English, asked by sa8196108, 20 days ago

narrative essay on morality​

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Answered by anitabasra201088
0

Answer:

Morality is our own way of distinguishing what is right from what is wrong. It is our own understanding of what good and evil is. And, our acts are all based on our understanding of morality. We do and do not do things according to what believe is right and wrong. It is the basis of our actions and all ideas and beliefs regarding it. In short, it is the decision on how we do things that gives great impacts on us. Morality and ethics has no great difference because it is just one. Morality is pertained to as the foundation of ethics. Ethics are the basis or universal rules of what is good and bad while morality is the application of either doing good or doing bad. Ethics is like the main idea within a given topic and morality serves as its supports and applications. As humans, our capacity to decide and act are limited that is why, an objective moral basis is needed. We must have that one accurate basis of everything. We should be knowledgeable of something that is common to all. We must have knowledge about things which everyone would accept and understand. This is not for depending upon what others may think but to further elaborate our knowledge on how…

Answered by alinak5
0

This essay describes the power of story as a tool to inspire scholarship. We think of stories as a means to bring life to legal cases in a way that grounds them and makes them visceral and comprehensible. We use storytelling to teach our students – showing how the emotive power of a story can persuade. However, stories can also serve a different function. In my search for a way to inspire my own writing, I discovered that a good story could be the source of a writer’s motivation to both create and sustain scholarship. Basing scholarship on a story essentially mimics the process that has been occurring all along in the formation of the common law. The common law develops and changes as new stories push the limits of existing rules. Thus, stories are the most natural and logical fodder for scholarship about current trends and doctrines. This essay describes how one young man’s story exemplified and illustrated a problem in the way laws have changed to include younger offenders in the adult criminal system

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