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  2. Moral order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_order

    Moral order may refer to: The conservative and monarchic French government in the 1870s (French: Ordre moral) : Ordre Moral. Immanuel Kant's rendering of the metaphysical argument from morality. A social structure and transcendent moral code derived from natural law in the philosophy of traditionalist conservatism.

  3. Argument from morality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_morality

    Some arguments from moral order suggest that morality is based on rationality and that this can only be the case if there is a moral order in the universe. The arguments propose that only the existence of God as orthodoxly conceived could support the existence of moral order in the universe, so God must exist.

  4. Moral universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_universe

    A moral universe implies that we live in a basically spiritual universe that is somehow ordered by a higher power, by invisible feelings of good and bad, a 'cosmic order' reminiscent of the early Greeks [1] that underpins and motivates our actions. Or a 'moral force' that means our actions must have definite effects which we carry with us.

  5. Moral Order (France) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_Order_(France)

    The moral order was a coalition of the right that formed after the successive falls of Napoleon III and the provisional republican government. It is also the name of the policy advocated by the government of Albert de Broglie under the presidency of Marshal Patrice de Mac Mahon starting from 27 May 1873.

  6. Social order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_order

    The problem of order or Hobbesian problem, which is central to much of sociology, political science and political philosophy, is the question of how and why it is that social orders exist at all. Sociology

  7. Ṛta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ṛta

    Dharma, then, was originally conceived of as a "finite or particularized manifestation of Ṛta inasmuch as it represents that aspect of the universal Order which specifically concerns the mundane natural, religious, social and moral spheres as expressed in ritualistic regulations, public laws, moral principles and laws of nature". [28]

  8. Natural order (philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_order_(philosophy)

    In philosophy, the natural order is the moral source from which natural law seeks to derive its authority. Natural order encompasses the natural relations of beings to one another in the absence of law , which natural law attempts to reinforce.

  9. Morality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morality

    Moral intuition involves the fast, automatic, and affective processes that result in an evaluative feeling of good-bad or like-dislike, without awareness of going through any steps. Conversely, moral reasoning does involve conscious mental activity to reach a moral judgment. Moral reasoning is controlled and less affective than moral intuition.