CNA Code of Ethics
... know the right thing to do, but for various reasons (including fear or circumstances beyond their control) do not or cannot take the right action or prevent a particular harm. • When values and commitments are compromised in this way, nurses’ identity and integrity as moral agents are affected and t ...
... know the right thing to do, but for various reasons (including fear or circumstances beyond their control) do not or cannot take the right action or prevent a particular harm. • When values and commitments are compromised in this way, nurses’ identity and integrity as moral agents are affected and t ...
Chapter 3: Ethics and Social Responsibility in Strategic Management
... –Cultural norms and values vary –Governance systems based on rule or relationships –Differences in values between businesspeople and key stakeholders ...
... –Cultural norms and values vary –Governance systems based on rule or relationships –Differences in values between businesspeople and key stakeholders ...
Michael S. Gazzaniga Dartmouth College
... and determines our actions, independent of our knowing about it until after the fact, then what becomes of free will? Free will is still alive and well. As I have argued, even if an action taken can be explained by a brain mechanism or function or malfunction “this does not mean that the person who ...
... and determines our actions, independent of our knowing about it until after the fact, then what becomes of free will? Free will is still alive and well. As I have argued, even if an action taken can be explained by a brain mechanism or function or malfunction “this does not mean that the person who ...
Ethics and Business
... • Although Kant showed that some rules would become inconsistent when universalized, this does not tell us which rules are morally valid • Kant never showed us how to resolve conflicts between equally absolute rules • Kant did not distinguish between making an exception to a rule and qualifying a ru ...
... • Although Kant showed that some rules would become inconsistent when universalized, this does not tell us which rules are morally valid • Kant never showed us how to resolve conflicts between equally absolute rules • Kant did not distinguish between making an exception to a rule and qualifying a ru ...
a. Title: Zen as a Social Ethics of Responsiveness
... praxis for developing virtue than a system of value-laden rules distinguishing moral and immoral behavior. This would make its character more akin to a “virtue ethics” in some ways.) Now let us turn to the present, asking whether Chan/Zen has something important to contribute to religious ethics in ...
... praxis for developing virtue than a system of value-laden rules distinguishing moral and immoral behavior. This would make its character more akin to a “virtue ethics” in some ways.) Now let us turn to the present, asking whether Chan/Zen has something important to contribute to religious ethics in ...
Evolution and moral naturalism - Victoria University of Wellington
... But it doesn’t always work out this way; sometimes falsehood is useful. For example, people robustly judge themselves better than average in all sorts of ways, including supposing themselves to have an above-average ability to resist the temptation to make unrealistic positive self-evaluations (Frie ...
... But it doesn’t always work out this way; sometimes falsehood is useful. For example, people robustly judge themselves better than average in all sorts of ways, including supposing themselves to have an above-average ability to resist the temptation to make unrealistic positive self-evaluations (Frie ...
Morality as Freedom
... phenomenal beings we sometimes go wrong. The view so understood gives rise to several problems. First, the claim that purely noumenal persons would act as the categorical imperative requires may be questioned. It is not obvious why persons uninfluenced by causality should act morally rather than any ...
... phenomenal beings we sometimes go wrong. The view so understood gives rise to several problems. First, the claim that purely noumenal persons would act as the categorical imperative requires may be questioned. It is not obvious why persons uninfluenced by causality should act morally rather than any ...
If killing isn`t wrong, then nothing is: A naturalistic defence of basic
... To my ears, and I’m sure also to the ears of non-philosophers too, there is something deeply peculiar about these purported explanations. They evince in me the same kind of reaction as that reported by Wittgenstein in response to the empirical certainties exhibited by Moore: “even though I find it q ...
... To my ears, and I’m sure also to the ears of non-philosophers too, there is something deeply peculiar about these purported explanations. They evince in me the same kind of reaction as that reported by Wittgenstein in response to the empirical certainties exhibited by Moore: “even though I find it q ...
Philosophy as Therapy for Recovering (Unrestrained) Omnivores
... plan at this green-forsaken cafeteria anyway. At the next class discussion, he compensates by speaking up for veganism, silently lamenting that the argument that so readily changed his mind has been decidedly less transformative of his will. In certain respects, the cases of Karla and Augusto are si ...
... plan at this green-forsaken cafeteria anyway. At the next class discussion, he compensates by speaking up for veganism, silently lamenting that the argument that so readily changed his mind has been decidedly less transformative of his will. In certain respects, the cases of Karla and Augusto are si ...
ethical theory
... -- let’s first locate moral theory ( N.B. “moral” and “ethical” used interchangeably) in terms of prior entries on the chart -- vs. practical ethics: -- practical (as in PHIL 140) focuses on particular cases, often cases currently in dispute; less abstract, more accessible for beginners to philosop ...
... -- let’s first locate moral theory ( N.B. “moral” and “ethical” used interchangeably) in terms of prior entries on the chart -- vs. practical ethics: -- practical (as in PHIL 140) focuses on particular cases, often cases currently in dispute; less abstract, more accessible for beginners to philosop ...
F
... and none with the rigor, depth, and clarity of Shane O’Mara in his excellent book, Why Torture Doesn’t Work: The Neuroscience of Interrogation. O’Mara is professor of experimental brain research at the University of Dublin’s Trinity College and director of its Institute of Neuroscience. Although he ...
... and none with the rigor, depth, and clarity of Shane O’Mara in his excellent book, Why Torture Doesn’t Work: The Neuroscience of Interrogation. O’Mara is professor of experimental brain research at the University of Dublin’s Trinity College and director of its Institute of Neuroscience. Although he ...
Corrections Academy 110KB Jan 19 2015 10:37:24 AM
... • Correctional Officers must at all times, and at all levels, exhibit professional attitudes and conduct – High esteem and sound moral values promote and sustain conduct consistent w/the highest ideals of a profession ...
... • Correctional Officers must at all times, and at all levels, exhibit professional attitudes and conduct – High esteem and sound moral values promote and sustain conduct consistent w/the highest ideals of a profession ...
Business Ethics
... • Assess gain over harm (pleasure/pain) • General happiness, not individual • Mill adds altruism and concern for others to Bentham’s pleasure/pain • Mill adds rules which create general welfare based on past experience www.philosophicalinvestigations.co. uk ...
... • Assess gain over harm (pleasure/pain) • General happiness, not individual • Mill adds altruism and concern for others to Bentham’s pleasure/pain • Mill adds rules which create general welfare based on past experience www.philosophicalinvestigations.co. uk ...
when supererogation is supererogatory. a case of medical ethics
... The question of supererogation is often evoked in bioethics (in particular in the context of medical ethics1) in relation to all those cases in which it is difficult to make an accurate moral judgment in agreement with the given moral paradigm. I am talking about uncertain situations of clear uncert ...
... The question of supererogation is often evoked in bioethics (in particular in the context of medical ethics1) in relation to all those cases in which it is difficult to make an accurate moral judgment in agreement with the given moral paradigm. I am talking about uncertain situations of clear uncert ...
Click here to open the literature review in a word document.
... archivists is grounded in examples of “archivists” who have complied with reprehensible regimes and organizations in order to maintain their power or cover up past crimes. As such, this idea of an “archival theology” is necessary to maintain the integrity and the social relevance of the profession. ...
... archivists is grounded in examples of “archivists” who have complied with reprehensible regimes and organizations in order to maintain their power or cover up past crimes. As such, this idea of an “archival theology” is necessary to maintain the integrity and the social relevance of the profession. ...
Crafting & Executing Strategy 18e
... actions have to be judged in the context of society’s standards of right and wrong. ...
... actions have to be judged in the context of society’s standards of right and wrong. ...
Affect-based trust - McGraw Hill Higher Education
... accurately identifies the morally “right” course of action. » Theory of cognitive moral development argues that as people age and mature, they move through several stages of moral development—each more mature and sophisticated than the prior one. ...
... accurately identifies the morally “right” course of action. » Theory of cognitive moral development argues that as people age and mature, they move through several stages of moral development—each more mature and sophisticated than the prior one. ...
Ethical Relativism
... norms of the society in which it is practiced. The same action may be morally right in one society but be morally wrong in another. ...
... norms of the society in which it is practiced. The same action may be morally right in one society but be morally wrong in another. ...
Document
... a spongy brain full of tiny holes. Two bright new researchers at Yale had proposed doing gene therapy for Canavan’s. They had tested their methods on 300 rats, 4 monkeys, and 2 children in New Zealand. They wanted the opportunity to shoot a syringe full of healthy genes into Jacob’s brain, but three ...
... a spongy brain full of tiny holes. Two bright new researchers at Yale had proposed doing gene therapy for Canavan’s. They had tested their methods on 300 rats, 4 monkeys, and 2 children in New Zealand. They wanted the opportunity to shoot a syringe full of healthy genes into Jacob’s brain, but three ...
Subjectivism in Ethics
... that isn't worth bothering with. But from a theoretical point of view, it is actually a very big and important difference. One way to see this is to consider again the arguments against Simple Subjectivism. While those arguments were severely embarrassing to Simple Subjectivism, they do not affect E ...
... that isn't worth bothering with. But from a theoretical point of view, it is actually a very big and important difference. One way to see this is to consider again the arguments against Simple Subjectivism. While those arguments were severely embarrassing to Simple Subjectivism, they do not affect E ...
ethics - Weebly
... own prejudices, experiences and opinions to the judgement. Objective 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 ...
... own prejudices, experiences and opinions to the judgement. Objective 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 ...
Abstracts - International Conference on Clinical Ethics and
... coping skills suggests that healthcare providers cannot simply treat them as if they have little or no say in their care plan. When it comes to caring for those who lack capacity for a specific clinical issue due to mental/behavior disorders, healthcare providers often employ a paternalistic model o ...
... coping skills suggests that healthcare providers cannot simply treat them as if they have little or no say in their care plan. When it comes to caring for those who lack capacity for a specific clinical issue due to mental/behavior disorders, healthcare providers often employ a paternalistic model o ...
Reasons, rational requirements, and the putative pseudo
... with the philosophical arguments for it?9 Of course not. For whether it is ultimately true or not, it is neither obvious nor incontestably established that regularly doing the outward deeds required by morality comports with the weight of nonmoral reasons. After all, regularly doing those deeds enta ...
... with the philosophical arguments for it?9 Of course not. For whether it is ultimately true or not, it is neither obvious nor incontestably established that regularly doing the outward deeds required by morality comports with the weight of nonmoral reasons. After all, regularly doing those deeds enta ...
Why Response-Dependence Theories of Morality are False
... response plays a truth-determining role in morality. This is stronger than the claim that the response in question plays a merely constitutive role in morality, for the response can play a constitutive role without playing a truth-determining role. By way of analogy, it has recently been argued4 tha ...
... response plays a truth-determining role in morality. This is stronger than the claim that the response in question plays a merely constitutive role in morality, for the response can play a constitutive role without playing a truth-determining role. By way of analogy, it has recently been argued4 tha ...
Moral responsibility
In philosophy, moral responsibility is the status of morally deserving praise, blame, reward, or punishment for an act or omission, in accordance with one's moral obligations.Deciding what (if anything) counts as ""morally obligatory"" is a principal concern of ethics.Philosophers refer to people who have moral responsibility for an action as moral agents. Agents have the capability to reflect on their situation, to form intentions about how they will act, and then to carry out that action. The notion of free will has become an important issue in the debate on whether individuals are ever morally responsible for their actions and, if so, in what sense. Incompatibilists regard determinism as at odds with free will, whereas compatibilists think the two can coexist.Moral responsibility does not necessarily equate to legal responsibility. A person is legally responsible for an event when a legal system is liable to penalise that person for that event. Although it may often be the case that when a person is morally responsible for an act, they are also legally responsible for it, the two states do not always coincide.