Evangelical Models of Ethics
... principles are not only objective features of the world, but that they are always binding on all moral agents and can never be overridden by other relevant moral or non-moral concerns. ...
... principles are not only objective features of the world, but that they are always binding on all moral agents and can never be overridden by other relevant moral or non-moral concerns. ...
Ethical Discrepancy Ethical Discrepancy
... conditions. The only thing that is affected is the rate at which individuals progress through this sequence” (p. 25). Extending Kohlberg’s model, Rest (1986) identifies four discrete steps involved in ethical decision making: awareness, judgment, intention, and behavior. Rest argues that people may ...
... conditions. The only thing that is affected is the rate at which individuals progress through this sequence” (p. 25). Extending Kohlberg’s model, Rest (1986) identifies four discrete steps involved in ethical decision making: awareness, judgment, intention, and behavior. Rest argues that people may ...
Chapter 3 - Lillian McMaster
... argues that Kohlberg’s theory of moral development does not adequately reflect relationships and concern for others. – A justice perspective is a moral perspective that focuses on the rights of the individual. – A care perspective views people in terms of their connectedness with others and emphasiz ...
... argues that Kohlberg’s theory of moral development does not adequately reflect relationships and concern for others. – A justice perspective is a moral perspective that focuses on the rights of the individual. – A care perspective views people in terms of their connectedness with others and emphasiz ...
[Title] Constructivism [Author] Adam Cureton [Main text] The term
... their various religious, moral and philosophical points of view. Christine Korsgaard (1996), by contrast, lays out a more Kantian version of constructivism that explicitly denies the existence of independent moral facts, entities or truths. She argues that by fully reflecting on the basic problem of ...
... their various religious, moral and philosophical points of view. Christine Korsgaard (1996), by contrast, lays out a more Kantian version of constructivism that explicitly denies the existence of independent moral facts, entities or truths. She argues that by fully reflecting on the basic problem of ...
View essay as PDF - Bakersfield College
... morality. As development increases, abidance with universal laws and principles becomes progressively more important as the standard for judging one’s morality. In gauging morality Kohlberg devised Heinz’s dilemma. Heinz’s dilemma involves a man deciding whether or not to steal an expensive drug in ...
... morality. As development increases, abidance with universal laws and principles becomes progressively more important as the standard for judging one’s morality. In gauging morality Kohlberg devised Heinz’s dilemma. Heinz’s dilemma involves a man deciding whether or not to steal an expensive drug in ...
Utilitarianism - Welcome to the UC Davis Philosophy
... • Some pleasures are so preferred that a considerable amount of discomfort is tolerated for their sake • Those of the higher faculties are preferred in this way by the competent, from their sense of dignity ...
... • Some pleasures are so preferred that a considerable amount of discomfort is tolerated for their sake • Those of the higher faculties are preferred in this way by the competent, from their sense of dignity ...
chapter 2 - TEST BANK 360
... divine command theory, which were discussed in chapter 1, can also be seen as normative theories and thus contrasted with the theories of this chapter. Shaw and Barry divide normative theories into consequentialist and nonconsequentialist. For the consequentialist, the key to determining whether an ...
... divine command theory, which were discussed in chapter 1, can also be seen as normative theories and thus contrasted with the theories of this chapter. Shaw and Barry divide normative theories into consequentialist and nonconsequentialist. For the consequentialist, the key to determining whether an ...
1 Killing with a Clean Conscience: Existential Angst and the
... it increases the motivation to believe in a just world and act in a manner that supports this belief – in some cases showing compassion and in other cases setting it aside (Hirschberger, 2009). Just as MS does not indiscriminately increase the desire for fairness, it also does not uniformly increase ...
... it increases the motivation to believe in a just world and act in a manner that supports this belief – in some cases showing compassion and in other cases setting it aside (Hirschberger, 2009). Just as MS does not indiscriminately increase the desire for fairness, it also does not uniformly increase ...
I have not entirely agreed with him
... 1. Discuss Todorov’s theory of totalitarianism and how it accounts for the widespread use of concentration camps and for related crimes in Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia. Interpret this statement of Todorov’s: “Totalitarianism reveals what democracy leaves in the shadows – that at the end of the ...
... 1. Discuss Todorov’s theory of totalitarianism and how it accounts for the widespread use of concentration camps and for related crimes in Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia. Interpret this statement of Todorov’s: “Totalitarianism reveals what democracy leaves in the shadows – that at the end of the ...
Holier than me? Threatening Social Comparison in the Moral Domain
... reproach (seen as implicit in their behavioral choice) triggers resentment. Sabini and Silver (1982) describe how difficult it is to express moral reproach, in large part because of the accompanying claim to moral superiority. Whereas it seems perfectly legitimate for sports fans to note the poor pe ...
... reproach (seen as implicit in their behavioral choice) triggers resentment. Sabini and Silver (1982) describe how difficult it is to express moral reproach, in large part because of the accompanying claim to moral superiority. Whereas it seems perfectly legitimate for sports fans to note the poor pe ...
William Moran Ethics: Virtue Dr. Faulders Character It is often said
... may find a feeling to just take one, steal it. My natural inclination maybe to take the ice-cream but hopefully if I have developed the correct virtues I go against such an inclination. And so the man of character is the man who has developed his thoughts and actions to act in accordance with correc ...
... may find a feeling to just take one, steal it. My natural inclination maybe to take the ice-cream but hopefully if I have developed the correct virtues I go against such an inclination. And so the man of character is the man who has developed his thoughts and actions to act in accordance with correc ...
Moral Disengagement In The Perpetration Of Inhumanities
... People suffer from the wrongs done to them regardless of how perpetrators might justify their inhumane actions. The regulation of humane conduct involves much more than moral reasoning. A complete theory of moral agency must link moral knowledge and reasoning to moral action. This requires an agenti ...
... People suffer from the wrongs done to them regardless of how perpetrators might justify their inhumane actions. The regulation of humane conduct involves much more than moral reasoning. A complete theory of moral agency must link moral knowledge and reasoning to moral action. This requires an agenti ...
Ethics Defined - Bremerton School District
... According to the Collins English Dictionary, Ethics is… 1.(functioning as sing) the philosophical study of the moral value of human conduct and of the rules and principles that ought to govern it; moral philosophy 2.(functioning as pl) a social, religious, or civil code of behavior considered correc ...
... According to the Collins English Dictionary, Ethics is… 1.(functioning as sing) the philosophical study of the moral value of human conduct and of the rules and principles that ought to govern it; moral philosophy 2.(functioning as pl) a social, religious, or civil code of behavior considered correc ...
In some psychological studies on the trolley problem
... The question of how to determine which moral claims and decisions are correct has traditionally been the domain of normative ethics in philosophy. One of the biggest debates in the field has centered on the question of which principle(s) should guide our moral evaluations, with many philosophers defe ...
... The question of how to determine which moral claims and decisions are correct has traditionally been the domain of normative ethics in philosophy. One of the biggest debates in the field has centered on the question of which principle(s) should guide our moral evaluations, with many philosophers defe ...
Introduction to Ethical Philosophy, Bioethics, Ethical - kcpe-kcse
... Lawrence Kohlberg (1981) defined six stages of moral development ranging from childhood to adulthood. Also he didn’t include any women in his study. Carol Gilligan ,raised the concern of gender bias. In her book In a Different Voice (1982),she argued that women’s moral reasoning is different ,but it ...
... Lawrence Kohlberg (1981) defined six stages of moral development ranging from childhood to adulthood. Also he didn’t include any women in his study. Carol Gilligan ,raised the concern of gender bias. In her book In a Different Voice (1982),she argued that women’s moral reasoning is different ,but it ...
The Psychology of Economic Ideology: Emotion, Motivation
... also helped spread the image, mocking the inherent unfairness of giving some people more than others in order to ensure that outcomes are equal. What's more fair: giving everyone the same box to stand on (equality of opportunity), or distributing boxes so that everyone ends up in the same position ( ...
... also helped spread the image, mocking the inherent unfairness of giving some people more than others in order to ensure that outcomes are equal. What's more fair: giving everyone the same box to stand on (equality of opportunity), or distributing boxes so that everyone ends up in the same position ( ...
Does Morality Demand our Very Best? On Moral Prescriptions and the Line of Duty
... satisfy the demands of morality (whatever they may be). Her point is not that we have the wrong moral ideals but rather that we need to recognize that they are not our only ideals and that it is both desirable and appropriate to give a significant regard to nonmoral ideals as well. Though Wolf sugge ...
... satisfy the demands of morality (whatever they may be). Her point is not that we have the wrong moral ideals but rather that we need to recognize that they are not our only ideals and that it is both desirable and appropriate to give a significant regard to nonmoral ideals as well. Though Wolf sugge ...
9 Deontology*
... myself. If there are constraints, then each of us has strong (or even overriding) moral reason not to kill anyone ourselves. Constraints give each of us distinct aims: I have reason not to kill anyone myself; you have reason not to kill anyone yourself. Thus although you will do wrong in killing the ...
... myself. If there are constraints, then each of us has strong (or even overriding) moral reason not to kill anyone ourselves. Constraints give each of us distinct aims: I have reason not to kill anyone myself; you have reason not to kill anyone yourself. Thus although you will do wrong in killing the ...
Navigating the Academic Pressure at Whitman
... One of the most famous examples that was used by Kohlberg in his research is the Heinz dilemma. Here is the story: In Europe, a woman was near death from a special kind of cancer. There was one drug that the doctors thought would save her. It was a form of radium that a druggist in the same town had ...
... One of the most famous examples that was used by Kohlberg in his research is the Heinz dilemma. Here is the story: In Europe, a woman was near death from a special kind of cancer. There was one drug that the doctors thought would save her. It was a form of radium that a druggist in the same town had ...
Political Theory Working Paper - e
... in moral conflicts. However, “reasonable” discrimination between values is much more context-dependent, even on an individual scale, than what moral, political or religious “rationalist” conceptions assume. Faced with a specific situation of conflicting values, there is no single “truth”, nor is the ...
... in moral conflicts. However, “reasonable” discrimination between values is much more context-dependent, even on an individual scale, than what moral, political or religious “rationalist” conceptions assume. Faced with a specific situation of conflicting values, there is no single “truth”, nor is the ...
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)
... Managerial Ethics that is due for publication later this year categorically states that Indian managers are very consequentlist in their approach to the ethical dilemma. It is therefore only proper for us to take a similar position since the readership of this journal is professional in nature. If w ...
... Managerial Ethics that is due for publication later this year categorically states that Indian managers are very consequentlist in their approach to the ethical dilemma. It is therefore only proper for us to take a similar position since the readership of this journal is professional in nature. If w ...
TT281: Right and Wrong
... This process would seem to supports much of what the researcher has discovered when looking at the data findings and especially concerning who by and how the children have been influenced. For Bandura (1977) aggressive individuals are not born with those traits but learn them just as they would any ...
... This process would seem to supports much of what the researcher has discovered when looking at the data findings and especially concerning who by and how the children have been influenced. For Bandura (1977) aggressive individuals are not born with those traits but learn them just as they would any ...
c. virtue ethics - University of San Diego
... utilitarians might have to morally deliberate about everything they do in life. 2. It can be hard to measure utility in terms of pleasures, happiness, or the satisfaction of preferences. Can all consequence of your actions be reduced to pleasures, happiness, or the satisfaction of preferences? 3. Co ...
... utilitarians might have to morally deliberate about everything they do in life. 2. It can be hard to measure utility in terms of pleasures, happiness, or the satisfaction of preferences. Can all consequence of your actions be reduced to pleasures, happiness, or the satisfaction of preferences? 3. Co ...
MacIntyre and Anscombe: Two Modern Virtue Ethicists
... people like Kant and Hume, the virtues have lived on. • What’s more, society depends for its very existence, upon people who exhibit the virtues. ...
... people like Kant and Hume, the virtues have lived on. • What’s more, society depends for its very existence, upon people who exhibit the virtues. ...
Selective Moral Disengagement in the Exercise of Moral Agency
... Cognitive restructuring of harmful conduct through moral justi cations, sanitising language and exonerating comparisons is the most effective set of psychological mechanisms for disengaging moral control. Investing harmful conduct with high moral purpose not only eliminates self-censure so destruct ...
... Cognitive restructuring of harmful conduct through moral justi cations, sanitising language and exonerating comparisons is the most effective set of psychological mechanisms for disengaging moral control. Investing harmful conduct with high moral purpose not only eliminates self-censure so destruct ...