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ethics
[ eth-iks ]
noun
- (used with a singular or plural verb) a system of moral principles:
the ethics of a culture.
- (used with a plural verb) the rules of conduct recognized in respect to a particular class of human actions or a particular group, culture, etc.: Christian ethics.
medical ethics;
Christian ethics.
- (used with a plural verb) moral principles, as of an individual:
His ethics forbade betrayal of a confidence.
- (used with a singular verb) that branch of philosophy dealing with values relating to human conduct, with respect to the rightness and wrongness of certain actions and to the goodness and badness of the motives and ends of such actions. Compare axiological ethics, deontological ethics.
ethics
/ ˈɛθɪks /
noun
- functioning as singular the philosophical study of the moral value of human conduct and of the rules and principles that ought to govern it; moral philosophy See also meta-ethics
- functioning as plural a social, religious, or civil code of behaviour considered correct, esp that of a particular group, profession, or individual
- functioning as plural the moral fitness of a decision, course of action, etc
he doubted the ethics of their verdict
ethics
- The branch of philosophy that deals with morality. Ethics is concerned with distinguishing between good and evil in the world, between right and wrong human actions, and between virtuous and nonvirtuous characteristics of people.
Derived Forms
- ˈethicist, noun
Word History and Origins
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Fridays there is ethics and law of war training and instruction.
Tom Rust, a spokesman for the House Ethics Committee, declined to comment to The Daily Beast.
Still, his conviction will restart a House Ethics Committee investigation into his actions.
Whether or not Hippocrates ever actually said “First, do no harm,” the axiom is central to medical ethics.
Arthur Caplan is the director of medical ethics for NYU Langone Medical Center.
She was just as honestintentionallyas she could be, but the ethics of business dealing were not quite straight in her mind.
The religion of Rome may not have advanced the theology or the ethics of the world, but it made and held together a nation.
Your religion does not make it—its ethics are too weak, its theories too unsound, its transcendentalism is too thin.
Impatiently I smother the accusing whisper of my conscience, "By the right of revolutionary ethics."
Ethics, in short, may be regarded as composed of unlike halves, which unite centrally to form a whole.
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