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  2. Accountability for reasonableness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accountability_for...

    Relevance: The decision-making criteria and factors considered should be relevant to the goals and values of the affected stakeholders, such as patients, healthcare providers, and the community. Publicity: The decision-making process should be transparent, and the reasons for the decisions made should be made publicly available. This helps ...

  3. Hypocrisy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypocrisy

    Hypocrisy is the practice of feigning to be what one is not or to believe what one does not. [1] The word "hypocrisy" entered the English language c. 1200 with the meaning "the sin of pretending to virtue or goodness". [2] Today, "hypocrisy" often refers to advocating behaviors that one does not practice.

  4. Self-justification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-justification

    The hypocrisy induction is the arousal of dissonance by having individuals make statements that do not align with their own beliefs, and then drawing attention to the inconsistencies between what they advocated and their own behaviors, with the overall goal of leading individuals to more responsible behaviors.

  5. Integrity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrity

    Integrity is the quality of being honest and showing a consistent and uncompromising adherence to strong moral and ethical principles and values. [1] [2] In ethics, integrity is regarded as the honesty and truthfulness or earnestness of one's actions.

  6. Casuistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casuistry

    Le grand docteur sophiste, 1886 illustration of Gargantua by Albert Robida, expressing mockery of his casuist education. Casuistry (/ ˈ k æ zj u ɪ s t r i / KAZ-ew-iss-tree) is a process of reasoning that seeks to resolve moral problems by extracting or extending abstract rules from a particular case, and reapplying those rules to new instances. [1]

  7. Social preferences - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_preferences

    Accounting individual's fairness concerns can affect the design of the social policies, especially for redistributive policies. In addition, reciprocal preferences can affect people's evaluation of different policies towards the poor depending on the individual's belief that whether the poor are deserving or undeserving.

  8. Category:Hypocrisy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Hypocrisy

    Today, "hypocrisy" often refers to advocating behaviors that one does not practice. However, the term can also refer to other forms of pretense, such as engaging in pious or moral behaviors out of a desire for praise rather than out of genuinely pious or moral motivations.

  9. Ethics of care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics_of_care

    The ethics of care (alternatively care ethics or EoC) is a normative ethical theory that holds that moral action centers on interpersonal relationships and care or benevolence as a virtue.