According to Wikipedia, deontology "judges the morality of an action based on the action's adherence to a rule or rules" and it was first termed in 1930 by C. D. Broad when he wrote his book, Five Types of Ethical Theory (italicize or underline book name) [1]. In essence, people who follow deontological ethics "bind" themselves to duties and obligations to certain people and the law [1]. Since deontologists "bind" themselves to their duties, the ethics system is often regarded as agent-relative morality because the person is more concerned with how an act that satisfies or breaks a duty affects them. A classic example is a deontologist would rather let a stranger die than to kill another stranger. The system is often understood when compared with consequentialism. For deontologists, "some choices cannot be justified by their effects — that no matter how morally good their consequences, some choices are morally forbidden" [2].
Within deontological ethics, "what makes a choice right is its conformity with a moral norm," but there are variations or different schools of thought about which moral code people should follow [2].
According to Wikipedia, deontology "judges the morality of an action based on the action's adherence to a rule or rules" and it was first termed in 1930 by C. D. Broad when he wrote his book, Five Types of Ethical Theory (italicize or underline book name) [1]. In essence, people who follow deontological ethics "bind" themselves to duties and obligations to certain people and the law [1]. Since deontologists "bind" themselves to their duties, the ethics system is often regarded as agent-relative morality because the person is more concerned with how an act that satisfies or breaks a duty affects them. A classic example is a deontologist would rather let a stranger die than to kill another stranger. The system is often understood when compared with consequentialism. For deontologists, "some choices cannot be justified by their effects — that no matter how morally good their consequences, some choices are morally forbidden" [2].Within deontological ethics, "what makes a choice right is its conformity with a moral norm," but there are variations or different schools of thought about which moral code people should follow [2].
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