Ethical Relationships in Schools

2020 ◽  
pp. 27-42
Author(s):  
Scherto Gill
Author(s):  
Yi Jonathan Chua

Xunzi’s philosophy provides a rich resource for understanding how ethical relationships between humans and nature can be articulated in terms of harmony. In this paper, I build on his ideas to develop the concept of reciprocal harmony, which requires us to reciprocate those who make our lives liveable. In the context of the environment, I argue that reciprocal harmony generates moral obligations towards nature, in return for the existential debt that humanity owes towards heaven and earth. This can be used as a normative basis for an environmental ethic that enables humanity and nature to flourish together.


2001 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 344-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Bridges ◽  
Ralph Hanson ◽  
Miles Little ◽  
Alison Choy Flannigan ◽  
Michael Fairley ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 160940691985163
Author(s):  
Victoria Bouvier ◽  
Jennifer MacDonald

Brought to life by an exchange with a crocus, we respond to our challenges with methodologies that privilege cognitive ways of theorizing and sharing together. As a Michif (Metis) woman and a woman of White settler descent, we engage in a layered dialogue across cultural understandings—what we call a spiritual exchange—guided by ethical relationality and the teachings of Spirit Gifting. The spiritual exchange offers a process to make meaning of experiences and to collaborate in ways that help us generate and live out ethical relationships. We question: How can we proceed in ways that might rehumanize the research process and honor the living earth? How might research look and feel if stories of respect, love, reciprocity, and responsibility were at the center? In this article, we offer an inquiry process that honors the act of study from an Indigenous sensibility, the multiplicity of kinetic and relational knowing, and the reanimation of the more-than-human.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 563
Author(s):  
Mohammad Hosseiny Nassab ◽  
Esmaeil Zohdi

<p><em>The present study was a comparative analysis of ethics and human responsibility in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road and Doris Lessing’s The Grass is Singing. Emmanuel Levinas’s theory of ethics was used here for a better understanding of the sense of responsibility of characters and to see how they conform to ethical relationships with others. Based on Levinasian notions of face, moral responsibility and alterity, it is argued that responsibility is the basic tenet of McCarthy’s and Lessing’s novels which arises from face-t</em><em>o</em><em>-face encounter with an Other. However, the study proved that the father and the son as major characters in McCarthy’s novel stayed ethically good and preserved goodness in the apocalyptic world because they felt responsible towards each other as well as other strangers. On the contrary, Mary as the protagonist of Lessing The Grass is Singing was not an ethical character since she showed no concerns with responsibility and making moral relationships with other people. </em></p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (3and4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bodh Raj Sharma

Retailers are dependent upon wholesalers as the latter provide the regular and uninterrupted supply of merchandise to the former even sometimes on credit basis. The retailers are,thus, expected to maintain sound relations with wholesalers on the basis of ethical retail practices. In fact, in the extant literature there is not even a single study on perceptions of wholesalers about ethical retail practices. This study is, thus, an endeavor to bridge the gap in extant literature on retailing ethics. This piece of work explores empirically the retailer - wholesaler ethical relationships for good governance in retail sector empirically. The study is based upon the data obtained from seventy wholesale firms from Jammu city in J&K through an instrument. The wholesalers viewed retailers ethical in most of the issues except untimely payments of bills and even payment of less amounts as agreed upon, which creates severe problem for the wholesalers who are ultimately liable to manufacturers. The study shall be highly useful for business concerns, retailers, wholesalers, and government for the policy guidelines and potential researchers for new thrust.


2007 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Mackenzie ◽  
C. McDowell ◽  
E. Pittaway

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