Teaching Research Ethics: Changing the Culture of Science
... agent” from that of the “moral judge” or “critic” or “spectator.” The ethical task of the moral agent differs from that of the moral judge. The objective is different; the mode of deliberation is different. The moral agent must fashion a solution in order to solve a moral problem with the research a ...
... agent” from that of the “moral judge” or “critic” or “spectator.” The ethical task of the moral agent differs from that of the moral judge. The objective is different; the mode of deliberation is different. The moral agent must fashion a solution in order to solve a moral problem with the research a ...
View
... – Rules: designed to advance the good of members over time • Morality – A society’s rules of conduct – What people ought / ought not to do in various situations (road network- good or bad) • Ethics (philosophical study of morality- guidelines) – Rational examination of morality – Evaluation of peopl ...
... – Rules: designed to advance the good of members over time • Morality – A society’s rules of conduct – What people ought / ought not to do in various situations (road network- good or bad) • Ethics (philosophical study of morality- guidelines) – Rational examination of morality – Evaluation of peopl ...
Outline of Virtue Ethics encyclopedia article
... ethics as a form of anti-theory. Those advocating the avoidance of theory argued, among other things, that our understanding of ethical phenomena is too complex, too rich, to be ...
... ethics as a form of anti-theory. Those advocating the avoidance of theory argued, among other things, that our understanding of ethical phenomena is too complex, too rich, to be ...
BENNETT v. HALLIE
... fall to ceaseless flames,” i. e. arbitrarily damns. • Thus, in Bennett’s view, Edwards is worse than Himmler because at least the latter had sympathy for his victims so that there was a chance sympathy might have saved him (and his victims) from his badly formed conscience. ...
... fall to ceaseless flames,” i. e. arbitrarily damns. • Thus, in Bennett’s view, Edwards is worse than Himmler because at least the latter had sympathy for his victims so that there was a chance sympathy might have saved him (and his victims) from his badly formed conscience. ...
Document
... humans – unless specifically designed to be! Original applications or training may have large impact (a2i2 vs. military). ...
... humans – unless specifically designed to be! Original applications or training may have large impact (a2i2 vs. military). ...
Perseus: Symbol of Ethical Values When I think of what a he
... Perseus: Symbol of Ethical Values When I think of what a hero represents to me, I think of an indiv idual who fights for family values and the ethics of a good human being. Greek mythological heroes h ave many attributes that can be related to positive traits in society today. One such ancient hero ...
... Perseus: Symbol of Ethical Values When I think of what a hero represents to me, I think of an indiv idual who fights for family values and the ethics of a good human being. Greek mythological heroes h ave many attributes that can be related to positive traits in society today. One such ancient hero ...
hindu ethics
... understanding has been gained of the practical influence exerted by the habits of worship, by the practice of the ascetic, devotional, or occult discipline, by the social organization and by the family system, the real impact of the faith upon the life of the individual and the community cannot be e ...
... understanding has been gained of the practical influence exerted by the habits of worship, by the practice of the ascetic, devotional, or occult discipline, by the social organization and by the family system, the real impact of the faith upon the life of the individual and the community cannot be e ...
Ethical Absolutism and Relativism
... Ethics: The Study of Moral Philosophy (Cont.) • Intermediate position: ethics and moral judgments change over time – What is right (or wrong) at one point in the development of a social system may be wrong (or right) at another point – Ethical systems evolve with the requirements of a social system ...
... Ethics: The Study of Moral Philosophy (Cont.) • Intermediate position: ethics and moral judgments change over time – What is right (or wrong) at one point in the development of a social system may be wrong (or right) at another point – Ethical systems evolve with the requirements of a social system ...
The Moral Point of View in Hume, Kant and Mill Margaret Marie
... view. When we adopt the general point of view, he claims, we ignore the differences that distance and time can make to our non-moral reactions. From the general point of view, it does not matter how close to or far from someone we are. We adopt a point of view where we ignore the features particula ...
... view. When we adopt the general point of view, he claims, we ignore the differences that distance and time can make to our non-moral reactions. From the general point of view, it does not matter how close to or far from someone we are. We adopt a point of view where we ignore the features particula ...
Frankena, Chapter 4
... actions are determined by an apparent good..no man can set as the object of his choice something that seems evil or bad to him. opponent:The evident fact of incontinence. A man’s desires or appetites are in conflict with his reason, precisely in the sense that he desires something that is bad for hi ...
... actions are determined by an apparent good..no man can set as the object of his choice something that seems evil or bad to him. opponent:The evident fact of incontinence. A man’s desires or appetites are in conflict with his reason, precisely in the sense that he desires something that is bad for hi ...
1 But What About the Animals? Cheshire Calhoun Abstract
... Finally, there is the ethical concern that is really at the heart of H.R. 5314—the failure to reward the dogs’ long, faithful, and important service. “It was obvious to me,” says Bartlett, “that Robby is a dog who has faithfully served his country….It was also obvious that Robby has a special bond w ...
... Finally, there is the ethical concern that is really at the heart of H.R. 5314—the failure to reward the dogs’ long, faithful, and important service. “It was obvious to me,” says Bartlett, “that Robby is a dog who has faithfully served his country….It was also obvious that Robby has a special bond w ...
Contemporary Ethical Theories and Jurisprudence
... certain naturalistic definitions (what these are will be explained below) are conjoined to the factual premises. Intuitionists and Neo-Kantians admit (a) but deny (b). All varieties of non-cognitivism deny (a); and all but one deny (b). The exception is that group of Oxford philosophers who take the ...
... certain naturalistic definitions (what these are will be explained below) are conjoined to the factual premises. Intuitionists and Neo-Kantians admit (a) but deny (b). All varieties of non-cognitivism deny (a); and all but one deny (b). The exception is that group of Oxford philosophers who take the ...
The Formula of the Universal Law
... could be shown that the notion of freedom requires an agent to accept the ML, then the KPL would be rendered inadequate in a clear way. Kant’s conception of freedom says that a positively free will cannot be determined by the agent’s desires, but rather must be determined by a law.17 The argument fo ...
... could be shown that the notion of freedom requires an agent to accept the ML, then the KPL would be rendered inadequate in a clear way. Kant’s conception of freedom says that a positively free will cannot be determined by the agent’s desires, but rather must be determined by a law.17 The argument fo ...
The Paradox of Environmental Ethics.
... Nietzsche argues that each moral engagement with nature requires a conceptual identification of nature which can, in the end, be conceived as a violent exclusion of alternative explanations. According to Nietzsche, interpretation is essentially will-to-power. Nevertheless, ‘nature’ is still a key co ...
... Nietzsche argues that each moral engagement with nature requires a conceptual identification of nature which can, in the end, be conceived as a violent exclusion of alternative explanations. According to Nietzsche, interpretation is essentially will-to-power. Nevertheless, ‘nature’ is still a key co ...
Jane Addams (1860 – 1935) Founder Hull House social settlement
... “The story it (the Report) tells is first and foremost of appalling suffering of many patients. This was primarily caused by a serious failure on the part of a provider Trust Board. It did not listen sufficiently to its patients and staff or ensure the correction of deficiencies brought to the Trust ...
... “The story it (the Report) tells is first and foremost of appalling suffering of many patients. This was primarily caused by a serious failure on the part of a provider Trust Board. It did not listen sufficiently to its patients and staff or ensure the correction of deficiencies brought to the Trust ...
THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV The Brothers Karamazov
... person has no life though the goal has been attained. Consequently, there is a future life in paradise.2 This logic is very similar to Kant’s argument for the enduring self. In his Critique of Practical Reason, Kant argues that we are presented with a categorical moral imperative to treat others as ...
... person has no life though the goal has been attained. Consequently, there is a future life in paradise.2 This logic is very similar to Kant’s argument for the enduring self. In his Critique of Practical Reason, Kant argues that we are presented with a categorical moral imperative to treat others as ...
Act Naturally - Integral Program
... Rousseau comes to the conclusion that inequality succeeded in establishing itself in stages through the history of man: “If we follow the progress of inequality in these different revolutions, we shall find that the establishment of law and the right of property was the first stage, the institutions ...
... Rousseau comes to the conclusion that inequality succeeded in establishing itself in stages through the history of man: “If we follow the progress of inequality in these different revolutions, we shall find that the establishment of law and the right of property was the first stage, the institutions ...
Ethical Leadership and Angelina Jolie
... children this, we ourselves, must practice what we preach and lead by example, by our doing the right thing. In Kohlberg’s theory of moral development, level 1, the Pre-‐Conventional morality, the mor ...
... children this, we ourselves, must practice what we preach and lead by example, by our doing the right thing. In Kohlberg’s theory of moral development, level 1, the Pre-‐Conventional morality, the mor ...
THE COMBINATION OF KANTIAN, RELIGIOUS AND
... constitutionalism. The ethical public realm and its expansion is, therefore, made by the law of global society (Booth et al., 2000: 11). Nardin also starts one of his articles with an opinion of religious concepts and supports two allegations: (1) there are no differences between ethics, law and rel ...
... constitutionalism. The ethical public realm and its expansion is, therefore, made by the law of global society (Booth et al., 2000: 11). Nardin also starts one of his articles with an opinion of religious concepts and supports two allegations: (1) there are no differences between ethics, law and rel ...
Recent Criticism of Natural Law Theory
... ontology obscures the antinomy of freedom and cause. Yet, this antimony undercuts the efforts of deontological natural law theorists no less thoroughly than it did those of their ontological predecessors. To obscure the antinomy is not to eliminate it. It reemerges in the form of analogous antinomie ...
... ontology obscures the antinomy of freedom and cause. Yet, this antimony undercuts the efforts of deontological natural law theorists no less thoroughly than it did those of their ontological predecessors. To obscure the antinomy is not to eliminate it. It reemerges in the form of analogous antinomie ...
Leadership and ethics in decision making
... Conscious effort to do what is right, act and live well That these values inherently translate into modes of conduct and ultimately a way of life That it is a deliberate attempt to pursue and do right through the setting of ground rules to guide the person at all ...
... Conscious effort to do what is right, act and live well That these values inherently translate into modes of conduct and ultimately a way of life That it is a deliberate attempt to pursue and do right through the setting of ground rules to guide the person at all ...
A Post-Secular Faith? Connolly on Pluralism and Evil
... vilification of certain practices as well as other doctrines that present religion, and particularly, Christianity differently, that is, in ways that reduce the demand for salvation by an omnipotent God. Whilst the question of evil is not the sole focus of Connolly’s enquiries, nevertheless, the nat ...
... vilification of certain practices as well as other doctrines that present religion, and particularly, Christianity differently, that is, in ways that reduce the demand for salvation by an omnipotent God. Whilst the question of evil is not the sole focus of Connolly’s enquiries, nevertheless, the nat ...
Objective Morality_final
... blame must, of course, be mediated by a more specific theory of moral character and the appropriateness of blame, which I shall not offer here. Furthermore, I do not want to state the connection between these concepts too strongly. It is likely that any connection between virtuous decisionmaking, pr ...
... blame must, of course, be mediated by a more specific theory of moral character and the appropriateness of blame, which I shall not offer here. Furthermore, I do not want to state the connection between these concepts too strongly. It is likely that any connection between virtuous decisionmaking, pr ...
Relativism - Creighton University
... What about the claim that CR has the advantage of promoting tolerance? Rachels: One can criticize the moral values of other cultures & still be appreciative of many of their beliefs. [Cultural relativists are often very intolerant of those who claim that there are some universal moral truths. Ind ...
... What about the claim that CR has the advantage of promoting tolerance? Rachels: One can criticize the moral values of other cultures & still be appreciative of many of their beliefs. [Cultural relativists are often very intolerant of those who claim that there are some universal moral truths. Ind ...
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.