the more similar they perceive them to be in these reports” and “the influence of perceived similarity on the correlation between ERBs depends on how morally important it is for the person to behave in an environmentally friendly way because moral importance influences the amount of dis ...
... consistently the more similar they perceive them to be in these reports” and “the influence of perceived similarity on the correlation between ERBs depends on how morally important it is for the person to behave in an environmentally friendly way because moral importance influences the amount of dis ...
It`s Not My Fault: Global Warming and Individual Moral
... Even assuming all of this, it is still not clear what I as an individual morally ought to do about global warming. That issue is not as simple as many people assume. I want to bring out some of its complications. It should be clear from the start that ‘‘individual’’ moral obligations do not always f ...
... Even assuming all of this, it is still not clear what I as an individual morally ought to do about global warming. That issue is not as simple as many people assume. I want to bring out some of its complications. It should be clear from the start that ‘‘individual’’ moral obligations do not always f ...
MORALIDADE ALÉM DO CONTRATUALISMO LA MORALIDAD
... view of a theory of value. This means that I will not approach the issue directly via the problem of duty, but by showing that it is connected to, and better understood within, a perspective of value. The choice in a moral theory of the measure of what is good in it has fundamental implications for ...
... view of a theory of value. This means that I will not approach the issue directly via the problem of duty, but by showing that it is connected to, and better understood within, a perspective of value. The choice in a moral theory of the measure of what is good in it has fundamental implications for ...
The Elie Wiesel Prize in Ethics
... as ethical while committing actions which compromise the moral principles we and society embrace. This is the freedom from shame which the mask can bring. The mask is thereby created by the compartmentalization of our lives. It is the excision of our personal ethics from our public life and occupat ...
... as ethical while committing actions which compromise the moral principles we and society embrace. This is the freedom from shame which the mask can bring. The mask is thereby created by the compartmentalization of our lives. It is the excision of our personal ethics from our public life and occupat ...
Butchered to Make an Austrian Holiday: Individual
... Satan’s main criticism of our species is the possession of what he calls the Moral Sense, which is described by the kindly Father Peter as “the faculty which enables us to distinguish good from evil” and a virtue that Theodor has been taught to be proud of, for it separates humanity from the animals ...
... Satan’s main criticism of our species is the possession of what he calls the Moral Sense, which is described by the kindly Father Peter as “the faculty which enables us to distinguish good from evil” and a virtue that Theodor has been taught to be proud of, for it separates humanity from the animals ...
Theories and Models of Moral Development
... Heinz Steals the Drug In Europe, a woman was near death from a special kind of cancer. There was one drug that the doctors though 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 ...
... Heinz Steals the Drug In Europe, a woman was near death from a special kind of cancer. There was one drug that the doctors though 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 ...
Haidt050307
... authority 2 . These labels may suggest to modern readers that rational authority is reasonable authority while traditional authority is patriarchal oppression, but Weber focused his analyses on the dark side of the unstoppable force of rationalization. Weber acknowledged that rational authority, in ...
... authority 2 . These labels may suggest to modern readers that rational authority is reasonable authority while traditional authority is patriarchal oppression, but Weber focused his analyses on the dark side of the unstoppable force of rationalization. Weber acknowledged that rational authority, in ...
Increasing the Moral Imagination of Children through
... understanding of ethics and, as identified in the introduction to this paper, they argue that literature can enable leaders to build their ‘unfinished self’ and their ‘moral imagination’, which will ensure that ethical leadership is not just what they do, but is ...
... understanding of ethics and, as identified in the introduction to this paper, they argue that literature can enable leaders to build their ‘unfinished self’ and their ‘moral imagination’, which will ensure that ethical leadership is not just what they do, but is ...
Exposure to moral relativism compromises moral behavior
... moral beliefs are simply a product of our cultural upbringing rather than any objective set of criteria”). Male circumcision was used as a source analogy for explaining the subjectivity of our moral values (“…male circumcision is also painful, can have risks…. Yet, it is seen as normal, and perhaps ...
... moral beliefs are simply a product of our cultural upbringing rather than any objective set of criteria”). Male circumcision was used as a source analogy for explaining the subjectivity of our moral values (“…male circumcision is also painful, can have risks…. Yet, it is seen as normal, and perhaps ...
haidt.graham.2009.pl..
... concepts such as fairness, rights, and justice, which the rest of their hive-like, group-oriented society does not include as part of the moral domain. In this paper we will suggest that an analogous situation holds here on Earth: many people who justify the political/economic system even when it se ...
... concepts such as fairness, rights, and justice, which the rest of their hive-like, group-oriented society does not include as part of the moral domain. In this paper we will suggest that an analogous situation holds here on Earth: many people who justify the political/economic system even when it se ...
Ethics and the Limited Liability Company
... ethical capabilities. If the answer is in the negative, the solution lies in the imposition of standards as condition for doing business. The assignment of moral responsibility makes no sense without the specification of those circumstances and capabilities that render action morally meaningful. Et ...
... ethical capabilities. If the answer is in the negative, the solution lies in the imposition of standards as condition for doing business. The assignment of moral responsibility makes no sense without the specification of those circumstances and capabilities that render action morally meaningful. Et ...
leadership, moral development, and citizenship behavior
... the highest priority needs of those being served, both within and outside an organization. As a practical test for this form of leadership, Greenleaf asks: . . . do those served grow as persons; do they, while being served, become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to b ...
... the highest priority needs of those being served, both within and outside an organization. As a practical test for this form of leadership, Greenleaf asks: . . . do those served grow as persons; do they, while being served, become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to b ...
Comparison between REBT and Visual/Kinaesthetic Dissociation in
... The prevalence rates for those who go on to develop repeated panics and panic disorder have been estimated at between 2 and 5% of the general population. The lifetime prevalence of agoraphobia (usually with panic disorder) is just under 6% (Clark 1996; Beamish et al. 2002). A panic attack according ...
... The prevalence rates for those who go on to develop repeated panics and panic disorder have been estimated at between 2 and 5% of the general population. The lifetime prevalence of agoraphobia (usually with panic disorder) is just under 6% (Clark 1996; Beamish et al. 2002). A panic attack according ...
The Real Difference between Liberals and Conservatives
... measured what factors were relevant to their moral judgments and decisions. As predicted, the answers showed that conservative participants placed less emphasis on fairness and compassion and more emphasis on group loyalty, authority, and purity. However, Haidt also asked the participants how they t ...
... measured what factors were relevant to their moral judgments and decisions. As predicted, the answers showed that conservative participants placed less emphasis on fairness and compassion and more emphasis on group loyalty, authority, and purity. However, Haidt also asked the participants how they t ...
Is Human Morality Innate? Richard Joyce
... A somewhat bolder claim would be that some of the items on the list are necessary features, and enough of the remainder must be satisfied in order to have a moral judgment. In either case: how much is “enough”? It would be pointless to stipulate. The fact of the matter is determined by how we, as a ...
... A somewhat bolder claim would be that some of the items on the list are necessary features, and enough of the remainder must be satisfied in order to have a moral judgment. In either case: how much is “enough”? It would be pointless to stipulate. The fact of the matter is determined by how we, as a ...
Moral panic

A moral panic is an intense feeling expressed in a population about an issue that appears to threaten the social order. The Oxford University's Dictionary of Sociology defines a moral panic as ""The process of arousing social concern over an issue - usually the work of moral entrepreneurs and the mass media."" The media are key players in the dissemination of moral indignation, even when they do not appear to be consciously engaged in crusading or muckraking. Simply reporting the facts can be enough to generate concern, anxiety or panic.The term first appeared in the English language in 1830 in a number of Christian journals.