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“Economic distress may explain wrongdoing, but it can never justify it”. Discuss this in light of ethical reasoning. How should morality guide choices under severe financial pressure?

Kartavya Desk Staff

Q7. “Economic distress may explain wrongdoing, but it can never justify it”. Discuss this in light of ethical reasoning. How should morality guide choices under severe financial pressure? (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: Mint

Why the question A twelve‑year‑old boy was reportedly abducted by a relative in Patna’s Phulwarisharif who wanted to repay his loan of ₹12 lakh. Key demand of the question The demand is to critically assess whether financial hardship can morally justify wrongdoing and to outline how ethical principles, theories, and values should guide decision-making in times of financial pressure. Structure of the Answer Introduction Briefly highlight how ethics is tested in adversity and why explanation of acts differs from their justification. Body Ethical reasoning against justification: Use thinkers like Kant (duty), Bentham (utilitarianism), Ambedkar (constitutional morality) to show why distress cannot justify wrongdoing. Morality guiding choices: Draw on Aristotle’s virtue ethics, Gandhi’s means-ends principle, and ethics of care to suggest how individuals should act responsibly under stress. Conclusion End with a crisp futuristic note that true morality lies in upholding dignity and justice even in hardship.

Why the question

A twelve‑year‑old boy was reportedly abducted by a relative in Patna’s Phulwarisharif who wanted to repay his loan of ₹12 lakh.

Key demand of the question

The demand is to critically assess whether financial hardship can morally justify wrongdoing and to outline how ethical principles, theories, and values should guide decision-making in times of financial pressure.

Structure of the Answer

Introduction Briefly highlight how ethics is tested in adversity and why explanation of acts differs from their justification.

Ethical reasoning against justification: Use thinkers like Kant (duty), Bentham (utilitarianism), Ambedkar (constitutional morality) to show why distress cannot justify wrongdoing.

Morality guiding choices: Draw on Aristotle’s virtue ethics, Gandhi’s means-ends principle, and ethics of care to suggest how individuals should act responsibly under stress.

Conclusion End with a crisp futuristic note that true morality lies in upholding dignity and justice even in hardship.

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