Science+of+ethics

  • 81Value (ethics) — For other uses, see Value (disambiguation). In ethics, value is a property of objects, including physical objects as well as abstract objects (e.g. actions), representing their degree of importance. Ethic value denotes something s degree of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 82Military medical ethics — (MME) is a specialized branch of medical ethics with implications for military ethics. Both are primarily fields of applied ethics, the study of moral values and judgments as they apply to the specific contexts of medicine and military affairs,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 83Cumberland School of Law's Center for Biotechnology, Law, and Ethics — The Center for Biotechnology, Law, and Ethics …

    Wikipedia

  • 84United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation — The United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation is a standing committee of the United States Senate in charge of all senate matters related to the following subjects: Coast Guard Coastal zone management Communications… …

    Wikipedia

  • 85The Ethics of Liberty — Infobox Book | name = The Ethics of Liberty image caption = Paperback cover author = Murray N. Rothbard country = United States of America language = English genre = Political philosophy, Ethics publisher = New York University Press. New York,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 86deontological ethics — the branch of ethics dealing with right action and the nature of duty, without regard to the goodness or value of motives or the desirability of the ends of any act. Cf. axiological ethics. * * * Ethical theories that maintain that the moral… …

    Universalium

  • 87teleological ethics — Theory that derives duty from what is valuable as an end, in a manner diametrically opposed to deontological ethics. Teleological ethics holds that the basic standard of duty is the contribution that an action makes to the realization of nonmoral …

    Universalium

  • 88Plato: ethics and politics — A.W.Price I Plato followed his teacher Socrates into ethics by way of a question that remained central in Greek thought: what is the relation between the virtues or excellences (aretai) of character, and happiness (eudaimonia)?1 Both concepts… …

    History of philosophy

  • 89Intrinsic value (ethics) — For intrinsic value of animals, see Intrinsic value (animal ethics). Intrinsic value is an ethical and philosophic property. It is the ethical or philosophic value that an object has in itself or for its own sake , as an intrinsic property. An… …

    Wikipedia

  • 90Teleological ethics — (Greek telos, “end”; logos, “science”) is a theory of morality that derives duty or moral obligation from what is good or desirable as an end to be achieved. It is opposed to deontological ethics (from the Greek deon, “duty”), which holds that… …

    Wikipedia