What does the concept of “morality” mean?
Very often morality is identified with morality and ethics. However, these concepts are not entirely similar. Morality is a set of norms and values of a particular person. It includes an individual’s ideas about good and evil, about how one should and should not behave in various situations.
Each person has his own criteria of morality. What seems completely normal to one is completely unacceptable to another. So, for example, some people have a positive attitude towards civil marriage and do not see anything bad in it. Others consider such cohabitation immoral and sharply condemn premarital relationships.
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SAMPLE CRITERIA OF MORALITY for a person
nature denies the behavior of people who commit
IMPOSSIBLE UNREASONABLE IMMORAL
negative destructive acts and even acts of thought, if acts are committed that are characterized as
1. Causing physical, moral, and energy-informational (mental) harm to humans and nature,
2. Obstruction to the processes of cognition and movement and the pursuit of the happiness of others
3. Foul language and bad thoughts
4. Unreasonable use of intoxicating and consciousness-blocking drugs, incl. drugs
5. practicing despondency, idleness, recluse, stubbornness
6. Obtaining benefits by deception, hypocrisy, violence, betrayal, perjury, neglect of one’s voluntarily accepted debts and obligations
7. Practice of anger, humiliation of others physically or morally, incl. psi actions
8. Parasitism on the life activity and results of the work of others,
9. Practice of selfish acquisitiveness, greedy desires for goods beyond what is necessary for one’s own life,
10. Exchange or sale of the values of your soul, health and love for consumer goods and money.
at the same time, nature supports the behavior of people who commit positive
PURPOSE, REASONABLE, MORAL acts,
This is behavior in life that ensures the achievement of personal happiness here and now through actions that bring well-being and conscious satisfaction to a person and good positivity to the people around him and nature, and this consists in -
1. Help people to commit moral actions and prevent them from committing immoral acts
2. Give love and gratitude to people and nature here and now, including for the kindness that you receive from others
3. Show respect for parents, parents, leaders, people, communities and their customs
4. Constantly learn the laws of the surrounding world - think, look, listen, master good truths and use them in your life, promoting and helping other people in this
5. Communicate with people, nature, convey to them your creative thoughts, feelings, enriching them with kindness, joy and satisfaction, helping them on the path to happiness.
6. Strive in your thoughts and actions to ensure that your work brings you joy and satisfaction, so that you feel happy and then you can make thousands happy.
7. Work conscientiously, create - create something new, useful, kind and joyful
8. Deny laziness, dream and ask nature for what you deserve, wish yourself complete happiness here and now
History of the problem
For as long as humanity can remember, the fight against immorality has been going on.
The source of morality for humanity is the Divine commandments, transmitted through prophets and messengers, of whom there were over 124 thousand. All the prophets of the Most High called for Monotheism, purity of thoughts and deeds. For this they were killed, persecuted and tortured. There have always been those who fought against the truth, but there were also those who accepted it, and these, of course, were the majority.
In different eras, spiritual guidelines were different. Sometimes people, guided by them, did things that would horrify a modern person. For example, the Egyptian pharaoh killed all newborn boys for fear of losing his kingdom. Remember the same Pompeii, Sodom and Gomorrah, destroyed by the Almighty for their unbelief, for crossing the boundaries of what is permitted.
If we look into history and turn to the memory of mankind, we will clearly see that moral standards of behavior, faith, honor, dignity, loyalty, love for the Motherland, a sense of duty and given word have always been above all for those who have reached at least a small part of the Laws Almighty. The echoes of the prophetic instructions and what remained of the Holy Scriptures, over the past centuries, were transformed in the minds of people into a moral code that they revered. And people died for these values.
In Rus', the “merchant’s word of honor” was inviolable and symbolized sincerity and directness.
Until recently, history remembers women always “with their heads covered.” Harlots, bacchantes, commoners, or those whom they wanted to disgrace threw off their veils. The more noble a woman, the more she was closed - with clothes and a fence - from prying eyes.
In Europe and Asia in the old days, girls always dressed modestly and covered their bodies - such clothing today is called a hijab and is attributed only to Muslims. In Rus', a woman who took off her headdress in public was said to have “lost her hair,” and this was considered extremely indecent.
The Mona Lisa is a portrait of a young woman painted by Italian artist Leonardo da Vinci around 1503. This is one of the most famous works of Renaissance painting, which by modern standards is considered the image of a modest woman. There is probably no person who has not seen this picture. However, studying the history of its writing, historians came to the conclusion that this image symbolized a girl of easy virtue, since women in those days did not allow themselves to expose their breasts and hair.
The problem of “alcoholism and offspring” has always worried the advanced minds of humanity. Two thousand years ago, Plutarch derived the famous formula “Ebrii ebrois gigunt” (“A drunkard gives birth to drunkards”). And Plato achieved the adoption of a law prohibiting drinking alcohol. The sage knew well that the still fragile body especially suffers from alcohol and that chronic alcoholics are primarily those who become addicted to wine from an early age. In ancient Rome, those who drank before the age of thirty were executed. This was explained by the fact that it was during these years that a person started a family and children. And in Carthage there was a law prohibiting drinking wine on days when marital duties were being performed. So, as we see, humanity, even at the dawn of civilization, fought for a healthy generation. The percentage of sincerity in those days was high. The love was pure and genuine.
Our Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him), the crown of the human race, who was sent down by mercy for all worlds, opened the way of deliverance from ignorance and darkness to science and light, his instructions have been educating humanity for over 1400 years. Thanks to him, millions of people overcame the threshold of poverty, got rid of the feeling of fear, he saved peoples from anarchy and violence and brought them to order. All the best that humanity has is inherited from the prophets, and the latest and greatest of them is Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him).
That is why the Almighty says in the Quran, addressing His Beloved (meaning): “I did not send you except as a mercy for the worlds” (Surah Al-Anbiya, verse 107).