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Ethics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ethics (also known as moral philosophy ) is a branch of philosophy which seeks to address questions about morality, such as what the fundamental semantic, ontological, and epistemic nature of ethic...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics |
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This introduction should be helpful to anyone who is taking an introductory level college course in ethics or anyone who would like to learn about moral philosophy on his or her own. ... Online philosophical papers, on ethics and; on philosophy of education, by Richard Garlikov...
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"The Society for Ethics (SE) serves the purpose of promoting philosophical research in ethics, broadly construed, including areas such as (but not limited to) ethical theory, moral, social and political philosophy, as well as areas of applied ethics such as (but not limited to) legal, business and medical ethics.
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A discussion of both what ethics is and what ethics is not. ... These replies might be typical of our own. The meaning of "ethics" is hard to pin down, and the views many people have about ethics are shaky.
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Yahoo! reviewed these sites and found them related to Philosophy > Ethics ... Ethics Updates; Updates on current literature, both popular and professional, that relate to ethics. ethics.sandiego.edu ... Directory > Arts > Humanities > Philosophy > Ethics...
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Introduction to Ethics ... Pat I of the site relies on original sources, excerpts from Ethics in the History of Western Philosophy (Macmillan, 1989), and excerpts from the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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Aristotle wrote two ethical treatises: the Nicomachean Ethics and the Eudemian Ethics. ... Although Aristotle is deeply indebted to Plato's moral philosophy, particularly Plato's central insight that moral thinking must be integrated with our emotions and appetites, and that the preparation for such unity of character...
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