Abstracts - International Conference on Clinical Ethics and
... Methods. This is being studied by means of the following research activities: a) Interviewing facilitators of MCD sessions and involved stakeholders (e.g. the director of the hospital); b) Applying the XXX evaluation questionnaires for participants of MCD sessions; c) Gathering the reports of the MC ...
... Methods. This is being studied by means of the following research activities: a) Interviewing facilitators of MCD sessions and involved stakeholders (e.g. the director of the hospital); b) Applying the XXX evaluation questionnaires for participants of MCD sessions; c) Gathering the reports of the MC ...
"Nihilism" encyclopedia entry - Victoria University of Wellington
... virtue of being an error theorist) accompanied by a kind of practical nihilism (in virtue of being an eliminativist). “Moral nihilism” is also often associated—though somewhat vaguely—with thoughts about how we should act in the more everyday sphere: as advocating a policy of “anything goes,” as hol ...
... virtue of being an error theorist) accompanied by a kind of practical nihilism (in virtue of being an eliminativist). “Moral nihilism” is also often associated—though somewhat vaguely—with thoughts about how we should act in the more everyday sphere: as advocating a policy of “anything goes,” as hol ...
Ethics and social responsibility
... Ethics as a Competitive Advantage in Global Business Ethical capability related to ...
... Ethics as a Competitive Advantage in Global Business Ethical capability related to ...
moral development and speeding
... PIAGET (1932) searched for an answer to explain how, beginning with the amoral world of a small child, it is possible for him to grow into manhood and act ethically. In an effort to do this, he studied the development of morality and justice. For Piaget the morality essence lays on the respect the i ...
... PIAGET (1932) searched for an answer to explain how, beginning with the amoral world of a small child, it is possible for him to grow into manhood and act ethically. In an effort to do this, he studied the development of morality and justice. For Piaget the morality essence lays on the respect the i ...
Ethical Gradualism
... discrimination of other species can be explained and understood in various ways, psychologically and sociologically. But the same is true of most acts and attitudes, some of which we would hardly defend morally—like racial discrimination. And what do we have in this case but human racism on behalf o ...
... discrimination of other species can be explained and understood in various ways, psychologically and sociologically. But the same is true of most acts and attitudes, some of which we would hardly defend morally—like racial discrimination. And what do we have in this case but human racism on behalf o ...
Diana Hoyos Valdés* Universidad de Caldas
... (mainly for psychological reasons) take on immoral attitudes as it is required for some artworks or that one in fact sometime1s does so, which seems to be a descriptive thesis about our behavior. The prescriptive or normative claim says, on the other side, that we sometimes should take on immoral at ...
... (mainly for psychological reasons) take on immoral attitudes as it is required for some artworks or that one in fact sometime1s does so, which seems to be a descriptive thesis about our behavior. The prescriptive or normative claim says, on the other side, that we sometimes should take on immoral at ...
Street`s Evolutionary Debunking Argument: Nuancing A Moral
... insofar as they have been influenced largely by humanity’s social context, and this, accord ing to Copp, has allowed us to remain with a great degree of morally evaluative accuracy.5 Simply because these moral codes which have been shaped in the midst of human society promote harmony, peaceful inte ...
... insofar as they have been influenced largely by humanity’s social context, and this, accord ing to Copp, has allowed us to remain with a great degree of morally evaluative accuracy.5 Simply because these moral codes which have been shaped in the midst of human society promote harmony, peaceful inte ...
Chapter 7
... Conform to the highest standards of ethical behavior or professional standards of conduct. Ethical Leadership is commonplace. Their goal is to succeed within the confines of sound ethical precepts Demonstrate high integrity in thinking, speaking and doing. Follow both the letter and the spirit of th ...
... Conform to the highest standards of ethical behavior or professional standards of conduct. Ethical Leadership is commonplace. Their goal is to succeed within the confines of sound ethical precepts Demonstrate high integrity in thinking, speaking and doing. Follow both the letter and the spirit of th ...
Ethical Decisions: A Foundation for Appropriate Problem
... An SLP who is planning to get married over the weekend and go on her honeymoon the following week, is intent on having all of her paperwork completed before she leaves work on Friday. On Thursday, she completes the Medicaid billing for the month and includes therapy sessions for two sessions for two ...
... An SLP who is planning to get married over the weekend and go on her honeymoon the following week, is intent on having all of her paperwork completed before she leaves work on Friday. On Thursday, she completes the Medicaid billing for the month and includes therapy sessions for two sessions for two ...
PDF version - The Menlo Roundtable
... strangers, she decrees it morally acceptable to save the spouse. However, she is being idealistic by expecting everyone to understand and live by her new definition of selfishness. Even in a philosophy class full of students well practiced in accepting terms they do not necessarily agree with for th ...
... strangers, she decrees it morally acceptable to save the spouse. However, she is being idealistic by expecting everyone to understand and live by her new definition of selfishness. Even in a philosophy class full of students well practiced in accepting terms they do not necessarily agree with for th ...
Sir William David Ross: (1877
... differences of opinion between people of good character as to what ought to be done in a given context. 3. They simply assume that there is no problem about selecting one’s actual duty from among the variety of moral claims simultaneously incumbent upon a person in a particular situation. ...
... differences of opinion between people of good character as to what ought to be done in a given context. 3. They simply assume that there is no problem about selecting one’s actual duty from among the variety of moral claims simultaneously incumbent upon a person in a particular situation. ...
Presentation
... How do we develop our virtues? Intellectual virtues: because they are capacities of reason, can be taught. Moral virtues: because they are habits and dispositions of character, can only be acquired by practice. ...
... How do we develop our virtues? Intellectual virtues: because they are capacities of reason, can be taught. Moral virtues: because they are habits and dispositions of character, can only be acquired by practice. ...
sample chapter
... “social compact” (p. 3) about how people should behave. Because it forms what can be thought of as a universal morality with a wide scope, the common morality provides society with a framework of ethical stability. The common morality contains rules of obligation, character traits, and common moral ...
... “social compact” (p. 3) about how people should behave. Because it forms what can be thought of as a universal morality with a wide scope, the common morality provides society with a framework of ethical stability. The common morality contains rules of obligation, character traits, and common moral ...
medical laboratory science ethics and medico
... patients rests on general moral principles about how a person should treat another person Thus Biomedical ethics grounded firmly in the study of moral philosophy Med Yr 1 ...
... patients rests on general moral principles about how a person should treat another person Thus Biomedical ethics grounded firmly in the study of moral philosophy Med Yr 1 ...
Part II: There`s more to morality than harm and fairness Central
... Shweder for two years after I finished my Ph.D. at Penn. Shweder was the leading thinker in cultural psychology—a new discipline that combined the anthropologist’s love of context and variability with the psychologist’s interest in mental processes.9 A dictum of cultural psychology is that “culture ...
... Shweder for two years after I finished my Ph.D. at Penn. Shweder was the leading thinker in cultural psychology—a new discipline that combined the anthropologist’s love of context and variability with the psychologist’s interest in mental processes.9 A dictum of cultural psychology is that “culture ...
The Impact of Moral Education on Religious Life
... and his character has always been tested with the criterion of moral virtues or vices. And everyone who can achieve higher score in this measurement will have higher and more valuable status for God and in people's memories. Therefore, the messengers of God in the human history have guided the man t ...
... and his character has always been tested with the criterion of moral virtues or vices. And everyone who can achieve higher score in this measurement will have higher and more valuable status for God and in people's memories. Therefore, the messengers of God in the human history have guided the man t ...
Ethics
... Decision based on an imperative duty not to deceive rather than the consequences of the act Many technical communicators are uninformed about the reasoning behind the ethical decisions they make. ...
... Decision based on an imperative duty not to deceive rather than the consequences of the act Many technical communicators are uninformed about the reasoning behind the ethical decisions they make. ...
Political Theory Working Paper - e
... Here we shall focus on what I believe is the centre of gravity of this new intellectual “music”: value pluralism. The most important point of Berlin’s pluralism is the “rational” conviction that there cannot be a single correct, unitary vision of good or morality. His criticism of “monist” theoretic ...
... Here we shall focus on what I believe is the centre of gravity of this new intellectual “music”: value pluralism. The most important point of Berlin’s pluralism is the “rational” conviction that there cannot be a single correct, unitary vision of good or morality. His criticism of “monist” theoretic ...
MEASURE THE ETHICAL RESPONSIVENESS OF YOUR BOARD
... Ethikos spells innovation since 1998. Global leader in the field of ethics, the firm was the first in Canada to formally propose to consider ethics in management, at a time when hardly anyone knew about, or was even interested in, such terms as “integrity”, “governance”, “corporate social responsibi ...
... Ethikos spells innovation since 1998. Global leader in the field of ethics, the firm was the first in Canada to formally propose to consider ethics in management, at a time when hardly anyone knew about, or was even interested in, such terms as “integrity”, “governance”, “corporate social responsibi ...
IMMANUEL KANT`S ETHICAL THEORY RIGHTS AND DUTIES DR
... It is categorical, because it applies (or is intended to apply) to everyone, without any exceptions, and it is an imperative, since it is a command. So it is a command that applies consistently, to everyone. You might think of the Ten Commandments here, as the kind of thing that he is referring to. ...
... It is categorical, because it applies (or is intended to apply) to everyone, without any exceptions, and it is an imperative, since it is a command. So it is a command that applies consistently, to everyone. You might think of the Ten Commandments here, as the kind of thing that he is referring to. ...
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIO-MORAL MEANING MAKING
... although not necessarily independently, as a result of experience in a particular domain. In this view spatial, social, and moral perspective-taking are fundamentally different processes rather than applications of a single general structure to different content areas“ (Colby & Kohlberg, 1987, p. 16 ...
... although not necessarily independently, as a result of experience in a particular domain. In this view spatial, social, and moral perspective-taking are fundamentally different processes rather than applications of a single general structure to different content areas“ (Colby & Kohlberg, 1987, p. 16 ...
conway-si410-fa10-week1-ethics - Open.Michigan
... (CONSEQUENTIALISM) Parent: Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) Outcome trumps intention (will) Choose the act that does the most good (least harm) for the greatest number of people Morality of the action depends on the results ...
... (CONSEQUENTIALISM) Parent: Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) Outcome trumps intention (will) Choose the act that does the most good (least harm) for the greatest number of people Morality of the action depends on the results ...
Integrity and Ethics,Mr.Shiva Hari Adhikari
... wrong that prescribe what ought to do, usually in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society, fairness, or specific virtues. Higher ethical standard and practices is critical in administering work to gain public trust. ...
... wrong that prescribe what ought to do, usually in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society, fairness, or specific virtues. Higher ethical standard and practices is critical in administering work to gain public trust. ...
Consequentialism
Consequentialism is the class of normative ethical theories holding that the consequences of one's conduct are the ultimate basis for any judgment about the rightness or wrongness of that conduct. Thus, from a consequentialist standpoint, a morally right act (or omission from acting) is one that will produce a good outcome, or consequence. In an extreme form, the idea of consequentialism is commonly encapsulated in the English saying, ""the ends justify the means"", meaning that if a goal is morally important enough, any method of achieving it is acceptable.Consequentialism is usually contrasted with deontological ethics (or deontology), in that deontology, in which rules and moral duty are central, derives the rightness or wrongness of one's conduct from the character of the behaviour itself rather than the outcomes of the conduct. It is also contrasted with virtue ethics, which focuses on the character of the agent rather than on the nature or consequences of the act (or omission) itself, and pragmatic ethics which treats morality like science: advancing socially over the course of many lifetimes, such that any moral criterion is subject to revision. Consequentialist theories differ in how they define moral goods.Some argue that consequentialist and deontological theories are not necessarily mutually exclusive. For example, T. M. Scanlon advances the idea that human rights, which are commonly considered a ""deontological"" concept, can only be justified with reference to the consequences of having those rights. Similarly, Robert Nozick argues for a theory that is mostly consequentialist, but incorporates inviolable ""side-constraints"" which restrict the sort of actions agents are permitted to do.