Walking your pathThe book states that ethics is about behavior. This means that for something to be part of your ethical beliefs, you must be willing to act on it if the situation arises. If you are not willing to act on something that you believe is your ethical and moral belief, is it really part of your ethics? I don't think a person can believe in something and contradict their beliefs with the decisions they choose to make. The decisions that people make decide for them what their ethical and moral beliefs are. Talking is little when it comes to ethics. I think that in the case of ethics the sentence should be reversed. If you are walking down the street, you are allowed to talk. For example, a teacher has many students, and at the beginning of the semester, or at the beginning of their teaching career, they choose to grade them equally and give students grades based on their homework scores, tests, and participation. This is the right ethical way of evaluating for the teacher. If the teacher has a student who tries really hard, who puts in the time outside of class, and has a tutor, but ultimately has difficulty with the topic. That student deserves to get a failing grade just because he is slower than the rest of the class. Why does the smart kid who doesn't have to make any effort and everything comes naturally get a good grade? I think teachers are more likely to give a passing grade to the student who tries so hard, when the numbers are the things that should determine the grade. I think you absolutely have an ethical responsibility to be a role model for others in your daily life. activity. For example, if you are in a management position, how can you expect people to behave the way you want if you are not willing to lead by example? I believe a manager, or even a person for that matter, shouldn't ask you to do something they wouldn't do if put in the same situation. If you don't act on something that is part of your ethical and moral beliefs, that doesn't belong to your ethical framework. It's more of a moral and ethical wish list, and the only things on that list that you can claim, are the things that you are practicing and using to make your decisions.
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