Virtue-Based Ethical Systems For centuries‚ philosophers have argued over a controversial issue of morality. Could a person who makes moral decisions unhappily be as moral as a person who makes them happily? One philosophy on that issue ranges as far back as Plato and Aristotle‚ this is the concept of virtue-based ethical systems. Pojman writes‚ “Virtue ethics centers on the heart of the agent-in his or her character.” Virtue ethics seeks to mold the agent into a better person
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MORAL POLICING‚ WOMEN‚ MEDIA AND PERSONAL FREEDOMMoral policing is a controversial term. Its supporters say it is an important function to be performed to safeguard our culture against western influence and save our youth from corruption. Those who oppose it see it as a threat to individual freedom and democratic dissent. I would not have been interested in these debates till I saw them affecting my life as an individual and more so as a woman. What is morality? How moral policing is gender biased
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My Moral Autobiography Junior year of high school I was diagnosed as having an eating disorder; I was anorexic which can be defined as "a serious‚ potentially life-threatening eating disorder characterized by self-starvation and excessive weight-loss" (http://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org). This definition does not mention that the effects of this can range anywhere from death to the inability to have children. This medical definition is broad and does not really encompass any of the mental
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signed on to teach English at a core virtues school‚ I had no idea what I was in for. I nodded and smiled in my interview when the Headmaster explained the virtues curriculum‚ and I parried back with everything I thought she wanted to hear; how I could infuse my lessons on To Kill a Mockingbird with discussions about empathy and courage. I may have even quoted Atticus’ line about walking around in someone else’s skin. I figured I could tack on some of that quaint "virtue" stuff before getting to the real
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Why does everyone strive for perfection when it is unattainable? It is unattainable because nothing in reality can ever be "perfect." However‚ we find perfection in the never-ending quest to be "perfect." The way to achieve perfection is through experience. Experience is filled with mistakes because if it wasn’t‚ we wouldn’t learn very much from it. It is admirable to aspire perfection‚ but foolish to expect that it will come quickly or with out mistakes. It certainly pays to expect the best of
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THE MORAL ARGUMENT How do we explain the fact that people often refrain from immoral acts even when there is no risk of their being caught? There are many formulations of the moral argument but they all have as their starting point the phenomenon (fact) of moral conscience. In essence the moral argument poses the question: where does our conscience‚ our sense of morality come from if not from God? It also asserts that if we accept the existence of objective moral laws we must accept the existence
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Meno asks Socrates‚ is it possible to teach virtue or is it something that can be learned through practice. On the other hand is it just something that people just posses or is it just learned through some other way. Now the argument goes as follows: If you know what to look for to learn something‚ then there is no reason to learn it: If virtue is taught‚ then there must be a teacher of virtue. Virtue is taught Therefore‚ there is a teacher of virtue If one would want to start to understand this
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------------------------------------------------- Moral education Categories Concepts Subjects People Essays Reviews Commons Courses Help | Pathways Concepts Subjects People Essays Reviews Commons Courses Help | Key tabs | article tab edit tab move tab | study tab history tab watch tab | From A Cyclopedia of Education‚ edited by Paul Monroe‚ Ph.D. (New York: The Macmillan Company‚ 1911‚ vol. IV‚ pp. 306-314). Moral education * Ernest N. Henderson (Ph.D.‚ Professor
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Moral Righteousness The basic needs for us humans to survive are food‚ water‚ shelter and. These‚ however‚ are only the physical needs of man. Humans also have social and mental needs. These needs require us humans to have law and order to be able to coincide serenely with ourselves‚ nature and the environment. The only way that law and order can be attained in human society is by a greater power. William Golding tries to hint on some of these features through the various characters he creates
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graduated Seton Hall University School of Law with a Juris Doctor degree. She is a lawyer involved in medical malpractice defense law so she deals with the misuse of medical technology often. In her paper‚ “The Need for Regulation on the Quest For Perfection‚” Jenifer Turriziani argues that it is impossible for a parent deciding their child’s genes to know what is best for them before they are born. For example‚ what if the child doesn’t enjoy the sport or activity the parents bought for them at birth
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