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3 definitions found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Mor·al
a.
1.
Relating
to
duty
or
obligation
;
pertaining
to
those
intentions
and
actions
of
which
right
and
wrong
,
virtue
and
vice
,
are
predicated
,
or
to
the
rules
by
which
such
intentions
and
actions
ought
to
be
directed
;
relating
to
the
practice
,
manners
,
or
conduct
of
men
as
social
beings
in
relation
to
each
other
,
as
respects
right
and
wrong
,
so
far
as
they
are
properly
subject
to
rules
.
Keep
at
the
least
within
the
compass
of
moral
actions
,
which
have
in
them
vice
or
virtue
.
--
Hooker
.
Mankind
is
broken
loose
from
moral
bands
.
--
Dryden
.
She
had
wandered
without
rule
or
guidance
in
a
moral
wilderness
.
--
Hawthorne
.
2.
Conformed
to
accepted
rules
of
right
;
acting
in
conformity
with
such
rules
;
virtuous
;
just
;
as
,
a
moral
man
.
Used
sometimes
in
distinction
from
religious
;
as
,
a
moral
rather
than
a
religious
life
.
The
wiser
and
more
moral
part
of
mankind
.
--
Sir
M
.
Hale
.
3.
Capable
of
right
and
wrong
action
or
of
being
governed
by
a
sense
of
right
;
subject
to
the
law
of
duty
.
A
moral
agent
is
a
being
capable
of
those
actions
that
have
a
moral
quality
,
and
which
can
properly
be
denominated
good
or
evil
in
a
moral
sense
.
--
J
.
Edwards
.
4.
Acting
upon
or
through
one's
moral
nature
or
sense
of
right
,
or
suited
to
act
in
such
a
manner
;
as
,
a
moral
arguments
;
moral
considerations
.
Sometimes
opposed
to
material
and
physical
;
as
,
moral
pressure
or
support
.
5.
Supported
by
reason
or
probability
;
practically
sufficient
; --
opposed
to
legal
or
demonstrable
;
as
,
a
moral
evidence
;
a
moral
certainty
.
6.
Serving
to
teach
or
convey
a
moral
;
as
,
a
moral
lesson
;
moral
tales
.
Moral agent
,
a
being
who
is
capable
of
acting
with
reference
to
right
and
wrong
.
Moral certainty
,
a
very
high
degree
or
probability
,
although
not
demonstrable
as
a
certainty
;
a
probability
of
so
high
a
degree
that
it
can
be
confidently
acted
upon
in
the
affairs
of
life
;
as
,
there
is
a
moral certainty
of
his
guilt
.
Moral insanity
,
insanity
,
so
called
,
of
the
moral
system
;
badness
alleged
to
be
irresponsible
.
Moral philosophy
,
the
science
of
duty
;
the
science
which
treats
of
the
nature
and
condition
of
man
as
a
moral
being
,
of
the
duties
which
result
from
his
moral
relations
,
and
the
reasons
on
which
they
are
founded
.
Moral play
,
an
allegorical
play
;
a
morality
. [
Obs
.]
Moral sense
,
the
power
of
moral
judgment
and
feeling
;
the
capacity
to
perceive
what
is
right
or
wrong
in
moral
conduct
,
and
to
approve
or
disapprove
,
independently
of
education
or
the
knowledge
of
any
positive
rule
or
law
.
Moral theology
,
theology
applied
to
morals
;
practical
theology
;
casuistry
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Sense
n.
1.
Physiol.
A
faculty
,
possessed
by
animals
,
of
perceiving
external
objects
by
means
of
impressions
made
upon
certain
organs
(
sensory
or
sense
organs
)
of
the
body
,
or
of
perceiving
changes
in
the
condition
of
the
body
;
as
,
the
senses
of
sight
,
smell
,
hearing
,
taste
,
and
touch
.
See
Muscular sense
,
under
Muscular
,
and
Temperature sense
,
under
Temperature
.
Let
fancy
still
my
sense
in
Lethe
steep
.
--
Shak
.
What
surmounts
the
reach
Of
human
sense
I
shall
delineate
. --
Milton
.
The
traitor
Sense
recalls
The
soaring
soul
from
rest
. --
Keble
.
2.
Perception
by
the
sensory
organs
of
the
body
;
sensation
;
sensibility
;
feeling
.
In
a
living
creature
,
though
never
so
great
,
the
sense
and
the
affects
of
any
one
part
of
the
body
instantly
make
a
transcursion
through
the
whole
.
--
Bacon
.
3.
Perception
through
the
intellect
;
apprehension
;
recognition
;
understanding
;
discernment
;
appreciation
.
This
Basilius
,
having
the
quick
sense
of
a
lover
.
--
Sir
P
.
Sidney
.
High
disdain
from
sense
of
injured
merit
.
--
Milton
.
4.
Sound
perception
and
reasoning
;
correct
judgment
;
good
mental
capacity
;
understanding
;
also
,
that
which
is
sound
,
true
,
or
reasonable
;
rational
meaning
.
“He
speaks
sense
.”
He
raves
;
his
words
are
loose
As
heaps
of
sand
,
and
scattering
wide
from
sense
. --
Dryden
.
5.
That
which
is
felt
or
is
held
as
a
sentiment
,
view
,
or
opinion
;
judgment
;
notion
;
opinion
.
I
speak
my
private
but
impartial
sense
With
freedom
. --
Roscommon
.
The
municipal
council
of
the
city
had
ceased
to
speak
the
sense
of
the
citizens
.
--
Macaulay
.
6.
Meaning
;
import
;
signification
;
as
,
the
true
sense
of
words
or
phrases
;
the
sense
of
a
remark
.
So
they
read
in
the
book
in
the
law
of
God
distinctly
,
and
gave
the
sense
.
--
Neh
.
viii
. 8.
I
think
'
t
was
in
another
sense
.
--
Shak
.
7.
Moral
perception
or
appreciation
.
Some
are
so
hardened
in
wickedness
as
to
have
no
sense
of
the
most
friendly
offices
.
--
L
'
Estrange
.
8.
Geom.
One
of
two
opposite
directions
in
which
a
line
,
surface
,
or
volume
,
may
be
supposed
to
be
described
by
the
motion
of
a
point
,
line
,
or
surface
.
Common sense
,
according
to
Sir
W
.
Hamilton
:
(a)
“The
complement
of
those
cognitions
or
convictions
which
we
receive
from
nature
,
which
all
men
possess
in
common
,
and
by
which
they
test
the
truth
of
knowledge
and
the
morality
of
actions.”
(b)
“The
faculty
of
first
principles.”
These
two
are
the
philosophical
significations
.
(c)
“Such
ordinary
complement
of
intelligence
, that,if
a
person
be
deficient
therein
,
he
is
accounted
mad
or
foolish.”
(d)
When
the
substantive
is
emphasized
:
“Native
practical
intelligence
,
natural
prudence
,
mother
wit
,
tact
in
behavior
,
acuteness
in
the
observation
of
character
,
in
contrast
to
habits
of
acquired
learning
or
of
speculation.”
Moral sense
.
See
under
Moral
,
(a)
.
The inner sense
,
or
The internal sense
,
capacity
of
the
mind
to
be
aware
of
its
own
states
;
consciousness
;
reflection
.
“This
source
of
ideas
every
man
has
wholly
in
himself
,
and
though
it
be
not
sense
,
as
having
nothing
to
do
with
external
objects
,
yet
it
is
very
like
it
,
and
might
properly
enough
be
called
internal
sense
.”
--
Locke
.
Sense capsule
Anat.
,
one
of
the
cartilaginous
or
bony
cavities
which
inclose
,
more
or
less
completely
,
the
organs
of
smell
,
sight
,
and
hearing
.
Sense organ
Physiol.
,
a
specially
irritable
mechanism
by
which
some
one
natural
force
or
form
of
energy
is
enabled
to
excite
sensory
nerves
;
as
the
eye
,
ear
,
an
end
bulb
or
tactile
corpuscle
,
etc
.
Sense organule
Anat.
,
one
of
the
modified
epithelial
cells
in
or
near
which
the
fibers
of
the
sensory
nerves
terminate
.
Syn:
--
Understanding
;
reason
.
Usage:
Sense
,
Understanding
,
Reason
.
Some
philosophers
have
given
a
technical
signification
to
these
terms
,
which
may
here
be
stated
.
Sense
is
the
mind's
acting
in
the
direct
cognition
either
of
material
objects
or
of
its
own
mental
states
.
In
the
first
case
it
is
called
the
outer
,
in
the
second
the
inner
,
sense
.
Understanding
is
the
logical
faculty
,
i
.
e
.
,
the
power
of
apprehending
under
general
conceptions
,
or
the
power
of
classifying
,
arranging
,
and
making
deductions
.
Reason
is
the
power
of
apprehending
those
first
or
fundamental
truths
or
principles
which
are
the
conditions
of
all
real
and
scientific
knowledge
,
and
which
control
the
mind
in
all
its
processes
of
investigation
and
deduction
.
These
distinctions
are
given
,
not
as
established
,
but
simply
because
they
often
occur
in
writers
of
the
present
day
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
moral
sense
n
:
motivation
deriving
logically
from
ethical
or
moral
principles
that
govern
a
person's
thoughts
and
actions
[
syn
:
conscience
,
scruples
,
sense of right and wrong
]
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