Applied ethics is a branch of ethics that deals with practical moral problems and policies in areas like personal life, professions, technology, and government. It differs from traditional ethical theory which focuses on general criteria of right and wrong. Applied ethics considers practical challenges. There are nine main branches of applied ethics including descriptive ethics, normative ethics, and analytic/meta ethics.
Applied ethics is a branch of ethics that deals with practical moral problems and policies in areas like personal life, professions, technology, and government. It differs from traditional ethical theory which focuses on general criteria of right and wrong. Applied ethics considers practical challenges. There are nine main branches of applied ethics including descriptive ethics, normative ethics, and analytic/meta ethics.
Applied ethics is a branch of ethics that deals with practical moral problems and policies in areas like personal life, professions, technology, and government. It differs from traditional ethical theory which focuses on general criteria of right and wrong. Applied ethics considers practical challenges. There are nine main branches of applied ethics including descriptive ethics, normative ethics, and analytic/meta ethics.
Applied ethics is a branch of ethics that deals with practical moral problems and policies in areas like personal life, professions, technology, and government. It differs from traditional ethical theory which focuses on general criteria of right and wrong. Applied ethics considers practical challenges. There are nine main branches of applied ethics including descriptive ethics, normative ethics, and analytic/meta ethics.
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Applied Ethics
• 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 challenges. • Along with general overviews and journals, nine central branches of applied ethics are added, with six to eight references in connection to each branch. It should be noted that these branches constitute only a selection among the plethora of disciplines within applied ethics. Moreover, some overlap is found among the different areas. Descriptive Ethics
• The category of descriptive ethics is the easiest to understand - it simply
involves describing how people behave and/or what sorts of moral standards they claim to follow. Descriptive ethics incorporates research from the fields of anthropology, psychology, sociology and history as part of the process of understanding what people do or have believed about moral norms. Normative Ethics
• The category of normative ethics involves creating or evaluating moral
standards. Thus, it is an attempt to figure out what people should do or whether their current moral behavior is reasonable. Traditionally, most of the field of moral philosophy has involved normative ethics - there are few philosophers out there who haven't tried their hand at explaining what they think people should do and why. • The category of analytic ethics, also often referred to as meta ethics, is perhaps the most difficult of the three to understand. In fact, some philosophers disagree as to whether or not it should be considered an independent pursuit, arguing that it should instead be included under Normative Ethics. Nevertheless, it is discussed independently often enough that it deserves its own discussion here. • Here are a couple of examples which should help make the difference between descriptive, normative and analytic ethics even clearer. • 1. Descriptive: Different societies have different moral standards. 2. Normative: This action is wrong in this society, but it is right in another. • 3. Analytic: Morality is relative. • All of these statements are about ethical relativism, the idea that moral standards different from person to person or from society to society. In descriptive ethics, it is simply observed that different societies have different standards - this is a true and factual statement which offers no judgments or conclusions. • In normative ethics, a conclusion is drawn from the observation made above, namely that some action is wrong in one society and is right in another. This is a normative claim because it goes beyond simply observing that this action is treated as wrong in one place and treated as right in another. • In analytic ethics, an even broader conclusion is drawn from the above, namely that the very nature of morality is that it is relative. This position argues that there are no moral standards independent of our social groups, and hence whatever a social group decides is right is right and whatever it decides is wrong is wrong - there is nothing "above" the group to which we can appeal in order to challenge those standards. • 1. Descriptive: People tend to make decisions which bring pleasure or avoid pain. 2. Normative: The moral decision is that which enhances wellbeing and limits suffering. 3. Analytic: Morality is simply a system for helping humans stay happy and alive Meta ethics • Metaethics is a branch of analytic philosophy that explores the status, foundations, and scope of moral values, properties, and words. Whereas the fields of applied ethics and normative theory focus on what is moral, metaethics focuses on what morality itself is.