Legal Moralism, from consequentialism to deontology theory
In moral duties, in order for an action to be characterized by morality, it requires free will, and by imposing and threatening punishment, there can be no moral consequence. This view, which has a solid theoretical basis, is largely attributed to Kant. But the consequentialist approach, considering...
Autors principals: | Erfan Karimi Rad, Mojtaba Farahbakhsh, Seyed Mansour Mirsaeedi, Ghasem Ghasemi |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Idioma: | Arabic |
Publicat: |
Imam Sadiq University in Iran, Islamic Republic of
2022-09-01
|
Col·lecció: | پژوهشنامه حقوق اسلامی |
Matèries: | |
Accés en línia: | https://ilr.isu.ac.ir/article_76370_cfd5ef4c2363aeab42da54baef25368f.pdf |
Ítems similars
-
FATHOMING TAX HAVENS CLIMATE THROUGH A CONSEQUENTIALIST VERSUS A DEONTOLOGICAL MORAL LENS
per: LARISSA BǍTRÂNCEA, et al.
Publicat: (2014-05-01) -
The motivated use of moral principles
per: Eric Luis Uhlmann, et al.
Publicat: (2009-10-01) -
The motivated use of moral principles
per: Eric Luis Uhlmann, et al.
Publicat: (2009-10-01) -
Morality And Alienation A Criticism of Railton’s Version of Consequentialism
per: Minoo Hojjat
Publicat: (2019-05-01) -
Deontology vs. utilitarianism: Understanding the basis for the moral theories in medicine
per: Felix N Chukwuneke, et al.
Publicat: (2022-01-01)