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sasom congress presentation culture and ethics 22 – november
sasom congress presentation culture and ethics 22 – november

... Reality: not many (if any) countries globally where cultures are homogenous On the other hand, ethics are fundamental to the moral fibre of any society/profession – as such fundamental to health care & quality of care Basic human rights enshrined in Constitution: - both recognition of culture + h ...
EECS 690
EECS 690

... their discrete parts to make use of such information for the purposes of communication is one thing that computers are getting more and more able to do. It is easy to see why this might be important, but does a system need affective or conative states of its own to make moral decisions? ...
The Ethics of Caring
The Ethics of Caring

... utmost attention to them, and hope that their specific field of mathematics is more widely recognized and appreciated. The concept of making moral decisions based on care is not a foreign concept. I believe this is the way that most women, (and some good men), naturally face everyday moral dilemmas ...
caring about ethics of care: a new dimension
caring about ethics of care: a new dimension

... We have to focus on two themes that the ethics of care underlines: the responsiveness of the moral subject and the difference between the generalized other and the concrete other. In In a different voice Carol Gilligan has written: “the morality of rights differs from the morality of responsibility ...
Ethics and Social Issues Related to Information Communication
Ethics and Social Issues Related to Information Communication

... Copyright © 2011, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited. ...
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism

...  Utility is NOT a “godless” doctrine. “If it be a true belief that God desires, above all things, the happiness of his creatures, and that this was his purpose in their creation, utility is not only not a godless doctrine, but more profoundly religious than any other.” ...
Does Morality Demand our Very Best? On Moral Prescriptions and the Line of Duty
Does Morality Demand our Very Best? On Moral Prescriptions and the Line of Duty

... Consider the example of a soldier who might jump on a grenade in order to save two others. That the soldier will lose his life will contribute negatively to the neutral value that the act has. However, this negative contribution will (other things equal) be outweighed by the positive contribution re ...
casual sex and morality: a kantian-libertarian
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... forms of human interaction (one example is given in note 4). In particular, it can be applied to a form of interaction of especial interest to libertarians, viz. market exchanges. In market transactions the Moral Law enjoins that we treat the parties to the transaction as ends and not merely as mean ...
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Ethics, Morals, Codes, and Laws

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The Reconciliation between Rationalism and Empiricism
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The Ethics of Relativism and Absolutism
The Ethics of Relativism and Absolutism

... the vast difference between cultures does not permit the creation of a viable set of worldwide ethical standards, yet the old cliché of ‘when in Rome, do as the Romans do’, no longer serves as an excuse in the current environment. Whilst it is evidently difficult to determine what is ethically right ...
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Ethics and Business
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Ethics Part II - NEAL TRAUTMAN INC
Ethics Part II - NEAL TRAUTMAN INC

... 1. There are bad people in the world. 2. We are human. Fallible  Have biases—to be like ourselves  Have biases—against others  Motivated by human drives and needs  Ignorance  Effected by interpersonal communication ...
The Moral Urgency of Action to Protect the World`s Megafauna
The Moral Urgency of Action to Protect the World`s Megafauna

... of value is borne out by the world’s ethical traditions, which provide at least three different types of reasons why we ought to defend terrestrial megafauna—­reasons derived from utilitarian values, from moral duties, and from human virtues. When so much is at stake in the survival of the great bea ...
Thiroux_PPTs_Chpt8
Thiroux_PPTs_Chpt8

... Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. ...
printable version
printable version

... One of my clients, a real estate developer, consulted me about a problem concerning a ten floor office building he was seeking to rent. He was negotiating with a potential client, A, about renting 7 floors of the building. They almost had reached a deal but the draft of the contract was at A’s offic ...
Notes on Utilitarianism
Notes on Utilitarianism

... 2. Utilitarianism is a type of consequentialist view, distinguishable from other consequentialist views by how it defines goodness. For the Utilitarian, the only thing ultimately valuable or good for its own sake is happiness, pleasure, or well-being. (Contemporary Utilitarians, including many econo ...
Ethical Gradualism
Ethical Gradualism

... animals has any awareness of its own death, except when a higher animal is threatened by death (and that is one of the painful experiences which humans should try not to inflict on animals). What started as human self-defense here ends in embarrassment: some of our patients, as well as early human f ...
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Ethical intuitionism

Ethical intuitionism (also called moral intuitionism) is a family of views in moral epistemology (and, on some definitions, metaphysics). At minimum, ethical intuitionism is the thesis that our intuitive awareness of value, or intuitive knowledge of evaluative facts, forms the foundation of our ethical knowledge.The view is at its core a foundationalism about moral beliefs: it is the view that some moral truths can be known non-inferentially (i.e., known without one needing to infer them from other truths one believes). Such an epistemological view implies that there are moral beliefs with propositional contents; so it implies cognitivism.
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