Honesty, Morality & Conscience
Title | Honesty, Morality & Conscience PDF eBook |
Author | Jerry E. White |
Publisher | |
Pages | 246 |
Release | 1978 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN |
Explores such topics as questionable business practices, lying declining morals, sexual deviation, superficial relationships, & self-deceit.
Honesty, Morality, and Conscience
Title | Honesty, Morality, and Conscience PDF eBook |
Author | Jerry White |
Publisher | NavPress Publishing Group |
Pages | 264 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 9780891099420 |
For the person seeking to find answers to the "gray" issues of life, this book shows how the Holy Spirit, the Bible, and the conscience can lead to right decisions.
A Bible Study on Honesty, Morality, & Conscience
Title | A Bible Study on Honesty, Morality, & Conscience PDF eBook |
Author | Jerry E. White |
Publisher | |
Pages | 64 |
Release | 1978 |
Genre | Christian ethics |
ISBN | 9780891090267 |
Honesty, Morality and Conscience
Title | Honesty, Morality and Conscience PDF eBook |
Author | Jerry E. White |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 1978 |
Genre | Christian ethics |
ISBN | 9780891090267 |
Nietzsche's Moral Psychology
Title | Nietzsche's Moral Psychology PDF eBook |
Author | Mark Alfano |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 317 |
Release | 2019-08-29 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1107074150 |
Examines Nietzsche's thinking on the virtues using a combination of close reading and digital analysis.
Integrity and Conscience
Title | Integrity and Conscience PDF eBook |
Author | Ian Shapiro |
Publisher | NYU Press |
Pages | 351 |
Release | 1998-04-01 |
Genre | Law |
ISBN | 0814788831 |
Can individuals believe that they are acting with integrity, yet in disobedience to the dictates of their conscience? Can they retain fidelity to their conscience while ignoring a sense of what integrity requires? Integrity and conscience are often thought to be closely related, perhaps even different aspects of a single impulse. This timely book supports a different and more complicated view. Acting with integrity and obeying one's conscience might be mutually reinforcing in some settings, but in others they can live in varying degrees of mutual tension. Bringing together prominent scholars of legal theory and political philosophy, the volume addresses both classic ruminations on integrity and conscience by Plato, Hume, and Kant as well as more contemporary examinations of professional ethics and the complex relations among politics, law and personal morality.
Moral Resilience
Title | Moral Resilience PDF eBook |
Author | Cynda Hylton Rushton |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 321 |
Release | 2018-10-02 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 0190619295 |
Suffering is an unavoidable reality in health care. Not only are patients and families suffering but also the clinicians who care for them. Commonly the suffering experienced by clinicians is moral in nature, in part a reflection of the increasing complexity of health care, their roles within it, and the expanding range of available interventions. Moral suffering is the anguish that occurs when the burdens of treatment appear to outweigh the benefits; scarce human and material resources must be allocated; informed consent is incomplete or inadequate; or there are disagreements about goals of treatment among patients, families or clinicians. Each is a source of moral adversity that challenges clinicians' integrity: the inner harmony that arises when their essential values and commitments are aligned with their choices and actions. If moral suffering is unrelieved it can lead to disengagement, burnout, and undermine the quality of clinical care. The most studied response to moral adversity is moral distress. The sources and sequelae of moral distress, one type of moral suffering, have been documented among clinicians across specialties. It is vital to shift the focus to solutions and to expanded individual and system strategies that mitigate the detrimental effects of moral suffering. Moral resilience, the capacity of an individual to restore or sustain integrity in response to moral adversity, offers a path forward. It encompasses capacities aimed at developing self-regulation and self-awareness, buoyancy, moral efficacy, self-stewardship and ultimately personal and relational integrity. Clinicians and healthcare organizations must work together to transform moral suffering by cultivating the individual capacities for moral resilience and designing a new architecture to support ethical practice. Used worldwide for scalable and sustainable change, the Conscious Full Spectrum approach, offers a method to solve problems to support integrity, shift patterns that undermine moral resilience and ethical practice, and source the inner potential of clinicians and leaders to produce meaningful and sustainable results that benefit all.