For me, an area of moral clarity is: you're in front of someone who's suffering and you have the tools at your disposal to alleviate that suffering or even eradicate it, and you act.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It's through the small things that we develop our moral imagination, so that we can understand the sufferings of others.
I place a high moral value on the way people behave. I find it repellent to have a lot, and to behave with anything other than courtesy in the old sense of the word - politeness of the heart, a gentleness of the spirit.
I have a strong moral sense - by my standards.
Circumstances dictate your set of values, your set of morals.
What is moral is what you feel good after, and what is immoral is what you feel bad after.
I have empathy; I am humane. I understand human misery.
When we are confronted with extreme situations, we forget about moral issues; we simply act and must then accept the consequences.
The individual makes a clear effort to define moral values and principles that have validity and application apart from the authority of the groups of persons holding them and apart from the individual's own identification with the group.
I know only that what is moral is what you feel good after and what is immoral is what you feel bad after.
Suffering isn't a moral endowment. People don't always do well under duress, and it seemed to me to be truer to a fellow in that situation to make him angry.
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