Challenging decisions
involving questions of ethics, justice, and equity arise every day in classrooms, lunch cafeterias, and principals» offices.
Not exact matches
The doing
of ethics involves the use
of certain presuppositions and procedures for reflecting on moral and social
questions in some sort
of orderly fashion.
The answer is simple: do the opposite
of what catholics want because you can always expect to find them on the wrong side
of any
question regarding
ethics and morals, especially if science is
involved or it shows them to be evil.
Eschatology and
ethics meet in this basic issue, for it
involves not only the scope
of God's love and favor and
of our responsibility but the
question of eternal destiny.
Answers to this
question involve the broadest evaluations
of sexuality and sexual
ethics: What is healthy or unhealthy sexuality?
Schneiderman's opponent in the fall elections is one
of those raising
questions about whether the attorney general, who was key to the formation
of the
ethics commission, could have been more
involved and done something to stop alleged interference in probes by Cuomo's aides.
An
ethics case
involving two Woodstock Town Board members has depleted the ranks
of the
Ethics Board and raised lingering
questions about matters such as due process, the rights and responsibilities
of public officials, and the soundness
of the local law at the heart
of the case.
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's opponent in the fall elections is one
of those raising
questions about whether the Attorney General, who was key to the formation
of the
ethics commission, could have been more
involved and done something to stop alleged interference in probes by Governor Cuomo's aides.
Its tasks are to reflect different standpoints in the scientific and public discussion
of life science issues, to develop ideas how to
involve citizens, and to give policy advice on
ethics questions surrounding new developments in the life sciences.
For example, the ABA Journal discusses the recent work
of Suffolk University law professor Andrew Perlman, who references sociological studies on group behavior to explain lawyers» tendency to discard their independent judgment and conform to group opinion when confronted with ambiguous
questions, such as those
involving ethics.
Often, issues
of ethics and professionalism raise complicated
questions,
involve shades
of grey, and require serious thought and contemplation to resolve.