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Ethic   /ˈɛθɪk/   Listen
Ethic

noun
1.
The principles of right and wrong that are accepted by an individual or a social group.  Synonyms: moral principle, value-system, value orientation.  "A person with old-fashioned values"
2.
A system of principles governing morality and acceptable conduct.  Synonym: ethical code.






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"Ethic" Quotes from Famous Books



... black the injury sank deep into his heart; savage as he was he felt the ignominy of his treatment; and he cherished that feeling of deep revenge which is innate in the natures of all God's creatures, but especially in those, who like the savage, have never had an ethic inculcation to restrain their passions. He gave vent to his agony, as he lay prostrate on his pallet, in wails of anguish and vituperative mutterings; uttered in the unintelligibleness of his ...
— Fern Vale (Volume 1) - or the Queensland Squatter • Colin Munro

... a higher and purer ethic than it has ever found in the natural moral standards of any people; it aims at perfection; it treats the least infraction as a violation of the whole law; it regards even corrupt thoughts as sins; it bids us be holy even as He is ...
— Oriental Religions and Christianity • Frank F. Ellinwood

... law, with ethic rule E'en in the breast of idle fool, (As moon and stars are heavenly pictured Within the ...
— Song-waves • Theodore H. Rand

... was yet a better Christian in fact than any of the Christian emperors who succeeded him. He governed his life by the Stoic discipline, the most hardy, in its practical requirements, of ancient systems, so rigorous in its ethic that Josephus is proud to claim an affinity with it for the "straitest" of the Jewish sects, and so pure in its spirit that St. Jerome ranks its best-known writer as a Christian,—a philosophy which taught ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 12, No. 72, October, 1863 • Various

... who, by reason of the great progress which has been made in the realm of the theoretical knowledge of nature, allow themselves to be drawn on to the hope of still explaining all states and processes in the world—the spiritual and the ethic processes as well as the physical—from the pure mechanism of atoms; and who see in that which thus far has been mechanically explained, the only and the infallible way of explaining all that is still obscure. They call this view the mechanical view of the world; and, as "monism," put it in opposition ...
— The Theories of Darwin and Their Relation to Philosophy, Religion, and Morality • Rudolf Schmid


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