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Categorical imperatives
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-imperatives that are binding without qualification-Immanuel Kant says these are the heart of ethics
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Virtue ethics
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Suggests that morality is primarily a matter of individual character
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Ethical absolutists
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-maintain there is a single standard in terms of assessments that can be made-that standards is usually their own
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Ethical relativists; types
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-see each culture as an island unto itself, correct in its own world; no overarching standard-types: descriptive-claims as a matter of fact that different cultures have different values; normative- claims that each culture's values are right for that culture
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Ethical pluralism
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Cultures can legitimately pass judgments on one another and encourages us to listen to what other cultures say about us and vice versa
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Rights theorists
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Contend that there is a certain universal moral minimum with which all people must comply
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Virtue theorists
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Concentrate on issues of charcter; the tole of virtues and vices in the moral life
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Ethical subjectivism
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Claims that moral values are relative to each unique individual
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4 Principles of pluralism
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1. understanding2. tolerance3. standing up against evil4. fallibility
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Compatibilism
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Claims that religion and reason are compatible with each other in moral matters and that they do not conflict
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Divine command theorists
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Maintain that whatever is good is good only because God wills it to be good
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Teleological suspension of the ethical
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Morality has its own independent basis in reason, but God has ultimate supremacy, even over reason
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Theists
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God's choices are constrained by what is morall right
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Marx on religion
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"opiate of the people": few people are motivated to challenge the existing social, political, and economic order
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Nietzsche on religiion
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Christianity founded on ressentiment: the desire of the weak to gain control over the strong without themselves developing strengths
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