Ethics
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Revision as of 21:18, 14 March 2010
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Ethics (from the Ancient Greek ēthikos, the adjective of ēthos "custom, habit"), a major branch of philosophy, is the study of values and customs of a person or group. It covers the analysis and employment of concepts such as right and wrong, good and evil, and responsibility. It is divided into three primary areas: meta-ethics (the study of the concept of ethics), normative ethics (the study of how to determine ethical values), and applied ethics (the study of the use of ethical values).
See also
- Altruism (ethics)
- Bioethics
- Buddhist Ethics (discipline)
- Business ethics
- Deontological ethics
- Engineering ethics
- Environmental ethics
- Ethical egoism
- Ethical relativism
- Ethical skepticism
- Ethical subjectivism
- Ethics in religion
- Fallibilism
- Foucault/Habermas debate
- Hedonism
- Journalism ethics
- Legal ethics
- List of ethics topics
- Medical ethics
- Moral absolutism
- Moral nihilism
- Moral syncretism
- Morality
- Normative ethics
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