scruple$73059$ - meaning and definition. What is scruple$73059$
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What (who) is scruple$73059$ - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Scruple (disambiguation)

Scrupulum         
ANTIQUE UNIT OF MASS AND OTHER QUANTITIES
, meaning a tiny stone (from sharp stone), indicates a weight of 1/24 of an ounce or, by extension, of other measures. Metaphorically, the stone is thought to be sharp and pricking, like a thorn.
conscience         
  • [[Global warming]] protestors in Chicago 2008
  • [[Gao Zhisheng]] human rights lawyer abducted in China
  • [[Adam Smith]]: conscience shows what relates to ourselves in its proper shape and dimensions
  • [[Albert Einstein]] associated conscience with suprapersonal thoughts, feelings and aspirations.
  • Schopenhauer]] considered that the good conscience we experience after an unselfish act verifies that our true self exists outside our physical person
  • The medieval Persian philosopher [[Ibn Sina]] ([[Avicenna]]) developed a sensory deprivation thought experiment to explore the relationship between conscience and God
  • [[Henry David Thoreau]]: Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the least degree, resign his conscience to the legislator?
  • [[Marcus Aurelius]] bronze fragment, Louvre, Paris: "To move from one unselfish action to another with God in mind. Only there, delight and stillness."
  • [[Dietrich Bonhoeffer]] (1932)
  • J.S. Bach]]. Original page from Credo (Symbolum Nicenum) section of [[Mass in B minor]]
  • [[Charles Darwin]] thought that any animal endowed with well-marked social instincts would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as its intellectual powers approximated man's.
  • [[Anton Pavlovich Chekhov]]. Tretyakov Gallery.
  • Illustration of [[François Chifflart]] (1825–1901) for ''La Conscience'' (by [[Victor Hugo]])
  • [[Darfur]] [[refugee camp]] in [[Chad]]: a challenge to the world's conscience.
  • Protests in India against the [[2012 Delhi gang rape case]]
  • [[Fyodor Dostoevsky]], author of ''[[Crime and Punishment]]''
  • [[Eugène Delacroix]], ''[[Hamlet]] and Horatio in the Graveyard'' (1839, oil on canvas)
  • Amnesty International protects prisoners of conscience. Stamp from Faroe Islands, 1986.
  • Gandhi in Noakhali, 1946: civil resistance or [[satyagraha]]
  • Siddhartha]]''.
  • [[Immanuel Kant]]: the moral law within us has true infinity.
  • Internet Map. [[Ninian Smart]] predicts global communication will facilitate ''world conscience''.
  • Jan van Ruysbroeck]] viewed a pure conscience as facilitating "an outflowing losing of oneself in the abyss of that eternal object which is the highest and chief blessedness"
  • [[Jeremy Bentham]]: "[[Fanaticism]] never sleeps ... it is never stopped by ''conscience''; for it has pressed ''conscience'' into its service."
  • [[John Locke]] viewed the widespread social fact of conscience as a justification for natural rights.
  • [[John Ralston Saul]]: consumers risk turning over their conscience to technical experts and to the ideology of free markets
  • [[Lester Ott]], [[conscientious objector]] during the [[First World War]]
  • [[Nikiforos Lytras]], ''Antigone in front of the dead Polynices'' (1865), oil on canvas, National Gallery of Greece-Alexandros Soutzos Museum.
  • [[Nonviolent]] protestors in [[Washington, D.C.]] in 2010 opposed to the [[Iraq War]]
  • Gravesite of [[Anna Politkovskaya]] in Russia
  • A.H.]] 509 = 1115–1116. Ghazali's crisis of epistemological skepticism was resolved by "a light which God Most High cast into my breast ... the key to most knowledge."
  • NASA climate scientist [[James Hansen]] arrested in 2011 for civil disobedience against laws allowing a tar sands oil pipeline
  • [[Graffiti]] portrait in [[Ramallah]] of murdered Arab cartoon artist [[Naji al-Ali]]
  • Gravesite of [[Neda Agha-Soltan]] in Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in Iran
  • Underwater American [[nuclear test]] in the Pacific. Worldwide expressions of 'conscience' against such explosions caused the French Government to cease atmospheric tests at [[Mururoa]] for political reasons.
  • [[Peter Singer]]: distinguished between immature "traditional" and highly reasoned "critical" conscience
  • [[Samuel Johnson]] (1775) stated that "No man's conscience can tell him the right of another man."
  • Seated [[Buddha]], [[Gandhara]], 2nd century CE. The Buddha linked conscience with compassion for those who must endure cravings and suffering in the world until right conduct culminates in right mindfulness and right contemplation.
  • [[Sombrero Galaxy]]: A [[United Nations]] treaty declares [[Outer Space]] the [[common heritage of humanity]]. [[Garrett Hardin]] doubted the capacity of ''conscience'' to protect such commons areas
  • Benedict de Spinoza]]: moral problems and our emotional responses to them should be reasoned from the perspective of eternity.
  • [[Chiune Sugihara]] practised ''conscientious noncompliance'' in issuing visas to fleeing Jews in Lithuania in 1939
  • [[Qur’ān]] Sura 49. Surah al-Hujurat, 49:13 declares: "come to know each other, the noblest of you, in the sight of God, are the ones possessing taqwá".
  • On the Threshold of Eternity]]''.
  • War criminal [[Adolf Eichmann]] in passport used to enter Argentina: his conscience spoke with the "respectable voice" of the indoctrinated wartime German society that surrounded him.
  • Holman Hunt]], 1853
JUDGMENT THAT ASSISTS IN DISTINGUISHING RIGHT FROM WRONG
Scruple; Scrupulous; Scruples; Over-scrupulous; Pang of conscience
n.
1) to appeal to; arouse smb.'s conscience
2) to have smt. on one's conscience
3) to ease one's conscience
4) a clear; guilty conscience (to have a guilty conscience)
5) a matter of conscience
6) in conscience (in all good conscience)
Scrupulous         
  • [[Global warming]] protestors in Chicago 2008
  • [[Gao Zhisheng]] human rights lawyer abducted in China
  • [[Adam Smith]]: conscience shows what relates to ourselves in its proper shape and dimensions
  • [[Albert Einstein]] associated conscience with suprapersonal thoughts, feelings and aspirations.
  • Schopenhauer]] considered that the good conscience we experience after an unselfish act verifies that our true self exists outside our physical person
  • The medieval Persian philosopher [[Ibn Sina]] ([[Avicenna]]) developed a sensory deprivation thought experiment to explore the relationship between conscience and God
  • [[Henry David Thoreau]]: Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the least degree, resign his conscience to the legislator?
  • [[Marcus Aurelius]] bronze fragment, Louvre, Paris: "To move from one unselfish action to another with God in mind. Only there, delight and stillness."
  • [[Dietrich Bonhoeffer]] (1932)
  • J.S. Bach]]. Original page from Credo (Symbolum Nicenum) section of [[Mass in B minor]]
  • [[Charles Darwin]] thought that any animal endowed with well-marked social instincts would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as its intellectual powers approximated man's.
  • [[Anton Pavlovich Chekhov]]. Tretyakov Gallery.
  • Illustration of [[François Chifflart]] (1825–1901) for ''La Conscience'' (by [[Victor Hugo]])
  • [[Darfur]] [[refugee camp]] in [[Chad]]: a challenge to the world's conscience.
  • Protests in India against the [[2012 Delhi gang rape case]]
  • [[Fyodor Dostoevsky]], author of ''[[Crime and Punishment]]''
  • [[Eugène Delacroix]], ''[[Hamlet]] and Horatio in the Graveyard'' (1839, oil on canvas)
  • Amnesty International protects prisoners of conscience. Stamp from Faroe Islands, 1986.
  • Gandhi in Noakhali, 1946: civil resistance or [[satyagraha]]
  • Siddhartha]]''.
  • [[Immanuel Kant]]: the moral law within us has true infinity.
  • Internet Map. [[Ninian Smart]] predicts global communication will facilitate ''world conscience''.
  • Jan van Ruysbroeck]] viewed a pure conscience as facilitating "an outflowing losing of oneself in the abyss of that eternal object which is the highest and chief blessedness"
  • [[Jeremy Bentham]]: "[[Fanaticism]] never sleeps ... it is never stopped by ''conscience''; for it has pressed ''conscience'' into its service."
  • [[John Locke]] viewed the widespread social fact of conscience as a justification for natural rights.
  • [[John Ralston Saul]]: consumers risk turning over their conscience to technical experts and to the ideology of free markets
  • [[Lester Ott]], [[conscientious objector]] during the [[First World War]]
  • [[Nikiforos Lytras]], ''Antigone in front of the dead Polynices'' (1865), oil on canvas, National Gallery of Greece-Alexandros Soutzos Museum.
  • [[Nonviolent]] protestors in [[Washington, D.C.]] in 2010 opposed to the [[Iraq War]]
  • Gravesite of [[Anna Politkovskaya]] in Russia
  • A.H.]] 509 = 1115–1116. Ghazali's crisis of epistemological skepticism was resolved by "a light which God Most High cast into my breast ... the key to most knowledge."
  • NASA climate scientist [[James Hansen]] arrested in 2011 for civil disobedience against laws allowing a tar sands oil pipeline
  • [[Graffiti]] portrait in [[Ramallah]] of murdered Arab cartoon artist [[Naji al-Ali]]
  • Gravesite of [[Neda Agha-Soltan]] in Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in Iran
  • Underwater American [[nuclear test]] in the Pacific. Worldwide expressions of 'conscience' against such explosions caused the French Government to cease atmospheric tests at [[Mururoa]] for political reasons.
  • [[Peter Singer]]: distinguished between immature "traditional" and highly reasoned "critical" conscience
  • [[Samuel Johnson]] (1775) stated that "No man's conscience can tell him the right of another man."
  • Seated [[Buddha]], [[Gandhara]], 2nd century CE. The Buddha linked conscience with compassion for those who must endure cravings and suffering in the world until right conduct culminates in right mindfulness and right contemplation.
  • [[Sombrero Galaxy]]: A [[United Nations]] treaty declares [[Outer Space]] the [[common heritage of humanity]]. [[Garrett Hardin]] doubted the capacity of ''conscience'' to protect such commons areas
  • Benedict de Spinoza]]: moral problems and our emotional responses to them should be reasoned from the perspective of eternity.
  • [[Chiune Sugihara]] practised ''conscientious noncompliance'' in issuing visas to fleeing Jews in Lithuania in 1939
  • [[Qur’ān]] Sura 49. Surah al-Hujurat, 49:13 declares: "come to know each other, the noblest of you, in the sight of God, are the ones possessing taqwá".
  • On the Threshold of Eternity]]''.
  • War criminal [[Adolf Eichmann]] in passport used to enter Argentina: his conscience spoke with the "respectable voice" of the indoctrinated wartime German society that surrounded him.
  • Holman Hunt]], 1853
JUDGMENT THAT ASSISTS IN DISTINGUISHING RIGHT FROM WRONG
Scruple; Scrupulous; Scruples; Over-scrupulous; Pang of conscience
·adj Given to making objections; captious.
II. Scrupulous ·adj Liable to be doubted; doubtful; nice.
III. Scrupulous ·adj Careful; cautious; exact; nice; as, scrupulous abstinence from labor; scrupulous performance of duties.
IV. Scrupulous ·adj Full ofscrupules; inclined to scruple; nicely doubtful; hesitating to determine or to act, from a fear of offending or of doing wrong.

Wikipedia

Scruples (disambiguation)

Scruples is a synonym for conscience.

Scruple(s) may also refer to:

  • Scruples (novel), by Judith Krantz, 1978
    • Scruples (miniseries), 1980, based on the novel
  • Scruples (comic strip), by Joseph Young, Jr.
  • Scruples (game), a card game based on ethical dilemmas.
  • Scruple (unit) (℈), a small unit of mass in the apothecaries' system