Significance of Ethical implications
Ethical implications, across various fields, involve moral consequences and considerations stemming from actions, beliefs, and research. Buddhism highlights the saturation of life with ethical implications, while Purana emphasizes moral impacts of interactions. Vedanta focuses on consequences from understanding the soul. Dharmashastra considers meat consumption, and Indian history addresses parental responsibilities and mystical beliefs. Psychiatry addresses conflicts of roles and mental disorder treatments, and health sciences covers HIV research, traditional medicine use, patient privacy, public health policies, information manipulation, authorship practices, audiology practices, medical communication failures, physiotherapy education, and patient referrals.
Synonyms: Ethical consequences, Moral implications
In Dutch: Ethische implicaties; In Finnish: Eettiset vaikutukset; In Spanish: Implicaciones éticas; In German: Ethische Implikationen; In Malay: Implikasi etika
The below excerpts are indicatory and do represent direct quotations or translations. It is your responsibility to fact check each reference.
Buddhist concept of 'Ethical implications'
Ethical implications in Buddhism, as seen by Keane, emphasizes the idea that treating religious symbols as active agents imbues daily life with ethical significance. This perspective suggests that actions and interactions with these objects carry moral weight.
From: Hualin International Journal of Buddhist Studies
(1) Keane remarks, ‘by treating relics or icons as having agency in themselves, villagers are insisting on the saturation of life with ethical implications.[1]
Hindu concept of 'Ethical implications'
Ethical implications in Hinduism stem from understanding the soul's connection to Brahman, guiding interactions between humans and the divine, and evaluating the moral weight of actions like meat consumption and its impact on living beings.
From: Manusmriti with the Commentary of Medhatithi
(1) The moral consequences and considerations associated with the act of consuming meat, particularly in relation to the treatment of living beings.[2]
From: Brahma Sutras (Shankaracharya)
(1) The potential moral consequences arising from the understanding of the relationship between the soul and the highest Brahman.[3]
The concept of Ethical implications in local and regional sources
Ethical implications stem from moral consequences impacting human interaction, societal values, and philosophical/religious contexts. They also relate to specific theories and parental responsibilities. Gandhian socialism emphasizes moral values for social reform.
From: Triveni Journal
(1) The moral consequences surrounding the actions of Abbie and Ephraim, particularly in terms of parental responsibilities.[4] (2) The moral consequences or considerations that arise from a particular philosophical or political theory.[5] (3) Gandhian socialism emphasizes moral values and individual ethics as the foundation for social reform.[6] (4) The moral consequences related to actions and beliefs that are discussed within various philosophical and religious contexts.[7] (5) The moral consequences arising from mystical experiences and beliefs that impact human interaction and societal values.[8]
The concept of Ethical implications in scientific sources
Ethical implications encompass moral consequences across diverse fields. This includes actions in HIV research, scientific authorship, physiotherapy, public health, psychotherapy, triage, HIV/AIDS management, mental health, information manipulation, medical communication, audiology, and traditional medicine practices. These implications involve integrity, patient care, and potential conflicts.
From: South African Family Practice
(1) This refers to the moral considerations and responsibilities related to audiologists' practices, particularly concerning fall risk screening.[9] (2) Ethical implications arise when referring patients with orange or red triage categories to other facilities, as it could potentially delay their care and be considered a clinical error.[10] (3) These are the moral considerations related to the management of HIV/AIDS, particularly concerning patient privacy, confidentiality, and the involvement of family members in the patient's care.[11] (4) This refers to the potential ethical outcomes or consequences of proposed actions, interventions, or policies in public health, which a framework aims to help anticipate and address, especially within the context of the geriatric community.[12]
From: The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
(1) The provided text suggests that manipulation of information has ethical implications, raising concerns about how such actions could affect individuals or society as a whole.[13] (2) The moral consequences and considerations that arise from failures in communication within the medical field.[14]
From: South African Journal of Physiotherapy
(1) Given the current situation in physiotherapy education as well as the inherent uncertainty of clinical practice, clinicians and undergraduate students in South Africa face a situation that is potentially enormously stressful, which not only has ethical implications for patient care but also for effective training and work satisfaction.[15]
From: South African Journal of HIV Medicine
(1) These are the moral consequences of actions or research, and the text mentions social and ethical implications of HIV cure research.[16]
From: African Journal of Primary Health Care and Family Medicine
(1) This raises issues of possible breaches of confidentiality and privacy of patient information that could have legal and ethical implications for mHealth programmes.[17]
From: South African Journal of Psychiatry
(1) The moral considerations and consequences that arise from decisions about how mental disorders are defined, diagnosed, and treated.[18] (2) These are factors that should be considered when an individual serves as both a psychotherapist and an expert witness, potentially causing a conflict of roles.[19]
From: Religions Journal (MDPI)
(1) These are the ways in which actions or behaviors are judged based on moral principles, particularly in the context of environmental degradation and social justice.[20] (2) To live a virtuous life and achieve genuine and lasting happiness, and even immortality, it was necessary for the human to think about that which is immortal and divine by contemplating the universe as a whole.[21]