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Slide 1
Slide 1

... • Do your share to make your community better • Cooperate • Get involved in community affairs • Stay informed • Be a good neighbor • Obey laws and rules • Respect authority Reference: Josephson Institute of Ethics (1996). Michael S. Josephson. ...
Four Types of Ethical Conflict
Four Types of Ethical Conflict

... Kant coined the following maxim, known as the Categorical Imperative, to help people decide which actions should be governed by rules: "Act only according to that maxim by which you can also will that it would become a universal law." In other words, people should only do things that they would be h ...
ii. Ethical Egoism and Social Contract Theory (A coagulation of
ii. Ethical Egoism and Social Contract Theory (A coagulation of

... Consequential thought also falls under teleology (as the ends of the action create morality for the entire action itself- an extension of one's own morality). Consequentialist theories hold that we ought always to act in the way that brings about the best consequences. It doesn’t matter what those a ...
Set 5 (ethics)
Set 5 (ethics)

... balance of good over bad for self, with ethical constraints Utilitarianism: greatest good for the greatest number, or maximize the social benefit function ...
Document
Document

... and reinforcing important company values. ...
ethics 101 - Driehaus College of Business
ethics 101 - Driehaus College of Business

... By reason of its Catholic character, DePaul strives to bring the light of Catholic faith and the treasures of knowledge into a mutually challenging and supportive relationship. It accepts as its corporate responsibility to remain faithful to the Catholic message drawn from authentic religious source ...
Pagan Environmental Ethics
Pagan Environmental Ethics

... commitment to our own children wins out over our commitment to someone else's. So, if we can uncover the sense and extent of community expressed by the Pagan worldview then we can more clearly perceive their ethical commitments and their environmental ethics. In general, even though there are variou ...
Prediction table 2012 File
Prediction table 2012 File

... Bentham and that of Mill. [25] (b) ‘Mill’s Utilitarianism is superior in every way to the Utilitarianism of ...
FREE Sample Here - test bank and solution manual for
FREE Sample Here - test bank and solution manual for

... There are two main arguments for relativism. o There are many different moral standards of behavior. o We do not know how to determine the absolute rules. Cultural relativism defines “good” as that which contributes to the health and survival of society. Occupational subcultures also support standar ...
Chief Officer Training Course
Chief Officer Training Course

...  Michael Josephson states: – “The terms values and ethics are not interchangeable. Ethics is concerned with how a moral person should behave, whereas values simply concern the various beliefs and attitudes that determine how a person actually behaves. Some values concern ethics when they pertain to ...
Group1 - Southern University College
Group1 - Southern University College

... 35. In what two branches is Buddhism divided into? A. Big and Right B. Theravada and Mahayana C. Black and white D. Ying and Yang 36. Deepavali is known as… A. the festival of lights. B. the celebration of enlightenment. C. a holy person. D. a state of happiness. 37. Guru of the Sikhs? ...
Information Technology And Control
Information Technology And Control

... Ethical Relativism and No-harm Principle. The national cultural connection was stronger with Ethical Relativism, where six cultural practices and two cultural values seem to be related to how people think about what is right and wrong. Concerning the No-Harm Principle one should not psychologically ...
Ethical Egoism
Ethical Egoism

... owners to pursue their own interest of maximum financial gain by capitalizing on what others are willing to pay to pursue their own interest of survival in the wake of natural ...
Key Points
Key Points

... Source: “Do Your Employees See,” located at http://www.bsr.org/BSRMagazine/INDepth/analysis.cfm ...
Shafer-Landua and Ethical Subjectivism - K
Shafer-Landua and Ethical Subjectivism - K

... 2. Either He does so because these are the right rules, or not. 3. Suppose not. 4. Then God’s commands are arbitrary, and supply no authoritative moral reasons for actions (at most the reasons are prudential—one serve’s one’s best interests by obeying them; but there is no reason to think disobedien ...
Ethical Decision Making and Personality Type – Leo Klug
Ethical Decision Making and Personality Type – Leo Klug

... most of us, this could be done retrospectively i.e. reviewing several ethical decisions we've recently made. Placing the four basic phases of the process of ethical discernment alongside how our particular T ype ranks the four inner functions, should provide immediate insights. Unless we are intenti ...
Ethical Reflections in Doctoral First, Second and Third Person Action
Ethical Reflections in Doctoral First, Second and Third Person Action

... First person practice means that our own beliefs, values, assumptions, ways of thinking and behaving are afforded explicit attention as we experience ourselves in inquiry and in action. The ethical challenges in first person work have an intellectual, a moral and an affective dimension. The doctoral ...
Writing and Analyzing Ethics Cases in Business
Writing and Analyzing Ethics Cases in Business

... – Thin cases are useful for abstracting a single point and focusing work on that point. – Thick cases can give the student practice in making ethical decisions in the full context of the messy real ...
Ethics Workshop with Case - University of Missouri
Ethics Workshop with Case - University of Missouri

... of impending respiratory failure. Her husband arrives and notices her declining condition and asks what you plan to do. To your surprise, when you explain and relate the content of your conversation with his wife he states that he believes that she is too ill and disabled to be capable of deciding a ...
Firms must adapt to survive turbulence
Firms must adapt to survive turbulence

... concerns and environmental dy­ namics respectively. In a press conference recently, the Nokia ...
Ethical Behavior - Northwest Missouri State University
Ethical Behavior - Northwest Missouri State University

... provides the most good or does the least harm, or, to put it another way, produces the greatest balance of good over harm. The ethical corporate action, then, is the one that produces the greatest good and does the least harm for all who are affected-customers, employees, shareholders, the community ...
Moral Reasoning
Moral Reasoning

... Although ultimately these are formally equivalent, the first illustrates the need for moral principles to be universalizable. The second points to the radical distinction to be made between things and persons, and emphasizes the necessity of respect for ...
In A Board Culture of Corporate Governance business author
In A Board Culture of Corporate Governance business author

... and controlling management activities with good business savvy, objectivity and integrity. Sound corporate governance is reliant on external marketplace commitment and legislation, plus a healthy board culture which safeguards policies and processes'. O'Donovan goes on to say that 'the perceived qua ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Decision Action ...
Lecture 23 - Paul DJ Harris
Lecture 23 - Paul DJ Harris

... Therefore there are no transcendent, objective or eternal values Mankind is alone in the universe and “condemned to be free” (p.359) This unconditional freedom means that there are no moral laws that we must obey For example; I can choose to be rational The ten commandments only have authority if I ...
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Business ethics

Business ethics (also corporate ethics) is a form of applied ethics or professional ethics that examines ethical principles and moral or ethical problems that arise in a business environment. It applies to all aspects of business conduct and is relevant to the conduct of individuals and entire organizations.Business ethics has normative and descriptive dimensions. As a corporate practice and a career specialization, the field is primarily normative. Academics attempting to understand business behavior employ descriptive methods. The range and quantity of business ethical issues reflects the interaction of profit-maximizing behavior with non-economic concerns.Interest in business ethics accelerated dramatically during the 1980s and 1990s, both within major corporations and within academia. For example, most major corporations today promote their commitment to non-economic values under headings such as ethics codes and social responsibility charters.Adam Smith said, ""People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices."" Governments use laws and regulations to point business behavior in what they perceive to be beneficial directions. Ethics implicitly regulates areas and details of behavior that lie beyond governmental control. The emergence of large corporations with limited relationships and sensitivity to the communities in which they operate accelerated the development of formal ethics regimes.
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