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25 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
The power or right to act, speak, or think as one wants without hindrance or restraint |
Freedom |
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Freedom and obligation are two indispensable conditions for morality to occur |
John mothershed |
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Based from her freedom is the strength of character to do what is good, true, noble, and right. freedom without discipline is impossible |
Kelly |
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Through discipline comes freedom |
Aristotle |
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It is the greatest personal intimacy and secretiveness; indeed, it is the hidden core of our being and unknowable by others |
INTERNAL FREEDOM |
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This refers to the normal and common freedom s expected in daily life, in most countries, throughout history. -Sometimes called “freedom from”.. |
EXTERNAL FREEDOM |
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In the sense of learning how to escape the ever- present danger of enslavement by our own passions and ignorance -“to find myself” |
SELF FREEDOM |
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Sometimes called “freedom to”… Has to do with establishing certain rights of action and limits to government power that help to guarantee the practice of those rights |
POLITICAL FREEDOM |
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Sometimes called “freedom for”… Based on an ideology of collective unity that prescribes distinct social and moral values and objectives for all. |
COLLECTIVE FREEDOM |
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In its purest form, this type of freedom comes from striving for a complete identification with God to arrive at a condition of a soul that transcends the confusion and disharmony of the self and the material world |
SPIRITUAL FREEDOM |
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Our actions or events that directly follow the occurrence of a behavior. It either increase or decrease the probability that the behavior they follow will occur again in the future |
Consequences |
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A duty or obligation to satisfactorily perform or complete a task (assigned by someone or created by someone's own promise or circumstances) the one must fulfill and which has a sequent penalty for failure |
Responsibility |
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What can be established in a court on the basis of evidence |
Legal |
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What the person actually did (truth discovery) |
Moral |
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What are the four kinds of responsibility |
Role causal liability capacity |
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The duties one has for doing various things which come with occupying a certain role in society |
Role responsibility |
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What cause something to happen |
Causal responsibility |
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Who is liable for somethings happening |
Liability responsibility |
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The capacity of a person to be held liability responsible for their actions |
Capacity responsibility |
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performed only by a human being and thus is proper to man. are actions shared by humans and other animals Naturally exhibited by man Natural involuntary actions MODIFIERS: IGNORANCE |
acts of man |
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Refer to appropriate actions of human beings Acts or actions done consciously and freely by man Free and voluntarily, done with knowledge and consent Under our control ELEMENTS: KNOWLEDGE |
HUMAN ACTS |
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these are acts originating from the individual performing the act using knowledge about the situations of the act. |
VOLUNTARY ACTIONS |
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are acts done under: A. force or coercion and; B. ignorance where the doer failed to understand the effect and feels sorry on the result. |
INVOLUNTARY ACTIONS |
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This is a choice which is deliberately selected based on a moral standpoint. |
INTELLECTUAL CHOICE |
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a choice which is borne out of psychological and emotional considerations. |
PRACTICAL CHOICE |