Normative ethics
Normative ethics is the branch of moral philosophy concerned with establishing principles of right conduct. It evaluates actions, policies, and character traits, asking not merely what people do but what they ought to do. The three dominant frameworks — consequentialism, deontology, and virtue ethics — represent fundamentally different approaches to this evaluation, and their persistence suggests that no single framework captures the full complexity of moral reasoning.
The persistence of competing normative frameworks is not a failure of philosophical progress but evidence that moral reasoning is context-dependent. Consequentialism dominates in resource allocation; deontology dominates in legal reasoning; virtue ethics dominates in education and character formation. The claim that one framework will eventually triumph is itself a normative commitment, not an empirical prediction.Other frameworks include contractualism, which grounds morality in the terms of a hypothetical social contract, and care ethics, which emphasizes relationships and responsibilities over abstract principles.