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Chapter 3: Ethics and Social Responsibility in Strategic Management
Chapter 3: Ethics and Social Responsibility in Strategic Management

... Reasons for Unethical Behavior ...
Ethical Models
Ethical Models

... • Compare/discuss your answers on items where there is disagreement. • Were there more or less items where group members agreed? Disagreed? ...
Humanities 117: Philosophical Perspectives on the Humanities First Paper
Humanities 117: Philosophical Perspectives on the Humanities First Paper

... concepts relate to such traditional formulae as “Love thy neighbor as thyself” and “Do as you would be done by”? (Can Hume and/or Kant be seen as interpreting these sayings? As correcting them?) In what ways would Kant say that Hume’s analysis of morality, in terms of these concepts, is correct, and ...
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A Plea for Moral Deference
A Plea for Moral Deference

... whom one might defer about what morality requires one to do. To generate that further conclusion, even for a given point in time, we would need to be shown that every ordinary person had developed his or her in principle equal epistemic capacities equally, i.e. to the same extent as everyone else (a ...
Materialy/07/Definition of Ethics
Materialy/07/Definition of Ethics

... enjoin virtues of honesty, compassion, and loyalty. And, ethical standards include standards relating to rights, such as the right to life, the right to freedom from injury, and the right to privacy. Such standards are adequate standards of ethics because they are supported by consistent and well fo ...
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... events or dispositions of objects. But how, absent explicit instruction, will she learn to discriminate between the rule-governed behavior concerning recyclables and the merely accidental but regular placement of the cereal box? Since elements of the world rarely come with labels, it is highly impla ...
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Key Enron Players - McGraw Hill Higher Education

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The Moral Philosophy of Bernard Williams

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Is Global Poverty a Moral Problem for Citizens of Affluent Societies
Is Global Poverty a Moral Problem for Citizens of Affluent Societies

... visits that country. That borders do matter morally seems to stand behind the fact that although U.S. citizens privately donate less than $15 per capita to foreign people, their total private charitable contributions are around $700 per capita.11 This suggests that people feel compassion for good ca ...
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Ethics - aquireligion

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Medical Ethics, Part I

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KAUSALITÄT UND MOTIVATION BEI EDITH STEIN

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The Most Influential Group of Philosophers

... In the course of human history, there have been many great, influential philosophers that have changed our view of this small planet and the universe around it. Perhaps the most influential group of philosophers came from ancient Greece. Many ideals and principles we use today come from three promin ...
MORAL INTUITION, MORAL THEORY, AND PRACTICAL ETHICS
MORAL INTUITION, MORAL THEORY, AND PRACTICAL ETHICS

... considerations may in fact have; but we are generally not overawed by the fact that these considerations have been identified as relevant by the theory. Their provenance in the theory fails to impress. One may even feel a certain puzzlement as to whether the norms and principles extracted from a mor ...
Meta-Ethics and the Problem of Creeping
Meta-Ethics and the Problem of Creeping

... Ayer’s inheritors, and so would just about any of his fellow travelers or his critics count him, but if you ask Blackburn whether there really is any such thing as moral wrongness, he will (unless you catch him an especially unguarded moment) say that there certainly is, and he’ll probably go on to ...
From Ethical Theory to Practice
From Ethical Theory to Practice

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02 key concepts

... the ontological view that a system of ethics can rest on some solid, universal foundation that is inherent in the nature of reality may be rooted in a material or spiritual worldview even if foundational ethical truths exist, we may or may not be able to discover or “know” such truths with confidenc ...
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Moral relativism

Moral relativism may be any of several philosophical positions concerned with the differences in moral judgments across different people and cultures. Descriptive moral relativism holds only that some people do in fact disagree about what is moral; meta-ethical moral relativism holds that in such disagreements, nobody is objectively right or wrong; and normative moral relativism holds that because nobody is right or wrong, we ought to tolerate the behavior of others even when we disagree about the morality of it. Not all descriptive relativists adopt meta-ethical relativism, and moreover, not all meta-ethical relativists adopt normative relativism. Richard Rorty, for example, argued that relativist philosophers believe ""that the grounds for choosing between such opinions is less algorithmic than had been thought"", but not that any belief is equally as valid as any other.Moral relativism has been espoused, criticized, and debated for thousands of years, from ancient Greece and India to the present day, in diverse fields including philosophy, science, and religion.
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