Book contents
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- 1 Next-Generation Ethics
- 2 Ethical Distinctions for Building Your Ethical Code
- Part I Technology
- Part II Business Enterprises
- Part III Engineering
- Part IV Society
- 21 Topics in Next-Generation Ethics
- 22 Techno Innovations: The Role of Ethical Standards, Law and Regulation, and the Public Interest
- 23 Evolutionary Ethics: A Potentially Helpful Framework in Engineering a Better Society
- 24 Topics in Next-Generation Medical Ethics
- 25 Next-Generation Ethical Development of Medical Devices
- 26 Looking Back to Go Forward: The Ethics of Journalism in a Social Media Age
- 27 Social Media Ethics 2.0
- 28 Artificial Intelligence, People, and Society
- 29 Ethics in Cyberspace: Freedom, Rights, and Cybersecurity
- 30 Next-Generation Religion and Ethics
- Index
- References
30 - Next-Generation Religion and Ethics
from Part IV - Society
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 October 2019
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- 1 Next-Generation Ethics
- 2 Ethical Distinctions for Building Your Ethical Code
- Part I Technology
- Part II Business Enterprises
- Part III Engineering
- Part IV Society
- 21 Topics in Next-Generation Ethics
- 22 Techno Innovations: The Role of Ethical Standards, Law and Regulation, and the Public Interest
- 23 Evolutionary Ethics: A Potentially Helpful Framework in Engineering a Better Society
- 24 Topics in Next-Generation Medical Ethics
- 25 Next-Generation Ethical Development of Medical Devices
- 26 Looking Back to Go Forward: The Ethics of Journalism in a Social Media Age
- 27 Social Media Ethics 2.0
- 28 Artificial Intelligence, People, and Society
- 29 Ethics in Cyberspace: Freedom, Rights, and Cybersecurity
- 30 Next-Generation Religion and Ethics
- Index
- References
Summary
Over the last decade, I have served as the Dean of Religious Life at the University of Southern California (USC), where I oversee more than ninety student religious groups and more than fifty campus chaplains on campus; collectively representing all the world’s great religious traditions and many humanist, spiritual, and denominational perspectives as well. I also have the great privilege to do this work on a campus with more international students than almost any other university in the United States, in the heart of Los Angeles, the most religiously diverse city in human history (Loskota, 2015). As a result, the opportunities to think deeply about geo-religious diversity, interfaith engagement, and global ethics are unparalleled at USC (Mayhew, Rockenbach, & Bowman, 2016).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Next-Generation EthicsEngineering a Better Society, pp. 459 - 466Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019
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