• Morals and Dogma: Council of Kadosh: XXX. (sacred-texts.com)
  • MORALS and DOGMA by Albert Pike. (bibliotecapleyades.net)
  • Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry , prepared for the Supreme Council of the Thirty Third Degree for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States: Charleston, 1871. (bibliotecapleyades.net)
  • The intensity and frequency of overall moral distress were rated as moderate level, with averages of 3.08 (± 1.45) and 2.94 (± 1.37), respectively. (bvs.br)
  • Analysis revealed a mean overall moral distress score of 79.58 (SD = 64.27) and median of 67, with a range of 0-354. (bvsalud.org)
  • A morality clause (also known as a morals clause, bad boy clause or bad girl clause) is a provision within instruments of a contract which curtail, or restrain, or proscribe certain behavior of individuals or party(s) to the contract. (wikipedia.org)
  • On this episode of Behind the Book, Professor Nye lays out a framework for evaluating the morality of presidents' foreign policy decisions, and discusses the implications of transnational threats that future presidents will have to consider in order to enact moral foreign policy. (harvard.edu)
  • It is not that moral idiots do not know, intellectually, that something called morality exists, but rather they cannot understand its applicability to their lives , particularly their professional lives. (commondreams.org)
  • This second part consists in a specific moral analysis of what we know (either intuitively or through patient study and examination) of specific objects or operations, such that through the direct application of reason we can formally articulate rules or laws, including rules and laws of morality. (catholicculture.org)
  • In the second place, once the impossibility of such articulation is verifi ed, we shall defend that shame, present in morality but also present in other dimensions of human development, is a necessary condition for the feeling of moral duty. (bvsalud.org)
  • Americans constantly make moral judgments about presidents and foreign policy. (harvard.edu)
  • We interpret this possibly self-deceptive adjustment of judgments to actions as moral hypocrisy. (repec.org)
  • Explanations tend to leak into moral judgments and so become excuses because of our tendency to grade not on results but on effort: "Given who they are and where they were brought up, we should give them credit for their decision not to burn but only imprison witches. (typepad.com)
  • Moral distress has been debated in various scenarios in the world context as a unique ethical and moral procedural experience. (bvs.br)
  • In the approach to MD, the particularities of this scenario were considered as a process linked to moral experience in articulation with elements and concepts such as moral sensitivity, moral deliberation, moral problem and the development of ethical and moral competences ( 13 ) . (bvs.br)
  • Health, environment and non chemical ingredients have been strong consumer motives for a while now and in making moral and ethical choices there is nowadays high status. (lu.se)
  • In his Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals, Immanuel Kant developed a basis for the answers. (doverpublications.com)
  • The following is a perspective on moral injury and the Just War tradition offered by It was prepared by Marc Livecche, Ph.D., the McDonald Distinguished Scholar of Ethics, War, and Public Life at "Providence: A Journal of Christianity & American Foreign Policy" and an expert in this field, with editorial assistance from Matt Gobush, member of the Church's Standing Commission on World Mission. (episcopalchurch.org)
  • Fundamental Moral Theology deals with the foundations of theological ethics. (unifr.ch)
  • Psychologists say that professing concern - what social scientists refer to as 'moral outrage' - is often a tool we use to alleviate our feeling that we have a personal role in societal harm. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • Respondents who read that Chinese consumers were to blame had similar guilt levels, regardless of whether or not they had the opportunity to express moral outrage. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • The opportunity to express moral outrage at corporate harm-doing (vs. not) led to significantly higher personal moral character ratings,' the authors wrote. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • But those who didn't have the chance to assert their goodness had more moral outrage at third parties. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • We can safely say that when it comes to waging war, or for that matter, aiding and abetting others doing so, the accepted behavior of both soldiers, statesmen, and diplomats is that called moral idiocy. (commondreams.org)
  • Moral Idiocy is not something this writer, creative as he is, has simply made up. (commondreams.org)
  • Are there objective moral facts, or should we embrace moral nihilism or moral relativism? (otago.ac.nz)
  • Results: The mean moral distress score was low, while the mean nurse practice environment and intent to stay scores were high. (cdc.gov)
  • Fundamental Moral Theology studies the happiness or ultimate end of man, the conditions and structure of human action, its interior principles which are the passions and virtues, and its exterior principles which are the law and grace. (unifr.ch)
  • Briefly, it means the ' Inability to understand moral principles and values and to act in accordance with them, apparently without impairment of the reasoning and intellectual faculties. (commondreams.org)
  • Tim Rogan's book, The Moral Economists: R. H. Tawney, Karl Polanyi, E. P. Thompson, and the Critique of Capitalism (2017), ably reconstructs the first extensive crisis of liberalism. (princeton.edu)
  • I need to be blunt, the world is on the brink of a catastrophic moral failure and the price of this failure will be paid with lives and livelihoods in the world's poorest countries. (cnbc.com)
  • We shall try to evaluate the contributions that the knowledge accumulated by Moral Psychology has made to the understanding of human development with the purpose of sustaining the following thesis: the source of energy of moral duty must be sought not only among exclusively moral feelings, but also among those which play a role in human development as a whole. (bvsalud.org)
  • Liberals have not even understood the concept of moral harm, and so their arguments have often missed the point of the laws they were criticizing. (ssrn.com)
  • This is done by explicating the structure of the concept of moral progress and the structure of value comparatives. (lu.se)
  • Moral Hypocrisy, Power and Social Preferences ," IZA Discussion Papers 6590, Institute of Labor Economics (IZA). (repec.org)
  • Moral Hypocrisy, Power and Social Preferences ," Working Papers 1216, Groupe d'Analyse et de Théorie Economique Lyon St-Étienne (GATE Lyon St-Étienne), Université de Lyon. (repec.org)
  • Moral Hypocrisy, Power and Social Preferences ," Post-Print halshs-00725939, HAL. (repec.org)
  • Moral Hypocrisy, Power and Social Preferences ," Working Papers halshs-00702578, HAL. (repec.org)
  • Objective To assess the progression of a public university's dental students through stages of moral development during the course. (bvsalud.org)
  • Andersson, H 2023, Jumping the hurdles of moral progress . (lu.se)
  • In the meantime, Catholic clergy, while sidelined by the vehement anti-Catholicism of the day, were nonetheless developing in parallel a taxonomy of clinical cases and a moral approach to medical decision-making that eventually found its way into mainstream medical thinking in the United States. (thenewatlantis.com)
  • Matthew Hoh, that former Marine, now a veterans advocate, introduced me to the phrase "moral injury," though the term is usually attributed to clinical psychiatrist Jonathan Shay . (thenation.com)
  • Moral distress in clinical research nurses. (bvsalud.org)
  • Clinical research nurses experience unique challenges in the context of their role that can lead to conflict and moral distress. (bvsalud.org)
  • Although examined in many areas, moral distress has not been studied in clinical research nurses . (bvsalud.org)
  • The aim of this study was to examine moral distress in clinical research nurses and the relationship between moral distress scores and demographic characteristics of clinical research nurses . (bvsalud.org)
  • This was a descriptive quantitative study to measure moral distress in clinical research nurses using the Measure of Moral Distress - Healthcare Professionals (MMD-HP) administered electronically. (bvsalud.org)
  • Moral distress scores were negatively correlated with clinical research nurse age (r = 0-.156, p (bvsalud.org)
  • The findings demonstrate that clinical research nurses do experience moral distress and revealed a wide range of scores. (bvsalud.org)
  • Further research is necessary to determine potential patient impact due to moral distress and to develop processes to minimize moral distress in the clinical research setting. (bvsalud.org)
  • These soul wounds have come to be termed "moral injury," and designate a psychic trauma resulting from doing, allowing to be done, or having done to you that which goes against deeply held normative beliefs (Litz, 2009). (episcopalchurch.org)
  • Eminent domain is a real-world example of the Trolley Problem from moral philosophy. (forbes.com)
  • Perfectionism has acquired a number of meanings in contemporary moral and political philosophy. (stanford.edu)
  • Robert J. Hartman (University of Gothenburg) "Moral Luck in Kant's Moral Philosophy? (lu.se)
  • Intent to stay, moral distress, and nurse practice environment among long-term care nurses: a cross-sectional questionnaire survey study. (cdc.gov)
  • These challenges are attributed, at least in part, to moral distress and a negative nurse practice environment. (cdc.gov)
  • second, to explore the potential mediating effect of the nurse practice environment on the intent to stay among those with high levels of moral distress. (cdc.gov)
  • Methods: This study was an online national survey of long-term care nurses' perceptions of their intent to stay, moral distress level (Moral Distress Questionnaire), and nurse practice environment (Direct Care Staff Survey). (cdc.gov)
  • Structural equation modeling analysis explored intent to stay, moral distress, and the nurse practice environment among long-term care nurses. (cdc.gov)
  • Moral distress had a significant, moderately negative association with the nurse practice environment (β = -0.41), while the nurse practice environment had a significant, moderately positive association with intent to stay (β = 0.46). (cdc.gov)
  • Conclusion: Since the nurse practice environment partially mediates the relationship between moral distress and intent to stay, interventions to improve the nurse practice environment are crucial to alleviating moral distress and enhancing nurses' intent to stay in their jobs, organizations, and the nursing profession. (cdc.gov)
  • To evaluate the frequency and intensity of moral distress in Brazilian nurses. (bvs.br)
  • Cross-sectional study performed with nurses from 27 Brazilian states through application of the Brazilian Moral Distress Scale in Nurses (Portuguese acronym: EDME-Br) and descriptive statistical analysis. (bvs.br)
  • Moral distress occurs in precarious work environments, with little expressiveness of the nurses' role. (bvs.br)
  • Labor aspects, such as working conditions, overload, skills and competences for the performance, relationship with the team and institutional norms, permeate the work process of nurses and are associated with physical, emotional and moral distress (MD) ( 1 - 6 ) . (bvs.br)
  • Moral distress is characterized as pain and emotional imbalance experienced when nurses recognize the correct decision or course of an action, but due to institutional constraints or barriers of various orders, cannot develop the action defined as morally correct ( 6 ) . (bvs.br)
  • A movement can be most inspiring when it converts abstract policy directions into moral choices, Barber said. (progressive.org)
  • abstract = "In their work on moral progress, Dan Egonsson and Toni R{\o}nnow-Rasmussen both express a worry concerning possible problems caused by value incommensurability. (lu.se)
  • Although the Just War tradition may provide resources for treating moral injury, it is insufficient to assert that killing a lawful enemy combatant in a just war using proportionate and discriminate force is, simply, morally permissible. (episcopalchurch.org)
  • Indeed, we are designed to perceive that reality has more than one dimension, including a moral dimension. (catholicculture.org)
  • One important button for us to push is to appeal to their belief that they are moral agents, and urge them to be their best selves. (typepad.com)
  • Doubts have been raised about interpretations of this teaching judged excessively rigid and intransigent, and grave fears have been expressed that, if the Church continues to teach and urge the moral norm of Humanae Vitae in keeping with such interpretations, she may lose credibility and attention with the critical person of today and with a large number of the faithful. (vatican.va)
  • Examining the moral cornerstones of a twentieth-century critique of capitalism, The Moral Economists explains why this critique fell into disuse, and how it might be reformulated for the twenty-first century. (princeton.edu)
  • And how can we, as the American public, judge presidents along moral lines? (harvard.edu)
  • The public was inclined to accept the moral authority of medicine because of the profession's commitment to be trustworthy in wielding the increasingly powerful and increasingly successful interventions of a scientifically-based medical craft. (thenewatlantis.com)
  • With reference to a recent public statement on the teaching of the Magisterium concerning "Humanae Vitae", made by a well-known moral theologian and widely reported by the press, we publish the following clarifications. (vatican.va)
  • But Barber was deadly serious about the need to re-frame public debate by "changing the language" and phrasing the movement's goals in moral rather than strictly economic terms. (progressive.org)
  • your moral obligation to public health outweighs financial considerations. (cdc.gov)
  • Consequently, the moral authority of the clergy was gradually waning. (thenewatlantis.com)
  • comment on my last essay ( The Moral Obligation of Reality ), bservaes4399 explains that he does not see how my argument moves from what is to what ought to be. (catholicculture.org)
  • Having served in the Departments of State and Defense, Professor Nye has long been interested in the moral dimensions of foreign policy, but he sees the gap in the US's conventional wisdom on the topic. (harvard.edu)
  • A president is either praised for the moral clarity of his statements or judged solely on the results of their actions. (harvard.edu)
  • Fundamental intuitions about the nature of things and their moral reality are built into the human person. (catholicculture.org)
  • The Moral Majority was a conservative Christian coalition organized in 1979 by Rev. Jerry Falwell . (conservapedia.com)
  • The Moral Majority, part of the Religious Right and partially responsible for moving the Republican Party to the right, organized a series of voting drives and political demonstrations to advance their conservative point of view and enhance the moral and religious attitudes of the nation. (conservapedia.com)
  • We saw the usual conservative moral prostitutes rush to condemn a group of innocent young Christian men. (takimag.com)
  • This course will introduce students to the principal positions in contemporary moral theory including consequentialism, deontology and virtue theory. (studiesabroad.com)
  • The course will deal with the main contemporary moral theorists within the context of moral theory going back to Hume and Kant. (studiesabroad.com)
  • The term is used to refer to an account of a good human life, an account of human well-being, a moral theory, and an approach to politics. (stanford.edu)
  • Collective Moral Hazard, Maturity Mismatch and Systemic Bailouts ," TSE Working Papers 09-052, Toulouse School of Economics (TSE), revised Oct 2010. (repec.org)
  • Democratic decision-making procedures are a source of moral reasons, but not of reasons that are decisive merely because of their provenance. (bostonreview.net)
  • State constitutions almost invariably reflect strong democratic protections and moral impulses that are not part of the policies adopted by politicians in the pockets of corporate CEOs. (progressive.org)
  • 1. Certainly, every couple in difficulty merits great respect and love, especially when it is the various circumstances of life, not only personal but also economic and social, which make it difficult to fulfil moral duty. (vatican.va)
  • The photo assignment agency also requires them to give up the moral rights and assume all legal risks of their assignments. (diyphotography.net)
  • The Moral Economists is part historiographical exegesis, part subtle polemic about the limitations of contemporary critiques of capitalism. (princeton.edu)
  • and contemporary naturalist moral realism. (otago.ac.nz)
  • In particular, the tradition's core concepts may be relevant in addressing "moral injury" suffered by combat veterans. (episcopalchurch.org)
  • As of August 2016[update] morals clauses still exist widely for athletes, and in fact, may be invoked more quickly than in the past, as in the case of Ryan Lochte. (wikipedia.org)
  • But the main arguments in favour of divestment are, in fact, moral ones. (smh.com.au)
  • The issue of moral unity or diversity arises from the fact that bioethics has expanded globally beyond Western countries. (who.int)
  • What makes a president's actions moral or immoral? (harvard.edu)
  • After all, the argument runs, there is little, if any, moral difference between the various actions that cause emissions and it is simply a fetish to focus solely on divestment. (smh.com.au)
  • It would be a bizarre instance of moral alchemy if one group of people could conjure up a permission to kill members of another group merely by voting among themselves. (bostonreview.net)
  • We do not think of the people who make up "everybody else" as rational analysts and moral agents. (typepad.com)
  • But the remarkable Forward Together coalition, which has been staging weekly "Moral Monday" protests of as many as 80,000 people, has managed to worry Governor Pat McCrory and his fellow Republicans. (progressive.org)
  • So let it be said once and for all that most of these people are moral frauds. (beliefnet.com)
  • Here it is at least a good sign that more people are realizing what utter frauds are Rich Lowry, David French, Jonah Goldberg, Max Boot, and the like moral prostitutes in what my friend Jack Kerwick calls "the Big Con. (takimag.com)
  • Reluctant Warriors: Premillennialism and Politics in the Moral Majority," Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol. 30, No. 3 (Sep. (conservapedia.com)
  • To take a few examples, a parent does not (and certainly ought not ) perceive himself as an isolated individual but as a person in a special relationship with a child, a relationship which both supposes and imposes moral duties. (catholicculture.org)
  • Joseph S. Nye's "Do Morals Matter? (harvard.edu)
  • It's exactly these questions that Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus and leading international relations scholar, Joseph S. Nye, sets out to answer in his new book, "Do Morals Matter? (harvard.edu)
  • Or the widespread moral panic in the 1980s about kids in day care . (techdirt.com)
  • This form of argument starts with the assumption that we--the writer and his readers--are rational analysts and moral agents who care about consequences and understand what good states of the world would be. (typepad.com)
  • Another important button for us to push is to convince them that we are not rational analysts and moral agents who care about consequent states of the world, but are instead ourselves zombie-automata motivated by honor or revenge or pride--"we will never negotiate with the terrorists! (typepad.com)
  • We are trying to be our best selves, and are making moral choices. (typepad.com)