A minimal requirement for morality.
When realating the law to morality, the law should be seen as helpful and guiding the teens and children, and to all age groups, to lead a moral life, to be virtous, chaste, modest, and respectful to parents, elders, and gaurdians. The law should say respect to all religions, to treat all people equal, not to hate, to be peacful and considerate towards others. The law should show respect to all babbies, to all elders, and to respect life. It should have regards to respect animals and land.
To what extent morality and criminal law overlap?
Laws should be established using a basis of morality, equality, consistency, mercy, equity and fairness.
Law is based on natural law, which is based on morals.
Morality is a code of your personal beliefs. Your beliefs and mine may be different. Criminal law is directed at enforcement of law and not beliefs.
The law relating all three is known as the Combined Gas Law, and follows the formula V1P1/T1=V2P2/T2.
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.
International Law is not a real Law, but a positive International Morality.
Good question. It SHOULD be possible! You can even do it in the case of the mutilation of the males genitalia.
A law degree opens many doors outside of law, but it should not be seen as a prerequisite for social policy.
Tort laws are primarily designed to address civil wrongs and provide remedies for harm caused by negligence or intentional misconduct, rather than to regulate public morality. While some aspects of public morality can intersect with tort law—such as defamation or invasion of privacy—attempting to legislate morality could lead to subjective interpretations and potentially infringe on individual freedoms. Ultimately, the focus of tort law should remain on protecting individuals from harm rather than enforcing moral standards.
Decisions based on morality but not necessarily law.