Ethics, Integrity & Aptitude mock tests are under development. We're preparing MCQs and case-study based questions covering ethical theories, public service values, moral thinkers, and attitude — aligned to the UPSC CSE Prelims and Mains GS Paper IV pattern.
← Back to UPSC CSEEthics (GS Paper IV) is unique in UPSC Mains — it tests both conceptual knowledge and applied ethical reasoning through case studies. In Prelims, ethics-related questions occasionally appear in GS Paper II.
Ethics (GS Paper IV) tests your understanding of ethical concepts, public service values, and your ability to apply moral reasoning in governance scenarios through case studies.
Consequentialism / Utilitarianism — Rightness of an action judged by its outcomes/consequences. Greatest happiness for the greatest number (Bentham, J.S. Mill). Deontological Ethics — Rightness determined by adherence to rules/duties, regardless of consequences (Kant's Categorical Imperative). Virtue Ethics — Focuses on character and virtues of the moral agent, not just actions (Aristotle). Gandhian Ethics — Based on Truth (Satya) and Non-violence (Ahimsa); means must be as pure as the ends. Rawlsian Justice — Veil of ignorance, difference principle; justice as fairness. UPSC often asks which theory applies to a given scenario — so understand the core distinction between rule-based (deontology), outcome-based (consequentialism), and character-based (virtue ethics) approaches.
The ARC (Administrative Reforms Commission) and UPSC syllabus list core public service values: Integrity — consistency between values, words and actions; refusing to compromise on principles. Impartiality — treating all citizens equally regardless of identity. Non-partisanship — civil servants must remain politically neutral. Objectivity — decisions based on evidence, not personal preferences. Dedication to public service — prioritising citizens' welfare. Empathy — understanding and responding to the needs of vulnerable groups. Tolerance — respect for diversity. Compassion — genuine concern for the less privileged. These values are tested through scenarios in Mains case studies.
Indian Thinkers — Mahatma Gandhi (Satya, Ahimsa, Sarvodaya), Swami Vivekananda (service to humanity is service to God), Kautilya/Chanakya (Arthashastra — duty of a king), Rabindranath Tagore (human dignity, universal brotherhood). Western Thinkers — Socrates (examined life), Plato (philosopher-king, justice), Aristotle (virtue ethics, golden mean), Kant (categorical imperative — act only by maxims you'd make universal law), Bentham & J.S. Mill (utilitarianism), John Rawls (theory of justice — veil of ignorance). Key concepts — Plato's four virtues (wisdom, courage, temperance, justice); Aristotle's eudaimonia (human flourishing); Kant's duty-based ethics.
Emotional Intelligence (EI/EQ) — coined by Salovey & Mayer, popularised by Daniel Goleman. Four components: (1) Self-awareness — recognising own emotions; (2) Self-regulation — managing one's emotions; (3) Social awareness/Empathy — understanding others' emotions; (4) Relationship management — handling relationships effectively. Relevance for civil servants: IAS/IPS officers deal with complex human situations — disaster relief, conflict, vulnerable populations. High EQ helps in: crisis management without bias, building trust with citizens, navigating political pressure while maintaining integrity, and resolving conflicts constructively. UPSC case studies often present dilemmas requiring both analytical reasoning (IQ) and empathetic understanding (EQ).