true
no he did not
no he did not
Yes, Aristotle believed that the morality of a government depended on whether those in power worked for the common good of the people or pursued their own self-interest. He argued that a government that prioritized the well-being of its citizens was more virtuous and legitimate.
It is a true statement that Aristotle judged a government's morality in terms of whether it work for itself or worked for its citizens. Aristotle was a Greek philosopher.
He based his morality upon whether the ruling party ruled for the benefit of the people (good) or for the benefit of only the ruling party (bad).
Rudie W. Tretten has written: 'State and local government' -- subject(s): Local government, State governments 'Morality in government' -- subject(s): Political corruption
Yes, law and morality can diverge. While laws are created and enforced by governing bodies, morality is based on personal beliefs and principles. There are times when an action may be legally permissible but morally questionable, or vice versa.
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Morality
Roman Catholic AnswerWho said the Catholic Church is meant to be a bastion of morality? The Catholic Church is the Mystical Body of Christ and has been commissioned by Christ to go out to all the world baptising them and preaching His Word. The Catholic Church has been sent to individual people. Individuals are responsible for forming their own governments not the Church.
All the first state governments came under the US Constitution. No state could enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation; or make their own money. Early American state governments agreed on freedoms that Americans should have, such as religious freedom. They disagreed on matters such as the morality of slavery.
Bombs are simply things and thus have no morality; of themselves they are neither good nor bad. It is the uses humans, which have morality, put them to that are good or bad.