Pronunciation: Brit. /ˈmɒrəl/ , /ˈmɒrlˌ/ , U.S. /ˈmɔr(ə)l/
Forms: ME–15
moralle, ME–16
morale, ME–16
morall, ME–
moral, 15–16
morrall;
Sc. pre-17
morale, pre-17
morall, pre-17
morell, pre-17
morrall, pre-17 17–
moral. ...
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Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French
moral (late 13th cent. in Old French in phrase
vertu morale : see
moral virtue n.;
c1370 modifying other nouns; 1403 in
philosophie morele ; late 17th cent. in sense ‘founded on opinion, sentiment or belief and not on meticulous facts or reasoning’; mid 18th cent. in sense ‘relating to the soul or spirit, as opposed to the physical’) and their etymon classical Latin
mōrālis concerned with ethics, moral <
mōr- ,
mōs custom (plural
mōrēs habits, morals (compare
mores n.); of unknown origin) +
-ālis -al suffix1. Classical Latin
mōrālis was formed by Cicero (
De Fato ii. i) as a rendering of ancient Greek
ἠθικός ethic adj. (
mōrēs being the accepted Latin equivalent of
ἤθη ).Compare Italian
morale decent, proper (late 13th cent.; early 14th cent. in sense ‘concerning modes of behaviour’), Spanish
moral (
c1330), Old Occitan
moral (14th cent.), Portuguese
moral (1525); also Dutch
moreel (1889; < French
moral , with alteration of the suffix), German
moralisch (16th cent.), Swedish
moralisk (17th cent.), Danish
moralsk .
In sense
2d after post-classical Latin
moralis , from 5th cent. in this sense.
In
moral philosophy after classical Latin
philosophia mōrālis , Middle French
philosophie morele (1403; French
philosophie morale ).
In
moral philosopher after post-classical Latin
philosophus moralis (from early 13th cent. in British sources, of Seneca); compare Middle French
philosophes moriaux , plural (late 16th cent., used of the moralists of antiquity).
With
moral science compare French
science morale (early 17th cent. or earlier; compare Anglo-Norman
les sept sciences, qe sount logiciene, naturele, morale, [etc.] , mid 14th cent.).
With
moral theology compare French
théologie morale (1868 in Littré)....
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1. Thesaurus »
Categories »
a. Of or relating to human character or behaviour considered as good or bad; of or relating to the distinction between right and wrong, or good and evil, in relation to the actions, desires, or character of responsible human beings; ethical.Recorded earliest in moral virtue n.c1387–95 Chaucer
Canterbury Tales Prol. 307 Sownynge in moral vertu was his speche.
a1402 J. Trevisa tr. R. Fitzralph
Defensio Curatorum (1925) 81 No man may feyne þat the forseide heeste is cerymonial‥For hit is verrey moral, longynge to good þewes.
c1449 R. Pecock
Repressor (1860) 155 Sum vntrewe opinioun of men‥is leding into deedis whiche ben grete moral vicis.
a1500 (1340) R. Rolle
Psalter (Univ. Oxf. 64) (1884) cxviii. 1 Þis psalme‥all shynys of haly lare and morale swetnes.
1593 G. Harvey
Pierces Supererogation 103 An aduauncement‥of that morall, and intellectuall good, that‥so forciblie emprooueth itselfe.
a1616 Shakespeare
All's Well that ends Well (1623) i. ii. 21 Youth, thou bear'st thy Fathers face‥Thy Fathers morall parts Maist thou inherit too.
1675 R. Burthogge
Cavsa Dei 97 Since the Objection doth proceed of Moral, and not of Metaphysical and Abstract Goodness.
1740 D. Hume
Treat. Human Nature III. i. 17 If these moral relations cou'd be apply'd to external objects, it wou'd follow, that even inanimate beings wou'd be susceptible of moral beauty and deformity.
1784 E. Allen
Reason viii. §2. 303 Moral good or evil is mental and personal, which cannot be transferred, changed or altered from one person to another.
1839 H. Hallam
Introd. Lit. Europe IV. iv. 306 The theologians who went no farther than revelation, or at least than the positive law of God, for moral distinctions.
1876 J. B. Mozley
Serm. before Univ. Oxf. iv. 97 It is plain that eloquence, imagination, poetical talent, are no more moral goodness than riches are.
1949 M. Fortes
Social Struct. 60 Its form derives from a paradigm‥sanctioned by‥moral values.
1988 T. L. S. Sprigge
Rational Found. Ethics iv. 93 In identifying moral goodness with benevolence, he [
sc. Hutcheson] had seen the goodness of a man as essentially the amount of happiness he produced divided by his opportunities.
c1387-95—1988
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Thesaurus »
b. Of an action: having the property of being right or wrong, or good or evil; voluntary or deliberate and therefore open to ethical appraisal. Of a person, etc.: capable of moral action; able to choose between right and wrong, or good and evil.1593 R. Hooker
Of Lawes Eccl. Politiei. xvi. 93 The axiomes of that lawe‥haue their vse in the morall, yea, euen in the spirituall actions of men.
1690 J. Locke
Ess. Humane Understandingii. xxvii. 157 There is another sort of Relation, which is the Conformity, or Disagreement, Mens voluntary Actions have to a Rule, to which they are referred, and by which they are judged of; which, I think, may be called Moral Relation; as being that which denominates our Moral Actions.
1736 Bp. J. Butler
Analogy of Relig.i. iii. 54 That God has given us a moral Nature,‥[is] a Proof of our being under his moral Government.
1754 J. Edwards
Careful Enq. Freedom of Willi. v. 29 A moral Agent is a Being that is capable of those Actions that have a moral Quality.
1802 W. Paley
Nat. Theol. xxvii. 586 The moral and accountable part of his terrestrial creation.
1868 A. Bain
Mental & Moral Sci. 403 Every creature possessing mind is a moral agent.
1910
Encycl. Brit. I. 766/1 A philosophical term‥for that theory of conduct which regards the good of others as the end of moral action.
1946
Mind 55 115 A will-less saint would be a sub-moral being, a fine creature perhaps, but not a responsible moral agent.
1980 J. H. Crook
Evol. Human Consciousness ii. 14 In some Christian doctrine the flesh is the source of evil and the soul or mind is elevated as the moral agent with behavioural choice.
1593—1980
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c. Of knowledge, an opinion, etc.: relating to the nature and application of the distinction between right and wrong, or good and evil. Cf. sense 2c.1690 J. Locke
Ess. Humane Understandingiv. iv. 284 And hence it follows, that moral Knowledge is as capable of real Certainty, as Mathematicks.
1752
Philos. Trans. 1749–50 (Royal Soc.)
46 750 The original meaning of the Word Philosophy was rightly applied to moral Wisdom.
1752 Ld. Chesterfield
Let. 6 Jan. (1932) (modernized text) V. 1815 If the religious and moral principles of the Society [
sc. the Jesuits] are to be detested.
1817 S. T. Coleridge
Biographia Literaria I. x. 213 My essays contributed to introduce the practice of placing the questions and events of the day in a moral point of view.
1883 W. James
Let. 23 Jan. in R. B. Perry
Thought & Char. W. James (1935) I. 389 Although from a moral point of view your sympathy commands my warmest thanks, from the intellectual point of view, it seems, first, to suppose that I am a bachelor [etc.].
1951 C. Day Lewis
Poet's Task 19 As an aesthetic judgement this is so bizarre that one can only take it for a moral judgement.
1988 R. Christiansen
Romantic Affinities ii. 77 He hectored his fiancée Wilhelmine with lists of knotty moral questions: ‘Is it better to do good, or to be good?’
1690—1988
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d. Of an idea, speech, etc.: involving ethical praise or blame.1690 J. Locke
Ess. Humane Understanding Contents (
heading) Book IV‥Chap. III‥19. Two Things have made moral Ideas thought uncapable of Demonstration. Their Complexedness, and want of sensible Representations.
1845 W. Whewell
Elem. Morality I. 238 The Supreme Standard‥is expressed by the Moral Ideas, Benevolence, Justice, Truth, Purity, and Wisdom.
1865 J. Grote
Treat. Moral Ideals (1876) 108 Those words, like all moral words, by frequent complimentary use‥have lost much of their warmth and force.
1908 E. Westermarck (
title) The origin and development of the moral ideas.
1992
Times Higher Educ. Suppl. 27 Mar. 16/2 Dewey‥tried to modernise liberal political discourse through moral concepts derived from the social sciences.
1690—1992
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e. Of a feeling: arising from an apprehension or sense of the goodness or badness of an action, character, etc.1768 L. Sterne
Sentimental Journey I. 134 With what a moral delight will it crown my journey.
1830 M. Donovan
Domest. Econ. II. iii. 45 To those who have got over the moral disgust of such food [
sc. human flesh], it‥has recommendatory qualities.
1872 J. Morley
Voltaire i. 7 Perhaps a moral relish for veritable proofs of honesty,‥drives men to grasp even a crudity with fervour.
1984 ‘J. Gash’
Gondola Scam (1985) xv. 112 Moral indignation from a Venetian is a scream, seeing they invented Carnival and the cicisbeo, that sissy upper-class version of a gigolo.
1768—1984
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2. Thesaurus »
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a. Of a literary work, an artistic or dramatic representation, etc.: dealing with the rightness and wrongness of conduct; intended to teach morality or convey a moral; (hence also) having a beneficial moral effect, edifying. In early use also: †allegorical, emblematical (obs.).c1390 Chaucer
Melibeus 2130 It is a moral tale vertuous.
c1390 Chaucer
Pardoner's Tale 39 Tel vs som moral thyng that we may leere Som wit.
c1443 R. Pecock
Reule of Crysten Religioun (Morgan M 519) 434 Þese now seid persoones wroote þe story of þe new testament and al þe moral documentis of þe same testament.
a1500 (1425) tr.
Secreta Secret. (Lamb.) 48 He made many morales epistels to Aristotel.
1526
Pylgrimage of Perfection (de Worde) f. 2, They shal haue therby a lyght to perceyue the better all moral matter, that they shall here preched or taught.
1568 (1505) R. Henryson tr. Æsop
Fables (Bannatyne) 1401, I pray Vndir the figure of sum brutall beist, A morall fable ȝe wald dedene to say.
a1616 Shakespeare
Timon of Athens (1623) i. i. 91 A thousand morall Paintings I can shew, That shall demonstrate these quicke blowes of Fortunes, More pregnantly then words.
1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc
World Surveyed 272 We had the pleasure there to see a morall representation of the Magdalens conversion.
1671 Milton
Samson Agonistes Pref. 3 Tragedy‥hath been ever held the gravest, moralest, and most profitable of all other Poems.
1726 Swift
Gulliver I. ii. vii. 134 From this way of Reasoning the Author drew several moral Applications useful in the Conduct of Life.
1744 Pope
Wks. (1755) III. 105 (
title) Moral Essays, in four epistles to Several Persons.
1789 H. L. Thrale
Observ. Journey France I. 115 To what purpose then‥the moral dances, as they call them now? One word of solid instruction to the ear, conveys more knowledge to the mind at last, than all these marionettes presented to the eye.
1811 R. Hunter (
title) The schoolmistress, a moral tale for young ladies.
1873 R. Browning
Red Cotton Night-cap Countryiii. 171 The late death-chamber, tricked with‥Skulls, cross-bones, and such moral broidery.
1919 W. S. Maugham
Moon & Sixpence ii. 10 Mr. Crabbe was as dead as mutton, but Mr. Crabbe continued to write moral stories in rhymed couplets.
1987 G. Phelps
Short Guide to World Novel (1988) 141 Catherine the Great‥wrote a number of moral fables.
c1390—1987
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†b. Of a person, esp. a writer: expounding moral precepts (in early use applied to allegorists). Also in extended use. Obs.a1425 (1385) Chaucer
Troilus & Criseyde (1987) v. 1856 O moral Gower, this book I directe To the.
a1450 (1421) Lydgate
Siege Thebes (Arun.) 995 A Tragedye of Moral Senyk.
c1460 Lydgate
Minor Poems (1934) ii. 784 The tragedyes‥Of moral Senek.
1508 W. Dunbar
Goldyn Targe (Chepman & Myllar) in
Poems (1998) 192 O morall Gower and Ludgate laureate.
1582 T. Watson
In Commend. Aucthor in G. Whetstone
Heptameron Ciuill Disc. sig. ¶, Euen as the fruictfull Bee, doth‥Sweet Honie draine, & layes it vp,‥So, Morall Whetstone, to his Countrey doth impart, A Worke of worth.
1600 Shakespeare
Much Ado about Nothingv. i. 30 Tis all mens office, to speake patience To those that wring vnder the loade of sorrow But no mans vertue nor sufficiencie To be so morall, when he shall endure The like himselfe.
1718 M. Prior
Picture Seneca Dying in
Poems Several Occasions 8 While cruel Nero only drains The moral Spaniard's ebbing Veins.
1742 E. Young
Complaintix. 534 The moral muse has shadow'd out a sketch.
a1425—1742
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Thesaurus »
c. Treating of or concerned with the nature of good and evil, right and wrong, or the rules of right conduct, as a subject of study.c1443 R. Pecock
Reule of Crysten Religioun (Morgan M 519) 334 Leernyd men in logik, in natural philosophie and moral philosophie and in diuinite.
1656 T. Hobbes
Elements Philos.i. i. 7 From the want of Morall science proceed Civill warres, and the greatest calamities of mankind.
1741 I. Watts
Improvem. Mindi. xvii. 269 Fabellus would never learn any Moral Lessons till they were moulded into the Form of some‥Fable.
1791 Bp. G. Horne
Charge to Clergy 14 Morality‥hath four chief virtues, which moral writers have well explained.
a1866 J. Grote
Exam. Utilit. Philos. (1870) iv. 61 A description as complete and beautiful, I think, as is to be found in any moral writings.
1878 J. P. Hopps (
title) Religious and moral lectures.
1990 R. McCormick & M. James
Curriculum Eval. in Schools 51 Other subjects‥included:‥history and geography; moral education; health education [etc.].
c1443—1990
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d. Designating or relating to an interpretation of a biblical passage which treats the events described as typifying something in the life of the reader; = tropological adj. 2. Later also in extended use.In quot. 1529 used adverbially.a1450 (1397)
Prol. Old Test. in
Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Harl. 1666) (1850) 3 To the literal vndirstonding it [
sc. Jerusalem] singnefieth an erthly citee‥to allegorie it singnefieth hooly chirche in erthe‥to moral vndirstondinge it singnefieth a cristen soule [etc.].
c1475 (1445) R. Pecock
Donet 107 Such a moral vndirstonding or an allegorie or an anogogie of holi scripture.
1503 S. Hawes
Example of Vertu ix. 10, I‥lykened the wyldernes by morall scence Vnto worldely trouble by good experyence.
1529 T. More
Supplyc. Soulysii. f. xxx, Bycause some doctours do conster those wordys of thappostle in dyuerse other sensys,‥sometyme after the letter, somtyme morall and somtyme other wyse.
1572 J. Higgins
Huloets Dict. (new ed.) (at cited word), The morall sence of a fable,
epimythium.
1600 Shakespeare
Much Ado about Nothingiii. iv. 74 Morall? no by my troth I haue no morall meaning, I meant plaine holy thissel.
1609
Bible (Douay) I. Gen. i. 1 Comm., There are three spiritual senses besides the literal‥: Allegorical‥Moral‥and Anagogical.
1794 R. J. Sulivan
View Nature II, There is a grammatical and an anagogetical or moral sense.
1884
Expositor Jan. 45 The three traditional divisions of the mystic sense into allegoric, tropologic or moral, and anagogic or spiritual.
1952
Yale French Stud. 9 62 Old desires must be clarified and the lovers must grow in understanding. This is the final tropological or moral sense of the poem.
a1450—1952
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3.
a. Of, relating to, or concerned with the morals or morality of a person or group of people.a1393 Gower
Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vii. 1650 Hou that a king himself schal reule Of his moral condicion With worthi disposicion Of good livinge in his persone.
1670 R. G. Preston (
title) Angliæ speculum morale; the moral state of England.
1794 W. Paley
View Evidences Christianity I. i. v. 119 The phrases which the same writer employs to describe the moral condition of Christians, compared with their condition before they became Christians.
1818 H. Hallam
View Europe Middle Ages II. ix. 602/2 His standard is taken, not from Avignon, but from Edinburgh,‥where the moral barometer stands at a very different altitude.
1848 W. K. Kelly tr. L. Blanc
Hist. Ten Years I. 382 The moral interests of society seemed still more compromised than the material.
1874 J. R. Green
Short Hist. Eng. People vii. §5. 393 The moral and religious change which was passing over the country through the progress of Puritanism.
1914
Observer 16 Aug. 4/6 That means an immense moral change. All modern Germany has been brought up to adore the myth which attributed to them alone the secret of some unapproachable military efficiency.
1993
Lancaster Diocesan Catholic Voice Apr. 2 Much debate has evolved as to the moral state of our nation and of our young people in particular.
a1393—1993
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b. Relating to, affecting, or having influence on a person's character or conduct, as distinguished from his or her intellectual or physical nature.1597 R. Hooker
Of Lawes Eccl. Politiev. lvii.128 Sacraments‥are not physicall but morall instruments of saluation, duties of seruice and worship.
1600 Shakespeare
Much Ado about Nothingi. iii. 11, I wonder that thou‥goest about to apply a morall medicine, to a mortifying mischiefe.
1659 H. Thorndike
Epil. Trag. Church of Eng.i. 186, I acknowledg the Scriptures to be an Instrument of God, though a Moral Instrument.
1728 E. Chambers
Cycl. at
Necessity, The Schools distinguish a Physical Necessity, and a Moral Necessity.‥ Moral Necessity‥is only a great Difficulty, such as that arising from a Long Habitude, a strong Inclination, or violent Passion.
1742 E. Young
Complaintv. 284 I'll‥gather ev'ry thought of sov'reign power To chace the moral maladies of man.
1780 W. Cowper
Progress of Error 272 'Tis not alone the grape's enticing juice Unnerves the moral pow'rs, and mars their use.
1823 W. Cobbett
Rural Rides in
Weekly Reg. 6 Sept. 602 There is now very little
moral hold which the latter [
sc. the clergy] possess.
1841 H. D. Thoreau
Jrnl. 19 Feb. (1981) I. 269 It is a moral force as well as he.
1851
Edinb. Rev. Jan. 225 The only effect produced was a kind of amicable splitting of the repeal party into two co-operative factions,—the moral-force men and the physical-force men.
1868 A. Bain
Mental & Moral Sci. 395 Moral Inability expresses the insufficiency of ordinary motives, but not of all motives.
1913
Act 3 & 4 Geo. V c. 28 §1 Moral imbeciles; that is to say, persons who from an early age display some permanent mental defect coupled with strong vicious or criminal propensities.
1951 R. Firth
Elem. Social Organization vi. 213 It is in the capacity to generate and adapt moral force that man derives one of the most potent springs to social action.
1968
Listener 26 Sept. 408/1 ‘Moral insanity’ was superseded by ‘moral imbecility’; this in turn gave way to ‘psychopathic personality’ (which had developed out of ‘constitutional psychopathic inferiority’).
1986 J. Huxley
Leaves of Tulip Tree (1987) iv. 78 Julian was not a physical but a moral invalid, absent from himself, indifferent to everything.
1597—1986
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c. Modifying a noun: having those qualities (i.e. those of the noun) metaphorically in respect of moral character or condition.1692 R. L'Estrange
Fables cccxxviii. 286 If all our Moral Wolves in Sheeps-Cloathing, were but Serv'd as This Hypocritical Wolfe was in the Fiction.
1813 Shelley
Queen Mabii. 25 Where Athens, Rome, and Sparta stood, There is a moral desart now.
1821 Scott
Kenilworth III. v. 78 Varney was one of the few—the very few moral monsters, who contrive to lull to sleep the remorse of their own bosoms.
1852 G. C. Mundy
Our Antipodes I. iii. 93 Sufferers for the sins of their fathers, moral bastards.
1894 W. E. Gladstone in
Times 9 Nov. 7/5 In my opinion‥an undenominational system of religion, framed by or under the authority of the State, is a moral monster.
1964 S. M. Willhelm in I. L. Horowitz
New Sociol. 184 The scientific ideology simply places the scientist in a moral vacuum.
1992 J. Torrington
Swing Hammer Swing! xxii. 190 Let's face some home truths, Clay; you're a moral skunk.
1692—1992
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d. Designating the incidental effect of an action or event (e.g. a victory or defeat) in producing confidence or discouragement, sympathy or hostility, etc. Cf. sense 8.1835 A. Alison
Hist. Europe IV. xxx. 261 The loss to the contending parties was nearly equal,‥but all the moral advantages of a victory were on their [
sc. the French] side.
1860 J. S. Mill
Considerations Representative Govt. (1865) 61 The instructed minority would, in the actual voting, count only for their numbers, but as a moral power they would count for much more.
1883 C. J. Wills
In Land of Lion & Sun 111 Armenian‥scowls staggering along in secure insolence, confident in the moral protection given him by the presence of the Englishman.
1888
Times 13 June 6/1 His idea was that the moral effect of artillery fire was greater than the positive.
1901
Dict. National Biogr. at
Victoria, Both the material and moral advantages that England derived from her intervention were long questioned.
1995
New Yorker 27 Mar. 62/1 Opposition to affirmative action has a second great advantage in today's political culture: it feeds that powerful hunger for the moral prestige and political spoils of victimhood.
1835—1995
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4. Thesaurus »
a. Of a person, a person's conduct, etc.: morally good, virtuous; conforming to standards of morality.c1443 R. Pecock
Reule of Crysten Religioun (Morgan M 519) 211 Þou [
sc. Christ] lividist a moral, holy lijf after lawe of kinde.
c1475 (1445) R. Pecock
Donet 118/24 Alle þe dedis‥bi wordis writen in þo x comaundementis ben pure moral ech oon.
1582 R. Mulcaster
1st Pt. Elementarie xi. 55 Then will I set down som other well pikt discourse, which shall concern morall behauior.
1638 T. Herbert
Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 233 Morall men they are, and humane in language and garbe.
1697 Dryden
Ded. Æneis in tr. Virgil
Wks. sig. a3, Your Essay of Poetry‥I read over and over with much delight,‥and, without flattering you, or making my self more Moral than I am, not without some Envy.
1700 Dryden
Fables Pref. sig. *C
v, My Enemies‥will not allow me so much as to be a Christian, or a Moral Man.
1782 W. Cowper
Conversation in
Poems 222 A moral, sensible and well-bred man Will not affront me.
1841–8 F. Myers
Catholic Thoughts II. iv. §23. 293 A man may be Moral without being Religious, but he cannot be Religious without being Moral.
1868 J. Ruskin
Arrows of Chace (1880) II. 199 A man taught to plough, row or steer well‥[is] already educated in many essential moral habits.
1921 D. O. Stewart
Parody Outl. of Hist. iv. 87 The Mayflower‥had landed its precious cargo of pious Right Thinkers, moral Gentlemen of God, and—Priscilla.
1990 D. Peterson
Dress Gray Introd. 2, I just wanted to attend West Point:‥to live in a moral, disciplined environment under an internalized Honor code.
c1443—1990
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†b.spec. Characterized by virtues other than specifically religious ones. See moral virtue n. Obs.1620 J. Ford
Line of Life sig. F
v, Socrates‥a good man, if a meere morrall man may be termed so.
a1686 T. Watson
Body Pract. Divinity (1692) 979 A Moral Man doth as much hate Holiness as he doth Vice.
1824 J. Hogg
Private Mem. Justified Sinner 197 A Mr. Blanchard, who was reckoned a worthy, pious divine, but quite of the moral cast.
1620—1824
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c. Virtuous with regard to sexual conduct; showing sexual morality. Freq. in moral restraint.1803 T. R. Malthus
Ess. Princ. Population (new ed.) iv. v. 523 The increase of vice which might contingently follow an attempt to inculcate the duty of moral restraint.
1806 T. R. Malthus
Ess. Princ. Population (ed. 3) I. i. i. 19 By moral restraint I‥mean a restraint from marriage, from prudential motives, with a conduct strictly moral.
1820 Shelley
Œdipus Tyrannusi. 74 Spay those Sows That load the earth with Pigs‥Moral restraint I see has no effect.
1879 ‘G. Eliot’
Theophrastus Such xvi. 283 Sir Gavial‥is a thoroughly moral man.‥ Very different from Mr. Barabbas, whose life‥is most objectionable, with actresses and that sort of thing.
1951 V. Nabokov
Let. 12 Oct. in
Sel. Lett. (1989) 128, I am engaged in the composition of a novel, which deals with the problems of a very moral middle-aged gentleman who falls very immorally in love with his stepdaughter, a girl of thirteen.
1991 S. Walker
Rom. Art 33 The stola, a traditional female garment deliberately revived by Augustus as an expression of his policy of moral restraint upon members of the aristocracy.
1803—1991
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a. Designating the body of requirements to which an action must conform in order to be right or virtuous; (also) designating a particular requirement of this kind. Freq. in moral law.When applied to laws often contrasted with ‘positive’ or ‘instituted’ laws, the obligation of which depends solely on the fact that they have been imposed by a rightful authority (cf. natural law n.). In early use chiefly applied to those parts of the Mosaic Law which enunciate moral rather than ceremonial or juridical precepts and principles.c1449 R. Pecock
Repressor (1860) 13 Doom of natural resoun‥is clepid ‘moral law of kinde’.
a1450 (1397)
Prol. Old Test. in
Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Harl. 1666) (1850) 3 The old testament is departid‥in to moral comaundementis, iudicials, and cerimonyals.
1551 T. Wilson
Rule of Reason sig. Eij
v, The morall law standeth for euer,‥The Iudiciall law is next, the which‥we be not bound to obserue as the Israelites ware.
1609 Shakespeare
Troilus & Cressidaii. ii. 183 If Helen then be wife to Sparta's King‥these morall lawes Of nature and of nations, speake alowd To haue her back returnd.
1640 W. Prynne
Ld. Bishops viii. sig. Hiij
v, If the Prelates shall pronounce the 4th Commandement not to be Morall for the sanctifying of a Seventh day.
1690 J. Locke
Ess. Humane Understandingi. iii. 15, I think it will be hard to instance any one moral Rule.
1736 Bp. J. Butler
Analogy of Relig.ii. i. 157 The moral Law is‥interwoven into our very Nature.
1784 E. Allen
Reason v. §2. 193 Nor is it possible that the Jews, who adhere to the law of Moses, should be under greater obligation to the moral law, than the Japannese; or the Christians than the Chinese.
1819 R. Hall
Wks. (1841) V. 327 The laws given to the Israelites were of three kinds—ceremonial, judicial, and moral.
1876 L. Stephen
Hist. Eng. Thought 18th Cent. II. ix. 5 Hobbes‥audaciously identified the moral with the positive law.
1927
Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 32 736 The same forces which co-operate to create the characteristic social organization and the accepted moral order of a given society or social group determine at the same time‥the character of the individuals who compose that society.
1951 R. Firth
Elem. Social Organization vi. 185 The effective standard of judgement‥has appeared to be the recognition of offences against a moral code of behaviour.
1994
N.Y. Rev. Bks. 12 May 16/2 There is an engaging search for a specific historic link to the followers of the seventeenth-century Ranter Ludowick Muggleton, with their‥furious rejections of the Mosaic Moral Law.
c1449—1994
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b. Of a right, obligation, responsibility, etc.: founded on moral law; valid according to the principles of morality. Freq. contrasted with legal.1690 J. Locke
Ess. Humane Understandingii. xxvii. 156 Sometimes the foundation of considering Things, with reference to one another, is some act whereby any one comes by a Moral, Right, Power, or Obligation to do something.
1736 Bp. J. Butler
Analogy of Relig.ii. Concl. 290 Our Obligation to attend to His Voice, is, surely, moral in all Cases.
1882 J. Morley
Cobden (1902) xix. 71/1 Cobden thus strove to diffuse the sense of moral responsibility in connexion with the use of capital.
1924 R. W. Seton-Watson
New Slovakia vi. 104 Such international opinion as regards the ‘Minority rights’ provided for by the Peace Treaties, as a moral obligation assumed by all members of the League of Nations.
1971
Universe 15 Oct. 19/3 [Where a legal right may be questionable] what cannot be denied is that he has a moral right—in fact a moral duty—to do so.
1690—1971
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†6. Of or relating to manners and customs. Obs.1604 E. G. tr. J. de Acosta (
title) The Naturall and Morall Historie of the East and West Indies [Sp.
Historia natural y moral de las Indias 1590].
1647 O. Cromwell in C. H. Firth
Clarke Papers (1992) 370 If you make the best of itt, if you should change the Government to the best of itt, itt is but a morall thinge.
1604—1647
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7. Of evidence, argument, etc.: based on a knowledge of the general tendencies of human nature, or of a particular person's character; probable rather than demonstrative, sufficient to justify practical certainty. Of a belief: held as practically certain. Freq. in moral certainty n. a degree of probability so great as to admit of no reasonable doubt; a practical certainty on the basis of moral evidence.The distinction between different degrees of certainty is made by Aristotle, who points out that moral philosophy cannot be discussed with the same insistence on proof as mathematics ( Nicomachaean Ethics 1094 b13), and is taken up in scholastic thought, e.g. by St Thomas Aquinas, who argues that a degree of certainty less than the highest is adequate for the conduct of human affairs ( Summa Theologica 1a 2ae. 96, 1). Although post-classical Latin moralis, moraliter have the sense ‘in or according to common usage’ as early as the 11th cent., they do not usually seem to be used of certainty in medieval authors. However, by the end of the 16th cent., if not earlier, the bases for assent to a truth could be classified as metaphysica, physica, or moralia, as they are by Francisco Suárez SJ ( Metaphysicae Disputationes 29, 3, 34–6), and post-classical Latin certitudo moralis is opposed to certitudo absoluta a1626 (A. Gazet, in Cassian's Collations xx. vii, in Cassian's Opera Omnia). Descartes uses Fr. moralement impossible to refer to a morally certain but not strictly demonstrable impossibility in the Discours de la Methode (1637), and refers to the arguments of the Principia as moraliter certa in the Latin text of 1644 (iv. §205), using French certitude morale at the corresponding point in the French text of 1647. From the mid 17th cent. onwards, the concept of moral certainty was applied to evidence in law and natural science as well as religion, and was defined with various degrees of precision, e.g. as a probability of at least 0.999 in Jakob Bernouilli's Ars Conjectandi (1713).1637 W. Chillingworth
Relig. Protestants iv. 224 It is impossible for any man (according to the grounds of your Religion) to know himselfe, much lesse another to be a true Pope, or a true Priest; nay to have a Morall certainty of it, because these things are obnoxious to innumerable secret and undiscernable nullities.
a1644 W. Chillingworth in R. R. Orr
Reason & Authority (1967) iii. 51 The schools distinguish of two kinds of certainty; Metaphysical, whereby we know that a thing is so‥and Moral, whereby we are assured a thing is so.‥ Moral certainty, is begott in us, by presumption and probabilities.
1646 J. Maxwell
Burden of Issachar in
Phenix (1708) II. 276 That this is truth, I am as much assur'd of, as moral Certainty can assure any Man of moral Truth.
1660 Bp. J. Taylor
Ductor Dubitantium I. i. v. 175 The Negative doubt is either Metaphysical or Moral, or it is onely a Suspicion.
a1676 M. Hale
Primitive Originat. Mankind (1677) ii. i. 128 Though the evidence be still in its own nature but moral, and not simply demonstrative or infallible.
1685 tr. P. Nicole & A. Arnauld
Logiclv. xv. 237 We ought to be satisfy'd with a moral assurance, in things not capable of Metaphysical certainty.
1692 R. L'Estrange
Fables ccxci. 254 He‥so Parts with a Moral Certainty in Possession, for a Wild and a Remote Possibility in Reversion.
1725 I. Watts
Logickii. ii. §9 In Matters of Faith, an exceeding great Probability is called a moral Certainty.
1728 E. Chambers
Cycl. at
Universality, Moral Universality, is that which admits of some exception.‥ In such-like propositions, 'tis enough that the thing be ordinarily so.
1743 H. Fielding
Ess. Convers. in
Misc. I. 137 When your Guest offers to go, there should be no Solicitations to stay‥farther than to give him a moral Assurance of his being welcome so to do.
1864 F. C. Bowen
Treat. Logic xii. 378 The inference is rightly said to rest upon moral, or probable, evidence.
1868 E. A. Freeman
Hist. Norman Conquest II. ix. 421 Was the succession of Harold merely a probability, a moral certainty it may be?
1911
Catholic Encycl. XII. 445/1 The only way efficiently to bring our actions into perfect harmony with objective morality is to follow the safe opinion, so long as the less safe opinion has not acquired moral certainty.
1994
Fellowship Catholic Scholars Newslet. Dec. 52/1 It enjoys moral certainty and consequently has a normative role in the formation of Christian conscience.
1637—1994
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†8. Of or relating to morale. Obs. rare.1834 W. F. P. Napier
Hist. War Peninsula IV. xvi. ii. 372 By this method lord Fitzroy acquired an exact knowledge of the true moral state of each regiment.
1889 D. Hannay
Life F. Marryat 38 The squadron was in an indifferent moral condition, divided by sour professional factions, and impatient of its Admiral.
1834—1889
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