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         Ethical Culture:     more books (100)
  1. The Ethics of Culture by Samuel Fleischacker, 1994-09
  2. Damned If You Do: Dilemmas of Action in Literature and Popular Culture
  3. Toxic Wealth: How the Culture of Affluence Can Harm Us and Our Children by Orla Cashman, James A. Twaite, 2009-07-08
  4. Conscience and Corporate Culture (Foundations of Business Ethics) by Kenneth E. Goodpaster, 2006-08-18
  5. Connecting Social Problems in Popular Culture by Karen Sternheimer, 2009-08-11
  6. Some ethical phases of Eskimo culture by Albert Nicolay Gilbertson, 2010-08-20
  7. Culture and Democracy: Social and Ethical Issues in Public Support for the Arts and Humanities
  8. Temptations in the Office: Ethical Choices and Legal Obligations by Stephen M. Goldman, 2008-04-30
  9. From Hermeneutics to Ethical Consensus Among Cultures by Pier Cesare Bori, 1994-01-01
  10. Human freedom an Indian culture: Christian ethical reflections by T. Jacob Thomas, 1995
  11. Creating an ethical culture: values-based ethics programs can help employees judge right from wrong.(MCI Inc.)(Cover story): An article from: Strategic Finance by David Gebler, 2006-05-01
  12. DEDICATION OF THE MEETING-HOUSE OF THE SOCIETY FOR ETHICAL CULTURE OF NEW YORK OCTOBER 23rd -26th, 1910 by ethics, 1910
  13. Ivy Preparatory School League: Horace Mann School, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, Dalton School, Riverdale Country School, Trinity School
  14. Education through experience: A four year experiment in the Ethical culture school by Mabel Ray. Goodlander, 1921-01-01

41. One Side Of Kipling - William M. Salter
Critical essay on Rudyard Kipling's imperial ethics by William M. Salter of the Chicago Society for ethical culture, 1900.
http://www.boondocksnet.com/ai/kipling/salter_kipling.html

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One Side of Kipling
By William M. Salter
The Ethical Record 2 (Oct.-Nov. 1900). T In Kipling these thoughts, these sentiments, these very words appear to have vanished. It is said by those who have read him carefully that the word "freedom" does not occur in his books. Certainly he has no song in praise of liberty and I remember scarcely an instance in which he shows sympathy with an oppressed people or class. The soldier is the man he celebrates and his praises are almost all of war. For the Czar's late peace-proposal, which struck almost all the world as pathetically sincere, he had only a sneer. He appears not to believe in the brotherhood of the nations and looks forward to "the last great fight of all" in which Anglo-Saxon supremacy on the earth shall be triumphantly asserted. Tennyson's great dream of "a Parliament of Man, a Federation of the World" has faded out of his mind. It is not that it is utopian merely; apparently he does not wish it. It is this side of Kipling that I wish to take up. I do not forget that there is another. There is unquestionable charm and an entirely innocent charm in the "Jungle Books." For the lover of good stories he has spread an abundant banquet there are ten or twelve volumes of them. The world of India is made very real to one after reading them, and so is life on the sea. He takes us into strange places and among strange peoples; he recites wild adventures, and he admires pluck and hard work everywhere, and all this is well. But it is as the poet of militant England and militant America, of a militant ethics and a militant religion, that I wish to consider him.

42. Ethical Culture Roots
ethical culture Roots. Perspectives from the history of ethical culture Death PenaltyAgainst the Execution of Children. ethical culture vs. Imperialism. MORE
http://roots.ethicalmanifold.net/
Ethical Culture Roots
Perspectives from the history of Ethical Culture
Death Penalty: Against the Execution of Children
The following statement has been issued on December 12, 2002, by the President of the American Ethical Union and the President of the National Leaders Council of the American Ethical Union. It is consistent with past positions of the American Ethical Union on the death penalty and on children's issues. MORE...
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Festival of the Winter Solstice
Felix Adler - 1884
contributed to this site by Jean Kotkin, December, 2002 The festival of the Winter Solstice was originally designed to celebrate the indestructible life in nature. The higher thought today is that the moral life of the world which appears so far as we know, in human beings only, is also indestructible - that after every defeat it rises to new victory - that after every obscuration it shines forth with new brightness. What is the symbol to which all shall express the thoughts that we in Ethical Culture would connect with the festival of the Winter Solstice? Is it the Christmas tree. or the old Yule tree which prior to the Christmas tree, symbolized the rekindling of the darkened light of the sun? But it expresses only the physical side of the festival, the fact of the evergreen life of external nature. For the higher, the spiritual nature, it does not stand. The only symbol that can be adequate for us is the child - the child not merely as it plays around the tree, not as it enjoys its gifts, not in relation to its parents who take great pleasure in its happiness, but the child apart from all these connections, the child as the vehicle of a new moral life, and therefore the type of the ever-recurring renewal of the moral life, the child as the promise and the pledge of the whole unspeakable future.

43. The Philippine War - Two Ethical Questions - Felix Adler
Speech on atrocities and patriotism during the PhilippineAmerican War by Felix Adler, founder of the Society for ethical culture, April 1902.
http://www.boondocksnet.com/ai/ailtexts/adler02.html

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The Philippine War: Two Ethical Questions
By Felix Adler
Ethical Addresses 9:10 (June 1902). An address before the Society for Ethical Culture of New York, April 1902, reprinted from the June Forum . Is it treason to condemn a war waged by our country while the war is still in progress? 2. Are civilized nations justified in adopting uncivilized methods of warfare? As a matter of fact, during our Civil War, when the existence of the Union was at stake, President Lincoln strained to their very limit the powers of government entrusted to him. The writ of habeas corpus was suspended. The liberty of the individual was curtailed, men being forced into the service by process of conscription. And the point here pertinent the freedom of the press was seriously restricted, the Postmaster-General having issued an order closing the mails to certain newspapers in sympathy with the rebellion, and confiscating copies of one of them in order to prevent the spread of the opinions which it advocated. Such and other measures like them were sustained by the people. "Inter arma silent leges" (amid the clash of arms the laws are silent). Or, rather, in times of extreme peril to the state there is a single law that supersedes all others. It is the law of national self-defense, of national self-preservation. Even if free speech and unlimited discussion in the United States had the effect throughout all the Philippine archipelago of rendering the natives dissatisfied with our present military and semi-military government, and inspired them with the love and hope of liberty and independence, so that larger armies would be needed to keep them in colonial subjection that, aye, and more than that, would be preferable, and infinitely preferable, to our renunciation of the principle of free speech, of the sovereignty of public opinion, of government of the people, for the people, and by the people, which is the soul and glory of our republic.

44. Ethical Culture Roots: Ethical Culture Vs. Imperialism
ethical culture Roots. Perspectives from the history of Ethical EthicalCulture vs. Imperialism. Jim Zwick writes about the influential
http://roots.ethicalmanifold.net/archives/000051.html
Ethical Culture Roots
Perspectives from the history of Ethical Culture Main Back
Ethical Culture vs. Imperialism
Jim Zwick writes about the "influential role" in the anti-imperialist movement played by leaders of the Ethical Culture movement in the late 19th and early 20th century. Articles by Felix Adler, William M. Salter, Jane Addams and others present an ethical perspective on war and imperialism. Jim Zwick's article and complete list of historical essays Articles by Adler on the site include:
The Parting of the Ways in the Foreign Policy of the United States
, Oct. 1898. The White Man's Burden Is Sentimentalism , March 12, 1899. The Philippine War: Two Ethical Questions , April 1902. Anti-Democratic Tendencies in American Life , July 1904. The World Crisis and Its Meaning Civilization and Progress in the Light of the Present War The National Character Spiritually Transformed National Self-Determination and Its Limits , Nov. 24, 1918.
Articles by William M. Salter include:
Imperialism
, by William M. Salter, Feb. 12, 1899. The New Militarism , April 16, 1899.

45. Community Connection: Ethical Culture Society Of Essex County
ethical culture Society of Essex County. Click below homepage. EthicalCulture is a religious, philosophical, and educational movement. Our
http://community.nj.com/cc/ethicalculture
Ethical Culture Society of Essex County Click below for more information:
homepage
Ethical Culture is a religious, philosophical, and educational movement. Our focus is on how we live our lives and not on what we believe. An Ethical Society is a community of individuals dedicated to making our lives and our world more humane, more ethical; Dedicated to the ideal that every human being has worth and dignity, and committed to a reverence for this world and all life. Searching for a better understanding of how the world actually is, what potentials exist, and what yet must be done to build a better life: through analysis and critique of social and personal conditions, through creative inquiry for realistic solutions to heal pain, reduce suffering, and add to hope, and through actively testing our conclusions in the world by our own experience and the experience of others.
Ethical Culture Society of Essex County
516 Prospect St.
Maplewood, NJ 07040
Phone:
t12325@aol.com

46. Community Connection: Ethical Culture Society Of Essex County
ethical culture Society of Essex County. Click below for more information http//sites.netscape.net/essexethical/homepage. Tell your friends about this site!
http://community.nj.com/cc/ethicalculture?sendThisNow=Y

47. Philosophy And Beliefs Of Ethical Culture
Philosophy and Beliefs of ethical culture What does it mean to be an ethicscenteredreligious community? Is ethical culture a religion?
http://www.ethicalstl.org/philosophy.shtml
Home
St. Louis Ethical Society

About Us
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Philosophy and Beliefs
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Support Groups Humanist of the Year Award
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Singles
Tuesday Women's Association Fun(d)raisers Special Events ... more... Resources Rentals, Weddings Online Library Other Resources Philosophy and Beliefs of Ethical Culture What does it mean to be an ethics-centered religious community? This list of frequently asked questions will give you insight into what members of the Ethical Society of St. Louis—and members of the 25 other Ethical Culture societies and fellowships throughout the United States—believe. Click on the links below to jump to particular information in the FAQ. We also invite you to visit our online library for platform presentations and other readings on ethical living and to check out some other resources , such as Web sites and books, that provide more information on Ethical Culture.

48. Riverdale-Yonkers Society For Ethical Culture
Visit us at our new Home. www.ethicsny.org.
http://home.earthlink.net/~rysec/
Visit us at our new Home www.ethicsny.org

49. Ethical Culture Movement
ethical culture Movement What is the ethical culture Movement? Theethical culture Movement was founded in 1876 by Felix Adler.
http://www.phillyethics.net/site/ethical_culture_movement.shtml
Philadelphia
Ethical Society 1906 S. Rittenhouse Square - (215) 735-3456
Ethical Culture Movement
What is the Ethical Culture Movement?
The Ethical Culture Movement was founded in 1876 by Felix Adler. Our Movement established the country’s first Settlement Houses and the Visiting Nurses Association. We helped initiate free legal aid for the poor and served as a sanctuary to European refugees during World War II. The Philadelphia Ethical Society was founded in 1885 and was, in turn, a founding member of our national organization, the American Ethical Union. With chapters from Boston to Los Angeles, our guiding principle remains the primacy of ethics in daily life. More about the Philadelphia Ethical Society
More about Ethical Culture, or to find an Ethical Society in a different city

About the International Humanist and Ethical Union
Common Questions What is the Philadelphia Ethical Society?
What is the Ethical Culture Movement?

What do Ethical Humanists believe?

Is the Ethical Society a religion?
...
Where are other Ethical Societies?
Seek always to elicit the best in others, thus bringing out the best in yourself.
Felix Adler, Founder of the Ethical Culture Movement, 1876

50. Eight Commitments Of Ethical Culture
Eight Commitments of ethical culture Ethics is Central. Affiliated with theAmerican Ethical Union, A Federation of ethical culture Societies.
http://www.phillyethics.net/site/8_commitments_ethical_culture.shtml
Philadelphia
Ethical Society 1906 S. Rittenhouse Square - (215) 735-3456
Eight Commitments
of Ethical Culture
Ethics is Central
The most central human issue in our lives is creating a more humane environment.
Ethics Begins with Choice
Creating a more humane environment begins by affirming the need to make significant choices in our lives.
We Choose to Treat Each Other as Ends, not Means
To enable us to be whole in a fragmented world, we choose to treat each other as unique individuals having intrinsic worth.
We Seek to Act with Integrity
Treating one another as ends requires that we learn to act with integrity. This includes keeping commitments, and being honest, open, caring and responsive.
We are Committed to Educate Ourselves
Personal progress is possible, both in wisdom and social life. Learning how to build ethical relationships and cultivate a humane community is a life-long endeavor.
Self Reflection and Our Social Nature Require Us to Shape a More Humane World
Growth of the human spirit is rooted in self-reflection, but can only come to full flower in community. This is because people are social, needing both primary relationships and larger supportive groups to become fully human. Our social nature requires that we reach beyond ourselves to decrease suffering and increase creativity in the world.
Democratic Process is Essential to Our Task
The democratic process is essential to a humane social order because respect for the worth of persons requires democratic process which elicits and allows a greater expression of human capacities.

51. Ethical Culture Society Of Westchester, White Plains, New York
ethical culture Society. of Westchester. NOTE Thispage has been moved to http//users.aol.com/ecsw1.
http://users.aol.com/JSegall780/welcome.htm
Ethical Culture Society
of Westchester
NOTE: This page has been moved to: http://users.aol.com/ecsw1

52. Princeton Ethical Humanist Fellowship Homepage
Princeton Ethical Humanist Fellowship ethical culture Serving Central New Jersey, member of the American Category Society Religion and Spirituality ethical culture Societies......Princeton Ethical Humanist Fellowship a member of the American EthicalUnion. ethical culture Serving Central New Jersey. About ethical culture.
http://njcc.com/~reichart/pehf.html
Princeton Ethical Humanist Fellowship
Ethical Culture Serving Central New Jersey
If you're not practicing your religion, perhaps you're practicing ours
Please drop by frequently
This page last updated January 18, 2003 You are visitor number since 1/21/00 Contents:
The PEHF Statement of Purpose
The goal of the Princeton Ethical Humanist Fellowship is to establish a growing community of friends, who will search for the highest ethical principles through the exchange of ideas, in mutual trust and respect.
The Fellowship should help its members understand that how people relate to one another is the greatest concern of ethical humanism, should help them present Ethical Culture ideas to others, and should work to improve relationships among people in society at large.
Who We Are
The Fellowship was founded in 1986 to represent the Ethical Culture Movement in central New Jersey. Members reside not only in Princeton Borough and Township but throughout the surrounding region.

53. An Ethical Culture Table Grace
ethical culture Serving Central New Jersey. AN ethical culture TABLE GRACE WeHope For An ethical culture That Will Nourish People Everywhere.
http://njcc.com/~reichart/grace1.html
AN ETHICAL CULTURE TABLE GRACE We Here Gathered Are
Grateful To Those People,
Known And Unknown To Us,
Who Have Given Their Efforts
To Provide Us With This Meal. Along With Others, The Work Of The
Farmer And The Grocer, The Shopper
And The Cook, Keeps Us Healthy Today. We Hope For An Ethical Culture That
Will Nourish People Everywhere. ... Gene Queval, President, Princeton Ethical Humanist Fellowship

54. Conduct An Ethical Culture Audit Before Taking A Job - Page.1
Given the current environment and the growing number of corporate scandals, thereare a number of questions that one should ask abut the ethical culture of an
http://www.jobweb.com/Resources/Library/Workplace_Culture/Conduct_an_Ethical_190

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Conduct an Ethical Culture Audit Before Taking a Job
While advancement opportunities, corporate culture, salary, and signing bonuses are important factors when considering a job offer, a Penn State authority on ethics and leadership advises conducting an ethical culture audit before joining any firm. "Given the current environment and the growing number of corporate scandals, there are a number of questions that one should ask abut the ethical culture of an organization before accepting a job," says Linda K. Trevino, professor of organizational behavior in the Penn State Smeal College of Business, and co-author of the book, Managing Business Ethics: Straight Talk About How to Do It Right. She points out that while many large corporations now have formal programs for managing ethical behavior and legal compliance, human resources departments often play only a minor role in companies' ethics management efforts. In her book, with Katherine Nelson, Trevino recommends dividing the ethical culture into formal and informal systems, then asking the following 15 questions.

55. Is Ethical Culture Right For You?
Is ethical culture Right For You? There are several resources availableto help you decide if ethical culture may be right for you.
http://ethicalculturesociety.org/favorite.htm
Is Ethical Culture Right For You?
There are several resources available to help you decide if ethical culture may be right for you. You can start by checking out the beliefs of ethical culture on the national site, American Ethical Union . Helpful links on the site include: A Statement of Purpose The Eight Commitments of Ethical Culture Common Questions Top 10 Reasons Ethical Culture May be Right For You Once you know our ideas suit your needs, you can look at the specific activities of our Puget Sound group. Our primary activity is the Sunday meeting platforms. You're welcome to read Past Platforms from selected Sunday meetings. There are also other ways to participate in ethical culture such as a reading group and weekend workshops. Visit our Current Activities page for a detailed list of ways to participate in ethical culture. The best way to find out is to just give it a try. Stop by a Sunday platform to meet our members and experience ethical culture firsthand. You'll find the group to be very friendly and glad to answer any questions you may have.

56. ABCNEWS.com : Are Ethics In The Workplace Disappearing?
(PhotoDisc), ethical culture Is the Enron Saga a Sign that Ethicsin the Workplace Are Disappearing? By Catherine Valenti Feb. 21
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/business/DailyNews/corporate_ethics_020221.html
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Unethical behavior in the workplace is often the result of pressure from above, say experts. (PhotoDisc) Ethical Culture Is the Enron Saga a Sign that Ethics in the Workplace Are Disappearing?
By Catherine Valenti
Feb. 21
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MORE ON THIS STORY FULL COVERAGE The Enron Implosion: Full Coverage IN DETAIL Vote: Ethics at Work COMMUNITY Debating Ethical Behavior RELATED STORIES Are You Ethical? The Truth Isn't Exactly Clear.

57. The New York Review Of Books: THE ETHICAL CULTURE SCHOOL
Letter. THE ethical culture SCHOOL. By Rosalind Singer, Reply by Jeremy Bernstein.In response to Creators of the Bomb (May 11, 2000). To the Editors
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/15324
@import "/css/default-b.css"; Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books The New York Review of Books
April 25, 2002
Letter
THE ETHICAL CULTURE SCHOOL
By Rosalind Singer , Reply by Jeremy Bernstein
In response to Creators of the Bomb (May 11, 2000) To the Editors In his review of In the Shadow of the Bomb: Oppenheimer, Bethe, and the Moral Responsibility of the Scientist , by S.S. Schweber [ NYR , May 11, 2000], Jeremy Bernstein states: "Oppenheimer...was educated at the Ethical Culture School in New York. This leads Schweber to devote several pages to a somewhat tedious digression into the ideas of Felix Adler, who founded the school. What any of this had to do with Oppenheimer is not entirely clear." I have not read Schweber's book, but as a graduate of the Ethical Culture Schools, I can tell the reviewer that the philosophy of Dr. Felix Adler had an enormous impact on all of us. For these reasons it seems to me that Bernstein's comment "What any of this had to do with Oppenheimer is not en-tirely clear" is incomprehensible. Although I could not understand much of the physics that Oppenheimer spoke about, I, along with many of my fellow alumni from Ethical, could very well understand most of his social and ethical comments. We all drank from the same philosophical fount. Rosalind Singer
Berkeley, California

58. Praxes Of Ethical Religion: Ethical Culture And Pragmatism
Praxes of Ethical Religion. How do we actualize our ethical culturefaith? What must one ethical culture and Pragmatism. In 1933 VT
http://collier.ethicalmanifold.net/archives/000094.html
Praxes of Ethical Religion
How do we actualize our Ethical Culture faith? What must one do to be ethical or to affirm the worth and dignity of others? These topics, and others, will be explored by Curt Collier on this site.
Main
Back
Ethical Culture and Pragmatism
In 1933 V.T. Thayer, the director of the Ethical Culture schools, signed the Humanist Manifesto. This fact was kept from Felix Adler, the founder of Ethical Culture, who was near death at the time, as it was believed that this news would have been too acrimonious for Adler and would have pushed the frail old man over the edge. You see, Felix Adler, the great moral champion who founded the Ethical Culture religion in 1876, was a neo-Kantian Idealist. He was opposed to Humanism for two principle reasons; first, because the term itself at that time was more commonly associated with Auguste Comte's (kawnt) curiously positivistic and ritualistic "Religion of Humanity." But more troublesome for dear old Adler was the creeping specter of pragmatic and naturalistic beliefs that were being espoused by some humanists such as John Dewey, who also signed the Humanist Manifesto. Adler was fearful that the foundation of human worth upon which he had constructed his whole moral philosophy, would collapse on the loose shifting sands of a pragmatism that eschewed certainty.

59. A Humanist Fellowship: Ethical Culture Festivals
A Humanist Fellowship. From Bart Worden, Leader, ethical culture Societyof Westchester « War with Iraq Main Back ethical culture Festivals.
http://worden.ethicalmanifold.net/archives/000046.html
A Humanist Fellowship
From Bart Worden, Leader, Ethical Culture Society of Westchester Main Back
Ethical Culture Festivals
Article for The Page 11-02 This year the American Ethical Union's Religious Education Committee hosted a weekend conference on the topic of festivals and I was asked to speak on the topic Saturday morning. In order to prepare for my workshop I visited the AEU archives in New York City and, with the help of archivist, Marc Bernstein, found some interesting materials from the early days of Ethical Culture. Among the items were two addresses, one from W. Edwin Collier and the other from Felix Adler, that provided very helpful guidelines for understanding the function of festivals for Ethical Societies.
W. Edwin Collier was the Leader of the Philadelphia Ethical Society in 1906 when he wrote "The Abiding Value of the Christmas Myth." He makes the distinction between "myths" and "legends" and notes that both legends and myths refer to stories whose origins have been forgotten, but legends have no deeper significance while myths serve to explain some practice, belief, institution or natural phenomenon of religious significance. Further, myths have, according to Collier, two main ingredients: the poetic imagination which personifies aspects of Nature and "the moral consciousness which changes the subject from Nature to human nature and the facts of moral experience." Collier's point about myths is that they help us locate ourselves within the history of human culture and within the tradition of ethical evolution. Myths provide narratives that call attention to our presence in the natural world and to our human experience of the natural world. When we share myths we generate opportunities to appreciate the deeper meanings implicit in our experiences and opportunities to explore the ethical ideals that respond to our experiences.

60. Ethical Culture Fieldston Schools
ethical culture Fieldston Schools. Fieldston Lower. Fieldston Road ManhattanCollege Parkway. Bronx NY 104713997. 718-329-7313. Fax 718-329-7304.
http://www.isaagny.org/ethical_culture_fieldston_school_bronx.htm
Ethical Culture Fieldston Schools Fieldston Lower Bronx NY 10471-3997 Fax: 718-329-7304 Dr. Joseph Healey, Head of School
George Burns, Principal Rita McRedmond, Admissions Early Childhood, Elementary, Coed To visit their web site click here

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