Kidder tells us in Chapter Nine that while our core ethical values and principles won’t change, the moral landscape of the future will change.

Kidder tells us in Chapter Nine that while our core ethical values and principles won’t change, the moral landscape of the future will change. Discuss one of the three features that Kidder says will define the future moral landscape. ——————- Future Ethics: New Challenge, New Urgency To an age waffling in relativism and awash with political correctness, the demand for ethical exercise may seem a tall order. Why bother? If ethics takes all that effort, why not just settle for compromise? Why does it matter that we’re ethical? The answer has a lot to do with the age we’re entering. Successful moral leadership for the twenty-first century will be grounded in centuries-old concepts of ethics that may never change. Yet it will also be flexible, adaptable, and inventive. Why? Because the moral landscape of the future will be shaped by three conditions our ancestors could not have imagined: First, we will face entirely new ethical issues. Second, we will live in an age of increasing moral intensity. Third, we will experience unprecedented pressures to drop out of society and make a separate peace—to carve out moral enclaves disconnected from the ethical issues of the world.