Ethics rev1
... pleasure and pain in any meaningful way. Of course the “C” here is “consequences”. So far then we have the ethical categories of communication/conversation, correct action/duty and consequences. Another important element to consider is the situation or context. Joseph Fletcher says that the situatio ...
... pleasure and pain in any meaningful way. Of course the “C” here is “consequences”. So far then we have the ethical categories of communication/conversation, correct action/duty and consequences. Another important element to consider is the situation or context. Joseph Fletcher says that the situatio ...
Ethics and Politics
... society The rulers cannot effectively rule without at least some degree of consent of the ruled – however expressed To be effective, power must be legitimate Laws made and enforced by the rulers must be rooted in the ethical norms existing in society: otherwise they won’t be effective ...
... society The rulers cannot effectively rule without at least some degree of consent of the ruled – however expressed To be effective, power must be legitimate Laws made and enforced by the rulers must be rooted in the ethical norms existing in society: otherwise they won’t be effective ...
boss1_ppt_ch_09
... answers and that those in authority know the right answers. Most college freshmen are at this stage. By substituting wider norms and laws for peer group culture, a process known as cultural relativism, people move to the second conventional stage. Most Americans are at this stage of moral developmen ...
... answers and that those in authority know the right answers. Most college freshmen are at this stage. By substituting wider norms and laws for peer group culture, a process known as cultural relativism, people move to the second conventional stage. Most Americans are at this stage of moral developmen ...
this PDF - HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
... notion of freedom in smuggling analysts’ views of what people ought to do with their freedom—the pursuit of their ‘real interests’—into its very definition.” To justify this distinction, he refers to Foucault’s late writings, starting with the concept of subjectivation, where, however, he commits th ...
... notion of freedom in smuggling analysts’ views of what people ought to do with their freedom—the pursuit of their ‘real interests’—into its very definition.” To justify this distinction, he refers to Foucault’s late writings, starting with the concept of subjectivation, where, however, he commits th ...
IGE 101 - Truth and Service for Holistic Living 27
... Not a checklist, but understanding the underlying process. 1. Recognize that there is a moral issue. A. what are the issues? B. are they really moral or just cultural or manners? 2. Determine the actor– whose moral issue is it? not involvement – everyone involved. Who is responsible? Who is morally ...
... Not a checklist, but understanding the underlying process. 1. Recognize that there is a moral issue. A. what are the issues? B. are they really moral or just cultural or manners? 2. Determine the actor– whose moral issue is it? not involvement – everyone involved. Who is responsible? Who is morally ...
Charity as a Moral Duty - DigitalCommons@Cedarville
... essential element as going beyond duty’s demands (Feinberg & Feinberg, 1993). Consider the act of starting a new program to provide relief or moving to the area and building a hospital. Society and Singer both agree that these acts are supererogatory, but for less grand gestures consensus crumbles. ...
... essential element as going beyond duty’s demands (Feinberg & Feinberg, 1993). Consider the act of starting a new program to provide relief or moving to the area and building a hospital. Society and Singer both agree that these acts are supererogatory, but for less grand gestures consensus crumbles. ...
Literary Theory and Methodology
... The ethics of reading / ethical criticism • Formalism and aestheticism • Structuralism: – Sign systems rather than authors – Characterization rather than character ...
... The ethics of reading / ethical criticism • Formalism and aestheticism • Structuralism: – Sign systems rather than authors – Characterization rather than character ...
lecture
... The creed which accepts as the foundation of morals, Utility, or the Greatest Happiness Principle, holds that actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness, wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness. By happiness is intended pleasure, and the absence of pain; by unha ...
... The creed which accepts as the foundation of morals, Utility, or the Greatest Happiness Principle, holds that actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness, wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness. By happiness is intended pleasure, and the absence of pain; by unha ...
Value Theory Exam Questions - Philosophy
... 6. It is sometimes said that the psychological systems of Plato and Aristotle have no place for the deliberate choice of evil recognized as such. Is this true? And do the respective approaches of Plato and Aristotle to this issue represent a strength or a weakness in their philosophies? 7. Taking on ...
... 6. It is sometimes said that the psychological systems of Plato and Aristotle have no place for the deliberate choice of evil recognized as such. Is this true? And do the respective approaches of Plato and Aristotle to this issue represent a strength or a weakness in their philosophies? 7. Taking on ...
Ethics and Leadership Responsibility
... Reasonably enough, Kant still stipulates that the fulfillment of a duty "should never become a habit but emerge always right from the beginning and genuinely from one's way of thinking." The habit of educated people to quote, whenever the opportunity arises, one of the three versions of the 'Categor ...
... Reasonably enough, Kant still stipulates that the fulfillment of a duty "should never become a habit but emerge always right from the beginning and genuinely from one's way of thinking." The habit of educated people to quote, whenever the opportunity arises, one of the three versions of the 'Categor ...
ethics
... the possessor of the ring from commiting any crime he felt like committing? He could never be caught. Would we not all be tempted, if we had such a ring, to do whatever our heart desired, knowing we would not, could not, be found out? ...
... the possessor of the ring from commiting any crime he felt like committing? He could never be caught. Would we not all be tempted, if we had such a ring, to do whatever our heart desired, knowing we would not, could not, be found out? ...
Building Trust Through Good Decision Making
... Ethical Aptitude Survey Forced Choice Survey of decision making preferences and styles from a moral point of view ...
... Ethical Aptitude Survey Forced Choice Survey of decision making preferences and styles from a moral point of view ...
Ethics - drfredmugambi.com
... we have to have some understanding of what will result from our choices. ...
... we have to have some understanding of what will result from our choices. ...
Moral Reasoning - University of Idaho
... Amoral - not dealing with moral issues... outside the realm of morality. Immoral - Knows right, chooses to do wrong for own benefit... Dr. Stoll,Director and Professor ...
... Amoral - not dealing with moral issues... outside the realm of morality. Immoral - Knows right, chooses to do wrong for own benefit... Dr. Stoll,Director and Professor ...
student-ethics
... needed a way to let everyone know what 'right' and 'wrong' were in any number of situations. They formed mechanisms to ensure that people in society treated each other in a way everyone agreed was acceptable. People started to codify rules for how people are to treat one another into laws. But somet ...
... needed a way to let everyone know what 'right' and 'wrong' were in any number of situations. They formed mechanisms to ensure that people in society treated each other in a way everyone agreed was acceptable. People started to codify rules for how people are to treat one another into laws. But somet ...
From Ethical Theory to Practice
... “Always treat humanity, whether in your own person or that of another, never simply as a means but always at the same time an end.” ...
... “Always treat humanity, whether in your own person or that of another, never simply as a means but always at the same time an end.” ...
Outline of Singer, “Famine, Affluence, and Morality”
... who works hard may deserve more food than a neighbor who does not work, even if the neighbor will suffer more without the food. Whereas Singer's CMI only considers consequences, Arthur claims we must also consider rights and desert. One of Arthur's most powerful arguments is his attempt to reduce Si ...
... who works hard may deserve more food than a neighbor who does not work, even if the neighbor will suffer more without the food. Whereas Singer's CMI only considers consequences, Arthur claims we must also consider rights and desert. One of Arthur's most powerful arguments is his attempt to reduce Si ...
Durkheim`s "Moral Education"
... education, itself a social phenomenon, and drives there from the consequent percepts of pedagogy (ibid). What is morality? "Mores refers to moral rules or ways of behaving that most members of a society believe are essential for maintaining standards of decency. Mores are vigorously enforced and tr ...
... education, itself a social phenomenon, and drives there from the consequent percepts of pedagogy (ibid). What is morality? "Mores refers to moral rules or ways of behaving that most members of a society believe are essential for maintaining standards of decency. Mores are vigorously enforced and tr ...
The Ethics of Animal Use
... conscious creature having an individual welfare that has importance to us whatever our usefulness to others. We want and prefer things, believe and feel things, recall and expect things. And all these dimensions of our life including our pleasure and pain, our enjoyment and suffering, our satisfacti ...
... conscious creature having an individual welfare that has importance to us whatever our usefulness to others. We want and prefer things, believe and feel things, recall and expect things. And all these dimensions of our life including our pleasure and pain, our enjoyment and suffering, our satisfacti ...
ethics - Weebly
... judgements are based on an impartial absolute value system The absolutist position is often held by those that believe in God (though this is not necessary). The reason that these rules are absolute could be because they come from God e.g. The Ten Commandments, or because they are a recognised stand ...
... judgements are based on an impartial absolute value system The absolutist position is often held by those that believe in God (though this is not necessary). The reason that these rules are absolute could be because they come from God e.g. The Ten Commandments, or because they are a recognised stand ...
Ethics – Handout 3 Ayer`s Emotivism
... Emotivism: Moral judgments are not truth-apt, but rather, are expressions of sentiments of approval or disapproval: e.g., saying “Murder is wrong” amounts to saying “Boo to murder!”: “[I]f I say to someone ‘You acted wrongly in stealing that money’, I am not stating anything more than if I had simpl ...
... Emotivism: Moral judgments are not truth-apt, but rather, are expressions of sentiments of approval or disapproval: e.g., saying “Murder is wrong” amounts to saying “Boo to murder!”: “[I]f I say to someone ‘You acted wrongly in stealing that money’, I am not stating anything more than if I had simpl ...