DEMOCRACY AND SOCIAL ETHICS
Print List Price: NRS 250.00
KaKha Price: Free (100% Discount)
View SampleA Brief Description
Publication Date: 2015-08-16
File Size: 388 KB
Print Length: 117 pages
Publisher: Muncha Media
Language: English
Full Description
It
is well to remind ourselves, from time to time, that "Ethics" is but
another word for "righteousness," that for which many men and women
of every generation have hungered and thirsted, and without which life becomes
meaningless.
Certain
forms of personal righteousness have become to a majority of the community
almost automatic. It is as easy for most of us to keep from stealing our
dinners as it is to digest them, and there is quite as much voluntary morality
involved in one process as in the other. To steal would be for us to fall sadly
below the standard of habit and expectation which makes virtue easy. In the
same way we have been carefully reared to a sense of family obligation, to be
kindly and considerate to the members of our own households, and to feel
responsible for their well-being. As the rules of conduct have become
established in regard to our self-development and our families, so they have
been in regard to limited circles of friends. If the fulfilment of these claims
were all that a righteous life required, the hunger and thirst would be stilled
for many good men and women, and the clew of right living would lie easily in
their hands.
But
we all know that each generation has its own test, the contemporaneous and current
standard by which alone it can adequately judge of its own moral achievements,
and that it may not legitimately use a previous and less vigorous test. The
advanced test must indeed include that which has already been attained; but if
it includes no more, we shall fail to go forward, thinking complacently that we
have "arrived" when in reality we have not yet started.