Situated Ethics

Situated ethics, often confused with situational ethics, is a view of applied ethics in which abstract standards from a culture or theory are considered to be far less important than the ongoing processes in which one is personally and physically involved, e.g. climate, ecosystem, etc. It is one of several theories of ethics within the philosophy of action associated with anarchism. It is sometimes thought to be a more abstract name for Gaia philosophy, as the planet one lives on is quite important in situated ethics. There are also situated theories of economics, e.g. most green economics, and of knowledge, usually based on some situated ethics. All emphasize the actual physical, geographical, ecological and infrastructural state the actor is in, which determines that actor's actions or range of actions - all deny that there is any one point of view from which to apply standards of or by authority. This makes such theories unpopular with authority, and popular with those who advocate political decentralisation. See also list of ethics topics

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
epi pen
multiplication alu
hernando de soto
sance
naidu
hernando de soto (economist)
gentleman thief
autoinjector
degu
wagn
golden horns of gallehus
kogo noda
list of psychiatric drugs
love & pop
julius martov
promise keepers
left socialist revolutionaries
tmi
ole worm
andean flamingo
social statistics
e mail art
woodstock
rocky mountain national park
steve case
dickinson
air asia
contemporary hindu movements
orval faubus
gerlinde obermeier
terentius maximus
art bank
modular form
lipolysis
kevin major
lee maracle
uss franklin (cv 13)
platonic love
regional internet registry
library of congress classification:class p, subclass p philology linguistics
daphne marlatt
decantation
separation
latin american and caribbean internet addresses registry