English, asked by marissanabyalla, 8 months ago

when do you say that morality is absolute? cite examples to support your answer​

Answers

Answered by ainafzal
4

Answer:

Moral Absolutism is the ethical belief that there are absolute standards against which moral questions can be judged, and that certain actions are right or wrong, regardless of the context of the act

Answered by DevendraLal
0

An ethical perspective known as moral absolutism holds that certain (perhaps all) actions have inherent right or wrong components.

  • For example, theft could be viewed as always being immoral, even if it is done for the benefit of others (for example, stealing food to feed a starving family), and even if it ultimately advances that good.
  • The idea that there are objective moral standards that may be used to determine moral matters and that some actions are right or wrong regardless of the circumstances surrounding them is known as moral absolutism.
  • The alternative is moral absolutism. It contends that everything is either right or bad intrinsically, and neither context nor result can alter this. These realities may have a foundation in the law, reason, human nature, or even religion.

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