Anything that makes it easier to imagine trading places with someone else increases your moral consideration for that other person.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Commerce, trade and exchange make other people more valuable alive than dead, and mean that people try to anticipate what the other guy needs and wants. It engages the mechanisms of reciprocal altruism, as the evolutionary biologists call it, as opposed to raw dominance.
Circumstances dictate your set of values, your set of morals.
There's nothing that will change someone's moral outlook quicker than cash in large sums.
There is a moral dimension, for me, in anything that's any good.
I don't want stuff that's compromising to me as a person, but as long as it has a pathway to redemption and has meaning, there's something solid in that in terms of the way I experience it.
Morality is a private and costly luxury.
Markets need morals.
The right moral compass is trying hard to think about what customers want.
I've yet to meet a person in my life who doesn't have some moral ambiguity.
Moral choices do not depend on personal preference and private decision but on right reason and, I would add, divine order.