Celestine M. Bittle
Ethics
Abstract
Everyone is aware of the distinction between right and wrong, between what is morally good and morally bad. The distinction is made by people every day, in the home and in the school, in business and labor, in courts and police actions, in politics and in government. And yet, the attitude of many persons toward human conduct is largely amoral. People know intuitively ‘that’ some actions are morally good and others morally bad, but they are not sure ‘why’ they are so. It is therefore necessary to reaffirm the principles which underlie morality. Ethics, or moral philosophy, seeks to lay bare the natural foundations of correct living, to uncover the principles which govern morality and make individual actions to be right or wrong, and thus develop the science of right conduct.
About the Author
Celestine Bittle was a Franciscan monk and professor of philosophy. He is the author of The Science of Correct Thinking, Reality and the Mind: Epistemology, The Domain of Being – Ontology and several other books on metaphysics.