Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_E - Ethics Philosophy
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 191    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Ethics Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. A Companion to Ethics (Blackwell Companions to Philosophy)
  2. The Environmental Ethics and Policy Book: Philosophy, Ecology, Economics by Donald Van DeVeer, Christine Pierce, 2002-06-24
  3. Applied Ethics (Oxford Readings in Philosophy)
  4. World Ethics by Wanda Torres-Gregory, Donna Giancola, 2002-06-14
  5. The Elements of Moral Philosophy by James Rachels, Stuart Rachels, 2006-04-24
  6. A Companion to Applied Ethics (Blackwell Companions to Philosophy)
  7. Stakes And Kidneys: Why Markets In Human Body Parts Are Morally Imperative (Live Questions in Ethics and Moral Philosophy) by James Stacey Taylor, 2005-06-30
  8. Biomedical Ethics (Fundamentals of Philosophy) by Walter Glannon, 2004-07-22
  9. Philosophy and the Good Life: Reason and the Passions in Greek, Cartesian and Psychoanalytic Ethics by John Cottingham, 1998-07-28
  10. Contemporary Debates in Applied Ethics (Contemporary Debates in Philosophy)
  11. Nature Ethics: An Ecofeminist Perspective (Studies in Social, Political, and Legal Philosophy) by Kheel Marti, 2007-12-28
  12. The Ethics of Policing (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and Public Policy) by John Kleinig, 1996-02-23
  13. A Companion to Business Ethics (Blackwell Companions to Philosophy)
  14. Foundations of Ethics: An Anthology (Blackwell Philosophy Anthologies)

21. Pollution And Environment Essay - Environmental Ethics Philosophy Essays
custom writing essays custom written essays custom written research papers custom writing term papers Pollution and Environment Essay Environmental Ethics
http://www.123helpme.com/assets/12368.html
Free Essays brought to you by 123HelpMe.com
Environmental Ethics
As college students, we should live in the spirit of peace for the good of all human beings and for the care of creation. At this moment in history, at the beginning of the third millennium, we are saddened to see the daily suffering of a great number of people from violence, starvation, poverty, and disease. We are also concerned about the negative consequences for humanity and for all creation resulting from the degradation of some basic natural resources such as water, air and land, brought about by an economic and technological progress which does not recognize and take into account its limits.
Almighty God envisioned a world of beauty and harmony, and He created it, making every part an expression of His freedom, wisdom and love (cf. Gen 1:1-25).
At the center of the whole of creation, He placed us, human beings, with our inalienable human dignity. Although we share many features with the rest of the living beings, Almighty God went further with us and gave us an immortal soul, the source of self-awareness and freedom, endowments that make us in His image and likeness (cf. Gen 1:26-31; 2:7). Marked with that resemblance, we have been placed by God in the world in order to cooperate with Him in realizing more and more fully the divine purpose for creation.
At the beginning of history, man and woman sinned by disobeying God and rejecting His design for creation. Among the results of this first sin was the destruction of the original harmony of creation. If we examine carefully the social and environmental crisis which the world community is facing, we must conclude that we are still betraying the mandate God has given us: to be stewards called to collaborate with God in watching over creation in holiness and wisdom.

22. David M. Kaplan Home Page
Ethics and Technology Philosophy of Technology Ancient Philosophy. Computer Ethics NonWestern Philosophy Modern Philosophy. Environmental ethics philosophy
http://ls.poly.edu/~dkaplan/
David M. Kaplan
I am no longer at Polytechnic University. I have moved to the Department of Philosophy and Religion Studies at the University of North Texas. http://www.phil.unt.edu/faculty/vdmk.php
David M. Kaplan Assistant Professor
Department of Philosophy and Religion Studies

P.O.Box 310920
University of North Texas

Denton
TX Tel.: 940-565-3521
Fax: 940-565-4448
dkaplan@unt.edu

23. UW-Rock County: Ethics: Philosophy Department Assessment Evaluation
The mandatory Philosophy Department Assessment Evaluation is now available on Desire2Learn. The quiz is located on Desire2Learn in the Ethics section.
http://seschmid.org/clogs/ethics/archives/2005/05/philosophy_depa.html
UW-Rock County: Ethics
Main
May 01, 2005
Philosophy Department Assessment Evaluation
The mandatory Philosophy Department Assessment Evaluation is now available on Desire2Learn. You are required to complete this exam as part of your course participation and attendance grade. How well you perform on the quiz will not be a factor in your course grade. I hope you all will try to do your best. The quiz is located on in the Ethics section. You should see the quiz listed in the left-hand column. Posted by seschmid at May 1, 2005 07:04 PM
Comments
Post a comment
Name:
Email Address:
URL:
Remember Me? Yes No
Comments:

24. Ethics Definition / Definition Of Ethics/ Ethics / Morals / Values / Moral Defin
ethics morals values cultural law view culture. a skill / ethics philosophy definition / DEFINITION OF values and ethics / culture definition / ethical
http://huizen.daxis.nl/~henkt/human-resources/egoism-slavery.html
Ethics / Morals: local definition of human values
Egoism Slavery Apartheid
Slavery in itself is 'good' nor 'bad'.
Nor having any dependent relation.
Nature is full of interdependencies.
Such relations disappear when sensed as being 'bad'.
Often for humans things feel bad if respect is missing.
Respect as ancient proven notion.
And opposite of Egoism.
Egoism is Self-Respect gone wild.
Slavery or Apartheid fits perfectly with Egoism. So let's banish egoism of pure mind as seen in 'management' and cherish respect. Free counter

25. Ethics [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Covers metaethics, normative ethics and applied ethics in depth.
http://www.iep.utm.edu/e/ethics.htm
Ethics The field of ethics, also called moral philosophy, involves systematizing, defending, and recommending concepts of right and wrong behavior. Philosophers today usually divide ethical theories into three general subject areas: metaethics, normative ethics, and applied ethics. Metaethics investigates where our ethical principles come from, and what they mean. Are they merely social inventions? Do they involve more than expressions of our individual emotions? Metaethical answers to these questions focus on the issues of universal truths, the will of God, the role of reason in ethical judgments, and the meaning of ethical terms themselves. Normative ethics takes on a more practical task, which is to arrive at moral standards that regulate right and wrong conduct. This may involve articulating the good habits that we should acquire, the duties that we should follow, or the consequences of our behavior on others. Finally, applied ethics involves examining specific controversial issues, such as abortion, infanticide, animal rights, environmental concerns, homosexuality, capital punishment, or nuclear war. By using the conceptual tools of metaethics and normative ethics, discussions in applied ethics try to resolve these controversial issues. The lines of distinction between metaethics, normative ethics, and applied ethics are often blurry. For example, the issue of abortion is an applied ethical topic since it involves a specific type of controversial behavior. But it also depends on more general normative principles, such as the right of self-rule and the right to life, which are litmus tests for determining the morality of that procedure. The issue also rests on metaethical issues such as, "where do rights come from?" and "what kind of beings have rights?"

26. Ethics
(SE) serves the purpose of promoting philosophical research in ethics, social and political philosophy, as well as areas of applied ethics such as
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~worc0337/phil_topics_ethics.html
Practical and Applied Ethics
(see also the Journals pages)

27. Religion/Ethics/Philosophy
GENERAL RELIGION ethics/ETHICAL ISSUES philosophy Access to a wide range of philosophical literature. Religion ethics NewsWeekly
http://www.geocities.com/dboals.geo/religion.html
RELIGION, ETHICS AND PHILOSOPHY Part of the History/Social Studies Web Site for K-12 Teachers Search this site powered by FreeFind
GENERAL

RELIGION

ETHICS/ETHICAL ISSUES
...
PHILOSOPHY

RELIGION
  • Introduction to Finding God in Cyberspace
  • Teaching About Religion In Public Schools: Worldview Education.
    "Teaching about Religion with a View to Diversity" serves classroom teachers and other educators who focus on religion in curriculum of U.S. public schools.  The site emphasizes a pluralistic society and offers a variety of materials on the topic of teaching about religion and nonreligion, including lessons, links, background information, and position statements."
  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Special Exhibitions: Art and Oracle: Spirit Voices of Africa
  • Devi
    From the Smithsonian Magazine.
  • Religious History Society
  • Asian Religions and Cultures

  • "This online exhibit focuses on the Book of Revelation, and considers that "probably no other book has justified as many soap-box sermons and hare-brained schemes as it has, and perhaps none ever will. But neither has any book produced a more profound vision of America's hopes, duties, dreams, and destiny." This site looks at the history of this famous book of the Bible, and considers its role in early American history, and up to the present day. Each page has bibliographic references, which link to images of the work itself. A fascinating study from the University of Virginia"

  • "Following the Civil War, the treasurer of Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee came up with an extraordinary plan: to lead a group of newly freed black singers out on a fundraising concert tour across the country and to Europe." The site features will include: A Spiritual tradition: Music at Fisk College, Reconstruction: A Portrait of Postwar America, Streaming audio of music from the broadcast, Background information on the people and important events in the enhanced transcript and A guide on how to use "The Jubilee Singers" in your classroom.
  • 28. Ethics For Artificial Intelligences
    University of Wisconsin at Madison (UWMadision), Department of philosophy. Paper presented in the Wisconsin State-Wide Technology Symposium Promise or Peril? Reflecting on Computer Technology Educational, Psychological, and Ethical Implications, 2002.
    http://philosophy.wisc.edu/lang/AIEthics/
    Ethics for Artificial Intelligences Chris Lang , Department of Philosophy, UW-Madision According to some authorities, in the next 10-30 years machines will take up most positions of responsibility in our society because they will outperform the humans who previously filled those positions. I argue that using non-terminating hill-climbing algorithms, we can ensure that such machines will learn to behave as though instilled with an appreciation for ethics. Invited paper for the 2002 Wisconsin State-Wide Technology Symposium, "Promise or Peril? Reflecting on Computer Technology: Educational, Psychological, and Ethical Implications" HTML PDF MSWord The Experts Speak ... Appendix A: AI in current use Previous Version ( HTML PDF MSWord PowerPoint Slides ... Death and Other Hardships : A one-act play about artificial life Download WinAlice chatbot ZIP Links to AI in current use MIT AI Lab

    29. Environmental Ethics
    environmental ethics and environmental philosophy. line. CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL philosophy. About Environmental ethics as an Academic Field
    http://www.cep.unt.edu/
    This World Wide Web server is dedicated to providing access to Internet
    resources throughout the world which pertain to or focus on
    environmental ethics and environmental philosophy CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY

    30. 20th WCP: Theoretical Ethics
    Papers given at the Twentieth World Congress of philosophy, in Boston, Massachusetts August 1015, 1998.
    http://www.bu.edu/wcp/MainTEth.htm
    Theoretical Ethics The papers indexed below were given at the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy, in Boston, Massachusetts from August 10-15, 1998. Additional papers may be added to this section as electronic versions are aquired and formatted for the archive. These papers will be listed for a period of time at the What's New? page. Regarding browser support: The papers published in The Paideia Archive webmaster and provide details of the difficulty.
    In addition to browsing the numerous subject indexes, you may also enter a name or subject keyword in the space below and hit the search button. Theoretical Ethics Author's Name Affiliation Paper Title Sharon Anderson-Gold Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Cultural Differentiation and Moral Orientation: Taking an Interest in History Antonio Trajano Arruda UNESP Paulista State University Moral Sentiments and Determinism Jeffrey W. Bulger Utah Valley State College Humanity Educating Philosophy Michael Byron Kent State University Evolutionary Ethics and Biologically Supportable Morality Philip Cafaro Southwest State University Virtue Ethics (Not Too) Simplified Angela Calvo de Saavedra Pontificia Universidad Javeriana Imaginanacion y Conversacion: Artifices Del Punto De Vista Moral En David Hume Patricia Moya Canas Universidad de los Andes M. Y. Chew

    31. Centre For Ethics, Policy And Public Affairs
    CENTRE FOR ethics, philosophy AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS. Director Prof John Haldane, FRSE (University of St Andrews). Associate Directors
    http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/philosophy/ceppa/
    UNIVERSITY OF ST ANDREWS
    CENTRE FOR ETHICS, PHILOSOPHY
    AND
    PUBLIC AFFAIRS Director
    Prof John Haldane, FRSE
    (University of St Andrews)
    Introduction
    Research Fellowship St Andrews Studies Links ... Latest News
    Centre for Ethics, Policy and Public Affairs, University of St Andrews, St Andrews Fife KY16 9AL, UK
    Tel: +44 (0)1334 462486/462488 Fax: +44 (0)1334 462485
    email: cppa@st-andrews.ac.uk or jjh1@st-andrews.ac.uk

    32. Luciano Floridi
    Oxford University, Department of philosophy. Essay (version 2). 10 parts, attempting to establish a philosophical grounding for cyberethics. Expanded version of a paper presented in the ETHICOMP International Conference on Ethical Issues of Information Technology, 1998.
    http://www.wolfson.ox.ac.uk/~floridi/ie.htm
    Information Ethics: On the Philosophical Foundation of Computer Ethics Luciano Floridi, version 2.0 A shorter version of this paper was given at ETHICOMP98 The Fourth International Conference on Ethical Issues of Information Technology , Erasmus University, The Netherlands, 25 to 27 March 1998, hosted by the Department of Philosophy Erasmus University, The Netherlands, in association with Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility De Montfort University, UK, Research Center on Computing and Society Southern Connecticut State University, USA, East Tennessee State University, USA. The paper is forthcoming in the Proceedings of the conference and I shall gratefully acknowledge any useful comments or suggestions for improvements . Please send your emails to Luciano.Floridi@philosophy.ox.ac.uk For a list of resources see A Short Webliography on Computer Ethics For information on research in CE in recent years in the fields of philosophy and computing, see the Appendix For a reading list see A Short Reading List on the Philosophy of Computer Ethics Index of the paper sections
  • The Foundationalist Problem Macroethics and Computer Ethics A Model of Macroethics From Computer Ethics to Information Ethics ... Conclusion
  • Information Ethics: On the Philosophical Foundation of Computer Ethics
    "We, who have a private life and hold it infinitely the dearest of our possessions…"

    33. The Problem Of Natural Evil
    This I admit; but when it is inferred that ethics contains truths which cannot be proved This comes from two sources philosophy and mystical religion.
    http://hem.passagen.se/nicb/russell.htm

    Science and Ethics
    By Bertrand Russell
    From Religion and Science (Oxford University Press, 1961)
    Those who maintain the insufficiency of science, as we have seen in the last two chapters, appeal to the fact that science has nothing to say about "values." This I admit; but when it is inferred that ethics contains truths which cannot be proved or disproved by science, I disagree. The matter is one on which it is not altogether easy to think clearly, and my own views on it are quite different from what they were thirty years ago. But it is necessary to be clear about it if we are to appraise such arguments as those in support of Cosmic Purpose. As there is no consensus of opinion about ethics, it must be understood that what follows is my personal belief, not the dictum of science.
    One of the ways in which the need of appealing to external rules of conduct has been avoided has been the belief in "conscience," which has been especially important in Protestant ethics. It has been supposed that God reveals to each human heart what is right and what is wrong, so that, in order to avoid sin, we have only to listen to the inner voice. There are, however, two difficulties in this theory: first, that conscience says different things to different people; secondly, that the study of the unconscious has given us an understanding of the mundane causes of conscientious feelings.
    Philosophers, by a different road, have arrived at a different position in which, also, moral rules of conduct have a subordinate place. They have framed the concept of the Good, by which they mean (roughly speaking) that which, in itself and apart from its consequences, we should wish to see existing - or, if they are theists, that which is pleasing to God. Most people would agree that happiness is preferable to unhappiness, friendliness to unfriendliness, and so on. Moral rules, according to this view, are justified if they promote the existence of what is good on its own account, but not otherwise. The prohibition of murder, in the vast majority of cases, can be justified by its effects, but the practice of burning widows on their husband's funeral pyre cannot. The former rule, therefore, should be retained, but not the latter. Even the best moral rules, however, will have

    34. Talk Philosophy
    philosophy discussion forum with topics such as ethics, Theology, philosophy, and Politics discussed as well as Music, Literature, and Film. Topical areas such as existentialism, popular philosophers, and aesthetics.
    http://www.talkphilosophy.org
    A philosophy discussion board for debate chat on politics, ethics and other philosophical issues Click here to go to http://www.thevaselines.co.uk/forum/

    35. AllRefer.com - Ethics (Philosophy, Terms And Concepts) - Encyclopedia
    AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete information on ethics, philosophy, Terms And Concepts. Includes related research links.
    http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/E/ethics.html
    AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather September 21, 2005 Medicine People Places History ... Maps Web AllRefer.com You are here : AllRefer.com Reference Encyclopedia Philosophy, Terms And Concepts ... ethics
    By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z E
    ethics, Philosophy, Terms And Concepts
    Related Category: Philosophy, Terms And Concepts ethics, in philosophy, the study and evaluation of human conduct in the light of moral principles. Moral principles may be viewed either as the standard of conduct that individuals have constructed for themselves or as the body of obligations and duties that a particular society requires of its members. Sections in this article:
    Topics that might be of interest to you: Aristippus
    Sir Alfred Jules Ayer

    Pierre-Simon Ballanche

    Jeremy Bentham
    ...
    Baruch Spinoza

    Related Categories: Philosophy and Religion Philosophy
    More articles from AllRefer Reference on ethics
    SITE MAPS Encyclopedia US Gazetteer:
    US States A-C
    US States D-H US States I-L US States M ... Countries A-Z Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities.

    36. E-CAP2004_ITALY Conference
    Hosted by the Computational philosophy Laboratory and the Department of philosophy, University of Pavia, Italy, 3 to 5 June 2004. Research topics cover many aspects of the computational turn that is occurring within the discipline of philosophy, including computers and ethics.
    http://www.unipv.it/webphilos_lab/courses/progra2.html

    37. Stanford Philosophy Department: Faculty, Staff And Students
    Agnieszka Jaworska, ethical theory, political philosophy, medical ethics Rob Reich, political philosophy, ethics and applied ethics,
    http://www-philosophy.stanford.edu/fss.html
    Department members are listed with their respective areas of interest. Visiting instructors, listed under Faculty, are noted as such. Jump directly to Faculty Staff , or Graduate Students Faculty
    R. Lanier Anderson
    History of late modern philosophy David Barker-Plummer heterogeneous logic, logic education Chris Bobonich Ancient Greek Philosophy Michael Bratman Philosophy of action and moral psychology Mark Crimmins Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Mind Graciela De Pierris Historical Topics in Epistemology, especially Hume and Kant Fred Dretske Epistemology, Philosophy of Mind John Etchemendy Philosophy of logic, philosophy of language Solomon Feferman Mathematical logic, Foundations of mathematics Contemporary Continental Philosophy, Phenomenology, Existentialism Michael Friedman Kant, Philosophy of Science, History of Twentieth Century Philosophy Peter Godfrey-Smith (former faculty) Philosophy of biology, philosophy of mind David Hills Aesthetics; History of Modern Philosophy, esp. Kant Nadeem Hussain metaethics, philosophy of action, 19th century German philosophy

    38. PhD In Philosophy Of Education: History, Philosophy And Comparative Education, S
    Specialties include ethics, epistemology, aesthetics, social and political philosophy, foundations of educational inquiry, feminist philosophy, continental philosophy, or historically important educational thinkers.
    http://education.indiana.edu/~edhpc/phil.html
    skip navigation Education Home
    Search Education

    Doctoral
    ...
    Department
    History, Philosophy and Comparative Education
    PhD in Philosophy of Education
    Students wishing to complete a PhD in Philosophy of Education should apply to the PhD program in History, Philosophy and Policy Studies in Education, indicating their intention to pursue the Philosophy of Education major in their application goals statement.  This program is primarily designed to prepare students for professional roles in university teaching and research, but students may also prepare for roles in development and consulting for governmental and non-governmental agencies. The major in Philosophy of Education may focus on ethics, epistemology, aesthetics, social and political philosophy, foundations of inquiry, feminist philosophy, continental philosophy, or historically important educational thinkers.  It is also expected that students will undertake philosophically relevant coursework in departments outside the School of Education, including the Departments of Philosophy, Religious Studies, and History and Philosophy of Science. Unconditional admission to the program is normally based upon the applicant’s meeting the following criteria:
  •  Successful completion of 12 semester hours of philosophy or philosophy of education at the undergraduate or graduate level prior to enrolment in the major.  A candidate who does not meet this requirement may be admitted conditionally, pending his or her successful completion of those credits in the first year of doctoral study.
  • 39. ORIENTALIA Encyclopedia | Indian Philosophy
    Basic terms and ideas in Indian Metaphysics, Epistemology, Logic, and ethics.
    http://www.orientalia.org/dic2.html

    Home
    Encyclopedia Subject Catalog Guides ... Your Account
    Navigator
  • Home
  • Account
  • New Password
  • Site Map ...
  • Feedback
    Oriental Top 10
    Dictionaries
    Yoga Dictionary
    Indian Philosophy

    Hindu Religion

    Buddhist Dictionary
    ...
    Open Wisdom Library

    Indopedia Bhasya 119
    Paratattva
    Antarbhuta Bhoja 119 ... read more... Guides Subject Index World History Meditation Music Oriental Medicine ... Martial Arts User Info Welcome, Guest Nickname Password Register Membership: Latest: New Today: New Yesterday: Overall: People Online: Visitors: Members: Total: Wisdom Quote More Guides Travel East Buddhism Oriental Kitchen Sponsoring Sites
  • Dedicated Servers
  • Virtual Private Servers
  • U.S. Dedicated Indian Philosophy Indian Philosophy Basic terms and ideas in Indian Metaphysics, Epistemology, Logic, and Ethics. In English and Russian. Please select a letter from the following list to consult terms: A B C D ... Go Back Posters are responsible for their postings, CMS code by FB , all the rest © 2004 by Eurasia Academic Publishers Indology Net Darsana Org Husserl Info Unipedia ... Yoga-Darsana
  • 40. An Introduction To Ethics (Moral Philosophy)
    An introductory pamphlet aimed at students in an introductory level college course in ethics or anyone who would like to learn about moral philosophy on his or her own. By Rick Garlikov.
    http://www.akat.com/Ethics.html
    Vanessa V. [unsolicited e-mail about "An Introduction to Ethics," May 1, 2000]
    An Introduction to Ethics
    Purchase online
    ($5.00) by secure credit card order;
    receive by e-mail as a file that can be read in, or printed out from, any web browser.
    (approximately 55-60 8.5x11 pages in normal font sizes) This work consists of two chapters from the book The Meaning of Love , by Richard Garlikov, which serve as a self-contained introduction to the subject of ethics. 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. The introduction is logical and analytic but should be interesting, readable, and clear to any reasonably serious reader, especially one who likes to think about a subject while reading. Interesting, easily recognized examples from daily life illustrate and explain the points that are made. Included Topics:
  • "Who's to say" what is right or wrong? (And "Does morality depend on religion or what God says?") The meaning of terms such as 'good', 'bad', 'right', 'wrong', 'duty', 'ought', 'obligation', 'motive', 'consequences', 'intentions', etc.
  • A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 191    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

    free hit counter