Morality and Ethics

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1. What are the differences between Morality and Ethics? - Too often people talk of moral when they mean ethical. Moral has a much narrower use than ethical. Moral behavior is ethical, but not all ethical behavior is moral. Moral is not always interchangeable with ethical though morality is a subset of ethics. Morality deals with people’s relationships with other people. Ethics deals with our relationship with the whole planet. The terms morality and ethics are not always interchangeable. Ethics is broader. Ethics deals with what is generally right and wrong and morality with what is right and wrong in relations between people. There is ethical behavior that does not bother with whether it is moral or immoral. Decisions involving other people are moral choices. Decision involving trees or animals or the environment or institutions etc are ethical choices. If you’re alone on a desert island, it’s not morality you need, its ethics. Ethics deals with our relationships to everything on the planet, morality with our relationships to other people. People are a subset of the planet. Ethics and morality do cross over but I agree that they are not synonyms. Morality is certainly a part of ethics but not all ethics is a part of morality so the two are not always interchangeable or synonyms. Ethics is a guide to doing stuff as is morality a guide to doing stuff to live socially, but you can be doing something that is ethical for the given point of view while at the same time it is unethical and immoral from a social point of view. - Torturing a dog is unethical and wrong as there is no reason to inflict that pain on the animal but it’s not immoral as that is the wrong term to use because another human is not involved. However, if your neighbor objects and starts hammering your door down, then you have a moral problem, particularly if it’s their dog. Murdering a person is

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