• This doctrine is usually discussed as a philosophical problem leaving aside its ethical significance which is the subject matter of this short essay. (buddhistdoor.net)
  • The differences between schools of ethics in their doctrines are rooted in their philosophical principles. (mullasadra.org)
  • Others, such as Buddhism in its original form and Confucianism, which trace their origin to a certain ostensibly historical person, claim no more for their founder than that he was an exceptionally wise and good man who first discovered and promulgated certain important moral and philosophical truths, and illustrated his doctrine by the special sanctity of his life. (ditext.com)
  • However, in both his philosophical and theological works, he treated many metaphysical, epistemological and ethical issues. (routledge.com)
  • Whereas in Freud's psychoanalytical approach the diagnosis of the discomfort caused by culture and ethics prevails, philosophical ethical analysis is much more interested in the positive effects of morals in society. (bvsalud.org)
  • Influenced by religious teachings, he also believes that religious training plays an influential and efficient role in ethical growth and development. (mullasadra.org)
  • From these standpoints, it becomes apparent that following the religious teachings plainly without giving room for other ethical concepts would posit conflict with ethical principles. (essaywriter.org)
  • Together with the Letter to Menoeceus , also found in Diogenes' works, it constitutes our only firsthand source for the ethical teachings of Epicurus. (enotes.com)
  • Mr. Bergdahl would say only that he himself had become disillusioned by the military's doctrine of counterinsurgency, aimed at winning over the Afghan population by building roads, schools and good governance while protecting them from insurgents. (dianawest.net)
  • The military's pattern of ethical breaches appears to reveal an embedded operational mindset fixed on tactics, as opposed to a strategic one focussed on building public trust. (rideauinstitute.ca)
  • Both thinkers explain the criteria for ethical acts relying on the principles of free will, intellect, moderation, and religious laws and analyze their referents based on elements of virtue, joy, friendship, etc. (mullasadra.org)
  • When communicating about theological beliefs and ethical principles, the first thing that comes into perspective is the source of authority that the religious believers live by. (essaywriter.org)
  • The Bible tells them what is right and wrong, and living this way may pose some ethical threats, hence a greater challenge to ethical principles. (essaywriter.org)
  • Additionally, ethical principles are against any form of discrimination. (essaywriter.org)
  • The idea of fate among orthodox Mohammedans is founded on the doctrine of God's absolute decree, and of predestination both for good and for evil. (catholic.org)
  • Like the Reformers, R.C. was willing to take bold stands for the central and essential doctrines of historic orthodox Christianity. (ligonier.org)
  • Orthodox Christian theology is often presented as the direct inheritor of the doctrine and tradition of the early Church. (lu.se)
  • The chapter argues ethical considerations surround epistemology and impact when conducting mixed methods research. (igi-global.com)
  • In this introductory chapter I will discuss the research question and some ethical considerations. (lu.se)
  • High doctrine by itself is arid theological intellectualism, and utterly worthless. (christkirk.com)
  • One piece of evidence from the text that demonstrates the sudden acts of ethical responsibility is "Can the Law Make Us Be Decent" by Jay Sterling Silver. (ipl.org)
  • This paper demonstrates that ethical foundation of teachers' code could be found in ethical doctrine of Immanuel Kant. (srce.hr)
  • However, given the different worldviews of these two philosophers, their ideas of any of the ethical elements and referents are also different. (mullasadra.org)
  • This paper is intended to explore ethical doctrines by comparing the ideas of these two philosophers. (mullasadra.org)
  • Philosophers also frequently base their doctrines on the wisdom of classical authors of Greco-Roman antiquity, the Middle Ages and the Kantianism and Idealism of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. (bvsalud.org)
  • The reason that informed consent has been increasingly adopted, since World War II, as the guiding ethical principle governing the patient-physician relationship, 23 is as deeply rooted in the comparatively new discipline of political science as it is in more ancient philosophies. (nvic.org)
  • Certainly, as we've seen, Red America has nothing to say to Blue America about morality, or teaching children to lead decent, responsible and ethical lives, since they fall far behind blue states and our cities in every moral category that can be measured by statistics , from divorce to domestic violence to homicide to STDs and teen pregnancy. (blogspot.com)
  • In classical antiquity and the European Middle Ages religion was the principal source of ethical norms, and moral life was considered to be a submission to a pre-established cosmological order. (bvsalud.org)
  • En la antigüedad clásica y en la Edad Media europea, la religión era la fuente principal de las normas éticas, y se consideraba a la vida moral como sumisión a un orden cosmológico preestablecido. (bvsalud.org)
  • En los tiempos modernos, se puede detectar una mudanza radical en la ética, debido a una nueva concepción de la subjetividad humana, lo que origina opiniones relativistas en la ética así como la pérdida de una orientación moral absolutamente cierta. (bvsalud.org)
  • Due to the nature of this type of innovation, a considerable number of legal, moral and ethical issues have emerged. (lu.se)
  • Ibn Miskawayh believes that the most important prerequisites for ethical acts are self-knowledge, education, and training. (mullasadra.org)
  • The doctrine of fate held an important position in the monistic system of the Stoics. (catholic.org)
  • The Karmagranthas are six books, of different dimensions, which treat of the most important points of the Karman doctrine. (jainworld.com)
  • 1) The first and most important peculiarity of Christianity is that it is, to an unique degree, a doctrine about its own Founder. (ditext.com)
  • Especially important is his view that individuals represent, and bear ethical responsibility for, their various communities: family, ethnic group, nation, and church. (christianitytoday.com)
  • Here is a strong corrective to any unbiblical spirituality, important for a whole range of ethical issues from ecology to sexuality. (christianitytoday.com)
  • Christianity was also legalized, and Confucianism remained an important ethical doctrine. (country-studies.com)
  • The Principal Doctrines is a collection of forty of the most important articles of Epicurus's teaching, presumably extracted by a disciple from the master's voluminous works. (enotes.com)
  • Although the Qur'an (Koran) does not directly discuss autopsies or postmortem examinations, Islam contains many important doctrines that do. (medscape.com)
  • ABSTRACT Ethical and regulatory oversight of research may be suboptimal in low- and middle-income countries. (who.int)
  • Consideration for Ethical Issues in Social Science Research. (igi-global.com)
  • Ethical issues permeate discussions in all areas, whether in science, politics, medicine or everyday life. (bvsalud.org)
  • Overview of Legal and Ethical Issues in Health Care Most adults have the legal right to make their own health care decisions. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Thus it is at this point that the Buddhist doctrine of anatta becomes significant in the Buddhist ethics. (buddhistdoor.net)
  • Different schools of ethics have presented different doctrines in the field of ethics. (mullasadra.org)
  • As such, it touches on a broad historical survey of the field of Christian Ethics, and then proceeds to dig slightly deeper into that field by examining me on my ability to develop a particular problem/approach area in that field, a particular doctrine in theology, and a particular Christian thinker who demonstrates major contributions in both. (mindmeister.com)
  • Paper indicates that those ethical codes are greatly influenced by imperatives of resourcefulness and therefore do not match criteria based on Kantian ethics. (srce.hr)
  • One of the theses I intend to defend in this presentation is that traditional objectivism in ethics is an illusion, and that bewailing an "ethical crisis" is nothing but a misunderstanding. (bvsalud.org)
  • The National Vaccine Information Center represents citizens from every state, who support the principle of informed consent to medical treatment, which has become a central ethical principle in the practice of modern medicine and is applied to medical interventions which involve the risk of injury or death. (nvic.org)
  • However, we have always endorsed the right to informed consent as an overarching ethical principle in the practice of medicine for which vaccination should be no exception. (nvic.org)
  • In this regard, the ethical principle of informed consent to vaccination attains even greater importance. (nvic.org)
  • The principle of client-lawyer confidentiality applies to information relating to the representation, whatever its source, and encompasses matters communicated in confidence by the client, and therefore protected by the attorney-client privilege, matters protected by the work product doctrine, and matters protected under ethical standards of confidentiality, all as established in law, rule and policy. (ca.gov)
  • The concept of the categorical imperative forms the kernel of his ethical theory, and it can be described as "an objective, rationally necessary, and unconditional principle that we must always follow despite any natural desires or inclinations we may have to the contrary. (counter-currents.com)
  • 3] Certain religions have objections to autopsy (eg, Islam, Judaism) in that bodily intrusion violates the sanctity of keeping the human body complete, despite those religious doctrines not strictly forbidding it. (medscape.com)
  • The curriculum integrates theory, doctrine, and practice. (udmercy.edu)
  • We begin by going to the management classics (specifically, Follett, Barnard and Simon), and we then turn to the anthropological approach of Pérez López (1993), with its built-in ethical analysis, and show how trust and loyalty are crucial to the development of organizations. (springer.com)
  • He was known for having a strong pro-life position, once remarking that abortion is perhaps the crucial ethical issue of our time. (ligonier.org)
  • The Canadian Forces stresses that it follows ethical guidelines in its propaganda operations. (rideauinstitute.ca)
  • Principal Doctrines/Letter to Menoeceus - Context" Student Guide to World Philosophy Ed. John K. Roth, Christina J. Moose and Rowena Wildin. (enotes.com)
  • While following Aquinas in theology, John at times developed his master's doctrine along new lines. (routledge.com)
  • Restricting literal claim scope to known embodiments may also conflict with the '"pioneering invention patent doctrine," to the except that doctrine continues to be viable. (patentlyo.com)
  • Ces femmes ont été interrogées en privé dans des centres médicaux, sur la base d'un questionnaire contenant des items tirés de la version modifiée de l'échelle des stratégies de gestion des conflits CTS (Conflict Tactic Scale), de l'échelle de satisfaction conjugale KMS (Kansas Marital Scale) et de l'échelle de mensonge du MMPI (Minnesota Multiphase Personality Inventory). (who.int)
  • Explore various theoretical frameworks, more precisely, recent trends in legal doctrine from the United States, that accommodate ethical aspects in Public International Law (PIL). (lu.se)
  • Students shall be able to consider and discuss social and ethical responsibilities within a commercial environment, understand ethical aspects of digital technologies and global trade within a sustainable European and international legal framework, and form individual legal opinions and arguments based on such reflections. (lu.se)
  • The Government rejected the idea that Britain's engagement with the world should have any ethical content. (independent.co.uk)
  • Content and Doctrine. (encyclopedia.com)
  • By ethical mysticism I mean that type of mysticism which first withdraws from the world revealed by the senses to the inward Divine Source of Light, Truth, and Power, and then returns to the world with strength renewed, insight cleared, and desire quickened to bind all life together in the bonds of love. (pym.org)
  • This represents standing point for analysis of some existing ethical codes. (srce.hr)
  • Now it is an essential part of Christian doctrine that, whilst it claims for the man Jesus all that Judaism claims for Moses or Mahometanism for Mahomet, it also claims something else which is different in kind and not in degree. (ditext.com)
  • For Bonhoeffer , all Christian doctrines have a "social intention" as well as a meaning for individuals. (christianitytoday.com)
  • This book explores the social intention of the Christian doctrines of person, creation, sin, and revelation. (christianitytoday.com)
  • The doctrine of Karman is the central dogma of the Indian religions. (jainworld.com)
  • But if I detach a life of ethical rigor from the doctrines of these cosmic mysteries, all I will get is a life of suffocating moralism. (christkirk.com)
  • If claim meaning or the scope of application of such meaning can expand over time for literal infringement purposes, then there is less need to resort to the doctrine of equivalents to protect against after-arising technologies. (patentlyo.com)
  • By the time R.C. left college, he was not only converted, he also had his "second conversion" to the doctrine of God. (ligonier.org)
  • Memories" of all experiences since the beginning of time, believed by some mystical doctrines to be stored permanently in a spiritual substance (Akasha). (ukpsychics.com)
  • Instead, it is a matter of interpretation of these doctrines that have changed over time. (medscape.com)
  • Le but de l'étude était de décrire les aspects pronostiques des AVC en réanimation. (bvsalud.org)
  • Kant, of course, could not have foreseen how his ethical theory would be abused to justify modern liberalism. (counter-currents.com)
  • Ethical doctrines include the premises, criteria, and referents of ethical acts. (mullasadra.org)
  • Unlike Aristotle, Ibn Miskawayh attaches great importance to Islamic laws in relation to his ethical views. (mullasadra.org)
  • The first part of the book is crammed with high doctrine about great mysteries. (christkirk.com)
  • The current ethical ideas that dominate the universities, media, and public discourse are wholly unfavorable to our cause and our existence. (counter-currents.com)
  • IVF and other ART techniques raise significant ethical questions. (cenacle.co.uk)
  • Plus de 85 % pensaient qu'ils devaient avoir droit à la confidentialité de leurs données, à des soins médicaux gratuits en cas d'incident durant la recherche et qu'ils devaient pouvoir poser des questions. (who.int)
  • The doctrine of God may very well be the hub of the wheel of R.C. Sproul's work and legacy, evidenced in his classic text, The Holiness of God (1985). (ligonier.org)
  • We're about to hear a conversation between Nancy and Mary about chapter 1 of this study-all about sound doctrine. (reviveourhearts.com)
  • 253].) The attorney-client privilege and work-product doctrine apply in judicial and other proceedings in which a member may be called as a witness or be otherwise compelled to produce evidence concerning a client. (ca.gov)
  • The doctrine treats governments as sovereign, with state power to prosecute carried over from years predating the Constitution. (fija.org)
  • primarily predicting doom for the Northern Kingdom because of social injustice and perversion of cult, emphasizing as it does Yahweh's ethical demands. (encyclopedia.com)
  • What is the separate sovereigns doctrine (or the dual sovereignty doctrine)? (fija.org)
  • The separate sovereigns doctrine or the dual sovereignty doctrine is an invention of the United States Supreme Court. (fija.org)
  • A member's ethical duty of confidentiality is not so limited in its scope of protection for the client-lawyer relationship of trust and prevents a member from revealing the client's confidential information even when not confronted with such compulsion. (ca.gov)
  • Once one discovers the illusionary nature of a doctrine, it loses its persuasive power. (bvsalud.org)
  • DePaul Professor Joshua Sarnoff has a new article addressing a recently reinvigorated subject: the doctrine of equivalents. (patentlyo.com)
  • Indeed, from the ranks of the biological profession itself, scientists of such eminence as Huxley and A.R. Wallace have lent themselves to this separatism, distinguishing the ethical or spiritual progress of the human race from the general cosmic process, and endowing men with qualities and with laws of action different in kind from those which obtain in the rest of the animal kingdom. (marxists.org)
  • I have not been so fortunate as to meet with any account of the details of this doctrine about Jesus which I could fully understand. (ditext.com)
  • There are those with high doctrine and low living. (christkirk.com)
  • Then there is the man with low doctrine and high living. (christkirk.com)
  • The last three chapters are filled with ethical instruction - children obey, servants honor, wives respect, husbands love, while all Christians put on the full armor of God. (christkirk.com)