How might a good Lutheran respond to the situation of having to join the Nazi army? Would he obey this “temporal” authority? Or would he see the Nazis as threatening his faith with their ideology and thereby reject them?
Added by Abigail N.
Step 1
Let's think step by step. Show more…
Show all steps
Your feedback will help us improve your experience
Benjamin Densmore and 65 other Psychology educators are ready to help you.
Ask a new question
Labs
Want to see this concept in action?
Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.
Key Concepts
Recommended Videos
What is a time when you or someone you know of experienced a conflict between duty to self and loyalty to the community? What would logical reasoning say should be done in that case? Why that? What would an Ethical Egoist say to do? Why would they say to do that? Note what you feel is the best course of action.
Benjamin D.
True or false. In Levi’s view, one of the fundamental moral questions posed by ‘survival’ in a German concentration camp is the extent to which any semblance of a morally good life is possible in such an extreme context
Nick J.
Levi asks: ‘How much of our ordinary moral world could survive on this side of the barbed wire?’ The question, in other words, is this: is a morally good life at all possible in a truly bad world? Or is it precisely in such contexts that humans most need virtue and/or commitment to duties to one another? Discuss
Caroline M.
Recommended Textbooks
Psychology Openstax
Myers' Psychology for AP
Psychology
Transcript
18,000,000+
Students on Numerade
Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities
Watch the video solution with this free unlock.
EMAIL
PASSWORD