Ethical Frameworks

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Ethical Frameworks

[Name of the Institute]

Ethical Frameworks

Introduction

Ethics should not be confused with morality. Morality is, formally, the set of directives in the form of imperative sentences, whose validity is impossible to prove or deny it, as imperative sentences are not sentences in a definite sense. The purpose of ethics is an investigation into possible sources of morality, the study of the effects that morality or lack thereof has on people and look at the basic philosophical premises on which one could reasonably have created collections of moral precepts (Spinoza, 2006). Ethical views normally take the form of the theory, which consists of team concepts and resulting claims from which to formulate sets of moral precepts. Ethical theories can be both an attempt to prove the validity of the moral well-functioning, and may stand in sharp contrast to the prevailing morality, questioning the validity of part or even all current orders in a given society. Ethics is the normative theory according to which there are certain actions that must be performed and others that should not be performed, beyond the positive or negative consequences that may bring. That is, there are certain duties, or obligations, that must be met beyond their consequences. Ethics is one of the main branches of philosophy, as required of reflection and argumentation, this field is the set of general assessments of human beings living in a society.

The Case

The case mentioned in the article also has to do with ethics. The nurse promises the patient that she will not tell the patient's parents about their treatment of the disease. A time came when the patient had several problems, so the nurse had to tell the parents, so that the proper treatment can be done. Here, is the dilemma that the nurse had already promised the patients that she will ...
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