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  1. Jun 5, 2012 · Summary. Two theories of moral law. Teleological conceptions of morality originated in ancient Greek philosophy. The major systems of ethics among the ancient Greeks, those of Plato and Aristotle, in particular, were teleological.

  2. medium.com › inserting-philosophy › kants-moral-law-5cdb57424fdaKant’s Moral Law - Medium

    Oct 5, 2021 · The moral law is a transcendent, universal, objective part of reality. If someone violates the moral law, that does not affect the law. The universality lies in the law itself and not...

  3. Feb 23, 2004 · 1. Aims and Methods of Moral Philosophy. 2. Good Will, Moral Worth and Duty. 3. Duty and Respect for Moral Law. 4. Categorical and Hypothetical Imperatives. 5. The Formula of the Universal Law of Nature. 6. The Humanity Formula. 7. The Autonomy Formula. 8. The Kingdom of Ends Formula.

  4. The term ethics may refer to the philosophical study of the concepts of moral right and wrong and moral good and bad, to any philosophical theory of what is morally right and wrong or morally good and bad, and to any system or code of moral rules, principles, or values.

  5. Moral law usually refers to a higher set of principles that should govern conduct that is not necessarily set down by legislation. Instead, moral law appeals typically to a theory of natural law or a set of religious law like canon law.

  6. Jun 5, 2012 · Summary. Kant's project in the Groundwork is “the search for and establishment of the supreme principle of morality ” (G 4:392). The establishment of the moral principle apparently relates to only one of its formulations, the third main formula, the formula of autonomy.

  7. Sep 23, 2002 · Some writers use the term with such a broad meaning that any moral theory that is a version of moral realism — that is, any moral theory that holds that some positive moral claims are literally true (for this conception of moral realism, see Sayre-McCord 1988)— counts as a natural law view.

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