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  1. Deontology is an ethical theory that says actions are good or bad according to a clear set of rules. Its name comes from the Greek word deon, meaning duty. Actions that align with these rules are ethical, while actions that don’t aren’t.

  2. Identify the meaning and purpose of the deontological approach. Articulate the role of duty and obligation within deontological reasoning. Compare and contrast the Kantian and pluralist interpretation of deontology.

  3. Jan 15, 2019 · Deontology is associated with the following features which play a more or less significant role in different deontological theories: agent-relativity, especially agent-relative constraints (restrictions), options (prerogatives) and special obligations; priority of the right over the good; definition of the right independently of the good ...

  4. Article Summary. Deontology asserts that there are several distinct duties. Certain kinds of act are intrinsically right and other kinds intrinsically wrong. The rightness or wrongness of any particular act is thus not (or not wholly) determined by the goodness or badness of its consequences.

  5. Dec 3, 2020 · Deontological ethics is about actions that must be performed (or must not be performed) because the actions themselves are intrinsically good or bad.

  6. Deontology, derived from the Greek words ‘deon’ meaning duty, and ‘logos’ meaning science, is an ethical framework that focuses on the rightness or wrongness of actions themselves, as opposed to the rightness or wrongness of the consequences of those actions. It’s a theory that insists on the adherence to clear, predefined rules or moral norms.

  7. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10Deontology | SpringerLink

    Deontology or deontological ethics (the terms stem from the Greek root deon meaning “obligation” or “duty”) is an approach to ethics which judges the morality of actions based on their adherence to a set of (most often strict) action-principles or rules.

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