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Conscience: An Interdisciplinary View: Salzburg Colloquium on Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities
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Barnes and Noble
Conscience: An Interdisciplinary View: Salzburg Colloquium on Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities
Current price: $169.99
Barnes and Noble
Conscience: An Interdisciplinary View: Salzburg Colloquium on Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities
Current price: $169.99
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Value change and uncertainty about the validity of traditional moral convictions are frequently observed when scientific research confronts us with new moral problems or challenges the moral responsibility of the scientist. Which ethics is to be relied on? Which principles are the most reasonable, the most humane ones? For want of an appropriate answer, moral authorities often point to conscience, the individual conscience, which seems to be man's unique, directly accessible and final source of moral contention. But what is meant by 'conscience'? There is hardly a notion as widely used and at the same time as controversial as that of conscience. In the history of ethics we can distinguish several trends in the interpretation of the concept and function of conscience. The Greeks used the word O"uvEt81lm~ to denote a kind of 'accompanying knowledge' that mostly referred to negatively experienced behavior. In Latin, the expression conscientia meant a knowingtogether pointing beyond the individual consciousness to the common knowledge of other people. In the Bible, especially in the New Testament, O"uvEt81l0"t~ is used for the guiding consciousness of the morality of one's own action.