Ethics

Group: 4 #group-4

Relations

  • Plato: Plato’s works, particularly The Republic, contain significant contributions to the field of ethics, including his ideas about virtue, justice, and the ideal society.
  • Socrates: Socrates’ teachings focused on ethical inquiry and living a virtuous life
  • Philosophical Concepts: Ethics is the branch of philosophy that deals with moral principles, values, and the distinction between right and wrong.
  • Philosophical Logic: Philosophical logic can be used to analyze and evaluate ethical arguments and moral reasoning.
  • Aristotle: Aristotle’s works on ethics, such as the Nicomachean Ethics, were highly influential.
  • Thomism: Thomistic ethics is based on natural law, virtue ethics, and the idea of human flourishing or eudaimonia.
  • Pre-Socratic Philosophy: While primarily focused on metaphysical and cosmological issues, some Pre-Socratic philosophers, such as Pythagoras, also explored ethical questions and principles.
  • Philosophical Terminology: Ethics is the branch of philosophy that deals with moral principles, values, and the nature of right and wrong.
  • Medieval Philosophy: Medieval philosophers developed ethical theories based on Christian virtues and natural law.
  • Peripatetic School: Developed ethical theories
  • Transcendentals: Goodness is one of the transcendental properties relevant to ethics.
  • Axiology: Axiology is the study of ethics and values.
  • Philosophy: Ethics is the branch of philosophy that deals with moral principles, values, and the nature of right and wrong.
  • Theory of Knowledge: The theory of knowledge has implications for ethical questions about the nature of knowledge and its acquisition.