u say 'indeed' a lot;-)...

On May 24, 10:46 pm, ashok tewari <[email protected]> wrote:
> Indeed !
>
> On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 10:05 PM, ornamentalmind <[email protected]
>
>
>
>
>
> > wrote:
> > Somehow I seemed to have missed this until now. It appears to be of
> > import and a common topic found here at ME.
>
> > I'm copy/pasting a small part of it and the link to the original is at
> > the bottom.
>
> > For the benefit of all beings,
>
> > orn
>
> > Introduction to Ethics for the New Millennium
>
> > Ethics for the New Millennium is addressed to a general audience. It
> > presents a moral framework based on universal rather than religious
> > principles. It rests on the observation that those whose conduct is
> > ethically positive are happier and more satisfied and the belief that
> > much of the unhappiness we humans endure is actually of our own
> > making. Its ultimate goal is happiness for every individual,
> > irrespective of religious belief.
>
> > Though the Dalai Lama is himself a practicing Buddhist, his approach
> > to life and the moral compass that guides him can be of use to each
> > and every one of us – Muslim, Christian, Jew, Buddhist or atheist – in
> > our quest to lead a happier, more fulfilling life. According to the
> > Dalai Lama our survival has depended and will continue to depend on
> > our basic goodness as human beings. In the past, the respect people
> > had for their religion helped maintain ethical practice through a
> > majority following one religion or another.
>
> > Today, with the growing secularization and globalization of society,
> > we must find a way that transcends religion to establish consensus as
> > to what constitutes positive and negative conduct, what is right and
> > wrong and what is appropriate and inappropriate.
> > ...
>
> > Definitions of Ethics
>
> > 1. Webster’s New International Dictionary, 2nd Edition
>
> > i.                 A treatise on morals (Aristotle)
>
> > ii.                The science of moral duty, more broadly the science
> > of the ideal human character and the ideal ends of human action. The
> > chief problems with which ethics deals concern the nature of the
> > summum bonum or highest good, the origin and validity of the sense of
> > duty, and the character and authority of moral obligation.
>
> > The principal ethical theories are:
>
> > 1. Such as consider happiness to be the greatest good; these may be
> > egoistic, as is usually the case with hedonistic and eudaemonistic
> > theories, or altruistic, as utilitarianism.
>
> > 2. Theories of perfectionism or self realization.
>
> > 3. Theories resting upon the nature of man to the universe or to
> > divine laws, as Stoicism, evolution, Christian ethics. Intuitionism
> > and empiricism in ethics are doctrines opposed with respect to the
> > character of the sense of duty. Absolute ethics affirms an unchanging
> > moral code; relative ethics regards moral rules as varying with human
> > development.
>
> > iii.               Moral principles, quality or practice; a system or
> > moral principles; as, social ethics, medical ethics, professional
> > ethics forbids him; the morals of individual action or practice, as
> > the ethics of conscientious man.
>
> > 2. WordNet ® 1.6, © 1997 Princeton University
>
> > i.      Motivation based on ideas of right and wrong [syn: ethical motive,
> > morals, morality]
>
> > ii.     The philosophical study of moral values and rules [syn: moral
> > philosophy]
>
> > 3. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth
> > Edition
>
> > i.      A set of principles of right conduct.
>
> > ii.     A theory or a system of moral values: “An ethic of service is at
> > war with a craving for gain” (Gregg Easterbrook).
>
> > iii.    The study of the general nature of morals and of the specific
> > moral choices to be made by a person; moral philosophy.
>
> > iv.     The rules or standards governing the conduct of a person or the
> > members of a profession: medical ethics.
>
> > 4. Dictionary of Religion and Philosophy by Geddes MacCregor
>
> >        i.      The term ethics is derived from the Greek ethos, which means
> > custom or usage. It has basic affinities, therefore, with similar
> > notions in non-Western cultures, such as China, where the Confucian
> > term li, meaning propriety or courtesy or decorum has the same
> > fundamental significance. The Greeks, e.g., Plato, used the term dike,
> > meaning also custom or usage to designate the right way of behaving,
> > very much as Confucius used the term li in Chinese.
>
> >        ii.   The adjectives ethical and moral are synonymous and
> > philosophers who concern themselves with ethical problems have been
> > sometimes known as moral philosophers as contrasted with logicians,
> > metaphysicians, and other specialists. Moral philosophers may either
> > build systems of guidance in reaching ethical decisions, i.e.,
> > decisions about what course of actions is good or bad. They also
> > analyze what is to be meant by good and bad, right or wrong. Modern
> > ethics tends more in the latter than in the former direction, but both
> > functions are necessary in the pursuit of ethical questions. Ethics as
> > a whole belongs to value theory, which includes aesthetics and other
> > branches.
>
> > From:http://www.dalailamafoundation.org/studyguide
>
> --
> ASHOK TEWARI- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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