Actualities of Moralization of Contract Law

Dublin Core

Title

Actualities of Moralization of Contract Law

Author

Morait, Branko

Abstract

Summary: Morality is not acquired characteristic of a person. One is not born as a moral person, as he is born with some innate, natural laws, that can never be taken away from him. If, however, they are forcefully taken away, they keep returning again and again, in the same form and capacity. A person is virtuous or he is not. Predominant number of individuals in one social group that behave morally make up the group’s morals. However, in the essence of the matter, there is no such thing as a collective morality, just like there is no collective guilt. It is unthinkable to mark members of certain or religious group as moral and immoral, if all they are doing is obeying moral norms or codes. Morality is the way that a person treats goodness, that is, customs of goodness. Obeying these moral codes is what makes up his moral stance and moral behavior. The contract on consumer credit in Swiss francs undermining the stability of the banking market. The moral behavior of the participants of this contractual relationship would stop the current controversy.

Keywords

Article
PeerReviewed

Identifier

ISSN 2303-5706

Publisher

International Burch University

Date

2016-04-15

Extent

3290

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