Biodiversity of Conscience: An Internal Framework Model for Ethical Pluralism in Higher Education
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26034/fr.jehe.2026.9780Keywords:
Biodiversity of conscience, ethical pluralism, internal ecosystem, consilience, nocebo, ethical resilience, Internal Biodiversity Framework (IBF), higher education ethicsAbstract
This article addresses a central challenge in higher education ethics: how can institutions cultivate morally resilient, ethically agile graduates and leaders in the face of growing value pluralism? Conscience is commonly conceptualised as a single-voiced, immutable inner judge — a view that insufficiently accounts for its dynamic, context-sensitive nature. Drawing on a metaphor from ecological biodiversity, this article introduces the Internal Biodiversity Framework (IBF), which reconceptualises conscience as an internal ecosystem of distinct ethical voices. Synthesising insights from psychodynamic theory, moral psychology, neurobiology, and traditions of Eastern and Western philosophy, the IBF proposes that ethical voice diversity strengthens moral resilience, enhances consilience (the creative integration of competing ethical perspectives), and acts as a natural buffer against ethical burnout and nocebo effects. The framework offers concrete, field-tested tools for higher education pedagogy, academic leadership development, and coaching, including an Ethical Voice Diary, an Ethical Ecosystem Map, and an Orchestra Conductor Protocol. Testable hypotheses are also proposed for future empirical validation through a draft Ethical Pluralism Scale. By repositioning conscience from a monolithic judge to a living ecosystem, the IBF provides higher education institutions with a principled, pluralistic approach to ethics education that resists both moral relativism and ethical monoculture.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Abdullah Çetin

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