Human existence is shared existence, that is, lived in coexistence with others. And it is this coexistence that defines the construction of the human being as a person and gives it a social dimension, based on institutions that imposes rules or standards governing the actions and relations with its members. And the way we relate to within the socially established moral standards will define our action, the intention of the subject moral act in a certain way. So the action is always someone, it gives you a personal dimension, which acts due to social norms, so ethics has a personal and social dimension and these two are inseparable.
However, sometimes human interaction is not always peaceful, emerging conflicts are mediated by institutions that provide a set of moral standards and socially shared indicator of what is good from what is bad. But it's the agent who incubate decide and select and implement the standards and their intentions. That is due to the way you see yourself in a given situation and its existence in society. The self designates the image that the individual has of himself, the opinion that others have of themselves and the expectations created by others relative to each other, and on which not only their actions but also what it is. Therefore the formation of man requires an inseparable relationship with themselves, with others and with institutions.
However, sometimes human interaction is not always peaceful, emerging conflicts are mediated by institutions that provide a set of moral standards and socially shared indicator of what is good from what is bad. But it's the agent who incubate decide and select and implement the standards and their intentions. That is due to the way you see yourself in a given situation and its existence in society. The self designates the image that the individual has of himself, the opinion that others have of themselves and the expectations created by others relative to each other, and on which not only their actions but also what it is. Therefore the formation of man requires an inseparable relationship with themselves, with others and with institutions.