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Post by autumn on Apr 11, 2021 2:26:34 GMT
Nope. One has to do with thought only. Awareness. The other has to do with conduct and actions based on that awareness. You could have morals and know you shouldn't speed, but do it anyway. This is where ethics comes in, and an ethical man would behave differently because the moral knowledge would stop him. Not the same thing at all. Those aren't slight and subtle differences. Hey, I've got a good one for ya: essentially ( adv): In essence; at bottom or by one's (or its) very nature synonyms: basically, fundamentally But they're not. It's like saying a song and dancing are the same thing. One is an intangible experience of feeling. Just the feeling and experience and acknowledgement of the music. Dancing on the other hand involves physical movement based on that song, and involves a choice to move about and make decisions on how to conduct yourself based on that music. One is "in essence" a thought experience. The other is "in practice" a physical act. One happens in the head only. The other happens in the body with the choices you make re: what to do.
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