It seems to mean Taking advantage of opportunities, but not of people.
The word 'principled' is the adjective form of the abstract noun principle.
you can't
unprincipled
Please give an example of where you acted in a principled, open and conscientiousness manner. What was the situation? What did you do? What was the outcome?
Managerial opportunism is basically when a person takes takes advantage of a managment position, and tries to get their in any manner that they can. Some examples of this are: job hopping, on the job consumption, and excessive product diversification.
The opposite of amoral is principled.
Absolutely not! she is principled
Principled behaviour is behaviour that is informed by some kind of background knowledge of the issue in question. It is behaviour that that is based on principles underlying the particular area of knowledge.
Dignity in humans is the quality of being worthy of honor or respect, of being highly principled and having a sense of pride in oneself.
Taking advantage of circumstances, often selfishly, when you are in a certain rank (e.g Lieutenant)
moral, principled, good, just, fair, responsible
It means a righteous wrongdoing. Honorable is defined as principled or righteous whereas transgression means wrongdoing, offense or crime contradicting each other.