Ethics and Psychology
Where ethics is more than a code
Welcome to the Nexus of Ethics, Psychology, Morality, Philosophy and Health Care
Monday, November 10, 2025
Moral injury is independently associated with suicidal ideation and suicide attempt in high-stress, service-oriented occupations
Sunday, November 9, 2025
The Cruelty is the Point: Harming the Most Vulnerable in America
This administration has weaponized bureaucracy, embarking on a chilling campaign of calculated cruelty. While many children, disabled, poor, and working poor grapple with profound food insecurity, their response is not to strengthen the social safety net, but to actively shred it.
They are zealously fighting all the way to the Supreme Court for the right to let families go hungry, stripping SNAP benefits from the most vulnerable.
Yet the most deafening sound is the silence from the GOP—a complicit chorus where not a single supposed fiscal hawk or moral conservative dares to stand against this raw, unadulterated malice.
Their collective inaction reveals a party that has abandoned any pretense of compassion, proving that for them, the poor and struggling are not a priority to protect, but a problem to be punished.
Saturday, November 8, 2025
Beyond right and wrong: A new theoretical model for understanding moral injury
Friday, November 7, 2025
High Self-Control Individuals Prefer Meaning over Pleasure
Thursday, November 6, 2025
International stability and change in explicit and implicit attitudes: An investigation spanning 33 countries, five social groups, and 11 years (2009–2019).
- Decreased bias for sexuality (−36%),
- Remained stable for age, body weight, and race,
- Increased bias for skin tone (+20%, favoring light over dark skin).
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
Are moral people happier? Answers from reputation-based measures of moral character.
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Moral trauma, moral distress, moral injury, and moral injury disorder: definitions and assessments
Monday, November 3, 2025
Scaling Laws Are Unreliable for Downstream Tasks: A Reality Check
- Only 39% of 46 evaluated tasks showed smooth, predictable (linear-like) scaling.
- The rest exhibited irregular behaviors: inverse scaling (performance gets worse as models grow), nonmonotonic trends, high noise, no trend, or sudden “breakthrough” improvements (emergence).
- Validation dataset choice matters: switching the corpus used to compute pretraining perplexity can flip conclusions about which model or pretraining data is better.
- Experimental details matter: even with the same task and data, small changes in setup (e.g., prompt format, number of answer choices) can qualitatively change scaling behavior.








