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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Exploring two ethical theories – categorical imperativism and ethical egoism – helps one to gain a significantly better understanding as to why the Bush Administration should immediately transfer all detainees captured in the "War on Terror" to civilian detention centers and afford them with all of the due process rights that would pertain to them in the civilian judicial system but will most likely not do so. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCWarTerror.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
afford them with all of the due process rights that would pertain to them in the civilian judicial system. Exploring two ethical theories - categorical imperativism and ethical egoism
- helps one to gain a significantly better understanding as to why the Bush Administration should immediately transfer all detainees captured in the "War on Terror" to civilian detention centers
and afford them with all of the due process rights that would pertain to them in the civilian judicial system but will most likely not do so. Immanuel Kants position
on categorical imperativism is such that it represents "a command which expresses a general, unavoidable requirement of the moral law" (Palmquist, 1995). In order for such a universally accepted
approach to exist, however, mankind must adhere to three primary components: It extends to all people; it encourages for people to be treated as ends and "not merely as the
means to our own selfish ends" (Palmquist, 1995); and it allows us to "see other persons as mutual law-makers in an ideal realm of ends" (Palmquist, 1995). In order
to establish whether or not categorical imperativism truly exists within the confines of a society where its presidential administration balks at transferring all detainees captured in the "War on Terror"
to civilian detention centers and affording them with all of the due process rights that would pertain to them in the civilian judicial system, it is critical to first understand
the concepts behind both ethical relativism and ethical objectivism, philosophical ideals that make man the morally minded creatures he strives to be - although their principles are often overlooked or
misconstrued. To delve into the concept of ethical relativism as it relates to the nonaction taken by the Bush Administration is to examine
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