CORNELIA MARGARETA GĂȘPĂREL
Abstract
During the development of science, a series of changes in terms of real events that today we find in contemporary moral concepts were done upon the ancient moral virtues in terms of scientific and social aspects. In this context of changes in the paradigm of moral values we refer to the epistemic concept of moral judgment in children and we make a classification of moral events. Among all intentionality plays a major role and captures the moral character of any human feelings and moral events. In the moral judgment, intention is everything. We believe, therefore, that intentionality, will and memory are indicators that point us to the moral conscience substrate which is fundamental to any interpretation of ethics. We assume that the failure to interpret the role of moral conscience and manifestations must start with the paradigm of ethical knowledge which puts at stake the moral judgment.
This paper captures the transformation of moral values from a psychological, epistemological, and mythological-religious theories perspective. Moral judgment tells us that somewhere in the history of science there has been a reversal of moral values and one of these consequences could be this imbalance created by the interpretation of the universe based on male predilection forces. Should be moral conscience different in terms of masculine and feminine concepts, of anima and animus, yin and yang? How much of this universe is feminine and masculine? Or do we talk of different energies that govern from the particular to the universal everything that manifests in the universe? Therefore, we advocate for a balanced interpretation of scientific and religious aspect of what are the moral virtues governing any scientific or social work.
The paper Ethical Iterations on the concept of moral conscience makes a smooth transition from an epistemological perspective of psychological knowledge to the mythological and philosophical perspective of what we call moral conscience.
AnnalsUnibuc-2011-60-02Gășpărel