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Discuss how Hill's idea of virtue (what sort of person are you) versus rights (what you can legally do) impacts our discussion of environmental issues.
What are some of the current ways of talking of collective intentions? How can collective intention move individual bodies?
How exactly are we to assess sweatshops? Can we make sweeping judgments about them or should we approach sweatshops on a case by case basis?
Explain to your breakfast company the meaning of the speech and that selection from Nietzsche. How might your breakfast company respond to Nietzsche and Sartre?
Explain how the statute could impact laws or enforcement in the area. Describe the range of punishments for violation of the law.
Examine at least two types of biases that you likely experienced as you evaluated the premises for and against your position.
What social, ethical, economic and/or philosophical issues are raised by The True Cost documentary? Why do we tolerate such a system?
What exactly is the mind-body problem? How do each of their positions come out of their understanding of nature viz a viz the nature of the mental and physical?
Why do so many female workers still earn less than male workers? How and why does the ‘social' become ‘biological'?
Why do social processes, in particular civil violence, either persist over time or suddenly change?
Would you say the description in the Case A New Work Ethic is realistic? Are acts of Enronesque greed a part of something pervasive but hidden?
What does Singer mean when he says that our attitudes are 'Speciesist'? Should we, in your view, consider non-human animals as morally equal to humans? Why?
What are some typical characteristics of female offenders? How are female offenders different than male offenders?
What is the issue that the moralist and autonomist disagree about? Identify and explain two conditions when cultural appropriation causes problems that James O.
In a section titled "Explanation" explain for each theory how it would help you make what you feel would be the right decision and in what situations.
What are the typical motivators for the offender? Describe the characteristics of offenders who typically commit the selected offense.
Evaluate whether the view can cope with cases in which you thought you knew but in the end didn't know (perhaps because you believed a falsehood).
Discuss your reaction to Socrates' implicit criticism of democracy at his trial. How would you go about answering his question?
Once you have finished looking at these individual aspects of his thinking, write a paragraph explaining your overall impression of what Heidegger has to say.
What do you think? Do aggressive sales tactics hold up to ethical scrutiny? Feel free to bring in your own experiences and examples.
Overview of Immanuel Kant's work on moral philosophy. Explain in detail the difference between nihilism and moral relativism.
What McMahan mean when he says that, Whether torture can morally permissible is less significant? What do you think of the notion of institutional morality?
Explain the view and the reasoning that leads him to it. Is substance dualism a defensible decision in the light of contemporary brain science?
Explain and evaluate his argument, as well as the conclusions he draws from it. Is the notion of ‘agent causation' coherent? Can we make it plausible?
Why do we have individually and as a society to narrow the gap? What role should the business community play? Defend your answer with ethical argumentation.