Relative morality is someone who always tries to judge a situation before making a decision. this means that sometimes the rules are broken, because that course of action does not seem to be the best one.
As time passes, Morality crumbles into a cesspool of depravity, as evidenced by our craven times ^_^
Everyman
Justice, freedom and morality
Relative and kin are synonyms.
a sign of a country's relative power
Relative morality is someone who always tries to judge a situation before making a decision. this means that sometimes the rules are broken, because that course of action does not seem to be the best one.
Absolute morality generally applies to the idea that there exists an objective moral truth, which may be outlined by a philosophy (e.g. utilitarianism), a religious text, or an authority figure. Relative morality applies to the idea that moral judgment, at its core, is subjective and a product of individual or cultural taste that may shift due to circumstance.
Reflective morality is the internalized version of right and wrong from the elements of our upbringing. Reflective morality can include both religious morality, customary morality, and empathy.
Well we don't know which morality play is 'the morality play' but usually a morality play focuses on some moral.
Relative location.
Morality is a branch of philosophy, not science.
There is no morality in cheating at games.
present the concrete basis of morality
the morality it is amorality in your lifr
Having fun is the morality of this story.
On the Genealogy of Morality was created in 1887.
The relativist (who holds that there is no absolute, universal truth and that all propositions have only relative or limited application) cannot give any justified statement on morality or religion, because he acknowledges no standard or basis for making judgments. If as the relativist holds there is no absolute truth, any moral or religious statements are meaningless and cannot be justified. Any statement the relativist puts forward is nullified by the relativist's own claim that no statement or viewpoint is absolutely true. The relativist's statement might be true relative to himself, but not relative to another individual.