The answer is a yes and a no. An example situation is watching porn.
Under moral sensism, which states that pleasuring one's senses to be moral, doing such as can be considered to be moral because you are pleasuring your senses, but under other moral philosophy, such act is immoral.
Thus, moral sensism is not a good basis for one's norm of morality. It has it's flaws and defects when one would over look at it in the scheme of philosophies such that is is somehow one sided as egoism (satisfaction for one's self) and can eliminate people of the right conscience.
More over, moral sensism can be a good norm of morality when dealt with other moral philosophies and when one's conscience is right.
Pleasuring one's senses itself is not inherently moral or immoral. It depends on the context in which it is done and whether it harms oneself or others. Balancing pleasure with responsibility and consideration for the well-being of oneself and others is important for making moral decisions about pleasuring one's senses.
moral sensism considers the rightness or wrongness of a act base on the pleasure or satisfaction that it gives to the senses. If an act gives pleasure to one's senses or perceptions, then it is morally good, otherwise it is wrong.
A decline or loosenes in ones moral standards. The state of giving in to low moral standards.
Yes, very tiny ones
it is commonly caused by women pleasuring themselves and not washing their hands correctly after. Men can receive this condition by pleasuring women also.
being greedy
pleasuring multitudes of women at a time!
to hold what you have very close and protect the ones you love.
Moral fiber
A story which is written to teach a moral is called a homilectic. The moral it is meant to teach is called the homily. But not all stories are homilectic. The best ones hardly ever are.
The four senses of Scripture are the literal sense (the meaning conveyed by the words of Scripture), the allegorical sense (the deeper, symbolic meaning), the moral sense (the ethical teachings found in Scripture), and the anagogical sense (the spiritual or mystical interpretation related to the afterlife or final destiny).
Gary M. Hochberg has written: 'Kant, moral legislation and two senses of 'will'' -- subject(s): Ethics, Will
yes