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  1. Normative ethics is the study of ethical behaviour and is the branch of philosophical ethics that investigates questions regarding how one ought to act, in a moral sense. Normative ethics is distinct from meta-ethics in that the former examines standards for the rightness and wrongness of actions, whereas the latter studies the meaning of moral ...

  2. Jan 1, 2023 · To proscribe ethical decision making, ethics codes in the public service must articulate core values that govern the public service consistent with society’s norms for retaining public trust in its moral and professional standards. Despite the enactment of ethics codes in public administrations and governments across national settings, there is little evidence of their effectiveness in ...

  3. Apr 13, 2023 · Applied ethics stands in contrast to two other branches of ethics: metaethics and normative ethics. Metaethics takes up nonmoral questions about morality itself.

  4. Aug 6, 2015 · This article offers a critical overview of the major normative theories of political legitimacy from the seventeenth century to the present day, with a special focus on the leading representatives of the social contract tradition: the voluntarist theory, according to which legitimate political authority must derive from the free choices of its ...

  5. Aug 27, 2018 · Philosophers engage in normative ethics by taking either a principle, sets of principles or frameworks and use them as the basis for determining the appropriate or ethical behavior in a particular circumstance. To give a concrete example consider a principle like the Golden Rule. By reflecting on its basic premise, to think about how our ...

  6. C. Normative ethics is the study of what makes actions right or wrong, what makes situations or events good or bad and what makes people virtuous or vicious.

  7. Sep 25, 2019 · Applied ethics is a branch of ethics devoted to the treatment of moral problems, practices, and policies in personal life, professions, technology, and government. In contrast to traditional ethical theory—concerned with purely theoretical problems such as, for example, the development of a general criterion of rightness—applied ethics takes its point of departure in practical normative ...