One reason why we are likely to speak slightingly of the ethics of the politician is that he can never exhibit his good qualities systematically. |
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An interesting choice of venue has been announced for the first European symposium devoted to ethics in gastroenterology and digestive endoscopy. |
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Brown makes clear that the group is not trying to teach all of journalistic ethics in a day-long seminar. |
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We should not put up with the army of health and ethics experts who are now trying to police both public debate and private lives. |
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The ethics and interests of film producers and film archivists are sometimes in opposition. |
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A number of new books have begun to question the ethics of marketing beauty products and services to adults too. |
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This distinction mirrors a major fault line in ethics between what are known as consequentialist and deontological theories. |
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Traditionally, the field of normative ethics is discussed in terms of two broad categories of ethical orientation, deontology and teleology. |
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On the contrary, ethics is determinately particularistic, at times veering dangerously close to narcissistic. |
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And Labor, in truth, is responsible for the diabolical state of ethics in Australia's radio and commercial television media. |
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Obviously, when journalists betray their code of ethics by making up stories, or egregious misconduct, they must be punished. |
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The logical positivists who dealt with ethics put forward a view called emotivism. |
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I wondered about the ethics of dissecting a donated body for general interest rather than specialist research. |
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A current series of articles in the Fort Worth Star Telegram calls into question the business practices and ethics of a local evangelist. |
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In addition, before I can figure out ethics for sure, I need to decide which epistemology I'm going to use. |
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His writings and addresses increasingly dealt with the ethics and morality of the end of life. |
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The MBA programs on my campus start with a retreat where students get an in-depth immersion in ethics and ethical decision-making. |
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Needless to say, careful review of all clinical trials by properly constituted ethics committees must continue. |
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These questions are subjective and involve our personal and professional ethics and philosophies. |
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The movie raises a lot of legitimate questions about the ethics and philosophical ramifications of cloning. |
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I'm not saying that ethics committees that question research proposals are always being pedantic. |
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Some of the new regulations currently in effect are aimed at raising the moral ethics of our people. |
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In view of these new possibilities, science sees dogmatic ethics and the moral burdens of history as obstacles on the road to progress. |
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I'm curious to know what your ethics committee and university thought of your proposal to do this work? |
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Conflicting loyalties pose a problem for perioperative nurses dealing with the ethics of advocacy. |
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Now the couple have been told the private clinic in England is willing to put their case to its ethics committee. |
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The study was performed in accordance with the regulations laid down by the hospital's ethics committee. |
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He also links to some info on a new study being done on the ethics and moral foundations of capitalism. |
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Science cannot establish the dignity of human soul, nor can it promote ethics and morality in a society. |
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Secular moralists canonized the ethics of Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Mill, and others. |
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Kantian ethics abstracts from the fact that as moral agents we are situated in the context of a history which is both unique and irreversible. |
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They thought that fundamental principles of ethics could be seen to be true by the natural light of reason. |
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From its beginning, ontology has always intimately related to ethics and politics. |
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Within this context, philosophy and ethics still have a crucial role to play. |
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Such questions lie more properly within the realm of ethics and philosophy. |
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Surely they're old enough to learn about ethics and moral philosophy, tailored to their age. |
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We all know, without the help of philosophy or ethics that we should, in normal circumstances, pay our debts and keep our promises. |
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It will stand in marked contrast to the ethics of the minority, whether that of any self-sufficient solitudinarian or self-debasing cadger. |
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As in the abortion debate, a little awareness of ethics will make us mistrustful of sound-bite-sized absolutes. |
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For the pagan, the alienation from divinity is so palpable and painful that it must be overcome at all costs, even if ethics are the price. |
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The key legal issues arising from clinical ethics committees concern accountability. |
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An attorney's duty of confidentiality is, perhaps, the most jealously guarded of the professional ethics. |
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I think there are all sorts of practical reasons, quite separate from the ethics, as to why you might want to take prisoners. |
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The defendant newspaper commends reliance upon the ethics of professional journalism. |
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Among other things, we will challenge the primary focus of much of the study of administrative ethics in public administration. |
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As I recall, he was in a similar situation and was forced, because of the House ethics rules, to not end up accepting the advance on the book. |
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He constructed a system which embraces metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind, aesthetics, ethics, and the meaning of life. |
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Under his treatment, ethics, sociology, aesthetics, and religion become a part of the history of the Absolute. |
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We must promote football by keeping off the grass and not trampling on ethics. |
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However, ethics aside, to force an employee to pay for a mistake, even one due to carelessness is against the law. |
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The alternative between a theological and an independent theory of ethics is, he holds, the alternative between ethical nominalism and realism. |
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I reserve the right to refuse readings that go against my ethics as a reader and my morals as a human being. |
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This is simply untrue as kerygma and woefully inadequate for churches to teach as social ethics. |
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Because of interest in the issue of agrarian ethics, the focus was on students in agricultural fields. |
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Mitchell displays an astonishing grasp of Wikipedian philosophy and ethics. |
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Should a reasonable person be able to assume that law and ethics are the same? |
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The Sunday Business Post has a section on its website where it holds forth on ethics and standards. |
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The code of ethics falls short of the expectations of many because there are no clear-cut penalties stated for recalcitrant legislators. |
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To have wingnuts like her commenting on legal ethics is like asking a wolf pack what they think of sheep herding. |
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The ethics we practice are those that we learned at our mother's knee, so we think they are good. |
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The imagination, ethics, and, ultimately, logic itself demand a less reductive view. |
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All women gave written informed consent to join the study, which had local and regional ethics approval. |
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A debate over the ethics of labiaplasty and other cosmetic gynecological operations has made its way into several mainstream medical journals. |
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They also altered the rules to make it harder to initiate an ethics investigation of a House member. |
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Brown's ethics problems have included a House investigation of her connection with a jailed African businessman. |
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Here is a second example where the stringency of ethics can lead to its rejection. |
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In each of these cases, the ethics are relatable to the processes whereby decisions are made. |
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For many, Darwin's theory led to a pure relativization and naturalization of ethics. |
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We went back to the JXC and worked on our ethics essay and I ended up finalising it and printed it out. Yay! |
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The crisis raises serious questions of the ethics of democratic co-existence and religious pluralism vis-a-vis the state. |
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Because we've been there before, we've endured yesterday's men and yesterday's ethics. |
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Chandelor wanted his so-called knights to have honor, a moral code of ethics, things with which tradition would expect. |
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I applaud both the concept of a code of ethics by which industry members are bound, and the revamping of the disciplinary process. |
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In other words, can the ethics of a godless secular state be lastingly legitimate and effective? |
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It argues over the ethics of non-involvement, and scoffs at those who would rationalize the repugnant for the sake of a settled conscience. |
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Genuinely novel ethics are not always genuine improvements, while many anciently articulated ethical goals remain elusive. |
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When push came to shove, ethics went by the board and they joined the ranks of sleazy money launderers. |
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Install a corporate ethics officer with real authority and independent reporting responsibility to the board. |
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In February he cleared the most important hurdle, successfully retaking the ethics portion of the bar exam. |
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In some circles, ethics experts are infamous for just this kind of psychological legerdemain. |
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And even in the presence of conscious cyborgs, it seems that ethics hardly steps aside from its anthropocentric tradition. |
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Charges including bribery and tax evasion are among the ten counts of the ethics code he is accused of violating. |
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Gellert's lectures on poetry, rhetoric, and ethics were exceptionally popular. |
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The founder of Stoicism, Zeno of Citium, developed a systematic and elaborate metaphysics, ethics, and epistemology. |
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The primary flaw in libertarianism is that it is rooted in an ethic of utilitarianism rather than virtue ethics. |
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Debate over the ethics of human research was stimulated by antivivisectionists in the nineteenth century. |
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Discourse ethics tries to explain the internal relation between rational acceptability and moral rightness. |
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The book's second half focuses on the ethics of prophetic and apocalyptic literature. |
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Now, record executives are appealing to ethics to urge parents to stamp out pirating. |
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Of these three kinds of ethics the third, the approbative, is the one held in situation ethics. |
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Critics last night welcomed the move but baulked at the idea that the lender has had a 'Road to Damascus moment' over its ethics. |
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They gave him three or at best four years to live, leaving him in a quandary about the ethics of standing again for parliament. |
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Certainly, professors of philosophy were careful to reconcile Aristotelian ethics and metaphysics with Augustinian orthodoxy. |
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The guild was established by Jim Clark to develop and maintain the highest standard of artisanship and ethics in the pistolsmith's craft. |
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Contemporary thinking about medical ethics attaches much importance to respecting the patient's autonomy. |
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Enter the ethics expert, who sagaciously counseled the company executive to put a halt to the practice of entertaining clients at strip joints. |
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The story of secrecy, scientific ethics and national security is macabre, grisly and disturbing. |
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However, they cannot authorize projects without the approval of the appropriate ethics committee. |
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This ethics of language, so central to Barthes's promotion of the avant-garde, may help to account for a puzzling feature of his criticism. |
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The superfield within philosophy known as axiology includes both ethics and aesthetics and is unified by each sub-branch's concern with value. |
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It's an insane effort, smacking of majoritarian tyranny and aggressive, hidebound religious-exclusivist ethics. |
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Pragmatism in ethics is often regarded as a form of teleology or consequentialism. |
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It is a model that applies both a human and a divine teleology through Thomas's hallmark ethics of natural law. |
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Until the 1990s, it was considered bad form, even in church-related law schools, to relate legal ethics to religious ethics. |
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Clearly science and empirical research is relevant to the study of ethics and to ethics research, but how exactly? |
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But by running for and taking the mantle of chief justice, Moore accepted the code of ethics that came with the job. |
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So you have an ethics officer in a department or corporation, but no one will take a scrap of notice of them. |
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This does not, as mentioned, mean that ethics and the rest are themselves nonsense. |
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It explores the kinds of issues that genetic developments raise for both theology and ethics. |
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On visiting the Ancestral Perch last weekend, the pending ethics upgrade of our electricity was discussed with the materfamilias. |
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The journalists who work for this newspaper are some of the best in the country and their ethics are second to none. |
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But in the UK, the important and thorny question of ethics is holding up research. |
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When it came to a philosophy of politics and ethics, again Archytas based his ideas on mathematical foundations. |
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The advocates typically have medical training and are experienced in end-of-life issues and medical ethics. |
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Non-consensual data sharing is contrary to medical ethics and appears to violate the European Convention on Human Rights. |
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A sound knowledge of medical ethics is essential to the good practice of medicine. |
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Australia's humanitarian responsibility to asylum seekers is a separate issue from the ethics of the people-smugglers. |
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Essentially it means the separation of religion from some element of society, be that education, ethics or government. |
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He has been conducting a series of workshops around the country on wartime journalism ethics. |
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He wrote about meteorology, biology, physics, poetry, logic, rhetoric, and politics and ethics, among other subjects. |
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Johnson said state ethics officials cleared her involvement in both groups. |
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As a satirist, the writer is unafraid of drawing aside the drapes of hypocrisy and sham that seem to safeguard middle-class ethics. |
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However, he does make a good case that the demand for some more transcendent basis for ethics is misplaced. |
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It is about transformational leadership and bringing in a different spirit and ethics to management. |
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These topics were the subject of a conference at Yale on transhumanism and ethics. |
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Are public university presidents required, like other government officials, to submit to the review of an ethics commission? |
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I just love treating myself to some good health and environmental ethics now and then. |
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There's nothing more important than accuracy when it comes to billing patients and insurers for psychological services, say ethics experts. |
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He emphasises a code of ethics for economics, rejects abstract free trade theory, and loathes the trickle-down effect. |
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A biocentric planetary religion that promotes ecological ethics would be ideal but I do not envision such an innovation until it is too late. |
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Yet biocentrists or ecocentrists may demand more caution, because of the wider range of ethics. |
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He writes a mission statement espousing the importance of ethics in business and hands it out to the entire company. |
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The expertise of physicians and psychologists in their respective fields is not always matched by their depth of knowledge of ethics. |
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Whilst studying ethics, one of the subjects we considered in depth was animal rights. |
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Werbach, a legal studies and business ethics professor, is teaching a MOOC this summer. |
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Ironically, given all the contemporary blather about ethics, it's much easier for today's ethically challenged reporter to thrive. |
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In principle this remarkably comprehensive scheme allows no ultimate distinction between religion and morality, law and ethics. |
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Government is not a good source for teaching ethics, morality or social behavior. |
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Maybe the fine distinctions between ethics and morality should be simplified. |
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In fact, such ethics, as well as the morality that underlies them, are nothing more than man-made myth to the atheist. |
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Either way the technical difference between moral philosophy and ethics is so minimal as to be irrelevant. |
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Approaching the question from a very different philosophical perspective, that of ethics and moral philosophy, we meet a contrary position. |
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You see, the House has quietly imposed a moratorium on taking new ethics cases and suspended any work on existing cases. |
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In the meantime there is nothing I can say on the whole saga until the ethics committee sits. |
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Let's chop them down to size and then we'll discuss civility and ethics again. |
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Although a problem in computer ethics may seem clear initially, a little reflection reveals a conceptual muddle. |
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He is concerned less with theoretical underpinnings and more with the ethics of process-based work. |
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You may challenge my ethics, call me a sleazy lawyer, but it is best for you. |
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The museological essays address the institution's mission, exhibition philosophy, history, and issues of ethics and repatriation. |
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Of these, museum ethics is one of the fast developing branches that has caught the attention of researchers and museologists worldwide. |
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A business school course in ethics is hardly going to transform an unethical person into an ethical one. |
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That Father Ray had the foresight, determination and unfaltering work ethics to bring the institutions into existence is outstanding. |
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Such books are sold through small booksellers, who are not accountable to any sales laws and who do not care for business ethics. |
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God forbid that we should think for a nanosecond that he was driven by any thought of principle, ethics, humanity or compassion. |
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This will give us a weapon in attempts by management to compromise ethics in the name of the bottom line or proprietors' interests. |
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This particular article is for that breed of people who congratulate themselves that they live by an undefined, unstated code of ethics. |
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These Brahmanic ethics, which were perhaps never the norm, seem so remote from our lives in the United States. |
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It doesn't negate an interest in politics, history, ethics or humanity at large, or mean you have no self-respect. |
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Aristotle believed that politics, or how people lived together in society, were part of ethics. |
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As a research team devoted to ethics in advanced neuroimaging, we are considering what this future may bring. |
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But inquiries into the ethics of neuroimaging may be a case of closing the barn door after the horse has escaped. |
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I imagined that a broadly utilitarian approach to ethics was fairly standard these days. |
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And once happiness is itself moralized, the credentials of utilitarianism as an overall theory of ethics are compromised. |
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When science becomes completely value-free and controlled privately, ethics are lost. |
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Shortly after the beginning of the Spanish Civil War, a gentle, spectacled professor of ethics embraced a fellow humanist in Paris. |
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I mutely watched two petite viragos lob insults at each other over the ethics of having a friend hold one's place in line. |
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All religions believe that human ethics should be derived from a supernatural, non-human source. |
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For virtue ethics, the problem concerns the question of which character traits are the virtues. |
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But it's not congressional ethics investigators who are most likely to frown on Daschle's lobbying vita. |
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The military version of bushido was seen as a distortion of samurai ethics by some of the upper class who resented the commoner military. |
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Barnes uses this as the springboard for a wider discussion about the ethics of drug-taking in sport. |
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It is found in every single religious tradition and in every non-theistic system of ethics as well. |
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By the standards, ethics and moral code of the time, they were behaving normally. |
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A handful of idealistic hacks questioned the journalistic ethics of accepting freebies, but they no longer work at the paper. |
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Systems of procedural ethics used by nurses and physicians are built on the goods embedded in the practice of nursing and medicine. |
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The summit will challenge the notion that ethics and spirituality blunt the competitive edge. |
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But I challenge the ethics of including stealthily edited sequences and extras that obtrude questionable material on unsuspecting viewers. |
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What is the status of professional codes of ethics relative to federal regulations? |
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The canons of journalistic ethics compel me to make this information available to you, the reader. |
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Would it coincide with our ethics to sterilize all criminals in order to stop crime and violence for good? |
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One school of ancient philosophers, the Stoics, developed a distinctive view of Medea as part of their ethics and psychology. |
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As we have seen, only virtue is good and choiceworthy, and only its opposite, vice, is bad and to be avoided according to Stoic ethics. |
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In fact hedonism, the view that pleasure is our ethical end, is always on the defensive in ancient ethics. |
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They viewed the world as a great machine, adopted hedonism as their ethics, and interpreted history from a subjective-critical point of view. |
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Fear is a powerful motivator, and it takes strong ethics to resist the temptation to abuse it. |
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I've never been a fan of the out-of-town shopping experience, with its huge, characterless soulless warehouses and dodgy trading ethics. |
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This may sound odd if your vision of medical ethics is the application to medicine of the Hippocratic oath. |
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All hail the beneficent spirit that motivates these historians of social ethics! |
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A sadly neglected topic in homiletics today concerns the ethics of preaching. |
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It's a film that focuses on ethics, be they pure or prurient, and how criminals and hoods can still require a sense of justice and fair play. |
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As a Chomskyan linguist I would argue in favour of an ethical system based on our own innate ethics. |
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The followers of Kant have selected now one now another doctrine from his ethics and combined therewith various pantheistical systems. |
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Does war reporting justify a different set of ethics than those applied in peacetime? |
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Clinical ethics committees cannot alone cope with the demands of ethically troubled doctors at the coalface. |
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There is evidence to suggest that students do perceive benefit from ethics courses. |
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The ancient codifiers of Hindu medicine carefully considered and documented the ethics of their profession and its various medical procedures. |
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This one explores genetic science, in particular the ethics of selecting genes for our children. |
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In military induction the conflict is much more subtle involving society's need for security and its need for ethics. |
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Dolly has come and gone, but the implications of her design have begun a new chapter in life, ethics and possibilities. |
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The author's indebtedness to Greek ethics can be seen even more clearly in his discussion of the natural virtues. |
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The duo propose to set up a commission to examine the authorities thoroughly, and they call for reforms in procurement and in government ethics. |
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We enhanced our corporate ethics program and accounting controls, hired a new Chief Ethics Officer and completed company-wide ethics training. |
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Debates about ethics have often accompanied well-known, not to say infamous, cases of alleged ethical transgression. |
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I find his insouciance about the difficulty of figuring out ethics disconcerting, though he's right that Nietzsche collapses into Platonism. |
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Goals include approval and instilment of general principles for professional ethics in fields of traditional and folk medicine and healing. |
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The traditional Confucianist ethics or patriarchal ideology can be found in the dramas' emphasis on relationship or one's social role. |
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She is a former congressional lawyer and now a government ethics expert at Washington University. |
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If these allegations are confirmed, such breaches of duty would constitute grave violations of medical ethics. |
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For at the core of mastery internal to ethics is always the power to decide who dies and who does not. |
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The survey, carried out by the Co-operative Bank, interviewed 1020 people to see how much ethics play a part in consumer spending. |
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Debates about censorship and journalistic ethics prevented an interpretative, critical investigation of the disaster. |
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Some have also begun to raise the question of the ethics of genital surgery on intersexual infants who cannot give consent for surgery. |
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But the ethics of teaching a junior doctor how to intubate someone, using a patient who was newly deceased, were different. |
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So, although Aristotle holds that ethics cannot be reduced to a system of rules, however complex, he insists that some rules are inviolable. |
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They cover logic, ethics, metaphysics, physics, zoology, politics, rhetoric, and poetics. |
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A scientist who served seven years in prison for trying to poison his wife has secured a job teaching ethics, university officials said today. |
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They are implicitly evoking a whole cosmogony, a religious morality and an ethics of social interaction. |
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He was not afraid to raise the most controversial questions posed by medical ethics nor to probe the current boundaries of medical practice. |
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A decision from the ethics committee lends credence, just by its existence, to the moral correctness of that decision. |
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I present some foundational concepts followed by a simplified summary of classical approaches to ethics. |
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They're sort of fighting a battle for God, but a battle of prayer and ethics, and sort of moral crusades. |
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The sudden culture shock at being thrown among those with very different work ethics and other attitudes can even be frightening. |
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If you were totally fundamentalist about the ethics, you would investigate the background to the client's wealth. |
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One of the most striking features of Cyrenaic ethics is their assertion that it is pleasure, and not happiness, which is the highest good. |
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Many don't even know there's a code of ethics, or if they do, feel powerless to enforce it. |
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The study and consent procedures were approved by the Gambian government and the Medical Research Council ethics committee. |
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Admittedly, many doctors fret about the ethics of sponsorship deals. |
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He shared his knowledge of medical ethics and made an important contribution towards building academic chairs in other parts of the United Kingdom. |
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In Germany and The Netherlands, for example, the protocol can be submitted to both the competent authority and the ethics committee simultaneously. |
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An ethics without an underlying sense of the Good is fundamentally doomed. |
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The medical ethics committee should report on the issues surrounding the circumcision of male children for whom there is no valid medical indication. |
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A diploma, even from a reputable overseas university, is not automatically a guarantee of quality, of achievement, of work ethics of the highest standards. |
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Though the embattled Minister welcomed the inquiry, the news that the ethics watchdog is to hold a preliminary inquiry has substantially increased the pressure upon him. |
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A prodigious polymath, he wrote on subjects as varied as grammar and gout, ethics and eczema, and was highly regarded in his lifetime as a philosopher as well as a doctor. |
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Although good ethics exist in the profession of law, nevertheless the profession is not without the unscrupulous cunning, and designing fellow members. |
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It also argues that an ethics of difference, and a poetics to support it, are needed in order to move the course of history in a more fruitful and fecund direction. |
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At the end of the day, every one knows that this is still a diplomatic affair, where protocol and ethics must be observed, and cordiality must always be extended. |
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Ethics without science is at best uninformed and at worst delusive, while science without ethics is at best suspect and at worst downright dangerous. |
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Discussions of how to address environmental ethics at camp usually offer programmatic exercises or discussions of ethics like the experiential lesson just described. |
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How does environmental ethics or deep ecology inform your reading? |
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In my tale, I set out the metaphysical principles, i.e. principles outside the closed system of the ethics being discussed, on which the ethics are based. |
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How can the evolution of human ethics be reconciled with Darwinism? |
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It is not an idealist, not a romantic call to ethics of conviction as opposed to ethics of responsibility. |
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Those are the roots, the immovable ties blind to ethics probes and corruption charges that are difficult to rip from the ground. |
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And, even if that could be papered over, McDonnell was ensnared in an ongoing ethics scandal that kept him off the campaign trail. |
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In just the latest, the embattled governor is being called out for violating state ethics laws by nabbing Yankees tickets gratis. |
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And what are narrow legalities and nitpicking ethics rules among friends? |
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Ullrich performed a two-wheeled sidestep around the pair and, as professional cycling ethics dictate, the entire lead group slowed while Armstrong and Mayo remounted. |
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In the management of its global operations, IBM the world's largest computer maker has been well known for its strict observance of clean business ethics. |
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Pat tries to quell her feelings for Bruce, her vain egoist of a flatmate, while navigating the purpose and ethics of naturism at a nudist picnic in Moray Place Gardens. |
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She knows the ethics behind this, and she wants those ethics to be visible on a broad scale. |
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By stepping down, the embattled McCaffery preempted an ethics investigation that could have cost him his state pension. |
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The way in which particularist reasoning is illustrated in historical stories such as those about Shun is also a distinctive feature of Confucian ethics. |
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But now, he says, the Jonnie Williams mess threatens not just to defuse but to trump the McAuliffe ethics card. |
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While today we may disagree with some of the wording or even the concepts in this early code of ethics, few would disagree with its intent or its essence. |
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Kant is an 18th century German philosopher whose work initiated dramatic changes in the fields of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, and teleology. |
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Today, the Reformed Evangelische Kirche, while professing to adhere to The Helvetic Confession, has departed completely from the historic Reformed faith and biblical ethics. |
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Just one more note of caution before we descend down the rapids of morality and ethics. |
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Enwezor's search for this inclusive discourse confronted the ethics and limits of occidental power, and its impact on contemporary discourses of globalization. |
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This was to change his life and, after this experience, he gave up military research to concentrate on the ethics of science and later on life sciences. |
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The man was ridiculed, his claims dismissed, and his ethics attacked. |
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My next book project goes back to my lifelong interests in animals, veterinary medicine, science, and ethics. |
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In other words, the so-called ethics watchdog was clearly always a lapdog. |
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About your role as chief bolsterer of government ethics, I'd like to read a quote you made earlier today that was cited in a column in the Globe and Mail. |
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The rules of judicial ethics preclude him from commenting publicly on pending or impending litigation or participating in politics, as by endorsing candidates. |
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New federal ethics rules apply to all companies, regardless of size. |
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The ethics of practice call upon the practitioner to take her or his place in the phenomenal world in full cognisance of the truths of love, oneness and interdependency. |
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Regrettably, the public was less interested in the complexities of ethics regulation than, understandably, in attempting to repair the damage done by fraud. |
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However, the error rate in a genetically modified or cloned conceptus is potentially so high that such applications should never be approved by any science ethics committee. |
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While I know plagiarism, appropriation, copying, etc exist, I also know that every instance of similarity does not equal an instance of compromised professional ethics. |
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Surely they're old enough to learn about ethics and moral philosophy. |
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Highly trained specialists, they relied on their professional ethics to help manage the tricky business of judging and sometimes countermanding the clients who paid the bills. |
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After 12 years of teaching ethics at the Air War College, Maxwell AFB, Alabama, I have learned a few lessons from the lieutenant colonels and colonels I've taught. |
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Under both the law and the ethics governing armed conflicts, sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. |
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In this article we analyze the grammar of codes of ethics as a written locutionary act, and attempt to determine their implicit illocutionary and perlocutionary values. |
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Hippocrates is an amazing figure, both a father of scientific ethics and first articulator of the insight that frees humankind to discover the universe. |
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The system of ethics and disciplines found within Patanjali's yoga sutras includes tapas, which means fire and refers to the passionate commitment to practice. |
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As such, even leaving aside the ethics of the thing, I sometimes wonder how historians manage to keep their jobs after trashing their primary source material. |
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Too often, publishers believe reporting ethics can be stapled to a couple of universal standards and delivered to each and every journalist for ingestion. |
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Chapters treat such topics as nature, postmodern concepts of God, religious ethics, free will, revivalism and sacramentalism, and the salvation of non-Christians. |
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These questions and more have crossed disciplinary lines, from ethics, public policy, social science, and law to computer security and information science. |
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For nearly two thousand years Biblicists have been lecturing people on the importance of adhering to the Bible's teachings on ethics, manners, and morality. |
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But on the relative plane, Zen is this-worldly and does not deny ethics, or ontology for that matter. |
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It can also be seen simply as the application of consequentialist ethics. |
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Impartial rule theory, casuistry, and virtue ethics are all consistent with rather than rivals of a principle-based account when it is properly conceived. |
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Adding to the complexity, state ethics rules also come into play. |
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As far as this particular scenario is concerned, ethics may as well be a county in the south of England, so amorally do the main protagonists appear to have behaved. |
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Among Republicans and Democrats, however, situational ethics runs the show. |
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But the predictable rush to the partisan ramparts leads to situational ethics rather than constructive action. |
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He also does not think that all Republican opposition to the mandate is entirely a case of situational ethics. |
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Double standards and situational ethics are the way the hyperpartisan game is played. |
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We conclude that there is an internal ethics or axiology within research perspectives and methodologies that needs to be examined where ethnoracial issues are prominent. |
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So much of my worldview at that time was informed by the ethics of the punk scene. |
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Nicole LaPorte on Pee-wee's first tweet, Diablo Cody's online ethics, and Oprah's slacker ways. |
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But recent discussions of naturalism in ethics and philosophy of mind return to issues he addressed and this has led to a new appreciation of his position. |
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Writers on research ethics adopt different stances concerning the ethical issues that arise in connection with relationships between researchers and research participants. |
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Like Ahab, he hounded teamster leader Jimmy Hoffa for more than a decade, bending every rule of evidence and prosecutorial ethics until he finally landed his prey. |
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All ethics committees require evidence of safety, but, in the nature of things, such statements have to be more provisional than is generally acknowledged. |
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At one time, journalistic ethics did not admit of such covertness. |
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Paramount is the need to create an independent office for ethics enforcement to end the clubbiness that more often than not covers up or excuses abuses. |
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