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Term Audio

Personal Morality

A TST specific term.

Personal Morality.

Personal morality is the individual’s sense of right and wrong and the principles used to guide personal choices.

Traditionally, personal morality refers to the values, duties, virtues, beliefs, and judgments a person uses when deciding how to act. It may come from family, religion, philosophy, culture, experience, conscience, or careful reflection. Personal morality can agree with group standards, but it can also challenge them when laws, customs, or institutions become unjust.

Within TST Ethics, Personal Morality is the choosing step of the TST Ethical Roadmap:

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

The Dichotomy of Control first identifies the moral agent and the boundaries of action. Group ethics then supplies the given guidance surrounding the decision, including laws, policies, rights, customs, professional standards, and shared moral traditions. Personal morality does not ignore that guidance, but neither does it surrender responsibility to it. The moral agent must still choose.

To make that choice, the moral agent uses the ethical tools most relevant to the situation. The Dichotomy of Advice helps sort guidance into avoiding what undermines flourishing and embracing what supports it. The Epicurean Pleasure Dichotomy helps evaluate pleasure and desire. The Stoic Virtue Framework helps build character and foster good intent. The Existential Toolkit helps with decisions involving identity and the Authentic Self. Confucian Role Ethics, Daoist Natural Alignment, and other inherited frameworks may also guide the choice.

Personal morality applies to individuals and to people making decisions on behalf of groups. When a board, government, family, company, or institution acts, its responsible decision-makers serve as the moral agents. They may act for a group, but they do not escape personal responsibility. They must still choose, act with good intent, weigh the real-world result against flourishing for all, and adjust when necessary.

The End.

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