ethics_ep08
... 2. In this way, traditional moral psychology, illustrated by Kohlberg, is very Kantian in orientation by emphasized the role of abstract reason. ...
... 2. In this way, traditional moral psychology, illustrated by Kohlberg, is very Kantian in orientation by emphasized the role of abstract reason. ...
Chief Officer Training Course
... 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 beliefs as to what is right and wrong. Most values do not.” LDR 5-7 ...
... 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 beliefs as to what is right and wrong. Most values do not.” LDR 5-7 ...
ethics primer
... 2. Are all ethical judgments “subjective” or “culturally relative?” To say that a judgment is “subjective” is to say that it is not generally shared by others. To say that a judgment is “culturally relative” is to say that it holds in one culture but not for others. Now judgments like “Parents shoul ...
... 2. Are all ethical judgments “subjective” or “culturally relative?” To say that a judgment is “subjective” is to say that it is not generally shared by others. To say that a judgment is “culturally relative” is to say that it holds in one culture but not for others. Now judgments like “Parents shoul ...
Crossing the Line: Economic Incentives and Ethical
... Contemporary Dimensions of Economics: •Microeconomics – examines the economic behavior of agents (including individuals and firms, consumers and producers) •Macroeconomics – examines the aggregate economy including variables such as unemployment, inflation, economic growth, monetary & fiscal policy ...
... Contemporary Dimensions of Economics: •Microeconomics – examines the economic behavior of agents (including individuals and firms, consumers and producers) •Macroeconomics – examines the aggregate economy including variables such as unemployment, inflation, economic growth, monetary & fiscal policy ...
Target audience • business practitioners, particularly to directors,
... rapidly growing importance in our society. The Master of Arts in Business Ethics is an interdisciplinary programme bringing together the fields of philosophical ethics, moral theology, business studies, marketing and public policy. It will encompass the social, political, legal, economic and moral a ...
... rapidly growing importance in our society. The Master of Arts in Business Ethics is an interdisciplinary programme bringing together the fields of philosophical ethics, moral theology, business studies, marketing and public policy. It will encompass the social, political, legal, economic and moral a ...
Slide 1
... Everything depends on the circumstances, especially the consequences of performing one action rather than another. How much ‘good’ does the action bring into the world? ‘The priority of the good over the right.’ ...
... Everything depends on the circumstances, especially the consequences of performing one action rather than another. How much ‘good’ does the action bring into the world? ‘The priority of the good over the right.’ ...
Four Types of Ethical Conflict
... factors: the action, the person who performs the action and the action's consequences. If the focus is on the action, we find that some actions are considered to be fundamentally wrong, no matter who performs them or what their consequences are. This focus of normative ethics is called deontology, f ...
... factors: the action, the person who performs the action and the action's consequences. If the focus is on the action, we find that some actions are considered to be fundamentally wrong, no matter who performs them or what their consequences are. This focus of normative ethics is called deontology, f ...
14-8C - CCRT
... Deldon Anne McNeely. Body Therapy and Depth Psychology, Toronto: Inner City Books, 1987. Written by a Jungian analyst and body therapist, this book illustrates how depth psychology and body therapy may be integrated in practice. A concise presentation of important considerations about the implicatio ...
... Deldon Anne McNeely. Body Therapy and Depth Psychology, Toronto: Inner City Books, 1987. Written by a Jungian analyst and body therapist, this book illustrates how depth psychology and body therapy may be integrated in practice. A concise presentation of important considerations about the implicatio ...
Ethics in the Financial Aid Profession
... 3. Research the cultural patterns of your work force and how those culture based values affect individual employees performance. 4. Accept the fact that we all have perceptions (which we confuse with knowledge) and ours is not the only reality; others see things differently. ...
... 3. Research the cultural patterns of your work force and how those culture based values affect individual employees performance. 4. Accept the fact that we all have perceptions (which we confuse with knowledge) and ours is not the only reality; others see things differently. ...
urpose in Life
... He felt that to get truth, a person must act on personal conviction, not one imposed by someone else. This search for truth causes apprehension, which he called “dread.” Awareness of death and nothingness=existential dread ...
... He felt that to get truth, a person must act on personal conviction, not one imposed by someone else. This search for truth causes apprehension, which he called “dread.” Awareness of death and nothingness=existential dread ...
Moral Reasoning
... How do we decide when face such issues. How do we determine what is “just”, “right” and “proper” in these and other instances? Choosing between right vs. right is not easy like choosing between right and wrong for business manager. On many occasion managers also choose between two wrongs . Manageri ...
... How do we decide when face such issues. How do we determine what is “just”, “right” and “proper” in these and other instances? Choosing between right vs. right is not easy like choosing between right and wrong for business manager. On many occasion managers also choose between two wrongs . Manageri ...
moral philosophy
... Each marries a wife, but they have their wives in common; for that which the Hellenes say that the Scythians do, is not in fact done by the Scythians but by the Massagetai, that is to say, whatever woman a man of the Massagetai may desire he hangs up his quiver in front of the waggon and has commer ...
... Each marries a wife, but they have their wives in common; for that which the Hellenes say that the Scythians do, is not in fact done by the Scythians but by the Massagetai, that is to say, whatever woman a man of the Massagetai may desire he hangs up his quiver in front of the waggon and has commer ...
Categorical Imperative
... • Kant argued that each person had a fundamental dignity that gives each person a value beyond price. • Thus, it is wrong to use people without their consent for our own selfish desires. • Morality requires that we always give others the opportunity to decide for themselves whether they wish to join ...
... • Kant argued that each person had a fundamental dignity that gives each person a value beyond price. • Thus, it is wrong to use people without their consent for our own selfish desires. • Morality requires that we always give others the opportunity to decide for themselves whether they wish to join ...
Does Morality Depend on Religion? - James Rachels
... nature makes nothing without some end in view, nothing to no purpose, it must be that nature has made all things specifically for the sake of man.” (Aristotle, 384-322 B.C.) ...
... nature makes nothing without some end in view, nothing to no purpose, it must be that nature has made all things specifically for the sake of man.” (Aristotle, 384-322 B.C.) ...
Ethics
... Study of Ethics Process of determining what is and is not a reasonable standard of moral conduct. Process of problem-solving to resolve situations in which there is actual or potential harm to an individual or group. ...
... Study of Ethics Process of determining what is and is not a reasonable standard of moral conduct. Process of problem-solving to resolve situations in which there is actual or potential harm to an individual or group. ...
Morality in the Modern World
... Possible Relationships between Religion and Moral Values Guiding Principles: Interpretation of Sacred Writings; The Golden Rule; Virtue Theory; Utilitarian Ethics; Kantian Ethics. ...
... Possible Relationships between Religion and Moral Values Guiding Principles: Interpretation of Sacred Writings; The Golden Rule; Virtue Theory; Utilitarian Ethics; Kantian Ethics. ...
Practice Quiz - General Ethics
... ‘Featherless biped’ is a mere biological definition b) Rationality is better than Featherlessness c) Animality is better than bipedalism d) It tells you more about what is important to know ...
... ‘Featherless biped’ is a mere biological definition b) Rationality is better than Featherlessness c) Animality is better than bipedalism d) It tells you more about what is important to know ...
ETHICS: BACKGROUND AND OVERVIEW
... “Ethics concerns itself with what is good/ right in human interaction” – one of many definitions – (slide 6) Interaction – two parties or “things” Good/ right - ??????? Ethics and the law (slide 7) Apples and barrels ...
... “Ethics concerns itself with what is good/ right in human interaction” – one of many definitions – (slide 6) Interaction – two parties or “things” Good/ right - ??????? Ethics and the law (slide 7) Apples and barrels ...
Ethics Considerations for Information Professionals
... • "Ethics is a guide for our morality when we face complicated situations that eclipse the level of our prior moral experience." (Richard W. Severson (1997). The Principles of Information Ethics. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. • "Ethics is mostly about how people should be treated and how one should act, ...
... • "Ethics is a guide for our morality when we face complicated situations that eclipse the level of our prior moral experience." (Richard W. Severson (1997). The Principles of Information Ethics. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. • "Ethics is mostly about how people should be treated and how one should act, ...
Ethics Theories
... According to Kant, we must not only act out of a right motivation, but must also do the right thing. Both the motive and the act must be morally relevant. (Any contradiction with the previous condition that as long as the motive is good the consequences of the act is not important?) Categorical im ...
... According to Kant, we must not only act out of a right motivation, but must also do the right thing. Both the motive and the act must be morally relevant. (Any contradiction with the previous condition that as long as the motive is good the consequences of the act is not important?) Categorical im ...
Ethics 160
... can be true or false. Premises are judged on the basis of whether they are true or false, and arguments are put together so that true premises related in the proper way will generate a true conclusion. • However, since some kinds of language are not truth evaluable, they are not (and cannot be) used ...
... can be true or false. Premises are judged on the basis of whether they are true or false, and arguments are put together so that true premises related in the proper way will generate a true conclusion. • However, since some kinds of language are not truth evaluable, they are not (and cannot be) used ...
WHAT IN THE WORLD IS ETHICS?
... by the work or lives of the mankind. They are the potentials of human ontology manifested by individuals. ...
... by the work or lives of the mankind. They are the potentials of human ontology manifested by individuals. ...
Emotivism
Emotivism is a meta-ethical view that claims that ethical sentences do not express propositions but emotional attitudes. Hence, it is colloquially known as the hurrah/boo theory. Influenced by the growth of analytic philosophy and logical positivism in the 20th century, the theory was stated vividly by A. J. Ayer in his 1936 book Language, Truth and Logic, but its development owes more to C. L. Stevenson.Emotivism can be considered a form of non-cognitivism or expressivism. It stands in opposition to other forms of non-cognitivism (such as quasi-realism and universal prescriptivism), as well as to all forms of cognitivism (including both moral realism and ethical subjectivism).In the 1950s, emotivism appeared in a modified form in the universal prescriptivism of R. M. Hare.