Abstract

The article discusses issues of relative unity and difference of legal and moral norms in Kazakh society that have not yet been studied in social and political science. The article examines in more detail the political and moral aspects: the difference of the legal and moral norms of Kazakh society; the relative unity of Kazakh law and morality of the people of Kazakhstan and others. The article states that the relative unity of legal and moral norms in Kazakh society is reflected primarily in the difference of the created ways, the forms of their existence and their guarantees. The rules of law are contained in the legislation, presidential decrees, decrees, statutes, orders and other acts of the organs of the Kazakh State, and the rules of morality are contained in the public conscience. Moral norms are transmitted from generation to generation in the form of generally accepted notions of good and evil, of nobility and vileness, etc., are imprinted in folk proverbs, legends, in works of art. However, the article also focuses on discussion issues.

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