Quotes about Ethics
The best argument I know for an immortal life is the existence of a man who deserves one.
— William James
The moral flabbiness born of the bitch-goddess SUCCESS. That — with the squalid interpretation put on the word success — is our national disease.
— William James
The difference between a good man and a bad man is the choice of cause.
— William James
If the atheist believes that suffering is bad or ought not to be, then he's making moral judgments that are possible only if God exists.
— William Lane Craig
For a universe without moral accountability and devoid of value is unimaginably terrible.
— William Lane Craig
How would you explain the fact that atheists just know that harming an innocent human being is wrong, and can live good lives, without believing that God is the ultimate source of values and duties? To repeat: Belief in God is not necessary for objective morality; God is.
— William Lane Craig
If life ends at the grave, then it makes no ultimate difference whether you live as a Stalin or as a Mother Teresa. Since your destiny is ultimately unrelated to your behavior, you may as well just live as you please. As the Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky put it: "If there is no immortality … then all things are permitted.
— William Lane Craig
The point is that if there is no God, then objective right and wrong do not exist.
— William Lane Craig
Dostoyevsky said, "All things are permitted." But man cannot live this way. So he makes a leap of faith and affirms values anyway. And when he does so, he reveals the inadequacy of a world without God.
— William Lane Craig
A legacy of true value is a legacy made of more than money. It's a legacy conceived in wisdom, nurtured by principle, and sustained by character.
— David Green
I overhear the Manyuema telling each other that I am the "good one." I have no slaves, and I owe this character to the propagation of a good name by the slaves of Zanzibar, who are anything but good themselves.
— David Livingstone
Euthanasia is a grave violation of the law of God, since it is the deliberate and morally unacceptable killing of a human person.
— Pope John Paul II