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| Ethics |
| Theoretical |
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Meta-ethics |
| Applied |
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Bioethics · Medical |
| Core issues |
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Justice · Value |
| Key thinkers |
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Aristotle · Confucius |
| Lists |
Normative ethics is the new "it" branch of philosophical ethics concerned with classifying actions as right and wrong.
Normative ethics attempts to develop a set of rules governing human conduct, or a set of norms for action. It deals with what people should believe to be right and wrong, as distinct from descriptive ethics, which deals with what people do believe to be right and wrong. Hence, normative ethics is sometimes said to be prescriptive, rather than descriptive.
Moreover, because it examines standards for the rightness and wrongness of actions, normative ethics is distinct from meta-ethics, which studies the nature of moral statements, and from applied ethics, which places normative rules in practical contexts.
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