moralnormative
Moralnormative is a term used in philosophy to describe the normative dimension of morality—the standards, reasons, and rules that govern what people ought to do. It concerns duties, permissions, justifications, and the authority of moral norms over agents and institutions.
In practice, moralnormative judgments are distinguished from descriptive claims about what people believe or do and
Core components include moral reasons that count in favor of or against actions, obligations or duties, permissible
Contemporary debates address whether moral normativity is objective and universal or culturally relative; whether moral reasons
Applications appear in law, bioethics, business ethics, and artificial intelligence, where normative standards guide policies and