What you need to know about the basic philosophical thoughts and camps in Ethics

Ethics refers to a set of rules for human behavior or a study of judgments of value, of good and evil, right and wrong, desirable and undesirable. Morality, on the other hand, refers to the rightness or wrongness of an action. The two terms, especially their adjective form (ethical and moral), are oftentimes used interchangeably.

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The Cut-Flower Thesis: Does Morality Need Religion?

Religious ethicists maintain that religion is necessary for the continued survival of morality as an integral part of human life. Glenn C. Graber calls this apologetic claim the “cut-flowers thesis” (1972, pp. 1-5) which consists of a hypothetical judgment that, “Morality cannot survive, in the long run, if its ties to religion are cut.”

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Are morals instinctive? Or is moral law real?

Is there an absolute moral truth? C.S. Lewis proves that there is a universal objective moral standard. Let us prove that moral law is real.

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Ethics: A Comprehensive Introduction to the Study of Morality

Many of the most renowned philosophers the world has produced have discussed about ethics in philosophy. Here is an introduction to Ethics.

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