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    Abortion Paper

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    Abortion is a procedure performed to end a pregnancy before birth occurs. I will succinctly analyze whether the act of abortion is morally right or wrong. Since the philosophy of ethics is very social and  states that we are all moral autonomous agents and are part of a moral community‚ we are defined as ’persons‚’ i.e. ethical individuals that legislate to reason right from wrong and thereby have a responsibility to do so. However‚ there is a fine line between being a ’person’ and being a ’human

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    philosopher‚ which dealt with human recognition. He has been considered as an irrationalist. Many philosophers think that he used the irrationalism to justify the trust in religion and to protect the religion from the science. In this paper I shall take a view to the philosophy of Kant on recongition and to the question if Kant is an irrationalist or not. Did he use the irrationalism to protect the religion from science? This paper shall show that Kant wasn’t an irrationalist‚ but he simply tried to

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    Question 1 In ethics many theories have similar and different ideas among them. Two theories that share this are utilitarianism and Kant’s moral theory. Both theories have similar ideas but they also are perceived differently. Utilitarianism is based on the principle of utility by John Stuart Mill. It is the belief that people ought to concern themselves with the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people (MacKinnon‚ Fiala‚ 2014 p. 356). With utilitarianism‚ the belief if about the consequences

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    classroom education which is structured and disciplined. Dewey’s thinking regarding education advocates unstructured progressive education where teachers are not rulers but leaders who have and share deeper knowledge and experience. Further‚ Dewey views teachers as guides of students in activities that are structured towards optimal learning. Thus‚ the paper assumes that past experiences of students should be evaluated and considered by teachers in preparing subject matters which aim to provide

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    can will it to become a universal lives” (Kant). Which means. If you were to do something with everyone follows it. If not it is wrong to perform that action. An example of this is‚ if I borrow money‚ I not going to pay the person back. I will use Kant’s first formulation and create the maxim “I borrow money‚ I not going

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    Kant’s categorical imperative approach implies that while making an ethical decision‚ facing an ethical dilemma‚ a person should act in such a way he/she supposes other persons will also act in the same situation. Therefore‚ moral rules must be universal

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    Abortion Essay

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    Choice! Issue statement: The legality of abortion is a controversial issue. I. First‚ one side supports abortion being illegal A. Women’s health B. Adoption C. Murder of an innocent child D. The God card II. On the other hand‚ another side supports abortion being legal. A. Women are endangered B. It’s the mothers choice C. A woman is more than a fetus D. Rape III. The arguments to keep abortion legal prove stronger than arguments against

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    Kant’s Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals is an exploration and argument that seeks a universally binding first principle for morals. Kant presents an essay in which empirical observations and facts are not adequate to answer the question of‚ why be moral? Instead Kant relies on theoretical concepts‚ such as autonomy‚ morality‚ duty and goodwill to explain how necessity and causality are ordered. In this essay I will attempt to explain the Kantian connection between freedom and morality. In

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    In Kant’s Foundation for the Metaphysics of Morals‚ he acknowledges the recommendation from the earlier that whatever instrument is found in man‚ it must be the most fitting instrument for it. Accordingly‚ it can’t be that joy is the most astounding characteristic since reason is not favorable for it. Nature would have constrained man’s reason from the domain of satisfaction and depended man’s bliss to impulse alone. Rather‚ Kant brings up that reason in the domain of satisfaction really prompts

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    Kant rejected theonomy and instead proposed that because free will is a human trait‚ we should aim to keep hold of that and retain our personal autonomy - not requiring any aspect of religion to govern our moral values. He holds the deontological view that certain actions are absolutely right or wrong‚ regardless of whether they beget positive or negative consequences. Such absolute rules are described in his 1785 text Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals as categorical imperatives: unconditional

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