Editor: The definition of a moral compass means to have a sense of right and wrong, or ethical values that guide one’s decisions, judgments and behavior. Our moral compass helps us to navigate life by ...
AI is advancing at such speed that speculative moral questions, once the province of science fiction, are suddenly real and pressing, says a philosopher and psychology researcher Frank Martela.
Editor: The following is a list of priorities in descending order that all GOP congressional candidates must adhere to. Win your respective election. Leave your ethics, moral compass, courage and ...
Middle managers get a bad rap. Blamed for being bottlenecks, pilloried as bureaucratic and ineffective, and painted as the “bad bosses” who send good talent running, they often bear the brunt of harsh ...
President-elect Donald Trump campaigned on lowering grocery prices. Yet he has had no meeting with multinational grocery manufacturers or grocery chain corporations. Instead, he wants to start wars ...
While the ethical conflicts discussed in medical school once focused primarily on patient privacy, end-of-life issues, and conflicts of interest with pharmaceutical companies, today, the list of ...
Treacherous was the moment. Most editors got a whiff of the story but were either afraid or reluctant to publish. Meffy (Godwin Emefiele, then CBN governor) had gone rogue in a perfect depiction of ...
It didn’t take long for President Trump to disgrace himself, again. His attempt to offer condolences to the families of the plane crash victims in Washington, D.C., was ruined by his politicization of ...
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New psychology research reveals that wisdom acts as a moral compass for creative thinking
A recent study published in the journal Intelligence has found that wisdom plays a key role in ensuring people use their creativity for the benefit of others. The findings suggest that while ...
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AI meets the conditions for having free will—we need to give it a moral compass, says researcher
AI is advancing at such speed that speculative moral questions, once the province of science fiction, are suddenly real and pressing, says Finnish philosopher and psychology researcher Frank Martela.
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