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ETHICS: Ethics in General

Definition of Ethics

The philosophical study of morality. The word is also commonly used interchangeably with ‘morality’ to mean the subject matter of this study; and sometimes it is used more narrowly to mean the moral principles of a particular tradition, group, or individual. Christian ethics and Albert Schweitzer’s ethics are examples. In this article the word will be used exclusively to mean the philosophical study.

Ethics, along with logic, metaphysics, and epistemology, is one of the main branches of philosophy. It corresponds, in the traditional division of the field into formal, natural, and moral philosophy, to the last of these disciplines. It can in turn be divided into the general study of goodness, the general study of right action, applied ethics, metaethics, moral psychology, and the metaphysics of moral responsibility. These divisions are not sharp, and many important studies in ethics, particularly those that examine or develop whole systems of ethics, are interdivisional. Nonetheless, they facilitate the identification of different problems, movements, and schools within the discipline.

The first two, the general study of goodness and the general study of right action, constitute the main business of ethics. Correlatively, its principal substantive questions are what ends we ought, as fully rational human beings, to choose and pursue and what moral principles should govern our choices and pursuits. How these questions are related is the discipline’s principal structural question, and structural differences among systems of ethics reflect different answers to this question. In contemporary ethics, the study of structure has come increasingly to the fore, especially as a preliminary to the general study of right action. In the natural order of exposition, however, the substantive questions come first.

Definition comes from

Books / Catalog on Ethics

The subject heading links present the WorldCat catalog with all of the books with that subject heading as the search term. To narrow your search, just add a keyword or two to the search box after the subject heading. A few keywords that you may want to add: "moral thought", "moral reasoning" and "church ethics".

The eBooks are about the topic of ethics and are found in our Credo Digital Reference material.

Journals / Databases on Ethics

1 - Pick your database. Best bets are: EBSCO's ATLA/ATLAS, EBSCO's Business Source Elite, ProQuest's ABI/INFORM Complete, ProQuest's Research Library, and ProQuest's PsycARTICLES.

2 - Start by entering a keyword or two in the search box.

3 - Find an article that looks like something you might use and then read its subject headings, they are found in the abstract.

4 - Search again, but use one subject heading from that article, change dropdown box to "subject" instead of "keyword" or "any term", AND

5 - add another keyword in second box to narrow search even more.

Philosophy Online

At the left of each article there is a link to "Author and Citation Information". That link creates a new tab in which it creates, what appears to be, an MLA or Turabian citation of the article. When using citation generators, be sure to double check with the style guide itself.

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