Before understanding Applied Ethics, it's helpful to see where it fits. Ethics, or Moral Philosophy, is broadly divided into three main areas:
| Branch | Guiding Question | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Meta-Ethics | "What *is* goodness?" | This is the most abstract branch. It doesn't ask what is right or wrong, but asks about the *nature* of morality itself. (e.g., Are moral truths objective? What do the words "good" and "bad" mean?) |
| 2. Normative Ethics | "What *should* I do?" | This branch creates general theories and principles to guide moral action. (e.g., Utilitarianism: "Do whatever creates the most happiness." Deontology: "Follow your moral duties.") |
| 3. Applied Ethics | "How do I apply ethics to *this* situation?" | This is the most practical branch. It takes the theories from Normative Ethics and applies them to specific, concrete, and often controversial real-world problems. |
A funnel or pyramid diagram showing Meta-Ethics at the top (most abstract), Normative Ethics in the middle (theories), and Applied Ethics at the bottom (concrete problems).
Applied Ethics is the branch of philosophy that attempts to apply general ethical theories to specific moral problems, issues, and fields of human activity.
The goal is not just to talk *about* problems, but to find a path *through* them. It's the "boots on the ground" part of moral philosophy. It moves ethics from the textbook into the hospital, the courtroom, the boardroom, and the newsroom.
Example of the process:
Applied Ethics is a vast field. This paper's syllabus covers several key branches. Other major branches also exist.
This is one of the largest and most established branches. It deals with the moral challenges arising from medicine, healthcare, and biological sciences.
Key Issues: Euthanasia, abortion, patient confidentiality, informed consent, genetic engineering, cloning, resource allocation (who gets the organ transplant?).
This branch formulates moral standards and codes of conduct for professionals. It recognizes that professionals (like doctors, lawyers, or journalists) have special duties and powers, and thus special ethical obligations.
Key Issues: Confidentiality, conflicts of interest, honesty, integrity, and public responsibility.
A specific subset of professional ethics, this deals with the moral obligations of journalists, news organizations, and other media platforms.
Key Issues: Truthfulness in reporting, bias, privacy of public figures, use of graphic images, "fake news," and the public's right to know.
This branch examines the ethical principles and moral problems that arise in a business environment.
Key Issues: Corporate social responsibility (CSR), fair wages, safe working conditions, honest advertising, environmental impact of businesses, insider trading.
A subset of professional ethics for lawyers and judges.
Key Issues: Attorney-client privilege, when a lawyer must/must not defend a client they know is guilty, conflicts of interest.
This branch examines the moral relationship between human beings and the natural world.
Key Issues: Animal rights, climate change, pollution, sustainability, obligations to future generations.