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ethical
(redirected from ethicalness)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Encyclopedia 0.01 sec.
eth·i·cal (th-kl)
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or dealing with ethics.
2. Being in accordance with the accepted principles of right and wrong that govern the conduct of a profession.

Patient discussion about ethical.

Q. The cobbler's shoes are never fixed A bit philosophical/ethical question: do you think it’s a appropriate to an alternative therapist to treat people with disease he or she has and can’t cure himself?

A. In my opinion – yes. First of all, many treatments are technically impossible to be performed by the therapist on his or her own body. Moreover, it’s a common notion in many alternative medicine disciplines that different people respond differently to the same treatments, so it’s not unacceptable that the healer would suffer from a disease he or she claims to cure in others.

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Morgan and Korschgen (2001) asked a sample of faculty and undergraduate students to rate the ethicalness of 16 faculty behaviors on a five-point scale with endpoints of "unquestionably not ethical" to "unquestionably ethical.
The regression model suggests that, to a small degree, teacher candidates with the largest gains in WTSEB scores from pretest to posttests tended to be those who believed that ethicalness was a characteristic of an effective teacher.
Second, the m ain topic of interest, recognizing the ethicalness of everyday situations, should not be limited to only those individuals who have worked full time.
 
 
 
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