Topic route

Applied Ethics

This topic cluster is for readers who meet philosophy through real decisions rather than classroom labels. It connects moral theory to the cases where institutions, technologies, professions, bodies, ecosystems, media systems, markets, schools, courts, borders, homes, workplaces, and public agencies make ordinary choices ethically difficult. The route starts with AI ethics, technology ethics, bioethics, medical ethics, and informed consent, then widens into public health, research, engineering, platform governance, media and journalism, law, military force, education, sport, migration, housing, energy, workplace life, consumer choice, design, food systems, neurotechnology, reproduction, disability, environmental justice, risk, harm, collective responsibility, epistemic injustice, data, privacy, surveillance, algorithmic bias, business ethics, and professional ethics.

Concepts
60
Guides
5
Comparisons
23
Applied ethics still life with a document, laptop, leaf, and clinical instrument
A visual anchor for AI, medical, environmental, data, business, and professional ethics.

Cluster summary

What this topic helps you understand.

Start a guide

Core problem

A route through AI, technology, medicine, public health, research, engineering, platforms, media, law, war, education, housing, energy, work, design, environment, risk, harm, justice, data, privacy, business, and professional responsibility.

Best comparison

AI Ethics vs Technology Ethics

Use a contrast when the topic starts to feel like a list of related but interchangeable terms.

The reader problem

Applied ethics is where philosophy stops sounding optional. A patient signs a consent form, an algorithm ranks a person, a company optimizes attention, a city installs cameras, a newsroom frames a crisis, a lawyer handles a conflict, a school sorts students, a tenant faces eviction, a worker is monitored, a community faces climate risk, or a professional sees a safety problem. The question is no longer whether ethics matters; it is which ethical pressure is being hidden by ordinary procedure.

The learning path

Begin with AI ethics and technology ethics to see how design choices become moral choices. Move into data ethics, privacy, surveillance, platform ethics, media ethics, journalism ethics, design ethics, and algorithmic bias to understand how information systems change power. Then read bioethics, medical ethics, care ethics, public health ethics, research ethics, neuroethics, reproductive ethics, disability ethics, and informed consent for bodily vulnerability, dependence, expertise, and institutional trust. Finish with environmental ethics, climate justice, environmental justice, energy ethics, animal ethics, food ethics, housing ethics, migration ethics, education ethics, sports ethics, legal ethics, military ethics, just war theory, workplace ethics, consumer ethics, business ethics, engineering ethics, professional ethics, risk, harm, collective responsibility, and epistemic injustice so the map includes ecosystems, markets, public institutions, roles, uncertainty, voice, and distributed accountability.

Why comparisons matter

The highest-value applied ethics mistakes come from collapsing nearby terms. AI ethics is not the whole of technology ethics. Journalism ethics is not the whole of media ethics. Legal ethics is not the whole of professional ethics. Military ethics is not identical with just war theory. Housing ethics is not only environmental justice. Workplace ethics is not the whole of business ethics. Risk is not the same as harm. The comparison pages turn those confusions into useful reading routes.

What makes the cluster practical

The goal is not to produce quick opinions about controversies. The cluster teaches a method: identify the affected parties, locate the institution, name the value at risk, compare neighboring concepts, ask who can object, separate risk from realized harm, and ask what accountability, repair, or redesign would actually change the case.

Where this cluster can still grow

Applied ethics is deliberately expandable. Future routes can deepen public interest, whistleblowing, war ethics, legal responsibility, advertising ethics, data labor, policing ethics, urban ethics, public administration ethics, humanitarian ethics, and global health ethics. New pages should join an existing pressure line rather than arrive as isolated terms: health and body, technology and information, environment and food, work and profession, public power and collective risk.

The public trust layer

The newest applied ethics pages add institutional accountability: public interest, whistleblowing, conflict of interest, corruption, policing, criminal justice, administration, philanthropy, nonprofit governance, advertising, persuasion, information, and accessibility.

Questions this topic answers

A good first pass

Do not try to read everything at once.

Start with a few concrete entries, test one hard distinction, and then use the guide to decide what deserves slower reading. That order keeps a large subject from turning into a wall of links.

How The Ideas Fit Together

How To Begin

Begin Applied Ethics with one question you can actually carry: How do moral theories change when real institutions, professions, and technologies are involved? That question gives the route pressure. Without it, the subject can look like a shelf of important words with no order.

A good first pass uses three moves. Read one broad concept for orientation, open one comparison to catch a likely confusion, then return to the topic and choose a guide. That rhythm keeps the subject readable because every next page has a job.

Do not worry about finishing the whole route in one sitting. A large subject becomes useful when a later concept changes how an earlier one sounds. Mark that change. It is often where the real philosophical work begins.

One simple note-taking habit helps: after each page, write down the sentence you would now revise. Maybe a definition needs a qualification, maybe an example no longer fits, or maybe a contrast has become more important than the original term. Those revisions show the subject becoming live rather than merely longer.

If the route feels too abstract, choose one ordinary scene and carry it through the whole topic. Ask how each concept would describe that same scene differently. A subject becomes easier to remember when its terms compete over a shared example instead of floating as separate definitions, and the shared example gives later rereading a concrete anchor for notes, discussion, and essay planning.

The Main Tensions

The central tension is the gap between a quick answer and a careful use. Each concept can be summarized, but summary alone does not show when the idea matters. The deeper work is to ask what changes when the concept is applied to an example, a text, a moral choice, or a historical debate.

The comparisons are stress tests, not decorative side paths. AI Ethics vs Technology Ethics, Privacy vs Surveillance, Climate Justice vs Environmental Ethics, Animal Ethics vs Environmental Ethics, Bioethics vs Medical Ethics, Care Ethics vs Medical Ethics, Research Ethics vs Medical Ethics, Engineering Ethics vs Professional Ethics, Environmental Justice vs Climate Justice, Risk vs Harm, Journalism Ethics vs Media Ethics, Legal Ethics vs Professional Ethics, Military Ethics vs Just War Theory, Design Ethics vs Technology Ethics, Housing Ethics vs Environmental Justice, Workplace Ethics vs Business Ethics, Energy Ethics vs Climate Justice, Utilitarianism vs Deontology, Whistleblowing vs Loyalty, Conflict of Interest vs Corruption, Police Ethics vs Criminal Justice Ethics, Advertising Ethics vs Consumer Ethics, and Public Interest vs Common Good show where readers are likely to blur nearby ideas and where a more precise vocabulary changes the interpretation.

The guides give the subject sequence. Applied Ethics for Real-World Problems, Applied Ethics: Technology, Health, and Environment, Applied Ethics: Public Life and Professional Power, Ethics: Core Theories, and Applied Ethics: Public Trust and Institutional Accountability help a reader decide what must come first, what can wait, and which distinction should be tested before moving on.

How This Helps Research

A research-minded reader can use this topic as an outline. The lead supplies the broad framing, the concept entries supply terms, the comparison pages supply thesis contrasts, and the guide pages supply order. Taken together, those pieces can become an essay plan, a seminar handout, or a self-study route.

The best use is iterative. Read one concept, write down the question it answers, then move to the next concept and ask what it changes. When the answer changes, the reader has found a real philosophical relation rather than a loose association. That relation is the unit of understanding this encyclopedia is trying to make visible.

For cross-tradition subjects, keep translation and setting visible. Some terms travel easily; others resist direct substitution. A useful note names the resistance without turning it into mystique or jargon.

Reading Order And Coverage

The safest first pass is to read from the broadest term toward the most contested one. Broad terms give orientation; contested terms reveal where the field becomes philosophically interesting. If the page feels large, begin with three concepts, one guide, and one comparison. That smaller route is enough to show the structure without turning the topic into a checklist.

A second pass should move in the opposite direction. Start with a specific confusion, then climb back to the wider cluster. This is often how readers actually learn philosophy: a puzzle about one term opens into a question about method, history, or evaluation. The topic page is meant to support that back-and-forth movement.

Coverage matters, but coverage is not the same as volume. A large topic is strong when it shows why each piece belongs. Concepts explain the vocabulary, guides explain sequence, comparisons explain boundaries, and sources explain trust. When all four appear together, the reader can see both breadth and shape.

How The Topic Can Grow

This cluster is designed to grow by adding depth along existing lines rather than by scattering disconnected pages. New entries should answer a missing reader question, clarify a neighboring term, or extend a tradition already named by the topic. That growth pattern keeps the page comprehensive without making it feel random.

The most valuable additions are usually not the most famous words. They are the terms that connect schools, arguments, and practices. A reader who understands those connecting terms can move from one page to another with a reason, not only with curiosity.

As the topic expands, the guiding test remains simple: can a reader tell what to read first, what to read next, and why the next page belongs here? If the answer is yes, the cluster is becoming an encyclopedia section rather than a directory.

What A Complete Pass Should Notice

A complete pass through this topic should notice at least four layers. The first layer is vocabulary: what the major terms mean and how they are normally introduced. The second layer is method: what kind of question each term is built to answer. The third layer is history: why the issue appears in this tradition, text, or debate. The fourth layer is application: what changes when the concept is used on an example.

Those layers prevent two common reading failures. One failure is treating the topic as a set of names to memorize. The other is treating every page as if it made the same kind of claim. Some pages define, some distinguish, some narrate a historical shift, and some ask the reader to test a practice or argument. Seeing the difference makes the cluster easier to study and easier to return to.

The reader should also watch for scale. A concept may look simple in a short definition and become difficult inside a text, institution, ritual, scientific debate, or moral conflict. Topic pages are where that change of scale becomes visible. They show how an idea moves from a sentence to a field of use.

The final check is whether the topic has changed the reader's questions. If the only result is a larger vocabulary, the pass was incomplete. If the reader can now ask sharper questions, locate better contrasts, and choose a more precise next page, the topic has done real educational work.

Questions To Carry Forward

A reader should carry three kinds of questions through this topic. The first kind asks for meaning: what does the term say, and what does it exclude? The second asks for use: what work does the term do inside an argument, practice, or interpretation? The third asks for limits: where does the term stop helping, and what other idea has to enter the discussion?

These questions are deliberately simple because they can travel across very different pages. They work for ancient texts, modern theories, religious traditions, political arguments, and classroom examples. A topic becomes easier to navigate when the reader can use the same small set of questions without flattening the differences between pages.

The carry-forward question also helps with memory. After reading a concept, write the one question that remains unresolved. Then open a guide or comparison page that seems likely to answer it. If the next page changes the question rather than merely answering it, the reader has found one of the deeper connections in the cluster.

This habit keeps the topic from feeling endless. Large coverage can become tiring when every link feels equally urgent. Questions create priority. They help the reader decide which concept matters now, which one can wait, and which comparison is needed before the next page will make sense.

A mature reading path ends with a better question than it began with. That is the mark of a rich topic page: it gives enough structure to orient the reader and enough openness to make further reading feel necessary rather than forced.

How To Know Where You Are

At any point in the topic, the reader should be able to answer a location question: am I reading a definition, a contrast, a historical bridge, or an application? Naming the location keeps the page from becoming a stream of information. It tells the reader what kind of attention the next section requires.

This matters most in broad topics where several traditions or subfields meet. A term may belong to one tradition by origin, another by later interpretation, and a third by classroom use. The topic page helps by placing the term beside guides and comparisons that make those movements easier to see.

The location question also supports returning readers. Someone who comes back after a week should not have to restart from the top. Clear sections, linked concepts, and repeated questions let the reader re-enter the topic at the right depth.

The strongest pages make that re-entry feel natural. A reader can skim the questions, open a concept, compare two terms, and then return with a sharper sense of what the topic is organizing.

That rhythm is what makes a large encyclopedia page readable. It offers breadth without asking the reader to absorb everything at once, and it offers depth without hiding the path back to the main question. It also lets a beginner and an advanced reader use the same page differently, with different levels of attention, rereading, purpose, patience, context, and prior knowledge.

Where Each Idea Starts

AI Ethics

01

AI Ethics is step 1 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. AI ethics asks what humans owe one another when decisions are delegated to artificial intelligence systems: who is accountable, what harms count, which benefits are real, and when a system should not be built or used.

Read AI Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Technology Ethics, Data Ethics, and Algorithmic Bias. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Technology Ethics

02

Technology Ethics is step 2 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Technology ethics asks how design choices become moral choices. It studies not only whether a tool works, but what habits, dependencies, rights, risks, and power relations the tool creates.

Read Technology Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: AI Ethics, Data Ethics, and Privacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Bioethics

03

Bioethics is step 3 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Bioethics asks how moral judgment should guide decisions about health, bodies, life, death, research, reproduction, disability, public health, and new biological technologies.

Read Bioethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Medical Ethics, Informed Consent, and Animal Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Medical Ethics

04

Medical Ethics is step 4 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Medical ethics asks what clinicians, patients, families, and health institutions should do when care involves risk, uncertainty, unequal power, scarce resources, and vulnerable bodies.

Read Medical Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Bioethics, Informed Consent, and Privacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Informed Consent

05

Informed Consent is step 5 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Informed consent is not just a signature. It asks whether someone has enough understanding, freedom, and decision-making capacity to authorize what will be done to them.

Read Informed Consent with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Bioethics, Medical Ethics, and Privacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Environmental Ethics

06

Environmental Ethics is step 6 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Environmental ethics asks whether nature matters only because it serves humans, or whether nonhuman beings, ecosystems, and future life have moral standing of their own.

Read Environmental Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Climate Justice, Animal Ethics, and Bioethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Climate Justice

07

Climate Justice is step 7 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Climate justice asks who caused climate risk, who suffers first, who has capacity to respond, and how the burdens of mitigation, adaptation, loss, and transition should be shared.

Read Climate Justice with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Environmental Ethics, Justice, and Social Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Animal Ethics

08

Animal Ethics is step 8 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Animal ethics asks whether animals matter morally for their own sake, and how sentience, suffering, flourishing, relationships, and ecological context should guide human treatment of them.

Read Animal Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Environmental Ethics, Bioethics, and Utilitarianism. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Data Ethics

09

Data Ethics is step 9 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Data ethics asks when information practices respect people and communities rather than turning them into extractable, risky, or manipulable data points.

Read Data Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Privacy, AI Ethics, and Algorithmic Bias. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Privacy

10

Privacy is step 10 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Privacy asks what should remain protected from unwanted access, exposure, inference, manipulation, or control so that persons and communities can live with dignity, trust, and agency.

Read Privacy with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Data Ethics, Surveillance, and Informed Consent. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Surveillance

11

Surveillance is step 11 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Surveillance ethics asks when watching, tracking, or profiling people is justified, and when it becomes domination, manipulation, discrimination, or a threat to privacy and democratic life.

Read Surveillance with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Privacy, Data Ethics, and AI Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Algorithmic Bias

12

Algorithmic Bias is step 12 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Algorithmic bias asks how automated systems can reproduce or intensify unfairness even when they appear neutral, technical, or statistically impressive.

Read Algorithmic Bias with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: AI Ethics, Data Ethics, and Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Business Ethics

13

Business Ethics is step 13 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Business ethics asks what companies and market actors owe to people affected by their decisions, not only what is legal, profitable, or strategically useful.

Read Business Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Professional Ethics, Justice, and Technology Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Professional Ethics

14

Professional Ethics is step 14 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Professional ethics asks how people should act when their role gives them knowledge, power, discretion, and responsibility that others must rely on.

Read Professional Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Medical Ethics, Business Ethics, and Technology Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Care Ethics

15

Care Ethics is step 15 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Care ethics asks what people owe one another when lives are interdependent, vulnerable, and sustained by relationships of attention, trust, responsibility, and practical support.

Read Care Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Medical Ethics, Bioethics, and Professional Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Public Health Ethics

16

Public Health Ethics is step 16 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Public health ethics asks how far communities and governments may go to protect population health, especially when safety, liberty, trust, justice, evidence, and unequal vulnerability conflict.

Read Public Health Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Bioethics, Medical Ethics, and Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Research Ethics

17

Research Ethics is step 17 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Research ethics asks how studies should be designed and governed so that the pursuit of knowledge does not exploit people, hide risks, distort evidence, or damage communities.

Read Research Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Informed Consent, Bioethics, and Data Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Engineering Ethics

18

Engineering Ethics is step 18 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Engineering ethics asks how technical expertise should serve safety, honesty, sustainability, public welfare, and responsible judgment when design choices can affect many people.

Read Engineering Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Professional Ethics, Technology Ethics, and Risk. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Platform Ethics

19

Platform Ethics is step 19 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Platform ethics asks how platforms should govern power over visibility, data, rules, recommendation, moderation, addiction, labor, and public discourse.

Read Platform Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Technology Ethics, Data Ethics, and Privacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Food Ethics

20

Food Ethics is step 20 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Food ethics asks what people, companies, governments, and communities owe one another when food choices affect bodies, animals, workers, land, climate, culture, and access to nourishment.

Read Food Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Animal Ethics, Environmental Ethics, and Business Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Neuroethics

21

Neuroethics is step 21 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Neuroethics asks how brain science and neurotechnology should be used when they affect responsibility, identity, privacy, treatment, enhancement, disability, and personhood.

Read Neuroethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Bioethics, Medical Ethics, and Privacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Reproductive Ethics

22

Reproductive Ethics is step 22 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Reproductive ethics asks how decisions about creating, carrying, avoiding, selecting, or supporting human life should respect autonomy, embodiment, care, equality, disability, family, and social power.

Read Reproductive Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Bioethics, Medical Ethics, and Informed Consent. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Disability Ethics

23

Disability Ethics is step 23 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Disability ethics asks how societies should understand disability without reducing disabled people to defects, burdens, inspiration, or medical problems.

Read Disability Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Care Ethics, Medical Ethics, and Reproductive Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Environmental Justice

24

Environmental Justice is step 24 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Environmental justice asks who bears environmental harm, who receives protection, who has voice in decisions, and how race, class, colonial history, disability, and place shape ecological risk.

Read Environmental Justice with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Climate Justice, Environmental Ethics, and Public Health Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Risk

25

Risk is step 25 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Risk asks how people and institutions should judge uncertain harms, distribute exposure, communicate uncertainty, and decide who may impose danger on whom.

Read Risk with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Harm, Public Health Ethics, and Engineering Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Harm

26

Harm is step 26 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Harm asks what counts as being wronged or damaged, who may impose costs on others, and when prevention, repair, compensation, or restriction is justified.

Read Harm with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Risk, Rights, and Public Health Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Collective Responsibility

27

Collective Responsibility is step 27 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Collective responsibility asks how responsibility should be assigned when many people contribute to a decision, system, benefit, harm, or failure together.

Read Collective Responsibility with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Professional Ethics, Business Ethics, and Climate Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Epistemic Injustice

28

Epistemic Injustice is step 28 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Epistemic injustice asks how people can be harmed not only by what is done to them, but by not being believed, understood, heard, or included in shared knowledge.

Read Epistemic Injustice with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Testimony, Recognition, and Disability Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Media Ethics

29

Media Ethics is step 29 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Media ethics asks how communication should serve truth, trust, dignity, privacy, democracy, and public understanding when attention, speed, profit, and power shape what people see.

Read Media Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Journalism Ethics, Platform Ethics, and Privacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Journalism Ethics

30

Journalism Ethics is step 30 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Journalism ethics asks what journalists owe the public when they select facts, protect sources, investigate power, report harm, correct mistakes, and decide what deserves attention.

Read Journalism Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Media Ethics, Epistemic Injustice, and Privacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Legal Ethics

31

Legal Ethics is step 31 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Legal ethics asks how lawyers should use specialized power when they owe duties to clients, courts, legal institutions, justice, and the public at the same time.

Read Legal Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Professional Ethics, Law, and Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Military Ethics

32

Military Ethics is step 32 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Military ethics asks how force can be constrained by moral judgment when soldiers, commanders, states, civilians, enemies, and institutions face danger, fear, uncertainty, and power.

Read Military Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Just War Theory, Professional Ethics, and Collective Responsibility. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Just War Theory

33

Just War Theory is step 33 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Just war theory asks whether armed force can ever be morally justified, and if so under what limits: just cause, legitimate authority, proportionality, last resort, discrimination, and responsibility after conflict.

Read Just War Theory with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Military Ethics, Harm, and Rights. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Education Ethics

34

Education Ethics is step 34 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Education ethics asks what schools, teachers, families, and societies owe learners when education shapes knowledge, identity, citizenship, opportunity, and the power to participate in public life.

Read Education Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Care Ethics, Justice, and Epistemic Injustice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Sports Ethics

35

Sports Ethics is step 35 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Sports ethics asks what makes competition fair and worthwhile when games involve rules, bodies, performance, money, identity, risk, and social meaning.

Read Sports Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Justice, Disability Ethics, and Business Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Migration Ethics

36

Migration Ethics is step 36 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Migration ethics asks who may move, who may exclude, what states owe migrants, refugees, citizens, and families, and how borders should be judged when people seek safety, work, dignity, or belonging.

Read Migration Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Citizenship, Justice, and Rights. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Housing Ethics

37

Housing Ethics is step 37 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Housing ethics asks what people are owed in relation to home: security, dignity, affordability, access, community, protection from displacement, and a real chance to live safely.

Read Housing Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Environmental Justice, Migration Ethics, and Social Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Energy Ethics

38

Energy Ethics is step 38 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Energy ethics asks how societies should power life without hiding costs: who gets reliable energy, who pays, who is exposed to extraction or pollution, and who carries the transition.

Read Energy Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Climate Justice, Environmental Justice, and Risk. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Workplace Ethics

39

Workplace Ethics is step 39 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Workplace ethics asks what employers, managers, workers, and institutions owe one another when labor is shaped by hierarchy, dependence, incentives, risk, and the need to earn a living.

Read Workplace Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Business Ethics, Professional Ethics, and Surveillance. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Consumer Ethics

40

Consumer Ethics is step 40 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Consumer ethics asks what buyers can and should be responsible for when purchases connect them to labor, animals, climate, privacy, advertising, inequality, and markets they do not fully control.

Read Consumer Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Business Ethics, Food Ethics, and Environmental Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Design Ethics

41

Design Ethics is step 41 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Design ethics asks what values are built into things before users ever choose: defaults, categories, affordances, exclusions, friction, visibility, accessibility, and incentives.

Read Design Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Technology Ethics, Engineering Ethics, and Platform Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Ethics

42

Ethics is step 42 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Ethics asks what makes actions right, lives good, people admirable, institutions just, and responsibilities binding.

Read Ethics with attention to its field, Moral philosophy, and to its related terms: Virtue Ethics, Deontology, and Utilitarianism. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Justice

43

Justice is step 43 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Justice asks how benefits, burdens, rights, offices, punishments, and forms of respect should be ordered so people are not merely managed but treated fairly.

Read Justice with attention to its field, Political philosophy, and to its related terms: Equality, Rights, and Liberty. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Rights

44

Rights is step 44 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Rights ask what individuals may claim against other people, institutions, and states, and what must not be traded away merely because doing so is useful.

Read Rights with attention to its field, Political philosophy, and to its related terms: Liberty, Equality, and Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Power

45

Power is step 45 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Power asks who can get things done, who can set the terms of action, and when influence becomes domination, authority, resistance, or shared political capacity.

Read Power with attention to its field, Political philosophy, and to its related terms: Authority, Domination, and Ideology. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Public Interest

46

Public Interest is step 46 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Public interest asks whose welfare an institution is supposed to serve when private incentives, professional loyalty, legal permission, and public harm pull in different directions.

Read Public Interest with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Common Good, Public Reason, and Professional Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Whistleblowing

47

Whistleblowing is step 47 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Whistleblowing asks when loyalty to an organization should yield to loyalty to patients, citizens, clients, workers, law, truth, or public safety.

Read Whistleblowing with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Loyalty, Public Interest, and Professional Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Loyalty

48

Loyalty is step 48 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Loyalty asks how far allegiance should go when a relationship, profession, nation, employer, or community asks for protection at the expense of truth or justice.

Read Loyalty with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Whistleblowing, Professional Ethics, and Public Interest. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Conflict of Interest

49

Conflict of Interest is step 49 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Conflict of interest asks whether a decision can be trusted when money, loyalty, ambition, politics, friendship, or career incentives pull against the role's duty.

Read Conflict of Interest with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Corruption, Professional Ethics, and Public Interest. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Corruption

50

Corruption is step 50 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Corruption asks how institutions decay when offices meant for public or fiduciary purposes are turned into tools of extraction, patronage, concealment, or private gain.

Read Corruption with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Conflict of Interest, Public Interest, and Legitimacy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Humanitarian Ethics

51

Humanitarian Ethics is step 51 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Humanitarian ethics asks how to help people under extreme vulnerability without turning aid into domination, political cover, neglect, or selective compassion.

Read Humanitarian Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Harm, Rights, and Public Interest. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Police Ethics

52

Police Ethics is step 52 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Police ethics asks when state force, surveillance, discretion, questioning, detention, and public order practices can be justified to the people who live under them.

Read Police Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Criminal Justice Ethics, Authority, and Law. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Criminal Justice Ethics

53

Criminal Justice Ethics is step 53 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Criminal justice ethics asks how societies should respond to wrongdoing without confusing accountability with cruelty, safety with control, or punishment with justice.

Read Criminal Justice Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Police Ethics, Restorative Justice, and Procedural Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Public Administration Ethics

54

Public Administration Ethics is step 54 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Public administration ethics asks how bureaucratic power can remain fair, accountable, competent, and public-facing when decisions are technical, slow, and often invisible.

Read Public Administration Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Public Interest, Corruption, and Technocracy. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Philanthropy Ethics

55

Philanthropy Ethics is step 55 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Philanthropy ethics asks when private generosity helps justice and when it lets wealthy donors set public priorities without democratic accountability.

Read Philanthropy Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Nonprofit Ethics, Public Interest, and Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Nonprofit Ethics

56

Nonprofit Ethics is step 56 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Nonprofit ethics asks how mission-driven organizations can serve people without turning need into branding, dependence, donor performance, or unaccountable power.

Read Nonprofit Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Philanthropy Ethics, Public Interest, and Professional Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Advertising Ethics

57

Advertising Ethics is step 57 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Advertising ethics asks when persuasion becomes manipulation, when targeting exploits vulnerability, and what truthful communication owes to consumer autonomy.

Read Advertising Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Persuasion Ethics, Consumer Ethics, and Business Ethics. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Persuasion Ethics

58

Persuasion Ethics is step 58 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Persuasion ethics asks what makes influence fair: truthfulness, transparency, respect for vulnerability, room for refusal, and accountable use of emotional pressure.

Read Persuasion Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Advertising Ethics, Liberty, and Public Reason. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Information Ethics

59

Information Ethics is step 59 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Information ethics asks how truth, privacy, access, credibility, ownership, misinformation, and digital infrastructure shape what people can know and do.

Read Information Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Data Ethics, Privacy, and Surveillance. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Accessibility Ethics

60

Accessibility Ethics is step 60 in this topic because it gives the reader a specific handle on the cluster's larger question. Accessibility ethics asks whether access is treated as a late accommodation or as a basic condition of equal participation, dignity, and public design.

Read Accessibility Ethics with attention to its field, Applied ethics, and to its related terms: Disability Ethics, Design Ethics, and Justice. Those links show where the idea stops being a definition and becomes part of a larger argument.

A useful note-taking move is to write one sentence beginning with "This concept matters because..." and then revise that sentence after reading one related page. The revision is the point: it shows how understanding changes when a concept is placed inside a larger network.

Questions To Carry Forward

Concepts in this cluster

AI Ethics

01
artificial intelligence ethicsethics of AI

AI ethics asks what humans owe one another when decisions are delegated to artificial intelligence systems: who is accountable, what harms count, which benefits are real, and when a system should not be built or used.

Technology Ethics

02
computer ethicsinformation ethics

Technology ethics asks how design choices become moral choices. It studies not only whether a tool works, but what habits, dependencies, rights, risks, and power relations the tool creates.

Bioethics

03
biomedical ethics

Bioethics asks how moral judgment should guide decisions about health, bodies, life, death, research, reproduction, disability, public health, and new biological technologies.

Medical Ethics

04
health care ethicsclinical ethics

Medical ethics asks what clinicians, patients, families, and health institutions should do when care involves risk, uncertainty, unequal power, scarce resources, and vulnerable bodies.

Informed Consent

05
autonomous authorization

Informed consent is not just a signature. It asks whether someone has enough understanding, freedom, and decision-making capacity to authorize what will be done to them.

Environmental Ethics

06
ecological ethics

Environmental ethics asks whether nature matters only because it serves humans, or whether nonhuman beings, ecosystems, and future life have moral standing of their own.

Climate Justice

07
climate ethics

Climate justice asks who caused climate risk, who suffers first, who has capacity to respond, and how the burdens of mitigation, adaptation, loss, and transition should be shared.

Animal Ethics

08
animals and ethicsmoral status of animals

Animal ethics asks whether animals matter morally for their own sake, and how sentience, suffering, flourishing, relationships, and ecological context should guide human treatment of them.

Data Ethics

09
information ethics

Data ethics asks when information practices respect people and communities rather than turning them into extractable, risky, or manipulable data points.

Privacy

10
privacy ethics

Privacy asks what should remain protected from unwanted access, exposure, inference, manipulation, or control so that persons and communities can live with dignity, trust, and agency.

Surveillance

11
surveillance ethics

Surveillance ethics asks when watching, tracking, or profiling people is justified, and when it becomes domination, manipulation, discrimination, or a threat to privacy and democratic life.

Algorithmic Bias

12
algorithmic unfairness

Algorithmic bias asks how automated systems can reproduce or intensify unfairness even when they appear neutral, technical, or statistically impressive.

Business Ethics

13
corporate ethics

Business ethics asks what companies and market actors owe to people affected by their decisions, not only what is legal, profitable, or strategically useful.

Professional Ethics

14
role ethicscodes of ethics

Professional ethics asks how people should act when their role gives them knowledge, power, discretion, and responsibility that others must rely on.

Care Ethics

15
ethics of care

Care ethics asks what people owe one another when lives are interdependent, vulnerable, and sustained by relationships of attention, trust, responsibility, and practical support.

Public Health Ethics

16
population health ethics

Public health ethics asks how far communities and governments may go to protect population health, especially when safety, liberty, trust, justice, evidence, and unequal vulnerability conflict.

Research Ethics

17
human subjects research ethics

Research ethics asks how studies should be designed and governed so that the pursuit of knowledge does not exploit people, hide risks, distort evidence, or damage communities.

Engineering Ethics

18
engineering responsibility

Engineering ethics asks how technical expertise should serve safety, honesty, sustainability, public welfare, and responsible judgment when design choices can affect many people.

Platform Ethics

19
social platform ethics

Platform ethics asks how platforms should govern power over visibility, data, rules, recommendation, moderation, addiction, labor, and public discourse.

Food Ethics

20
ethics of food

Food ethics asks what people, companies, governments, and communities owe one another when food choices affect bodies, animals, workers, land, climate, culture, and access to nourishment.

Neuroethics

21
ethics of neuroscience

Neuroethics asks how brain science and neurotechnology should be used when they affect responsibility, identity, privacy, treatment, enhancement, disability, and personhood.

Reproductive Ethics

22
procreative ethics

Reproductive ethics asks how decisions about creating, carrying, avoiding, selecting, or supporting human life should respect autonomy, embodiment, care, equality, disability, family, and social power.

Disability Ethics

23
disability justice ethics

Disability ethics asks how societies should understand disability without reducing disabled people to defects, burdens, inspiration, or medical problems.

Environmental Justice

24
environmental justice ethics

Environmental justice asks who bears environmental harm, who receives protection, who has voice in decisions, and how race, class, colonial history, disability, and place shape ecological risk.

Risk

25
risk ethics

Risk asks how people and institutions should judge uncertain harms, distribute exposure, communicate uncertainty, and decide who may impose danger on whom.

Harm

26
harm principle

Harm asks what counts as being wronged or damaged, who may impose costs on others, and when prevention, repair, compensation, or restriction is justified.

Collective Responsibility

27
shared responsibility

Collective responsibility asks how responsibility should be assigned when many people contribute to a decision, system, benefit, harm, or failure together.

Epistemic Injustice

28
testimonial injusticehermeneutical injustice

Epistemic injustice asks how people can be harmed not only by what is done to them, but by not being believed, understood, heard, or included in shared knowledge.

Media Ethics

29
communication ethics

Media ethics asks how communication should serve truth, trust, dignity, privacy, democracy, and public understanding when attention, speed, profit, and power shape what people see.

Journalism Ethics

30
news ethicsjournalistic ethics

Journalism ethics asks what journalists owe the public when they select facts, protect sources, investigate power, report harm, correct mistakes, and decide what deserves attention.

Legal Ethics

31
lawyer ethicsprofessional responsibility in law

Legal ethics asks how lawyers should use specialized power when they owe duties to clients, courts, legal institutions, justice, and the public at the same time.

Military Ethics

32
war ethicsethics of war

Military ethics asks how force can be constrained by moral judgment when soldiers, commanders, states, civilians, enemies, and institutions face danger, fear, uncertainty, and power.

Just War Theory

33
just war traditionjus ad bellum

Just war theory asks whether armed force can ever be morally justified, and if so under what limits: just cause, legitimate authority, proportionality, last resort, discrimination, and responsibility after conflict.

Education Ethics

34
ethics of education

Education ethics asks what schools, teachers, families, and societies owe learners when education shapes knowledge, identity, citizenship, opportunity, and the power to participate in public life.

Sports Ethics

35
sport ethicsphilosophy of sport

Sports ethics asks what makes competition fair and worthwhile when games involve rules, bodies, performance, money, identity, risk, and social meaning.

Migration Ethics

36
immigration ethics

Migration ethics asks who may move, who may exclude, what states owe migrants, refugees, citizens, and families, and how borders should be judged when people seek safety, work, dignity, or belonging.

Housing Ethics

37
ethics of housingright to housing

Housing ethics asks what people are owed in relation to home: security, dignity, affordability, access, community, protection from displacement, and a real chance to live safely.

Energy Ethics

38
energy justiceethics of energy

Energy ethics asks how societies should power life without hiding costs: who gets reliable energy, who pays, who is exposed to extraction or pollution, and who carries the transition.

Workplace Ethics

39
work ethicsemployment ethics

Workplace ethics asks what employers, managers, workers, and institutions owe one another when labor is shaped by hierarchy, dependence, incentives, risk, and the need to earn a living.

Consumer Ethics

40
ethical consumerismethical consumption

Consumer ethics asks what buyers can and should be responsible for when purchases connect them to labor, animals, climate, privacy, advertising, inequality, and markets they do not fully control.

Design Ethics

41
design for valuesethical design

Design ethics asks what values are built into things before users ever choose: defaults, categories, affordances, exclusions, friction, visibility, accessibility, and incentives.

Ethics

42

Ethics asks what makes actions right, lives good, people admirable, institutions just, and responsibilities binding.

Justice

43

Justice asks how benefits, burdens, rights, offices, punishments, and forms of respect should be ordered so people are not merely managed but treated fairly.

Rights

44

Rights ask what individuals may claim against other people, institutions, and states, and what must not be traded away merely because doing so is useful.

Power

45

Power asks who can get things done, who can set the terms of action, and when influence becomes domination, authority, resistance, or shared political capacity.

Public Interest

46

Public interest asks whose welfare an institution is supposed to serve when private incentives, professional loyalty, legal permission, and public harm pull in different directions.

Whistleblowing

47

Whistleblowing asks when loyalty to an organization should yield to loyalty to patients, citizens, clients, workers, law, truth, or public safety.

Loyalty

48

Loyalty asks how far allegiance should go when a relationship, profession, nation, employer, or community asks for protection at the expense of truth or justice.

Conflict of Interest

49

Conflict of interest asks whether a decision can be trusted when money, loyalty, ambition, politics, friendship, or career incentives pull against the role's duty.

Corruption

50

Corruption asks how institutions decay when offices meant for public or fiduciary purposes are turned into tools of extraction, patronage, concealment, or private gain.

Humanitarian Ethics

51

Humanitarian ethics asks how to help people under extreme vulnerability without turning aid into domination, political cover, neglect, or selective compassion.

Police Ethics

52

Police ethics asks when state force, surveillance, discretion, questioning, detention, and public order practices can be justified to the people who live under them.

Criminal Justice Ethics

53

Criminal justice ethics asks how societies should respond to wrongdoing without confusing accountability with cruelty, safety with control, or punishment with justice.

Public Administration Ethics

54

Public administration ethics asks how bureaucratic power can remain fair, accountable, competent, and public-facing when decisions are technical, slow, and often invisible.

Philanthropy Ethics

55

Philanthropy ethics asks when private generosity helps justice and when it lets wealthy donors set public priorities without democratic accountability.

Nonprofit Ethics

56

Nonprofit ethics asks how mission-driven organizations can serve people without turning need into branding, dependence, donor performance, or unaccountable power.

Advertising Ethics

57

Advertising ethics asks when persuasion becomes manipulation, when targeting exploits vulnerability, and what truthful communication owes to consumer autonomy.

Persuasion Ethics

58

Persuasion ethics asks what makes influence fair: truthfulness, transparency, respect for vulnerability, room for refusal, and accountable use of emotional pressure.

Information Ethics

59

Information ethics asks how truth, privacy, access, credibility, ownership, misinformation, and digital infrastructure shape what people can know and do.

Accessibility Ethics

60

Accessibility ethics asks whether access is treated as a late accommodation or as a basic condition of equal participation, dignity, and public design.