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  2. Klaus M. Leisinger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaus_M._Leisinger

    In Business & Professional Ethics Journal Vol.31 (2012) No.1, 135–185. Corporate Responsibility and Corporate Philanthropy (with Karin Schmitt), June 2012 UN Development Cooperation Forum [ 6 ] Global Values for Global Development (September 2014) Working Paper for the Sustainable Development Solutions Network [ 7 ]

  3. Terrell Ward Bynum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrell_Ward_Bynum

    Terrell Ward Bynum (born 1941) is an American philosopher, writer and editor.Bynum is currently director of the Research Center on Computing and Society at Southern Connecticut State University, where he is also a professor of philosophy, and visiting professor in the Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility in De Montfort University, Leicester, England. [1]

  4. The Elements of Moral Philosophy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Elements_of_Moral...

    He revised the book three times, adding a chapter on "The Ethics of Virtue" in 1993 and a chapter on "Feminism and the Ethics of Care" in 1999. The fourth edition appeared in 2003, the year Rachels died. Since then, his son Stuart has written the fifth edition and the sixth edition, which was released in April 2009.

  5. Outline of ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_ethics

    Organizational ethics – ethics among organizations. Professional ethics. Accounting ethics – study of moral values and judgments as they apply to accountancy. Archaeological ethics; Computer ethics – deals with how computing professionals should make decisions regarding professional and social conduct. [3] Ten Commandments of Computer Ethics

  6. Science of morality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_of_morality

    Utilitarian Jeremy Bentham discussed some of the ways moral investigations are a science. [9] He criticized deontological ethics for failing to recognize that it needed to make the same presumptions as his science of morality to really work – whilst pursuing rules that were to be obeyed in every situation (something that worried Bentham).

  7. Ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics

    The term axiological ethics is sometimes used for the discipline studying this overlap, that is, the part of ethics that studies values. [179] The two disciplines are sometimes distinguished based on their focus: ethics is about moral behavior or what is right while value theory is about value or what is good . [ 180 ]

  8. Value (ethics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_(ethics)

    Values are one of the factors that generate behavior (besides needs, interests and habits) and influence the choices made by an individual. Values may help common human problems for survival by comparative rankings of value, the results of which provide answers to questions of why people do what they do and in what order they choose to do them.

  9. Axiological ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axiological_ethics

    He also provides a platonist metaphysics of values, complementing the intuitive insight a priori into values. [6] John Niemeyer Findlay, a moral philosophy and metaphysics professor at Yale University, wrote Axiological Ethics in 1970. [3] Findlay's book is a modern historical account of academic discussion around axiological ethics.