Dictionary Definition
morality
Noun
1 concern with the distinction between good and
evil or right and wrong; right or good conduct [ant: immorality]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The ability to distinguish good and evil or right and wrong, right or good conduct.
- In the context of "ethics": Motivation based on ideas of right and wrong.
Antonyms
Related terms
Translations
The ability to distinguish good and evil or
right and wrong, right or good conduct.
- Portuguese: moralidade
(ethics) Motivation based on ideas of right and
wrong.
- Albanian: moralitet
- Arabic: الأخلاقية
- Azerbaijani: əxlaq
- Bulgarian: етика (etika)
- Chinese: 道德
- Croatian: etika
- Czech: morálnost
- Dutch: ethiek
- Esperanto: moraleco
- Estonian: kõlblus
- Finnish: etiikka
- French: moralité
- Georgian: ა(morali)
- German: Moral
- Greek: ηθική (ethiké)
- Hebrew: מוסר
- Hungarian: erkölcs
- Indonesian: kesusilaan
- Italian: moralità
- Japanese: 道徳 (dōtoku)
- Korean: 도덕 (dodŏg)
- Latvian: morāle
- Lithuanian: dorovė
- Persian: سيرت
- Polish: moralność
- Romanian: morală
- Russian: этика (etika)
- Serbian: етика (etika)
- Slovak: morálka
- Spanish: moralidad
- Swedish: moral
- Turkish: ahlâk
- Uyghur: exlaqsizliq
- Welsh: moes
- Yiddish: moral
Extensive Definition
Morality (from the Latin "manner,
character, proper behavior") is the learning process of
distinguishing between virtues and vices.
The proper system of values and principles of
moral conduct promotes good customs (virtues), but also condemns
bad customs (vices). Moral judgment determines whether an action
should be considered as appropriate or inappropriate, selfish or
unselfish. The true identification of morality is virtue, which has
to be regarded as; goodness, propriety, rectitude, righteousness. Hypocrisy
is the act of false virtue, by claiming to have higher moral
standards which in reality do not correspond to the
achievements.
Morals are evaluated through logic, experience
and proper judgment, whether this originates from culture,
philosophy, religion, society or individual conscience. In the
normative and universal sense, morality refers to an ideal code of
conduct, one which would be espoused in preference to alternatives
by all rational people, under specified conditions. To deny
'morality' in this sense is a position known as moral
skepticism.
Morality is sometimes used as a synonym for
ethics, the systematic
philosophical study of the moral domain. Ethics seeks to address
questions such as how a moral outcome can be achieved in a specific
situation (applied
ethics), how moral values should be determined (normative
ethics), what morals people actually abide by (descriptive
ethics), what the fundamental nature of ethics or morality is,
including whether it has any objective justification (meta-ethics),
and how moral capacity or moral agency develops and what its nature
is (moral
psychology). In applied ethics, for example, the prohibition
against taking human life is controversial with respect to capital
punishment, abortion and wars of invasion. In normative ethics,
a typical question might be whether a lie told for the sake of
protecting someone from harm is justified. In meta-ethics, a key
issue is the meaning of the terms "right" or "wrong". Moral
realism would hold that there are true moral statements which
report objective moral facts, whereas moral anti-realism
would hold that morality is derived from any one of the norms
prevalent in society (cultural
relativism); the edicts of a god (divine
command theory); is merely an expression of the speakers'
sentiments (emotivism); an implied
imperative (prescriptive);
falsely presupposes that there are objective moral facts (error
theory). Some thinkers hold that there is no correct definition
of right behavior, that morality can only be judged with respect to
particular situations, within the standards of particular belief
systems and socio-historical contexts. This position, known as
moral
relativism, often cites empirical evidence from anthropology as
evidence to support its claims. The opposite view, that there are
universal, eternal moral truths is known as moral
absolutism. Moral absolutists might concede that forces of
social conformity
significantly shape moral decisions, but deny that cultural
norms
and customs
define morally right behavior.
Religion as a source of moral authority
Religious belief systems usually include the idea of divine will and divine judgment and usually correspond to a moral code of conduct.Anthropological perspectives
Tribal and territorial moralities
Celia Green
has made a distinction between tribal and territorial morality. She
characterizes the latter as predominantly negative and
proscriptive: it defines a person’s territory, including his or her
property and dependants, which is not to be damaged or interfered
with. Apart from these proscriptions, territorial morality is
permissive, allowing the individual whatever behaviour does not
interfere with the territory of another. By contrast, tribal
morality is prescriptive, imposing the norms of the collective on
the individual. These norms will be arbitrary, culturally dependent
and ‘flexible’, whereas territorial morality aims at rules which
are universal and absolute, such as Kant’s
‘categorical
imperative’. Green relates the development of territorial
morality to the rise of the concept of private property, and the
ascendancy of contract over status.
In-group and out-group
Some observers hold that individuals have distinct sets of moral rules that they apply to different groups of people. There is the "ingroup," which includes the individual and those they believe to be of the same culture or race, and there is the "outgroup," whose members are not entitled to be treated according to the same rules. Some biologists, anthropologists and evolutionary psychologists believe this ingroup/outgroup difference is an evolutionary mechanism, one which evolved due to its enhanced survival aspects. Gary R. Johnson and V.S. Falger have argued that nationalism and patriotism are forms of this ingroup/outgroup boundary.Comparing cultures
Fons
Trompenaars, author of Did
the Pedestrian Die?, tested members of different cultures with
various moral
dilemmas. One of these was whether the driver of a car would
have his friend, a passenger riding in the car, lie in order to
protect the driver from the consequences of driving too fast and
hitting a pedestrian. Trompenaars found that different cultures had
quite different expectations (from none to almost certain).
Evolutionary perspectives
Evolutionary biologists start from the assumption that morality is a product of evolutionary forces. On this view, moral codes are ultimately founded on emotional instincts and intuitions that were selected for in the past because they aided survival and reproduction (inclusive fitness). The strength of the maternal bond is one example. Another is the Westermarck effect, seen as underpinning taboos against incest, which decreases the likelihood of inbreeding depression.The phenomenon of 'reciprocity' in nature is
seen by evolutionary biologists as one way to begin to understand
human morality. Its function is typically to ensure a reliable
supply of essential resources, especially for animals living in a
habitat where food quantity or quality fluctuates unpredictably.
For example, on any given night for vampire bats,
some individuals fail to feed on prey while others consume a
surplus of blood. Bats that have successfully fed then regurgitate
part of their blood meal to save a conspecific from starvation.
Since these animals live in close-knit groups over many years, an
individual can count on other group members to return the favor on
nights when it goes hungry (Wilkinson, 1984)
It has been convincingly demonstrated that
chimpanzees show empathy for each other in a wide variety of
contexts. They also possess the ability to engage in deception, and
a level of social 'politics' prototypical of our own tendencies for
gossip, and reputation management.
Christopher Boehm (1982) has hypothesized that
the incremental development of moral complexity throughout hominid
evolution was due to the increasing need to avoid disputes and
injuries in moving to open savanna and developing stone weapons.
Other theories are that increasing complexity was simply a
correlate of increasing group size and brain size, and in
particular the development of theory of
mind abilities. Richard
Dawkins in The God
Delusion suggested that our morality is a result of our
biological evolutionary history and that the Moral
Zeitgeist helps describe how morality evolves from biological
and cultural origins and evolves with time within a culture.
Neuroscientific and psychiatric perspectives
Mirror-neurons
Research on mirror
neurons, since their discovery in 1996, suggests that they may
have a strong role to play in empathy. Social neuro-scientist
Jean
Decety thinks that the ability to recognize and vicariously
experience what another creature is undergoing was a key step
forward in the evolution of social behavior, and ultimately,
morality. The inability to feel empathy is one of the defining
characteristic of psychopathy, and this would
appear to lend support to Decety's view.
Psychological perspectives
Morality as maladaptive and universal
Phil Roberts, Jr. has offered a perspective in
which morality, and specifically the capacity for guilt, is viewed
as a maladaptive byproduct of the evolution of rationality:
Guilt is a maladaptive manifestation of our need
to justify our existence, in this case by conforming to a shared
subconscious theory of rationality in which 'being rational' is
simply a matter of 'being objective', as exemplified in the moral
maxim, 'Love (intrinsically value) your neighbor as you love
(intrinsically value) yourself'. Although none of us can actually
measure up to this standard, we nonetheless come to experience
feelings of worthlessness (guilt) along with a corresponding
reduction in the will to survive (depression) when we deviate from
the standard to an unreasonable degree. In other words, a capacity
for guilt (having a conscience) is a part of the price we humans
have had to pay for having become a little too objective (too
rational) for our own good.http://www.rationology.net
Morality in judicial systems
In most systems, the lack of morality of the
individual can also be a sufficient cause for punishment, or can be
an element for the grading of the punishment.
Especially in the systems where modesty (i.e., with reference to
sexual crimes) is legally protected or otherwise regulated, the
definition of morality as a legal element and in order to determine
the cases of infringement, is usually left to the vision and
appreciation of the single judge and hardly ever precisely
specified. In such cases, it is common to verify an application of
the prevalent common morality of the interested community, that
consequently becomes enforced by the law for further
reference.
The government of South Africa
is attempting to create a Moral Regeneration movement. Part of this
is a proposed Bill of
Morals, which will bring a biblical-based "moral
code" into the realm of law. This move by a nominally secular
democracy has attracted relatively little criticism.
Morality and politics
If morality is the answer to the question 'how
ought we to live' at the individual level, politics can be seen as
addressing the same question at the social level. It is therefore
unsurprising that evidence has been found of a relationship between
attitudes in morality and politics. Jonathan
Haidt and Jesse Graham
have studied the differences between liberals and
conservatives, in
this regard. According to their model, political conservatives make
their moral choices using five moral variables (harm/care,
fairness/reciprocity, ingroup loyalty, authority/respect,
purity/sanctity), whereas liberals use only two (harm/care and
fairness/reciprocity). Haidt also hypothesizes that the origin of
this division in the United States can be traced to geohistorical
factors, with conservatism strongest in closely knit, ethnically
homogenous communities, in contrast to port-cities, where the cultural mix
is greater, thus requiring more liberalism.
Group morality develops from shared concepts and beliefs and is often codified to
regulate behavior within a culture or community. Various
defined actions come to be called moral or immoral. Individuals who
choose moral action are popularly held to possess "moral fiber",
whereas those who indulge in immoral behavior may be labeled as
socially degenerate.
The continued existence of a group may depend on widespread
conformity to codes of morality; an inability to adjust moral codes
in response to new challenges is sometimes credited with the demise
of a community (a positive example would be the function of
Cistercian
reform in reviving monasticism; a negative example would be the
role of the Dowager
Empress in the subjugation of China to European interests).
Within nationalist
movements, there has been some tendency to feel that a nation will
not survive or prosper without acknowledging one common morality,
regardless of in what it consists. Political Morality is also
relevant to the behaviour internationally of national governments,
and to the support they receive from their host population. Noam
Chomsky states that
Moral codes
Codified morality is generally distinguished from
custom,
another way for a community to define appropriate activity, by the
former's derivation from natural or
universal principles. In certain religious communities, the
Divine is said to
provide these principles through revelation, sometimes in
great detail. Such codes may be called laws, as in the Law of Moses, or
community morality may be defined through commentary on the texts
of revelation, as in Islamic law. Such
codes are distinguished from legal or judicial right, including civil
rights, which are based on the accumulated traditions, decrees
and legislation of a political authority, though these latter often
invoke the authority of the moral law.
Morality can also be seen as the collection of
beliefs as to what constitutes a good life. Since throughout most
of human history, religions have provided both
visions and regulations for an ideal
life, morality is often confused with religious precepts. In secular
communities, lifestyle
choices, which represent an individual's conception of
the good life, are often discussed in terms of "morality".
Individuals sometimes feel that making an appropriate lifestyle
choice invokes a true morality, and that accepted codes of conduct
within their chosen community are fundamentally moral, even when
such codes deviate from more general social principles.
Moral codes are often complex definitions of
right and wrong that are based upon well-defined value
systems. Although some people might think that a moral code is
simple, rarely is there anything simple about one's
values, ethics, etc.
or, for that matter, the judgment of those of others. The
difficulty lies in the fact that morals are often part of a
religion and more often
than not about culture
codes. Sometimes, moral codes give way to legal codes,
which couple penalties or corrective actions with particular
practices. Note that while many legal codes are merely built on a
foundation of religious and/or cultural moral codes, ofttimes they
are one and the same.
Examples of moral codes include the Golden
Rule; the Noble
Eightfold Path of Buddhism; the
ancient Egyptian code of Ma'at ;the ten
commandments of Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam;
the yamas and niyama of the Hindu scriptures;
the ten
Indian commandments; and the principle of the Dessek.
Another related concept is the moral core which
is assumed to be innate in each individual, to those who accept
that differences between individuals are more important than
posited Creators or their rules. This, in some religious systems
and beliefs (e.g. Taoism, Moralism and
Gnosticism), is
assumed to be the basis of all aesthetics and thus moral
choice. Moral codes as such are therefore seen as coercive — part
of human politics.
Moral psychology
Religiosity and morality
In the scientific literature, the degree of
religiosity is generally found to be associated with higher ethical
attitudes. Although a recent study by Gregory S.
Paul published in the Journal of Religion and Society argues
for a positive correlation between the
degree of public religiosity in a society and certain measures of
dysfunction, an analysis published later in the same journal
contends that a number of methodological problems undermine any
findings or conclusions to be taken from the research. In a
response to the study by Paul, Gary F. Jensen builds on and refines
Paul's study. His conclusion, after carrying out elaborate
multivariate statistical studies, is that there is a correlation
(and perhaps a causal relationship) of higher homicide rates, not with
Christianity, but with dualism in Christianity, that is to say with
the proportion of the population who believe the devil and hell
exist. Excerpt: "A multiple regression analysis reveals a complex
relationship with some dimensions of religiosity encouraging
homicide and other dimensions discouraging it." Meanwhile, other
studies seem to show positive links in the relationship between
religiosity
and moral behavior — for example, surveys suggesting a positive
connection between faith and altruism. Modern research in
criminology also acknowledges an inverse relationship between
religion and crime, with many studies establishing this beneficial
connection (though some claim it is a modest one). Indeed, a
meta-analysis of 60 studies on religion and crime concluded,
“religious behaviors and beliefs exert a moderate deterrent effect
on individuals’ criminal behavior”.
See also
- Ethics
- Secular ethics
- Mores
- Ethos
- Norms
- Moral relativism
- Moral absolutism
- Moral universalism
- Consequentialism
- Deontological ethics
- Ethical dilemma
- Applied ethics
- Moral particularism
- Guilt
- Criticism of atheism
- Criticism of religion
- Conscience
- Kohlberg's stages of moral development
- Public morality
- The ends justify the means
- Moral Zeitgeist
- Amorality
- Sin
Footnotes
Bibliography
- Walker, Martin G. LIFE! Why We Exist...And What We Must Do to Survive (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LIFE_Why_We_Exist... Wiki Book Page) (http://www.meaninginmylife.com Web Site), Dog Ear Publishing, 2006, ISBN 1-59858-243-7
- Trompenaars, Fons. Did the Pedestrian Die? ISBN 1-84112-436-2
External links
- Fairness Judgments: Genuine Morality or Disguised Egoism? Psychological Article on Fairness (registration required)
- The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy on the Definition of Morality
- Objective Morality An evolutionary approach
- Christian and Muslim debates on Morality
- Morality and Judaism chabad.org
- Wiki site for discussing and taking action on shared morals (WorldMoralMovement.org)
- Morals and Ethics in Islam
- Understanding the Islam, Christianity Debate
- How Sex Was Made A Sin
- Stephen Pinker on the Psychology and Evolutionary Biology of Morality
morality in Bosnian: Moral
morality in Catalan: Moral
morality in Czech: Morálka
morality in German: Moral
morality in Estonian: Moraal
morality in Spanish: Moral
morality in Esperanto: Moralo
morality in French: Morale
morality in Croatian: Moral
morality in Indonesian: Moral
morality in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Moral
morality in Icelandic: Siðferði
morality in Italian: Morale
morality in Hebrew: מוסר
morality in Latvian: Morāle
morality in Lithuanian: Moralė
morality in Macedonian: Морал
morality in Malay (macrolanguage): Moral
morality in Dutch: Moraal
morality in Japanese: 道徳
morality in Norwegian Nynorsk: Moral
morality in Polish: Moralność
morality in Portuguese: Moralidade
morality in Russian: Мораль
morality in Albanian: Morali
morality in Simple English: Morality
morality in Slovak: Morálka
morality in Serbian: Морал
morality in Serbo-Croatian: Moral
morality in Finnish: Moraali
morality in Swedish: Moral
morality in Thai: คุณธรรม
morality in Turkish: Ahlak
morality in Ukrainian: Мораль
morality in Yiddish: מוסר
morality in Chinese: 道德
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Grand Guignol, Passion play, Tom show, angelicalness, antimasque, assignment, audience success,
ballet, behavior, bomb, broadcast drama, burlesque
show, chalk talk, charade, cliff hanger, closet
drama, comedy drama, conduct, critical success,
customs, daytime serial,
decency, dialogue, discourse, disquisition, documentary
drama, drama, dramalogue, dramatic play,
dramatic series, duodrama, duologue, epic theater,
ethicality, ethicalness, ethics, exercise, experimental theater,
exposition, extravaganza, failure, fair play, fairness, flop, gasser, giveaway, godliness, goodness, habits, happening, harangue, hit, hit show, homework, homily, honesty, ideals, improvisational drama,
instruction,
integrity, justice, lecture, lecture-demonstration,
legitimate drama, lesson,
masque, melodrama, minstrel show,
miracle, miracle play,
monodrama, monologue, moral, moral lesson, moral
rectitude, morale,
morality play, moralization, morals, mores, music drama, musical revue,
mystery, mystery play,
object lesson, opera,
pageant, panel show,
pantomime, pastoral, pastoral drama,
piece, play, playlet, preachment, principles, probity, problem play, propriety, psychodrama, quiz show,
radio drama, recital,
recitation, rectitude, review, revue, right, right conduct, righteousness, rightness, saintlikeness, saintliness, sensational
play, serial, sermon, set task, show, sitcom, situation comedy,
sketch, skit, skull session, soap, soap opera, sociodrama, spectacle, stage play, stage
show, standards,
straight drama, success,
suspense drama, tableau,
tableau vivant, talk, talk
show, task, teaching, teleplay, television drama,
television play, theater of cruelty, total theater, uprightness, variety show,
vaudeville,
vaudeville show, vehicle, virtue, virtuousness, word-of-mouth
success, work