Most people learn ethical norms at home, school, religious institutions and social settings. Although we learn about right or wrong in our childhood, we acquire the knowledge of morality and develop it further throughout the different stages of life. Ethics is concerned with what is good for individuals and society. Morality is the belief or recognition that certain behaviors are either ‘good’ or ‘bad’. Some morals are very easy to accept and only the fringes of society might question or reject them. These people on the ‘fringes’ may be good or bad, the mere act of rejecting a socially accepted moral of the time is in no way an indicator of a person’s goodness. Hence Socrates said, “A system of morality which based on relative emotional values is a mere illusion, a thoroughly vulgar conception which has nothing in it and nothing true.” Before I read the literature of both Frederick Douglass and Friedrich Nietzsche, I never really gave it a deep thought. Ethics and Morality were something as simple as right or wrong, what my religion, my culture, and/or my society approve or don’t approve. I remember I stole money from my dad’s wallet to buy my childhood friend the book he just lost, because if his parents got to know, he would be punished. I was scared because I stole money which is a sin, but at the same time I convinced myself I did it to help my friend. I followed the Dutch Philosopher Baruch Spinoza’s quote “If men were born free, they would, so long as they remained free, from no conception of good or evil.” I did it without even realizing. Since every day we face ethical & moral issues, so I asked some of my friends (from different culture, religion) and families, “What is ethics?”. The Answers were different. The most common answers were “It has to do with my religious beliefs” or “Doing something that laws require us to do” or “Ethics is the set of standards of behavior our society acc