Health is the requisite after morality
I learned a lot about morality from fiction, from movies.
Every important cultural gesture comes down to a morality, a model for human behavior concentrated into a gesture.
Veracity is the heart of morality.
Any virtue systematically applied becomes a vice. Morality is attention, not system.
When you take the high moral road it is difficult for anyone to object without sounding like a complete fool.
I gravitate toward the law, I think, certainly more times than not, because it's our best mechanism for legislating human behavior, and morality, and ethics.
The greatest works of literature seem to embody both "art" and "morality".
Morality knows nothing of geographical boundaries, or distinctions of race.
I once heard someone say morality was method. Do you hold with that? I suppose you wouldn't. You would say that morality was vested in the aim, I expect. Difficult to know what one's aims are, that's the trouble, specially if you're British.
Human well-being is not a random phenomenon. It depends on many factors - ranging from genetics and neurobiology to sociology and economics. But, clearly, there are scientific truths to be known about how we can flourish in this world. Wherever we can have an impact on the well-being of others, questions of morality apply.
The only morality in a cruel world is chance.
Capitalism doesn't consider morality. It considers profitability.
You can't legislate morality.
Those people who treat politics and morality separately will never understand either of them.
Once you know something is wrong, you're responsible, whether you see it, or hear about it, and most particularly when you're a part of it.
It is unreasonable [for a father] to expect moral success with [his] children without submitting to the laws of morality.
To love our neighbor as ourselves is such a truth for regulating human society, that by that alone one might determine all the cases in social morality.
The more a government strives to curtail freedom of speech, the more obstinately is it resisted ; not indeed by the avaricious,. . . but by those whom good education, sound morality, and virtue have rendered more free.
Liberty and morality had to win their way slowly over many centuries, until finally expanding liberty made possible the great technological advance of the Industrial Revolution and the flowering of modern capitalism.