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Therese Marie E.

Tiro RE 114 March 31, 2023


BSMT 2A

In our daily lives, we encounter circumstances that need us to pause and assess the
morality of our acts. A moral action must come of our own volition and must be our own. One
might de ne an action as moral if one intends for the good. Even though we act morally
righteously, we engage in moral evil when we do so with a wrong aim. A terrible deed
(something evil) cannot be made good without a good purpose. A moral act is motivated by
moral standards and is performed with consideration for others' responsibilities, rights, and
dignity. We, moreover, want to act reasonably and fairly. A deed is moral if you consider how it
might a ect, bene t, and be understood by others.

When we make decisions consistent with our genuine good and draw us closer to God,
we can claim that an action is morally right. Three factors are considered for determining the
goodness of a moral act: the object and goodness of the object, the intention, and the
circumstances. When something is ethically right and improves our lives and others around us,
we can also remark that it is worth possessing or doing.

Ethics is the systematic study or process of establishing what is morally acceptable and
wrong in human behavior. It may involve considering the advantages and disadvantages of a
course of action, values, and personal interests. It o ers guidelines for what is morally right in
behavior. On the other hand, morality is the application of our ethics. It is whether human
action is morally right or evil. For instance, by the ethical principles for health workers, a doctor
may not euthanize a patient, even at the patient's request. Nonetheless, the same doctor can
personally support a patient's right to die based on their morality.
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