Yes.An engineermay be morally opposed to designing weapons for the military, but there is nothing unethical about doing this in the code of ethics for professional engineers. A pharmacist may be morally opposed to filling perscriptions for Birth Control, but there is nothing in their code of ethics against this.
Yes, ethics and morality can conflict. While ethics reflect the values and morals of a societal group, morality is a set of beliefs and values specific to an individual, which can lead to conflict and difficulty in making decisions if the two sets of ideals differ.
since the law is made by people it is imperfect. Legislators and judges bring their own personal opinions and their own views on ethics and morality to the lawmaking process.
Ethics generally refers to a set of principles that guide behavior and decision-making, often rooted in concepts of right and wrong, while positive morality refers to the actual moral beliefs and practices existing within a specific society or culture. Ethics is more abstract and universal, while positive morality is more specific and contextual.
personal morality and social justice
Answer Both concern distinction of good and bad
both of them should be consistent with each other. Ethics are the laws which God gives to us and the morality is how we live these laws inour lives. There must not be a division between these.
Morris Nemeth has written: 'Sex and morality' -- subject(s): Ethics, Jewish, Jewish ethics, Sexual ethics
Do the right thing because its right.
Ethics in general is concerned with human behavior that is acceptable or "right" and that is not acceptable or "wrong" based on conventional morality.
It is mainly about ethics, morality and fair play
The two words mean basically the same. Ethics means motivation based on ideas of right and wrong. While morality means concern with the distinction between good and evil or right and wrong; right or good conduct.
Ross Poole has written: 'Morality and modernity' -- subject(s): Ethics, Modern, Liberalism, Modern Ethics
Frankena has written: 'Perspectives on morality' -- subject(s): Ethics