Want this question answered?
Natural Law
No. Natural Law is scientific and universal. The Law of the Ten Commandments is moral law. Natural Law: gravity, e=mc2, and similar. Moral Law: X is wrong, Y is right, and similar.
There are no universal moral truths because culture dictates morality and culture various through time and space. There are particular moral truths within specific cultures but not any universal moral truths.
According to Kant, the power to follow the moral law comes from our rational nature and the ability to reason. He believed that individuals possess autonomy, enabling them to freely choose to act according to moral principles. Kant argued that rationality allows us to recognize and adhere to universal moral laws, which guide our actions.
My guess is that the Universal Moral Code was produced by mankind and The Ten Commandments came from the Almighty God
An action has moral worth according to Kant when it is done solely out of a sense of duty, motivated by the intention to follow a universal moral law (categorical imperative) rather than personal desires or consequences.
The law applies to everything in the universe.
Opposite the moral law.
moral damages
Moral Idealism is a belief that individual rights and responsibilities are universal, regardless of outcome.
Foundation for Moral Law was created in 2002.
moral damages