What is the impact of moral entrepreneurs on your perception of family?

entrepreneur
Moral entrepreneurs do what it takes to bring morality to places where it hasn’t been before, embrace new responsibilities, making them their own, and persuade their peers to do likewise, expand conscience, the fundamental prerequisite for concern, commitment, and action. The mission of the moral entrepreneur is not to create a new tax-exempt organization. It is to inspire others to engage deeply in community causes and to do so in a way that leverages their unique strengths.

3 Responses to What is the impact of moral entrepreneurs on your perception of family?

  1. ImolaAvant says:

    I would have to question the assertion that there are places where morality does not exist. Every society (be on the scale of nations or neighborhoods) has it’s own set of morals. A person may not relate to those morals, and may go as far as judging such belief systems as immoral; but an outsiders opinion does make it so. Take for example the settling of the land mass now known as the United States. Were the native people immoral and savage? The settlers believed so.

    Your suggestion that someone should go into an area and institute their belief system on someone else is dangerous and immoral in itself, despite the fact that you believe it’s for the better. The only way your goal could be accomplished peacefully is from within the society itself. Look how well imposing morality on Iraq is working.

  2. yayyo says:

    This is correct.In simple terms moral entrepreneurs bring rise to awareness. Good is Good and Bad is Bad, then some could sum these entities into opinions instead of a way of life, more room for conflict in such a fashion of thinking. Family should be and is important.

  3. Calvin of China, PhD says:

    Let me assure you that a moral entrepreneur starts out with the best of intentions. This mode of operation creates a desire for customers to be near the family and even befriend them. But in business, the leopard will sometimes change its spots. This means the moral entrepreneur status was merely window dressing. Most sociologists believe this will encompass about 82% of the entrepreneurs, showing being moral was an illusion.