Thesis edit2 - University of Tilburg
... goods. Or maybe the violator felt equally apathetic to vandalizing and stealing, but thought the latter had grave legal consequences when caught. On the other hand, maybe the agent thought both acts defied morality, but simply did not act accordingly or thought stealing was more wrong than vandalizi ...
... goods. Or maybe the violator felt equally apathetic to vandalizing and stealing, but thought the latter had grave legal consequences when caught. On the other hand, maybe the agent thought both acts defied morality, but simply did not act accordingly or thought stealing was more wrong than vandalizi ...
Slide 1 - International Forum on Teaching Legal Ethics and
... (b) is neither misleading, confusing, or deceptive, nor likely to mislead, confuse or deceive, and (c) is in the best interests of the public and is consistent with a high standard of professionalism. ...
... (b) is neither misleading, confusing, or deceptive, nor likely to mislead, confuse or deceive, and (c) is in the best interests of the public and is consistent with a high standard of professionalism. ...
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 ...
Perseus: Symbol of Ethical Values When I think of what a he
... ovide Perseus, which momentarily elevates him to a higher status than other mortals so he may comple te his mission. According to Stephen Harris and Gloria Platzner, "Perseus literally assumes, at lea st temporarily, powers like flight and invisibility that humans may dream of but are otherwise rese ...
... ovide Perseus, which momentarily elevates him to a higher status than other mortals so he may comple te his mission. According to Stephen Harris and Gloria Platzner, "Perseus literally assumes, at lea st temporarily, powers like flight and invisibility that humans may dream of but are otherwise rese ...
Consequentialism and our special relationship to self
... Our special relationship to our selves grounds options instead of obligations because, though this relationship is rooted in agent-relative reasons, those reasons are fundamentally subjective, rooted in idiosyncratic desires. When a person opts not to benefit herself, or even to harm herself, any ra ...
... Our special relationship to our selves grounds options instead of obligations because, though this relationship is rooted in agent-relative reasons, those reasons are fundamentally subjective, rooted in idiosyncratic desires. When a person opts not to benefit herself, or even to harm herself, any ra ...
Moral Rationalism and Rational Amoralism
... moral arguments to justify and give reasons for action is sufficient to support the moderate existence internalism which rationalism entails. What defense do I offer of judgment internalism connecting moral judgments and motives, and what sort of necessary connection do I defend? My favored formulat ...
... moral arguments to justify and give reasons for action is sufficient to support the moderate existence internalism which rationalism entails. What defense do I offer of judgment internalism connecting moral judgments and motives, and what sort of necessary connection do I defend? My favored formulat ...
Dewey`s Aesthetics and Today`s Moral Education - Purdue e-Pubs
... For Dewey, without an expansive imagination—one willing to go beyond conventional limits—teachers cannot be free, nor can they free their students. Moreover, without imagination they cannot be moral, because morality means the capacity to choose as well as to assume responsibility for those values c ...
... For Dewey, without an expansive imagination—one willing to go beyond conventional limits—teachers cannot be free, nor can they free their students. Moreover, without imagination they cannot be moral, because morality means the capacity to choose as well as to assume responsibility for those values c ...
Save - Yimg
... By systematically completing this audit through brainstorming about the actions, beliefs, cooperative potential, and stakes of your stakeholders, we can create a broader, more objective picture of the situation, the players, and firm’s potential and actual role in the ...
... By systematically completing this audit through brainstorming about the actions, beliefs, cooperative potential, and stakes of your stakeholders, we can create a broader, more objective picture of the situation, the players, and firm’s potential and actual role in the ...
The Role of Antagonism in Kant`s Metaphysic of
... challenge to Plato: how matter partakes in idea if matter and idea are totally different?3 Kant insists that reason and morality have the capacity to immediately stimulate a moral sentiment for letting man, a dual being belonging to the noumenal world and at the same time to the phenomenal world, a ...
... challenge to Plato: how matter partakes in idea if matter and idea are totally different?3 Kant insists that reason and morality have the capacity to immediately stimulate a moral sentiment for letting man, a dual being belonging to the noumenal world and at the same time to the phenomenal world, a ...
Duty Theory - Soazig Le Bihan
... others’ rational agents autonomy, including ousrselves. As rational, autonomous agents, we understand that our duty is to do whatever we could will be done by all others. Soazig Le Bihan -- University of Montana ...
... others’ rational agents autonomy, including ousrselves. As rational, autonomous agents, we understand that our duty is to do whatever we could will be done by all others. Soazig Le Bihan -- University of Montana ...
Ch 5 Reviewx - Loyola Blakefield
... Catholics form their consciences in a Christian ____________________ that believes in ________________, who continues to teach us through the _______________________ and the bishops. We cannot form a Christian conscience without the help, advice, and teaching of our Church ___________________ who wa ...
... Catholics form their consciences in a Christian ____________________ that believes in ________________, who continues to teach us through the _______________________ and the bishops. We cannot form a Christian conscience without the help, advice, and teaching of our Church ___________________ who wa ...
Engineering Ethics: An Introduction
... cheating”, etc. It might also include even more clearly positive precepts, such as “help the needy”, “promote human happiness”, and “protect the natural environment”. ...
... cheating”, etc. It might also include even more clearly positive precepts, such as “help the needy”, “promote human happiness”, and “protect the natural environment”. ...
Slide 1
... Engineers shall disclose all known or potential conflicts of interest that could influence or appear to influence their judgment or the quality of their services. Engineers shall not accept compensation, financial or otherwise, from more than one party for services on the same project, or for servic ...
... Engineers shall disclose all known or potential conflicts of interest that could influence or appear to influence their judgment or the quality of their services. Engineers shall not accept compensation, financial or otherwise, from more than one party for services on the same project, or for servic ...
traditional ethics and the maintenance of social order in the nigerian
... those beings below them who defile the moral law or principles. It is this consciousness that causes the Africans to live in fear of the spiritual beings that are above them in the hierarchy of beings. That is to say that African ontology gives birth to an African traditional ethics that is based on ...
... those beings below them who defile the moral law or principles. It is this consciousness that causes the Africans to live in fear of the spiritual beings that are above them in the hierarchy of beings. That is to say that African ontology gives birth to an African traditional ethics that is based on ...
McGraw-Hill/Irwin The Consequences of Unethical Conduct
... Four Approaches to Ethical Reasoning • Social contract ethics – The rightness of an action is based on the customs and norms of a particular society or community ...
... Four Approaches to Ethical Reasoning • Social contract ethics – The rightness of an action is based on the customs and norms of a particular society or community ...
What Normative Terms Mean and Why It Matters for Ethical Theory.
... these speci c linguistic and ethical issues can be seen as case studies illustrating the fruitfulness of utilizing resources from philosophy of language and linguistics in ethical theorizing. Of course, one could acknowledge a role for linguistic inquiry in ethics but reject my speci c claims about ...
... these speci c linguistic and ethical issues can be seen as case studies illustrating the fruitfulness of utilizing resources from philosophy of language and linguistics in ethical theorizing. Of course, one could acknowledge a role for linguistic inquiry in ethics but reject my speci c claims about ...
Ethics—The Basics by John Mizzoni
... VIRTUE ETHICS • Moral excellence—a moral virtue— consists in a mean state. • “By virtue I mean virtue of character… it is concerned with feelings and actions….” (Aristotle, 337 BCE) • “Virtue, then, is a mean, in so far as it aims at what is intermediate.” (Aristotle, 337 BCE) ...
... VIRTUE ETHICS • Moral excellence—a moral virtue— consists in a mean state. • “By virtue I mean virtue of character… it is concerned with feelings and actions….” (Aristotle, 337 BCE) • “Virtue, then, is a mean, in so far as it aims at what is intermediate.” (Aristotle, 337 BCE) ...
From Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 6 (1985) - UNC
... moral intuitions to a relatively minor role. Although these approaches do require some agreement between moral intuitions and moral theory, the requirement is often minimal and the appeals to such agreement serve as reassurance rather than as justification. Kant, for example, considers and then reje ...
... moral intuitions to a relatively minor role. Although these approaches do require some agreement between moral intuitions and moral theory, the requirement is often minimal and the appeals to such agreement serve as reassurance rather than as justification. Kant, for example, considers and then reje ...
Was Kant right?
... distinguish between them. • W.D. Ross gives us a way out by arguing for a hierarchy of prima facie duties, which are relative. So you can be a deontological relativist! ...
... distinguish between them. • W.D. Ross gives us a way out by arguing for a hierarchy of prima facie duties, which are relative. So you can be a deontological relativist! ...
The goodness of pleasure: Epicurean ethics
... The goodness of virtue: Stoic & Peripatetic ethics On Moral Ends III.1–61: Stoics ethics – defence Stoics identify morality/virtue as the only good. How do they account for the other things in life that people typically value (e.g. wealth, health, honour)? Stoics believe that the goodness of moralit ...
... The goodness of virtue: Stoic & Peripatetic ethics On Moral Ends III.1–61: Stoics ethics – defence Stoics identify morality/virtue as the only good. How do they account for the other things in life that people typically value (e.g. wealth, health, honour)? Stoics believe that the goodness of moralit ...
Glory as an Ethical Idea
... You also need to understand why, in particular, this was a good moment to achieve a runout within this specific match. Alongside the aspects of the glory of Flintoff’s run-out that are internal to the nature of the game of cricket, there are also narrative aspects, concerning the history of the gam ...
... You also need to understand why, in particular, this was a good moment to achieve a runout within this specific match. Alongside the aspects of the glory of Flintoff’s run-out that are internal to the nature of the game of cricket, there are also narrative aspects, concerning the history of the gam ...
“I believe this will become the standard in the field of biblical ethics
... this series will address the interpretation of biblical teachings; others will focus on the history, theological integration, philosophical analysis, and application of Christian moral understanding. But all will use and apply God’s moral truth in ways that convince the mind, convict the heart, and ...
... this series will address the interpretation of biblical teachings; others will focus on the history, theological integration, philosophical analysis, and application of Christian moral understanding. But all will use and apply God’s moral truth in ways that convince the mind, convict the heart, and ...
Moral Leadership - Regent University
... “superego” and not the “id.” The author pictured a moral leader as someone who supposedly tells people the difference between right and wrong from on high through his or her daily behaviors. Here, the praxis speaks volumes because, there is much more to moral leadership than merely telling others wh ...
... “superego” and not the “id.” The author pictured a moral leader as someone who supposedly tells people the difference between right and wrong from on high through his or her daily behaviors. Here, the praxis speaks volumes because, there is much more to moral leadership than merely telling others wh ...
A Plea for Moral Deference
... whom one might defer about what morality requires one to do. To generate that further conclusion, even for a given point in time, we would need to be shown that every ordinary person had developed his or her in principle equal epistemic capacities equally, i.e. to the same extent as everyone else (a ...
... whom one might defer about what morality requires one to do. To generate that further conclusion, even for a given point in time, we would need to be shown that every ordinary person had developed his or her in principle equal epistemic capacities equally, i.e. to the same extent as everyone else (a ...
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 ...
Emotivism
Emotivism is a meta-ethical view that claims that ethical sentences do not express propositions but emotional attitudes. Hence, it is colloquially known as the hurrah/boo theory. Influenced by the growth of analytic philosophy and logical positivism in the 20th century, the theory was stated vividly by A. J. Ayer in his 1936 book Language, Truth and Logic, but its development owes more to C. L. Stevenson.Emotivism can be considered a form of non-cognitivism or expressivism. It stands in opposition to other forms of non-cognitivism (such as quasi-realism and universal prescriptivism), as well as to all forms of cognitivism (including both moral realism and ethical subjectivism).In the 1950s, emotivism appeared in a modified form in the universal prescriptivism of R. M. Hare.