Yes, although I think that reason is the most important factor in making moral decisions. For example, we can emotionally want something such as to kill someone if we really dislike them, but reason tells us that killing is wrong and so (hopefully!) we decide that killing the person would be morally wrong.
It's necessary but not an evil. A well-run bureaucracy ensures that employees will be hired based on merit rather than connections and that the persons will be treated equally, without regard to factors such as race or sex, based on published rules as opposed to whim or caprice, with right to appeal adverse decisions to a higher, impartial authority.
she treated all her people equally and she wont take crud bout nothing
Cleopatra made some bad decisions in her time, but she also made good one. She made the good decision to treat all of her people equally and just. :)
She faces the fact that people can and have to get angry and sad, etc. in life... It's all normal.
Mixtures incite different reactions than pure substances, and these reactions are equally necessary.
It is equally important in both as the path changing decisions have to be taken by few people or else there will be too much of conflict.
Because Turkey and Greece were historic rivals, it was necessary to help both equally, even though the threat to Greece was more immediate.
equally
The estate was equally divided by the children. The chess masters were equally matched. It was equally apparent that they had no source of income.
Bisect is the word for divide equally. It is a word for divide equally and is used in mathematics.
What goes in 100 equally
3 syllables are in equally