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Term Audio

A TST specific term.

Group Ethics.

Group ethics is the shared guidance a group provides to the people acting within it.

Traditionally, group ethics includes the laws, rules, duties, rights, customs, policies, and standards that help families, communities, professions, institutions, and governments function. This guidance gives people a common framework for deciding what is permitted, required, fair, or harmful. It creates order, but it is never infallible. Groups can be mistaken, unjust, inconsistent, or slow to change.

Within TST Ethics, flourish for all is the goal and is all you need to remember for most decisions. When needed, Group Ethics is the guidance step of the TST Ethical Roadmap:

Group ethics guides. Personal morality chooses. Act with good intent. Weigh the result. Adjust.

Group ethics supplies the given guidance surrounding a decision, but it does not make the final choice. The moral agent must still decide what to do. When a group acts, its responsible decision-makers become the moral agents acting on its behalf. They inherit existing laws, policies, traditions, and standards, but they also remain responsible for questioning and improving them.

TST uses a moral engine to help groups create, test, and revise shared guidance. A proposed rule is tested for consistency, reciprocity, consequences, fairness, and real-world results. Decision-makers ask whether it can be applied fairly, whether they would accept it if roles were reversed, what harms and benefits it produces, and whether power and burdens are balanced. After the rule is used, they examine what reality taught them and recalibrate when needed.

Group ethics is therefore both inherited guidance and guidance under construction. It guides moral agents, but moral agents also build it. Flourishing for all remains the north star, and no law, institution, or tradition is beyond revision when its real-world effects undermine truth, fairness, rights, or lasting well-being.

The End.

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