Don`t Let it Happen Again: A Kantian Account of
... Moving on for Community’s Sake: a (Self-Respecting) Kantian Account of Forgiveness (Note: This is an early draft of this paper; for the final version, please see the published proceedings of the XI Kant Kongress.) Kant only mentions forgiveness explicitly in a few, short passages in the Lectures on ...
... Moving on for Community’s Sake: a (Self-Respecting) Kantian Account of Forgiveness (Note: This is an early draft of this paper; for the final version, please see the published proceedings of the XI Kant Kongress.) Kant only mentions forgiveness explicitly in a few, short passages in the Lectures on ...
Beyond Evaluation Standards?
... is no longer ‘hot’ news. It is however the current authors’ opinion that the need remains for a critical analysis of current evaluation standards. What then are we talking about when discussing the ethics of evaluation or outlines for evaluation ethics? Who deals with these questions? Whose ethical ...
... is no longer ‘hot’ news. It is however the current authors’ opinion that the need remains for a critical analysis of current evaluation standards. What then are we talking about when discussing the ethics of evaluation or outlines for evaluation ethics? Who deals with these questions? Whose ethical ...
The Strategic Position Strategic Purpose
... Philosophy). The field of ethics comprises: Metaethics: asks where do ethical principles come from, and what do they mean? Normative ethics: articulates moral standards that regulate right and wrong conduct Applied ethics: involves examining and analysing the ethical aspects of specific issues, ...
... Philosophy). The field of ethics comprises: Metaethics: asks where do ethical principles come from, and what do they mean? Normative ethics: articulates moral standards that regulate right and wrong conduct Applied ethics: involves examining and analysing the ethical aspects of specific issues, ...
Chapter 2
... • If Bill and customer have equal rights to information, Bill did nothing wrong to sell information. • If customers have right to expect name and address or transaction to be confidential without giving permission, then Bill was wrong to sell information ...
... • If Bill and customer have equal rights to information, Bill did nothing wrong to sell information. • If customers have right to expect name and address or transaction to be confidential without giving permission, then Bill was wrong to sell information ...
Introduction to Ethics Chapter 2
... • If Bill and customer have equal rights to information, Bill did nothing wrong to sell information. • If customers have right to expect name and address or transaction to be confidential without giving permission, then Bill was wrong to sell information ...
... • If Bill and customer have equal rights to information, Bill did nothing wrong to sell information. • If customers have right to expect name and address or transaction to be confidential without giving permission, then Bill was wrong to sell information ...
Slide 4- 2 - Computer and Information Science
... Who will benefit if the company follows your recommendation? Who will be harmed if the company follows your recommendation? Do you have an obligation to any group of people that may be affected by your decision? ...
... Who will benefit if the company follows your recommendation? Who will be harmed if the company follows your recommendation? Do you have an obligation to any group of people that may be affected by your decision? ...
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)
... Values are indicative of a sense of refinement and well being. The term value derives its origin from the self-reflective nature of human reason. It is humans alone who can transcend the animal instincts and have the knowledge of right and wrong, good and evil, ends and means etc.Morality or moral c ...
... Values are indicative of a sense of refinement and well being. The term value derives its origin from the self-reflective nature of human reason. It is humans alone who can transcend the animal instincts and have the knowledge of right and wrong, good and evil, ends and means etc.Morality or moral c ...
Devils, Souls, and the Spectre of Matthew Arnold in Oscar Wilde`s
... begin (if not end) with the latter’s “The Critic as Artist.”1 Lawrence Danson (Wilde's Intentions 129) astutely shows that both Wilde’s mouthpiece Gilbert and foil Ernest voice ideas drawn from Arnold and Walter Pater so that Wilde can mimic, refute and combine their doctrines to clarify his own aes ...
... begin (if not end) with the latter’s “The Critic as Artist.”1 Lawrence Danson (Wilde's Intentions 129) astutely shows that both Wilde’s mouthpiece Gilbert and foil Ernest voice ideas drawn from Arnold and Walter Pater so that Wilde can mimic, refute and combine their doctrines to clarify his own aes ...
“Moral Perfectionism” or Emerson`s “Moral Sentiment”?
... When it comes to Emerson's ethics and his vision of human perfectibility 3, reference to the moral sentiment is not optional, even if we find the doctrine dissatisfactory (e.g. Van Cromphout 1999, 34-35, 47, 57). We cannot speak of Emerson's “moral perfectionism,” much less of its constitution (Cave ...
... When it comes to Emerson's ethics and his vision of human perfectibility 3, reference to the moral sentiment is not optional, even if we find the doctrine dissatisfactory (e.g. Van Cromphout 1999, 34-35, 47, 57). We cannot speak of Emerson's “moral perfectionism,” much less of its constitution (Cave ...
The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Truth about Morality
... because the community to which you belong dislikes, disapproves of, or prohibits it? Presumably not. If, somehow, the whole community were to decide that torturing cats is okay, this activity would, by the lights of most people, still be wrong. In answering these questions in the negative, one expre ...
... because the community to which you belong dislikes, disapproves of, or prohibits it? Presumably not. If, somehow, the whole community were to decide that torturing cats is okay, this activity would, by the lights of most people, still be wrong. In answering these questions in the negative, one expre ...
YAKIN DOĞU ÜNİVERSİTESİ DIŞA AÇIK DERSLER
... 2. Teach the fundamentals of engineering ethics and how those fundamentals apply in the field of information systems 3. Teach that an engineer must at least follow written ethical rules known as codes of ethics, but that moral values are still above written ethical rules 4. Teach how to approach a g ...
... 2. Teach the fundamentals of engineering ethics and how those fundamentals apply in the field of information systems 3. Teach that an engineer must at least follow written ethical rules known as codes of ethics, but that moral values are still above written ethical rules 4. Teach how to approach a g ...
Save - Yimg
... Business ethics deals with what is “right and wrong” in organizational decisions, behaviour, and policies. ...
... Business ethics deals with what is “right and wrong” in organizational decisions, behaviour, and policies. ...
Socrates` Question
... One can of course ask, on a given occasion, "what should I do from an ethical point ofview?" or "what should I do from a self-interested point of view?" These ask for the results of subdeliberations, and invite one to review a particular type of consideration among those that bear on the question an ...
... One can of course ask, on a given occasion, "what should I do from an ethical point ofview?" or "what should I do from a self-interested point of view?" These ask for the results of subdeliberations, and invite one to review a particular type of consideration among those that bear on the question an ...
Credit Union Fraud & Ethics
... Questionable behavior Mishandling of ethical situations when they arise ...
... Questionable behavior Mishandling of ethical situations when they arise ...
Kant`s Account of Moral Education
... possibility of influencing someone else’s processes of learning. According to Kant’s view, however, the human self can only be seen as free if it is not influenced by empirical causes, that is, if it stands outside the causal chains of the empirical world. The idea of transcendental freedom is intro ...
... possibility of influencing someone else’s processes of learning. According to Kant’s view, however, the human self can only be seen as free if it is not influenced by empirical causes, that is, if it stands outside the causal chains of the empirical world. The idea of transcendental freedom is intro ...
The elementary forms of moral life?
... precisely, withdrawn from general use, or even sight. To Durkheim, the rise of individuals with powers to move, change, or alienate property were developments of relationships of production and exchange. These relationships followed long after the original arrangements of people and things created t ...
... precisely, withdrawn from general use, or even sight. To Durkheim, the rise of individuals with powers to move, change, or alienate property were developments of relationships of production and exchange. These relationships followed long after the original arrangements of people and things created t ...
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
... possible world that contains only a single item: a stunning Vermeer painting. Leave aside any doubts you might have about whether paintings can be good in a world without viewers, and accept for the sake of argument that this painting has aesthetic value in that world. It seems intuitively plausible ...
... possible world that contains only a single item: a stunning Vermeer painting. Leave aside any doubts you might have about whether paintings can be good in a world without viewers, and accept for the sake of argument that this painting has aesthetic value in that world. It seems intuitively plausible ...
Ethical Encounter - sikkim university library
... taste.7 Or: ‘objectivism’ – the view that value is somehow ‘in the world’ rather than merely ‘in us’ – can be preserved by holding that ‘brutal’ and ‘callous’ register so-called ‘evaluative properties’ of (in this case) the boys’ deeds. (And the evaluative properties are not entailed by the non-eval ...
... taste.7 Or: ‘objectivism’ – the view that value is somehow ‘in the world’ rather than merely ‘in us’ – can be preserved by holding that ‘brutal’ and ‘callous’ register so-called ‘evaluative properties’ of (in this case) the boys’ deeds. (And the evaluative properties are not entailed by the non-eval ...
Gatta_Santina_2015_research paper
... Second, given this argument, it does not mean that the ancient Greeks did not offer up or experience any form of relational reciprocities of morality in their daily interactions. People of any civilization or time do not live unto themselves, but within a community, and living amongst others require ...
... Second, given this argument, it does not mean that the ancient Greeks did not offer up or experience any form of relational reciprocities of morality in their daily interactions. People of any civilization or time do not live unto themselves, but within a community, and living amongst others require ...
Nietzschean Ethics: One`s Duty to Overcome
... phrase “ethical theory” usually refers to theories about interpersonal conduct and our obligations to others, but I do not believe that the phrase should exclude theories which emphasize the self. Finally, even though Nietzsche personally renounces all forms of morality, I will attempt to prove that ...
... phrase “ethical theory” usually refers to theories about interpersonal conduct and our obligations to others, but I do not believe that the phrase should exclude theories which emphasize the self. Finally, even though Nietzsche personally renounces all forms of morality, I will attempt to prove that ...
Nietzsche Against the Philosophical Canon
... Nietzsche, pointing to the Stoic metaphysics of nature, observes that their “pride wants to dictate and annex [their] morals and ideals onto nature” (BGE 9), but in doing so they are just exemplifying the general tendency of philosophers to invent a metaphysics that vindicates the philosopher’s valu ...
... Nietzsche, pointing to the Stoic metaphysics of nature, observes that their “pride wants to dictate and annex [their] morals and ideals onto nature” (BGE 9), but in doing so they are just exemplifying the general tendency of philosophers to invent a metaphysics that vindicates the philosopher’s valu ...
LaNdscaPe ethIcs a moral commitment to responsible regional
... precariousness of both human beings themselves and nature also opens our eyes to the senselessness of certain habits that were common in the past, as well as, for example, today’s urge for total control over nature, which only distinguishes between use and abuse very rarely. Nevertheless, many of th ...
... precariousness of both human beings themselves and nature also opens our eyes to the senselessness of certain habits that were common in the past, as well as, for example, today’s urge for total control over nature, which only distinguishes between use and abuse very rarely. Nevertheless, many of th ...
The Missing Formal Proof of Humanity`s Radical Evil in Kant`s
... than another, whereas freedom and necessity surely exclude one another. Richard Bernstein expresses the worry well: Kant is at war with himself. For, on the one hand, he never wants to compromise the basic claim of his moral philosophy: that human beings as finite rational agents are free, which mea ...
... than another, whereas freedom and necessity surely exclude one another. Richard Bernstein expresses the worry well: Kant is at war with himself. For, on the one hand, he never wants to compromise the basic claim of his moral philosophy: that human beings as finite rational agents are free, which mea ...
Ethics and the Professions
... admirable as he had the courage to fulfill the victim’s wants. Therefore, Meiwes should still serve a sentence for killing another human being but a reduced one for euthanasia as he acted to help. General Moral Principle: It is right to help someone in need. Factual Claim: Meiwes helped Brandes. Con ...
... admirable as he had the courage to fulfill the victim’s wants. Therefore, Meiwes should still serve a sentence for killing another human being but a reduced one for euthanasia as he acted to help. General Moral Principle: It is right to help someone in need. Factual Claim: Meiwes helped Brandes. Con ...
Morality
Morality (from the Latin moralitas ""manner, character, proper behavior"") is the differentiation of intentions, decisions, and actions between those that are distinguished as proper and those that are improper: In other words, it is the disjunction between right and wrong. Morality can be a body of standards or principles derived from a code of conduct from a particular philosophy, religion, or culture, or it can derive from a standard that a person believes should be universal. Morality may also be specifically synonymous with ""goodness"" or ""rightness.""Moral philosophy includes moral ontology, or the origin of morals, as well as moral epistemology, or what is known about morals. Different systems of expressing morality have been proposed, including deontological ethical systems which adhere to a set of established rules, and normative ethical systems which consider the merits of actions themselves. An example of normative ethical philosophy is the Golden Rule which states that, ""One should treat others as one would like others to treat oneself.""Immorality is the active opposition to morality (i.e. opposition to that which is good or right), while amorality is variously defined as an unawareness of, indifference toward, or disbelief in any set of moral standards or principles.