Ethics should also be concerned with developing the ability to genuinely care for others. This care isn’t an abstract concept; in fact, the way in which you care for one person may be different from how you should care for another. In other words, care is a relational term for Nodding’s. Therefore, care is a virtue that can only be developed through concrete relationships with other people. However, developing an ethics of care cannot only be about caring for existing relationships. In fact, it requires us to develop new and different caring relationships to other people. For example, you may care about your friends and family, but to really develop as a person, you need to form new caring relationships by coming to the aid of a stranger or volunteering at a homeless shelter.
Of course, the idea that we have ethical responsibilities presupposes that we have some free will. While there are nuances within each of these positions, the debate over free will is basically argued from one of two positions, 1 is that Determinists believe that human free will can be explained by referencing determining causes and 2 Indeterminists believe that free will is not determined so free actions are