The Science of Ethics: II. Ethical Judgement

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William Stephenson

Abstract

Ethics, to have scientific stature, has to be discovered, as a natural development of social and individual life. An example is provided with respect to the Iran hostages crisis of 1979-80: mass communication news described Iran as "crazy," when the reality was a difference of opinion in the American government as to how to deal with a religious revolution. Quantum factor analysis discovered a moral factor inherent in the opinion. Ethical judgment can be discovered, with morality adherent to it.

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How to Cite
Stephenson, W. (1988). The Science of Ethics: II. Ethical Judgement. Operant Subjectivity, 11(2). Retrieved from https://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/osub/article/view/9114
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