User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
Noun
duties- Plural of duty
Extensive Definition
this duty in
ethics Duty (from "due," that which is owing, O. Fr. deu, did,
past participle of devoir; Lat. debere, debitum; cf. "debt") is a term that conveys a
sense of moral commitment to someone or something. The moral
commitment is the sort that results in action, and it is not a
matter of passive feeling or mere recognition. When someone
recognizes a duty, that person commits himself/herself to the cause
involved without considering the self-interested courses of actions
that may have been relevant previously. This is not to suggest that
living a life of duty precludes one from the best sort of life, but
duty does involve some sacrifice of immediate self-interest.
Cicero is an early
philosopher who acknowledged this possibility. He discusses duty in
his work “On Duty." He suggests that duties can come from four
different sources:
- It is a result of being human
- It is a result of one's particular place in life (your family, your country, your job)
- It is a result of one's personality
- One's own moral expectations for yourself can generate duties
But it seems that one can be compelled to live up
to a duty. That is not always the case. In the case of mandatory
child support, a parent is being put in such a position.
From the root idea of obligation to serve or give
something in return, involved in the conception of duty, have
sprung various derivative uses of the word; thus it is used of the
services performed by a minister
of a church, by a
soldier, or by any
employee or
servant.
A special application is to a tax, a payment due to the revenue of
a state, levied by
force
of law. Properly a "duty" differs from a "tax" in being levied
on specific commodities, transactions, estates, &c., and not on
individuals; thus it is right to talk of import-duties,
excise-duties, death or succession-duties and etc., but of income tax as
being levied on a person in proportion to his income.
Many schools of thought have debated the idea of
duty. While many assert mankind's duty on their own terms, some
philosophers have absolutely rejected a sense of duty.
References
See also
duties in Czech: Povinnost
duties in Danish: Pligt
duties in German: Pflicht
duties in French: Devoir
duties in Japanese: 義務
duties in Norwegian: Plikt
duties in Russian: Долг (философия)
duties in Swedish: Plikt