Professional ethics

Professional ethics

"It is a pleasure for me to present the book "Professional

Ethics. Fundamental Part," published by the

Mexican Association of Catholic Institutes of Higher

Education, under the responsibility of Rev. Juan

Manuel Garca de Alba M., S.J.

This work stands out on account of its personalist

perspective on ethics, which tends toward perfection

with the development of the person, society and history.

It presents objective norms that apply to

everyone and expressly disapproves of situational."

  • Cover
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Presentation
  • Table of contents
  • Introduction
    • 0.0 Responsibility for living
    • 0.1 What is ethics?
    • 0.2 Objective of ethics
    • 0.3 What contríbutíon should ethics make?
    • 0.4 What does ethics look at?
    • 0.6 How does ethics reach its objective?
    • 0.7 Methodology
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter l. How did the human person arise as an ethical being?
    • 1.1 The emergence of the human person
    • 1.2. Consequences of considering ethics in an evolutionary framework
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter II. Why are human beings ethical?
    • 2.1 Anthropological grounding
    • 2.2 The human person's ethical structure
    • 2.3 Binding ethical reality and natural law
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter III. The person as ethical subject and his dynamism
    • 3.1 The human person
      • 3.1.1 Person and society
      • 3.1.2 The person and his action
    • 3.2 How does a human being become a person?
    • 3.3 Unity and continuity of the human person
    • 3.4 Development of personal ethical awareness
    • 3.5 The concept of situation
      • 3.5.1 The situated person
      • 3.5.2 Characteristics of the situated person
    • 3.6 Law and situation
    • 3. 7 Situational ethics
    • 3.8 Situational ethics is unacceptable
    • 3.9 Surnrnary and conclusion
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter IV. The value of the human person
    • 4.0 Preface
    • 4.1 Historical discovery of the human person's value
    • 4.2 The experience of the human person's value
    • 4.3 Anthropological grounding of personal pre­ eminence
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter V. The ethical dynamics of the human person
    • 5.1 Ethical perception
    • 5.2 Consciousness
      • 5.2.1 The ethical judgment of conscience
      • 5.2.2 The dialectic of conscience
      • 5.2.3 Function of conscience
      • 5.2.4 The formation of the conscience
      • 5.2.5 Ethical conscience as the ultirnate criterion for action
    • 5.3 Freedom
      • 5.3.1 Freedom in process
      • 5.3.2 Freedom for commitment
      • 5.3.3 Meaning or purpose of freedom
    • 5.4 Responsibility
      • 5.4.1 How to be responsible?
      • 5.4.2 The scope of responsibility
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter VI. Factors of the ethical personality
    • Introduction
    • 6.1 The human person as being-in-the-world
    • 6.2 People's social reference
    • 6.3 Historicity
    • 6.4 Sexuality
    • 6.5 Innate reactions
    • 6.6 Feelings
    • 6.7 Imagination
    • 6.8 Economic dimension
    • 6.9 Unity and totality
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter VII. Good and evil as realities of the human person
    • 7.1 Good and human fulfillment
      • 7.1.1 The roots of good
      • 7.1.2 The good of people: value
      • 7.1.3 Possibility of fulfillment
    • 7.2 Evil and human frustration
      • 7.2.1 The roots of evil
      • 7.2.2 Objective evil
      • 7.2.3 Guilt and frustratíon
    • 7.3 Awareness of guilt and feeling guilty
    • 7.4 Possibility of recovery
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter VIII. Basic principles
    • 8.0 Ethical criteria and their justification
    • 8.1 The humanization principie
    • 8.2 Autonomy principie
    • 8.3 Equality principie
    • 8.4 Difference principie
    • 8.5 Complexity principie
    • 8.6 Totality principie
    • 8.7 Solidarity principie
    • 8.8 Enablement principie
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter IX. Common good and social responsibility
    • 9.1 The common good
      • 9.1.1 Common good and human costs
      • 9.1.2 Common good and personal good
      • 9.1.3 Enabling conditions for the common good
    • 9.2 Ongoing transformation of society
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter X. How is the ethical person formed?
    • 10.1 The fundamental option
      • 10.1.1 Options and renunciations
      • 10.1.2 Implicit options
      • 10.1.3 Explicit options
      • 10.1.4 Fundamental options and styles of life
    • 10.2 Education
    • 10.3 Self-image
    • 10.4 Ethical social structure
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter XI. Responsible action
    • 11.1 Decisions
    • 11.2 Intention
    • 11.3 The objective effect of action
    • 11.4 Distinction between ends and means
    • 11.5 Plurality of ends and the order of nature
    • 11.6 Ethical character of means and ends
    • 11.7 Double effect
    • 11.8 The consequences of action
    • 11.9 Complicity
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter XII. Beyond Ethics
    • 12.1 Transcendence
    • 12.2 Communion with God
    • 12.3 The importance of action
    • 12.4 Biblical morality
    • Bibliography
  • Latin axioms

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