intensive bioethics course 2017 - Monash Arts
... in ethical theory. It then proceeds to focus on application of these principles and frameworks to some of the most important and interesting traditional, contemporary, and emerging bioethical topics and questions, including reproductive ethics, public health ethics, resource allocation, organ transp ...
... in ethical theory. It then proceeds to focus on application of these principles and frameworks to some of the most important and interesting traditional, contemporary, and emerging bioethical topics and questions, including reproductive ethics, public health ethics, resource allocation, organ transp ...
Medical Ethics
... obligations because society trusts them to provide valuable goods and services that cannot be provided unless their conduct conforms to certain standards. • Professionals who fail to live up to their ethical ...
... obligations because society trusts them to provide valuable goods and services that cannot be provided unless their conduct conforms to certain standards. • Professionals who fail to live up to their ethical ...
Ethics and Ethical Theories
... Discussion stoppers • People disagree on solutions. – They also agree on many things. ...
... Discussion stoppers • People disagree on solutions. – They also agree on many things. ...
Ch 3 Ethics Intro
... Traveled?: 800 miles across South Atlantic Result?: Shackleton & his crew survived! ...
... Traveled?: 800 miles across South Atlantic Result?: Shackleton & his crew survived! ...
Chapter 4
... Hiring practices, labor relations, diversity issues, employment conditions are some specific issues that require careful thought ...
... Hiring practices, labor relations, diversity issues, employment conditions are some specific issues that require careful thought ...
On the Importance of Teaching Professional Ethics to Computer
... Methods and tools of analysis of ethical argument Professional and ethical responsibilities Risks and liabilities of safety-critical systems Intellectual property Privacy and civil liberties Social implications of the Internet Computer crime Philosophical foundations of ethics ...
... Methods and tools of analysis of ethical argument Professional and ethical responsibilities Risks and liabilities of safety-critical systems Intellectual property Privacy and civil liberties Social implications of the Internet Computer crime Philosophical foundations of ethics ...
On the Importance of Teaching Professional Ethics to Computer
... Methods and tools of analysis of ethical argument Professional and ethical responsibilities Risks and liabilities of safety-critical systems Intellectual property Privacy and civil liberties Social implications of the Internet Computer crime Philosophical foundations of ethics ...
... Methods and tools of analysis of ethical argument Professional and ethical responsibilities Risks and liabilities of safety-critical systems Intellectual property Privacy and civil liberties Social implications of the Internet Computer crime Philosophical foundations of ethics ...
Medical Ethics, Part I
... Every action should have pure intention behind it; otherwise it is meaningless Did not necessarily believe that the final result is the most important aspect of an action, but that how the person felt while carrying out the action is the time at which value was set to the ...
... Every action should have pure intention behind it; otherwise it is meaningless Did not necessarily believe that the final result is the most important aspect of an action, but that how the person felt while carrying out the action is the time at which value was set to the ...
Chapter 2
... • “to plagiarize means to present another person’s language or ideas as your own - to give the impression you have written or thought something yourself when you have actually taken it from someone else.” ...
... • “to plagiarize means to present another person’s language or ideas as your own - to give the impression you have written or thought something yourself when you have actually taken it from someone else.” ...
Ethics
... • Technology Precipitated Value Conflicts: – A development allows something to be done that precipitates a value conflict between two or more cherished values of one and the same party. • Life extending technologies force family members to choose between life extension and death with dignity. ...
... • Technology Precipitated Value Conflicts: – A development allows something to be done that precipitates a value conflict between two or more cherished values of one and the same party. • Life extending technologies force family members to choose between life extension and death with dignity. ...
moral philosophy
... - feeling isn’t enough. Why? - tradition isn’t enough. Why? - agreement isn’t enough, Why? ...
... - feeling isn’t enough. Why? - tradition isn’t enough. Why? - agreement isn’t enough, Why? ...
Rethinking the Ethical Framework
... is a judgment call based upon the individual’s understanding of the situation and ability to remove emotions from the decision-making process. Understanding that a virtue which may seem straight-forward is actually imbued with nuance and uncertainty in practice is an important first step toward sens ...
... is a judgment call based upon the individual’s understanding of the situation and ability to remove emotions from the decision-making process. Understanding that a virtue which may seem straight-forward is actually imbued with nuance and uncertainty in practice is an important first step toward sens ...
2. NOTIONS OF MORALITY (notes)
... Kant claimed that various actions are morally wrong if they are inconsistent with the status of a person as a free and rational being, and that, conversely, acts that further the status of people as free and rational beings are morally right. ...
... Kant claimed that various actions are morally wrong if they are inconsistent with the status of a person as a free and rational being, and that, conversely, acts that further the status of people as free and rational beings are morally right. ...
CALAseminar.041210
... Ethical Reasoning Based on the consequences of your action Utilitarianism: Choose the action that has the best overall consequences for everyone concerned. ...
... Ethical Reasoning Based on the consequences of your action Utilitarianism: Choose the action that has the best overall consequences for everyone concerned. ...
06. Questions of Values and Ethics
... Didn’t believe action would be taken. Feared retaliation from mgmt. Didn’t trust confidentiality. Feared not being a team player. Feared retaliation from co-workers. Didn’t know who to contact. ...
... Didn’t believe action would be taken. Feared retaliation from mgmt. Didn’t trust confidentiality. Feared not being a team player. Feared retaliation from co-workers. Didn’t know who to contact. ...
Maat, The Moral Ideal in Ancient Egypt: A Study
... Maatian thought as a rich resource for philosophic reflection and modern moral discourse, Professor Karenga draws on a wide range of literary, historical and archeological sources to recover and reconstruct this ancient ethical tradition in a dual process of interpretation and transmission. ...
... Maatian thought as a rich resource for philosophic reflection and modern moral discourse, Professor Karenga draws on a wide range of literary, historical and archeological sources to recover and reconstruct this ancient ethical tradition in a dual process of interpretation and transmission. ...
Ethics - aquireligion
... Knowledge – the agent has the intellectual knowledge; agent has awareness of the means to employ in performing an act. Freedom – agent does an act under the control of his will Voluntariness – requires the presence of knowledge and freedom; willful act ...
... Knowledge – the agent has the intellectual knowledge; agent has awareness of the means to employ in performing an act. Freedom – agent does an act under the control of his will Voluntariness – requires the presence of knowledge and freedom; willful act ...
EthICAL thEORY fOR fRAuD ExAmINERS
... in relation to human nature and conduct. Metaethics centers on matters of universal truths, the purpose of reason in ethical judgments, and the meaning of ethical terms. Metaethics addresses questions similar to the following: • What is really being talked about when people say something should be d ...
... in relation to human nature and conduct. Metaethics centers on matters of universal truths, the purpose of reason in ethical judgments, and the meaning of ethical terms. Metaethics addresses questions similar to the following: • What is really being talked about when people say something should be d ...
Professionalism & Medical Ethics
... • Is based on philosophical ethics • It isn’t any special ethics but rather ethics of special cases. • Medical ethics does not concern only doctors but also patients and society. • The central question of medical ethics is the doctor-patient relationship. ...
... • Is based on philosophical ethics • It isn’t any special ethics but rather ethics of special cases. • Medical ethics does not concern only doctors but also patients and society. • The central question of medical ethics is the doctor-patient relationship. ...
OCR Document - Francis Bennion
... cultures. He did not want to divide them into cultural groups. He wanted "an umbrella covering them all as human beings". The answer was to make the pupils genuine and effective partners in setting the ethical climate of their school. Excellent moves, comments Professor Bahm. He adds: "How they can ...
... cultures. He did not want to divide them into cultural groups. He wanted "an umbrella covering them all as human beings". The answer was to make the pupils genuine and effective partners in setting the ethical climate of their school. Excellent moves, comments Professor Bahm. He adds: "How they can ...
Project Team Development
... correspondence to and sustain fundamental rights • List of duties based on respect for persons and belief in human capacity for moral autonomy • For example, if you have a right not to be deceived, then I have a duty not to deceive you. To deceive you is to undermine your ability to carry out your p ...
... correspondence to and sustain fundamental rights • List of duties based on respect for persons and belief in human capacity for moral autonomy • For example, if you have a right not to be deceived, then I have a duty not to deceive you. To deceive you is to undermine your ability to carry out your p ...
Ethics
... Decision-making employees must explain, in detail, how the organization’s principles are upheld in any decision they advocate or present. Principles-based decisions must be discussed and celebrated. ...
... Decision-making employees must explain, in detail, how the organization’s principles are upheld in any decision they advocate or present. Principles-based decisions must be discussed and celebrated. ...
Week 01 - ETHICS_tal..
... ENGINEERING ETHICS in 3D Gene Moriarty Department of Electrical Engineering San Jose State University ...
... ENGINEERING ETHICS in 3D Gene Moriarty Department of Electrical Engineering San Jose State University ...
Arthur Schafer
Professor Arthur Schafer is a Canadian ethicist specializing in bioethics, philosophy of law, social philosophy and political philosophy. He is Director of the Centre for Professional and Applied Ethics, at the University of Manitoba.He is also a Full Professor in the Department of Philosophy and an Ethics Consultant for the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health at the Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg. For ten years he was Head of the Section of Bio-Medical Ethics in the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Manitoba. He has also served as Visiting Scholar Green College, Oxford.Professor Schafer has received a number of awards and honours. He is a Canadian Commonwealth Scholar, Honorary Woodrow Wilson Scholar, a Canada Council Fellow. At the University of Manitoba he has received the Stanton Teaching Excellence Award, the Campbell Award for University Outreach, and the University Teaching Service Award for Teaching Excellence.Arthur Schafer has published widely in the fields of moral, social, and political philosophy. He is author of The Buck Stops Here: Reflections on moral responsibility, democratic accountability and military values, and co-editor of Ethics and Animal Experimentation. His curriculum vitae lists more than 90 scholarly articles and book chapters, covering a wide range of topics, with a special focus on issues in professional and bio-medical ethics, business and environmental ethics. Professor Schafer is National Research Associate of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, which has published two of his Reports. He has made several hundred conference presentations in Canada and abroad, and has written dozens of newspaper articles for The Globe and Mail, The Toronto Star, The Winnipeg Free Press, The Medical Post, and The Sunday Times (London). Arthur Schafer has been a frequent guest on CBC radio and television, including many appearances on CBC radio’s Morningside, This Morning and The Current, As It Happens, Sunday Morning, and Cross Country Check Up; and CBC television’s The National, The Journal, The National Magazine, and Newsworld. He has also appeared frequently on The Discovery Network’s “@Discovery.ca”, discussing ethical and value aspects of medicine, science and technology; and on the CTV, WTN, Global and Baton television networks.