Moral Implications Essays

  • Moral Implications of the Battered Woman Syndrome

    3171 Words  | 7 Pages

    Moral Implications of the Battered Woman Syndrome The Battered Woman Syndrome, like the Cycle Theory of Violence, helps to illuminate the situation of the person victimized by domestic violence. However, it may also contribute to the violence of the battering situation. In this paper, I explore some of the implications of the Battered Woman Syndrome for domestic violence cases wherein an abused woman kills her abuser. I begin by delineating some of the circumstances of a domestic violence situation

  • The Language Behind Dawkins’ Selfish Gene Theory

    1841 Words  | 4 Pages

    transmitted. Dawkins, in the excerpts that Barlow has chosen, uses heavily metaphoric language to explain these scientific concepts to the general public. However, the language that Dawkins uses, while thought provoking, also carries some negative implications that extend beyond his theory. The selfish gene theory has many positive aspects, but its metaphors detract in certain ways from the scientific message of Richard Dawkins. The metaphor behind Dawkins' theory can best be described by his opening

  • Kant Political Leader

    571 Words  | 2 Pages

    the actor lent the action its morality. If a person acted out of a vested interest (because of a possible consequence) then the act was non-moral—it had no moral implications whatsoever. But, if a person acted because she thought she was doing the right thing, then she was acting out of good will and the act was a moral act. In Kant’s view, actions have true moral worth only when they spring from a recognition of a duty and a choice to discharge it. For example, using Kantian logic, an advertiser who

  • Public Policy Problems In The Environment

    832 Words  | 2 Pages

    America would no longer be so dependent on foreign oil. The problem with Bush’s plan, according to Gore, was that this could be devastating to the environment of the scarcely populated Alaskan wilderness. Regardless of the political, legal or moral implications of such drilling, there are problems dealing with multiple types of rationality in this issue. In his book “Reason in Society,” Paul Diesing describes six major types of rationality. These include technical, economic, social, legal, political

  • Cloning is Ethically and Morally Wrong

    948 Words  | 2 Pages

    Scientists and ethicists alike have debated the implications of human and non-human cloning extensively since 1997 when scientists at the Roslin Institute in Scotland produced Dolly. No direct conclusions have been drawn, but compelling arguments state that cloning of both human and non-human species results in harmful physical and psychological effects on both groups. The following issues dealing with cloning and its ethical and moral implications will be addressed: cloning of human beings would

  • Revenge In Hamlet

    1537 Words  | 4 Pages

    issue of death and disease, both physical and emotional is very prevalent throughout the duration of the play, as well as fate and divine providence. The play also questions madness and whether it can be feigned, as well as corruption and its moral implications. Of course, who could forget the famous ‘To be or not to be’ soliloquy, where Hamlet not only questions life and death, but many of life’s other uncertainties as well. Undoubtedly, the most essential theme in the development of Hamlet is

  • Essay on Picture of Dorian Gray: Discovering Wilde

    912 Words  | 2 Pages

    acknowledging what he has done: "He felt that the secret of the whole thing was not to realize the situation" (159). Dorian escapes from every unpleasant realization by turning his attention to other things. Unwilling to admit that his actions have moral implications, he seeks refuge in art. On hearing of Sibyl's death, he accepts an invitaton, for that very evening, to go to the opera. He learns to see life only from an aesthetic perspective. He reflects: Form is absolutely essential to it. It should

  • Achebe's Misinterpretation of Conrad's Heart of Darkness

    717 Words  | 2 Pages

    hindered by his anti-western bias. From the beginning, Achebe brazenly assumes that Conrad's narrator, Marlow, is simply a mouthpiece for Conrad's ideas. No more thought is given to the subject. Achebe never considers the fact that there maybe implications as to why Conrad chose a framing narrative to tell his story, and he chooses to ignore that perhaps by telling the story through the eyes of a seamen from Europe with firsthand imperialist experience of Africa, he could better expose the evils

  • Dostoevsky was an Anti-Semite

    2282 Words  | 5 Pages

    paper will address Dostoevsky's anti-Semitism through an examination of Isay Fomitch Bumstein in The House of the Dead, the Messianic idea in The Devils, and 'the little demon' in The Brothers Karamazov. Furthermore, this paper will question the moral implications of Dostoevsky's Christian message given his anti-Semitic posture. It will suggest that while he was indeed an anti-Semite, one can continue to read Dostoevsky's work without feeling that his message was a complete sham.2 Until The House of

  • Culture and a Mans Dying Wish

    1837 Words  | 4 Pages

    odds with his community on this point, has left a provision in his will that he be cremated and his ashes scattered into the ocean. The body waits in the hospital while the community debates the issue. What is to be done? The elders have asked for a moral opinion. What is one to say? If the belief that the man must be buried is one deeply ingrained in the hearts and minds of the community, then a decision to cremate him would cause an uproar. On the other hand, if there are some who sympathize with

  • Sexual Abuse In the Catholic Church

    3983 Words  | 8 Pages

    the moral authority. When one has questions with his faith he is taught that he can go to his priest for informed answers. In this paper I also hope to deal with how these priests failed their flock. They took advantage of men who came to them for help when in trouble and preyed on the little boys who came to the church for guidance. In addition to the tacit feeling that as a priest they will only do what is right, these men told their victims that they would deal with the moral implications.

  • Marijuana Use: An Ethical Examination

    1846 Words  | 4 Pages

    about whether or not marijuana should be legalized in the United States, I would like to examine a much more fundamental question: whether or not it is right to use the drug. This problem is strictly an ethical one. If we are to examine only the moral implications of the action then we must discard governmental laws from the equation, for this decision could be made anywhere, at any time, under any sort of governmental regime, under any set of laws, which after all are only that particular government’s

  • Reaction to The Reader

    927 Words  | 2 Pages

    from their problems. This can be paralleled to the efforts of the German people towards Vergangenheitsbewältigung, or "coping with the past." In coping with Germany's Nazi history, the Germans attempted to distance themselves from it and the moral implications it presented. They tried to understand it without involving themselves in it, since involving themselves could implicate them. The one person in the book who cannot distance herself, Hanna, is still unsympathetic because everyone else distances

  • Hustler - Censoring a Film about Censorship

    3819 Words  | 8 Pages

    being protected, pointing out the impossibility of portraying the obscene images in an R-rated film. After that, I will discuss the possible ramifications of pornography, including violence against women and children. I will then address the moral implications of a complete freedom of expression and the possible effects of promoting ignorance about pornography through the movie. Finally, I will comment on my views regarding pornography and censorship in our society. The Sexual Revolution in

  • Monosodium Glutamate

    3864 Words  | 8 Pages

    Monosodium Glutamate I.INTRODUCTION Have you ever had a situation were after a busy day at work, went to a restaurant for a nice dinner and enjoyed the taste of the food that was presented to you, but soon after the dinner was over, you felt really tired and sick? Did this ever made you regret the fact that you went there instead of taking the time of preparing to yourself something “light” and “healthy” or maybe you were promising to yourself that you would never do this again? But how

  • Exploring the Moral Implications of Abortion

    1241 Words  | 3 Pages

    commandments found in the Bible. As humans, our moral intuitions tell us without much difficulty that killing is wrong. When the act of taking a life is framed in such a way, it is difficult to imagine anyone who would disagree – but this presentation is deceptively simple. “Thou shalt not kill”, as helpfully prescriptive as it may be, misses a crucial parameter. Thou shalt not kill – what? Or whom? It is evident that navigating one’s way through the moral implications of killing becomes incredibly difficult

  • Euthenasia Moral and Ethical Implications

    884 Words  | 2 Pages

    her life; and ‘active euthanasia’, in which a physician terminates the life of a patient. By far, the most common method of euthanasia is ‘lethal injection’, in which an individual is administered a fatal cocktail of drugs. Due to its moral and ethical implications, euthanasia is hotly debated all over the world. As of 2014, three nations – the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg – allow active euthanasia. Switzerland and certain US states, Washington, Oregon, Vermont and Montana; permit assisted

  • Moral Implications For Practice Analysis

    2325 Words  | 5 Pages

    struggle of “good versus evil” is nothing new to the members of the human race, but more often than not many people forget this concept is one of the main components of morality, a guiding compass that exists within every person. Every person has morals but several individuals do not know what to make of morality or do not realize just how important it is for our society to study this ancient ideal. To understand morality and its effect on the world we must first understand what morality is and how

  • The Moral Implications Of Disney Movies

    951 Words  | 2 Pages

    Although movies and television shows we watched as children have been criticised for ages, the moral implications of these films run deeper than just bad test results and lack of attention span; they promote decision making skills and encourage children to have a high self-esteem. 90’s kids grew up watching shows like Spongebob, Kim Possible, Friends, Drake and Josh, etc. These films subconsciously shaped the way they are today, all the way down to Spongebob’s work ethic, Kim Possible’s trustworthiness

  • Unveiling the Moral Implications of Abortion

    1432 Words  | 3 Pages

    the avocation against the killing of innocent and unborn child. First, this essay argues against the idea of a fetus being considered less than human are evaluated and criticized. The secondly, it presents strong support for why the life of a fetus moral rights has to be taking into consideration equally as a matured human .Thus, this essay focus on the reasoning behind the decision for abortion, then coming to the conclusion is that an abortion is only