what makes an experience a moral experience
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Moral experience encompasses a person's sense that values that he or she deems important are being realised or thwarted in everyday life. This includes a person's interpretations of a lived encounter, or a set of lived encounters, that fall on spectrums of right-wrong, good-bad or just-unjust.
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An experience becomes a moral experience after the realisation of the situation.
- When a person directly feels the effects of their or another person's actions and draws conclusions about potential future effects on them or the rest of the world, then they have had a moral experience.
- A person's essential values are realised or defeated in daily life when their senses are fully engaged.
- This involves how a person interprets an interaction along right-wrong, just-unjust and good-bad spectrums.
- The common examples of moral experiences are -
- Being truthful
- Keeping promises
- Being responsible and kind
- When good arises from an experience and makes others feel good when it teaches good, and when there is nothing negative involved in the experience, it has a possibility of being a positive moral experience.
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