Applied Ethics

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Articles in This Field

A Guided Tour of Applied Ethics Through One Big Question: What Should We Do?
Applied ethics is the part of philosophy that refuses to stay at a safe distance. It asks how moral ideas should guide real choices when time is short, information is imperfect, and people carry different loyalties and fears. It is about medicine and war, business and family, courts and classrooms, technology and the ordinary decisions […]
The Ethics of Care and Responsibility When Rules Are Not Enough
Many people approach ethics as if it were mainly about rules. Do not lie. Keep your promises. Do not harm. Treat people fairly. Rules matter, and societies cannot function without them. Yet in ordinary life, the most morally demanding moments often arrive precisely when rules do not tell you enough. You are caring for someone […]
Technology and Moral Agency: What We Owe Each Other in a Mediated World
Applied ethics is often introduced through familiar cases: a physician’s duty, a courtroom dilemma, a business scandal, a conflict between honesty and kindness. Technology forces those cases into new shapes. It does not merely add gadgets to the world; it changes how people see one another, how choices are made, and how responsibility is distributed. […]
A Short History of Applied Ethics in Four Shifts
Applied ethics is often described as “taking moral theory into the real world.” That is accurate, but incomplete. Applied ethics is also the story of moral reflection becoming public, institutional, and accountable. It did not arise merely because philosophers became interested in practical problems. It arose because modern life made moral decisions unavoidable at scale. […]
Applied Ethics and the Limits of Pure Rationalism
Applied ethics is often expected to deliver clear answers: what to do, what to permit, what to ban. That expectation encourages a particular style of moral reasoning: start from universal principles, apply them like rules, and derive a verdict. There is something admirable in that impulse. Reason matters. Consistency matters. Public justification matters. Yet applied […]
Applied Ethics and the Question of Speech Ethics
Speech is one of the most ordinary human acts and one of the most morally powerful. With words we can comfort, bless, instruct, warn, reconcile, or heal. With the same instrument we can deceive, shame, manipulate, seduce, divide, or destroy trust. Applied ethics treats speech not as background noise but as action with consequences and […]
Applied Ethics Without Jargon: The Real Issues in Plain Speech
Applied ethics is the part of ethics that enters the mess of real life. It asks what should be done in concrete situations: medicine, business, technology, policing, war, education, family life, and public institutions. People often assume applied ethics is either: obvious moral common sense, or impossible moral argument because everything is “too complicated.” Both […]
How Applied Ethics Changes the Way You Interpret Evidence
In public debates, people often throw around the word “evidence” as if it settles moral questions by itself. They say: “The evidence proves this policy is \right.” “The data shows that this is harmful.” “Science says we must do this.” Applied ethics changes how you interpret those claims. It does not reject evidence. It insists […]
A Guided Tour of Applied Ethics Through One Big Question: Technology Ethics
Applied ethics exists to bring moral reflection down to the level where decisions actually happen: in institutions, products, policies, professions, and daily life. In technology ethics, the “applied” part is not a downgrade from theory. It is where theory is tested against constraints, incentives, and real harms. The guiding question in this tour is simple […]

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