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Amoral

Amoral is an adjective that describes something lacking any sense of morality, or operating outside the framework of moral evaluation. It can refer to actions, systems, or beings that do not consider right or wrong, or to contexts in which moral judgments are not applied. This use is distinct from immoral, which denotes behavior that is judged to be wrong or contrary to moral norms. In common usage, amoral can describe indifference to moral questions or an absence of moral guidance rather than overt wrongdoing.

The term derives from the prefix a- meaning without, attached to moral; it entered English via French

In philosophy and ethics, amoral is used to characterize actors or phenomena that do not engage in

In practice, many discussions distinguish amoral from moral and immoral usage. For example, a tool or algorithm

See also: morality, immoral, amoralism, moral agency, ethics.

amoral,
reflecting
the
Latin
root
moralis.
moral
reasoning,
such
as
certain
nonhuman
animals
or
hypothetical
artificial
agents
that
lack
the
capacity
for
ethical
deliberation.
The
concept
is
debated;
some
theorists
argue
that
agents
can
be
amoral
by
nature,
while
others
maintain
that
all
intentional
beings
are
at
least
moral
agents
in
some
sense.
Amoral
descriptions
are
typically
descriptive
rather
than
prescriptive.
may
be
described
as
amoral
if
it
operates
without
moral
intent,
whereas
policies
or
actions
judged
to
violate
norms
may
be
described
as
immoral.
The
label
can
carry
normative
connotations
in
everyday
speech,
implying
indifference
or
deficiency
in
moral
sensibility.