The Seven Major Ethical Systems David Lawter Axia College of the University of Phoenix Throughout the history of the human race‚ men and women have struggled with determining the difference between good and bad actions. For example‚ if you are walking through a crowded store and the person in front of you drops some money on the floor‚ you have to make a decision whether to pick it up and walk away or to return it to the person that dropped it. For most people‚ their morals‚ that have been
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There are seven different major ethical systems and they are: ethical formalism‚ utilitarianism‚ religion‚ natural law‚ ethics of virtue‚ ethics of care‚ and egoism. All seven of these ethical systems are dealt with on a daily basis and sometimes it is hard to determine which one you are dealing with. Ethical systems intertwine with one another and make up how humans respond and react to situations they are faced with every day. Each ethical system has its own way of coming across to each individual
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Deontological Paper Marketing products‚ services‚ or even charities to the public has become a very powerful force in our world. Millions of dollars are spent on advertising each year with the goal of increasing revenue for the business or raising awareness of an organization to the public. Pharmaceutical companies bring products to the markets that are intended to help people live better lives. Advertising is a relatively new phenomenon for pharmaceutical companies in the United States. “In
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The Teleological Argument for God There are many theories about how the universe‚ earth‚ and humans came into existence. Some aim to prove the existence of God‚ that a large explosion created all life‚ or even that everything has just always existed. One of these theories works to answer questions about creation and prove the existence of the Christian God; this theory is known as the Teleological argument. To expand my basis of knowledge on this subject I consulted Matthew Esters‚ who recently
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University of Phoenix Material Jason Harrison Ethical Systems Table Directions: 1. Fill in brief definitions of each primary ethical theory. ➢ Deontological- Duty based approach. Moral obligation or commitment to act in a certain manner. (“Introduction to Ethics for University of Phoenix Students‚” n.d.). ➢ Teleological or consequentialism- Goal based. Ethicist’s believe people who practice this type of approach believe there is a design to the universe. Goal
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What are the main strengths and weaknesses of the teleological argument for the existence of God? The original teleological argument was developed by Aquinas in which he used his fifth way to prove the existence of God. The teleological argument is an a posteriori argument which looks at design in our world in order to prove God’s existence. Aquinas’ fifth way stated that everything operates as to a design‚ this design being God. Aquinas developed this to say that this operative design follows certain
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DEONTOLOGICAL ETHICS. No single idea captures all of the features in virtue of which an ethical theory may deserve to be called a deontology. In one sense‚ a deontology is simply theory of our duties‚ something most ethical theories have. But philosophers mean to convey more by calling a theory deontological. Roughly‚ a deontological theory denies in some way that the good or what is of value‚ always takes priority over the right or duty. What this denial comes to‚ however‚ depends on whether it
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The Teleological Argument recognizes the various complex aspects of the Earth‚ nature‚ and life and attributes these complexities to a designer. The most common analogy depicting this argument is described through a watch. A watch represents intricate and meticulous
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battlefield decision loop has become an achievable and likely goal. In his work “The Case for Ethical Autonomy in Unmanned Systems”‚ Arkin argues for the ethical case of fielding autonomous unmanned system in light of the benefits it produces. Contrary to
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Ethical Systems Table PHL/323 June 20‚ 2012 Ethical Theory or System | Brief Definition | Other Names for Theory | Real-world Example | Workplace Example | Duty-based Ethics | Regardless of consequences‚ certain moral principles are binding‚ focusing on duty rather than results or moral obligation over what the individual would prefer to do (Treviño & Nelson‚ 2007‚ Ch. 4).In ethics‚ deontological ethics‚ or deontology (Greek: deon meaning obligation or duty)‚ is a theory holding that
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