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Ethical Imperative in Sports: From the Agonal Ideal to the Practice of Responsibility


Introduction: Sport as a Moral Field

Sports, in essence, is not only a physical activity but also a complex social institution filled with moral choices. The concept of the "ethical imperative" in sports refers to a system of unconditional moral requirements that arise not from external rules or the fear of punishment, but from the internal logic and purpose of sports activity itself. This imperative exists in tension between two poles: the ideal agonal (honest competition for the sake of competition itself, rooted in ancient tradition) and modern realities of hypercommercialization, politicization, and technologization. Scientific analysis allows us to identify its key dimensions and points of crisis.

Philosophical Foundations: From Kant to MacIntyre

The ethical imperative in sports can be examined through several philosophical perspectives:

Immanuel Kant's Categorical Imperative: An action is moral if its maxim can be converted into a universal law. In sports, this is expressed by the principle of "playing by the rules," which should be universal for all participants. Cheating (doping, fixed matches) is immoral not because it will be punished, but because it makes the very idea of competition impossible if it becomes a universal practice.

virtue ethics (Aristotle, Alasdair MacIntyre): Here the focus shifts from rules to the character of the agent — the athlete. The goal of sports is not just victory, but the achievement of internal well-being (perfection of skill, courage, justice, self-control), which cannot be achieved otherwise than through honest practice. A professional using doping may achieve external well-being (glory, money), but will never experience the internal well-being of true mastery.

The concept of "fair play" as a social contract: Participation in sports implies a voluntary acceptance of restrictions on rules for the sake of obtaining specific benefits that are only possible within these rules. Violating them is a form of moral treachery to the community.

Structure of the Ethical Imperative: Levels of Responsibility

The ethical field of sports is structured and imposes imperative requirements on different actors:

Level of the athlete:

Imperative of honesty: Refusal of doping, simulation, agreements.

Imperative of respect: To the opponent (see him as a condition of one's own perfection, not an enemy), judges, spectators, rules.

Imperative of responsibility for health: Not only one's own, but also the opponent (refusal of prohibited injurious techniques).

Example: The decision of German pentathlete Lena Schoneborn in 2022 to publicly condemn her coach-husband for physical abuse, despite personal and professional risks, is an act of following the imperative of dignity and truth.

Level of coach, doctor, manager:

Imperative of non-maleficence: Opposing pressure on the athlete, refusal of risky health methods, prohibition of concealing injuries.

Imperative of pedagogical responsibility: Raising not a champion at any cost, but a whole person.

Example: The drama of the GDR team, where doctors and coaches systematically violated the Hippocratic Oath, giving steroids to underage athletes without their knowledge, is a total violation of the ethical imperative.

Level of organizer, judge, federation:

Imperative of justice: Ensuring equal conditions, impartial judging, transparency of selection.

Imperative of care for the heritage: Organizing events taking into account environmental and social consequences.

Example: The scandal in figure skating at the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City, where preliminary agreements between judges were revealed, led to a fundamental change in the system of judging, as an attempt to restore the imperative of justice.

Level of spectator, fan, media:

Imperative of respect: Refusal of racist, xenophobic chants, insults.

Imperative of truthfulness: Responsible journalism, refusal to incite hatred.

Areas of Crisis and Challenges

Modern sports challenges traditional ethical imperatives, creating "gray zones":

Doping and bioethics: The boundary between treatment and enhancement (improvement) is blurred. Where does therapy end and unfair advantage begins? The imperative of health comes into conflict with the imperative of victory.

Technologies and "technological doping": The use of super-advanced suits, prosthetics (like Oscar Pistorius), or algorithms for game analysis raises questions about the boundaries of human competition. The imperative of honesty requires rethinking.

Hypercommercialization: The transfer of market logic into sports turns the athlete into a commodity and competition into a show. The imperative of serving the ideal is replaced by the imperative of profit.

Nationalism vs. universalism: The pressure to "represent the country" can lead to the abandonment of moral principles for the sake of "higher" national interests.

Interesting Facts and Cases of the Imperative Manifestation

Ancient example: At the ancient Olympic Games, athletes found guilty of cheating (bribing an opponent) were required to build a statue of Zeus at their own expense with a humiliating inscription — a material embodiment of moral condemnation.

Fair play of the highest order: At the 2020 tennis tournament, Belarusian Arina Sabalenko stopped the decisive rally of the match to point out to the referee a mark from her opponent's ball that she had not noticed. She preferred to lose a point but maintain the honesty of the game.

Imperative of solidarity: In 1968, American runners Tommie Smith and John Carlos raised their fists in black gloves on the podium, putting the imperative of social justice above the imperative of sports protocol, paying for it with a lifetime ban from the Games.

Counterexample — the failure of the imperative: The "Salikhova case" in Russian swimming (2010s) showed a systemic failure at all levels: the swimmer was accused of evading doping tests, the coach of pressure, the federation of concealing. This is an example of the collapse of the entire ethical architecture.

Conclusion: Sport as a Laboratory of Morality

The ethical imperative in sports is not a relic of the romantic era of amateurism, but a necessary condition for the existence of sports as significant human activity. Without it, sports degenerates into either a circus, a war, or a stock exchange. Its strength lies in appealing to internal, not external, motivations: honor, conscience, respect for oneself and others.

Modern challenges do not cancel the imperative, but make it more complex and multifaceted. It requires today not only the personal virtue of the athlete but also institutional ethics — the creation of systems (judging, anti-doping control, selection) that maximize the protection of fair play values. In this way, sports becomes a gigantic laboratory of morality, where universal ethical principles are tested and tested in real time and at the highest stakes. Adhering to these principles is what makes the "Olympic spirit," which turns physical competition into a phenomenon of human culture, and a champion not only into a record setter but also into a moral agent.


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Ethical imperative in sports // Dodoma: Tanzania (LIBRARY.TZ). Updated: 18.01.2026. URL: https://library.tz/m/articles/view/Ethical-imperative-in-sports (date of access: 09.02.2026).

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