Work Ethics and Quality Workplace: An Observation from the
... In noting the meaning of work and work ethic from the modern perspective, Heelas (2002:78) ascribed that work ethics is an attribute to the value to work, the means to some ends. Miller et al. (2001) defined work ethic as a commitment to the value and importance of hard work among the potential empl ...
... In noting the meaning of work and work ethic from the modern perspective, Heelas (2002:78) ascribed that work ethics is an attribute to the value to work, the means to some ends. Miller et al. (2001) defined work ethic as a commitment to the value and importance of hard work among the potential empl ...
Divine Command Moral Ontology - SPARK: Scholarship at Parkland
... duties in a transcendent but non-theistic base, while the latter tries to ground them in some sort of human flourishing. These views will be considered in turn. Take first, Atheistic Moral Platonism (hereby AMP). This view may be said to find its origin in the works of Plato, who thought that there ...
... duties in a transcendent but non-theistic base, while the latter tries to ground them in some sort of human flourishing. These views will be considered in turn. Take first, Atheistic Moral Platonism (hereby AMP). This view may be said to find its origin in the works of Plato, who thought that there ...
PDF version - The Menlo Roundtable
... often search for a rational explanation. A common justification is that they support the death penalty because it is cheaper than keeping the criminals in jail for life. However, the truth is that the death penalty is more expensive. People do not always change their stance on the death penalty aft ...
... often search for a rational explanation. A common justification is that they support the death penalty because it is cheaper than keeping the criminals in jail for life. However, the truth is that the death penalty is more expensive. People do not always change their stance on the death penalty aft ...
Introduction to Moral Reasoning in Sport
... 1. Being accountable for one's actions. 2. Being accountable in the present, past, and future. a. Present. Jane is responsible, meaning something about her character. b. Past. Jane was responsible for that action. c. Future. Jane is responsible for some future action. Dr. Stoll,Director and Professo ...
... 1. Being accountable for one's actions. 2. Being accountable in the present, past, and future. a. Present. Jane is responsible, meaning something about her character. b. Past. Jane was responsible for that action. c. Future. Jane is responsible for some future action. Dr. Stoll,Director and Professo ...
Moral Reasoning - University of Idaho
... 1. Being accountable for one's actions. 2. Being accountable in the present, past, and future. a. Present. Jane is responsible, meaning something about her character. b. Past. Jane was responsible for that action. ...
... 1. Being accountable for one's actions. 2. Being accountable in the present, past, and future. a. Present. Jane is responsible, meaning something about her character. b. Past. Jane was responsible for that action. ...
Rhetoric
... Logos Example “We don’t have single-sex toilets at home, and we don’t need them at the office. Then there’s also the small question of efficiency. I see my male colleagues waiting in line to use the men’s room, when the women’s toilet is unoccupied. Which is precisely why Delta Airlines doesn’t lab ...
... Logos Example “We don’t have single-sex toilets at home, and we don’t need them at the office. Then there’s also the small question of efficiency. I see my male colleagues waiting in line to use the men’s room, when the women’s toilet is unoccupied. Which is precisely why Delta Airlines doesn’t lab ...
IMMANUEL KANT`S ETHICAL THEORY RIGHTS AND DUTIES DR
... action. Suppose Kant is right that reason discovers moral duties. So what? What happens then? We need to have action. Reason is insufficient to motivate us to do our duty, since we need a desire or an inclination to decide to do an action, even if we know that it's the right action. In fact, for Hum ...
... action. Suppose Kant is right that reason discovers moral duties. So what? What happens then? We need to have action. Reason is insufficient to motivate us to do our duty, since we need a desire or an inclination to decide to do an action, even if we know that it's the right action. In fact, for Hum ...
187 “Goodness itself must change” – Anthroponomy in an age of
... precise interrelationship to produce the effects that they do needs to be sorted out through socially conscious action. It is not the place to sort out these precise relationships – indeed, they differ from society to society – but it is the place and the time to bundle them under the placeholder of ...
... precise interrelationship to produce the effects that they do needs to be sorted out through socially conscious action. It is not the place to sort out these precise relationships – indeed, they differ from society to society – but it is the place and the time to bundle them under the placeholder of ...
Does Morality Demand our Very Best? On Moral Prescriptions and the Line of Duty
... uncommon for the agent herself to deny in these cases that she has done anything more than was her duty (Wes Autrey, for example, said: “I don’t feel like I did something spectacular; I just saw someone who needed help. I did what I felt was right.”i). But these protestations are usually thought the ...
... uncommon for the agent herself to deny in these cases that she has done anything more than was her duty (Wes Autrey, for example, said: “I don’t feel like I did something spectacular; I just saw someone who needed help. I did what I felt was right.”i). But these protestations are usually thought the ...
Document
... “No single act can do it. But a collection of things – reporting requirements, corporate governance, a move away from the imperial CEO – will add up.” Andy Grove Intel ...
... “No single act can do it. But a collection of things – reporting requirements, corporate governance, a move away from the imperial CEO – will add up.” Andy Grove Intel ...
Rightness and Responsibility
... connection between morality and motivation. At its heart is the thesis that rightness and other moral considerations represent reasons for people to act in accordance with them. This thesis is a version of the position that is sometimes called “rationalism” in ethics; if it is true, then we can say ...
... connection between morality and motivation. At its heart is the thesis that rightness and other moral considerations represent reasons for people to act in accordance with them. This thesis is a version of the position that is sometimes called “rationalism” in ethics; if it is true, then we can say ...
here
... sentiment; therefore, both are the basis of legislation. Sister Helen Prejean illustrates the role of both in her memoir, Dead Man Walking, in which she recounts her personal experience with capital punishment and its surrounding legislation. Even though she augments the injustice that stems from ec ...
... sentiment; therefore, both are the basis of legislation. Sister Helen Prejean illustrates the role of both in her memoir, Dead Man Walking, in which she recounts her personal experience with capital punishment and its surrounding legislation. Even though she augments the injustice that stems from ec ...
Relative Ethics or Universal Ethics
... Criticism #2 of Relative Ethics: If cultures and societies are morally infallible, then critics and reformers are morally wrong to try to change a culture or society. Moral progress thus becomes a meaningless idea, since it implies improvement of a society or culture that is already as morally right ...
... Criticism #2 of Relative Ethics: If cultures and societies are morally infallible, then critics and reformers are morally wrong to try to change a culture or society. Moral progress thus becomes a meaningless idea, since it implies improvement of a society or culture that is already as morally right ...
information ethics in the knowledge society
... Code of ethics is a list of guiding principles for ethical behaviors. Codes of ethics are bases of a system of discipline for information professions. In a code, the professions its members what they should consider when faced with an ethical dilemma. But codes can not provide everything that is req ...
... Code of ethics is a list of guiding principles for ethical behaviors. Codes of ethics are bases of a system of discipline for information professions. In a code, the professions its members what they should consider when faced with an ethical dilemma. But codes can not provide everything that is req ...
This paper thus proposes that only moderate forms of
... expect intervention to curb the practices of FGC to only have positive impacts since it is a form of wrongdoing. The case on FGC however differs from the case of the Tormentor as it is not a clear-cut violation of universal moral values. As Appiah mentions, cases such as the Tormentor who sincerely ...
... expect intervention to curb the practices of FGC to only have positive impacts since it is a form of wrongdoing. The case on FGC however differs from the case of the Tormentor as it is not a clear-cut violation of universal moral values. As Appiah mentions, cases such as the Tormentor who sincerely ...
Why Emotivists Love Inconsistency
... exactly the question we are trying to answer. So, even though I have refrained from defining emotivism negatively as the view that moral opinions are not beliefs, our problem remains.2 The second possibility, and the one developed here, is that even if an emotivist must say that the account of reaso ...
... exactly the question we are trying to answer. So, even though I have refrained from defining emotivism negatively as the view that moral opinions are not beliefs, our problem remains.2 The second possibility, and the one developed here, is that even if an emotivist must say that the account of reaso ...
Patients With Ventromedial Frontal Damage Have Moral Beliefs
... So we cannot conclude that VM patients do not have moral beliefs. That is a good thing, for if argument CB were true, either there would be no examples of practical irrationality, for beliefs would always mesh with behavior, or in cases where they didn’t, everyone would be practically irrational. Ch ...
... So we cannot conclude that VM patients do not have moral beliefs. That is a good thing, for if argument CB were true, either there would be no examples of practical irrationality, for beliefs would always mesh with behavior, or in cases where they didn’t, everyone would be practically irrational. Ch ...
Good Will, Duty, and the Categorical Imperative
... • Kant says that “the moral worth of an action does not lie in the effect expected from it, nor in any principle of action which requires to borrow its motive from this expected effect.” • Thus, unlike any consequentialist theory, Kant says that it is incorrect to look for the moral worth of an acti ...
... • Kant says that “the moral worth of an action does not lie in the effect expected from it, nor in any principle of action which requires to borrow its motive from this expected effect.” • Thus, unlike any consequentialist theory, Kant says that it is incorrect to look for the moral worth of an acti ...
VALUES, MORALS AND ETHICS
... 8. Moral principles must apply to all who are in the relevantly similar situation. If one judges that act X is right for a certain person P, then it is right for anyone relevantly similar to P. According to GOLDEN RULE “It cannot be right for A to treat B in a manner in which it would be wrong for ...
... 8. Moral principles must apply to all who are in the relevantly similar situation. If one judges that act X is right for a certain person P, then it is right for anyone relevantly similar to P. According to GOLDEN RULE “It cannot be right for A to treat B in a manner in which it would be wrong for ...
Globalization versus Relativism: The Imperative of a Universal Ethics
... The above implication raises some crucial concerns. If relative standards are all there is and by extension could possibly be, why bother about the effects of globalization? And does it imply that valid universal principles may never ever be discovered, or will be of no used if eventually found? The ...
... The above implication raises some crucial concerns. If relative standards are all there is and by extension could possibly be, why bother about the effects of globalization? And does it imply that valid universal principles may never ever be discovered, or will be of no used if eventually found? The ...
Ch. 4: Deontology
... o We do not get rights simply by wanting something very badly, but too few rights, reverts to Utilitarianism. ...
... o We do not get rights simply by wanting something very badly, but too few rights, reverts to Utilitarianism. ...
PSYC 206 Lifespan Development
... Stage two (self-interest): “Heinz should not steal the medicine because prison is an awful place, and he would more likely languish in a jail cell than over his ...
... Stage two (self-interest): “Heinz should not steal the medicine because prison is an awful place, and he would more likely languish in a jail cell than over his ...
What is Situation Ethics?
... The study above blamed many things on the fact that many people were turning away from the Church’s rules (legalism) and more towards antinomianism (the abandonment of any rules). The world was becoming more secular (non-religious) and people had stopped listening to the Church and their teachings o ...
... The study above blamed many things on the fact that many people were turning away from the Church’s rules (legalism) and more towards antinomianism (the abandonment of any rules). The world was becoming more secular (non-religious) and people had stopped listening to the Church and their teachings o ...
Situation Ethics Revision pp
... The study above blamed many things on the fact that many people were turning away from the Church’s rules (legalism) and more towards antinomianism (the abandonment of any rules). The world was becoming more secular (non-religious) and people had stopped listening to the Church and their teachings o ...
... The study above blamed many things on the fact that many people were turning away from the Church’s rules (legalism) and more towards antinomianism (the abandonment of any rules). The world was becoming more secular (non-religious) and people had stopped listening to the Church and their teachings o ...
Is Procreative Beneficence Obligatory?
... that (again, other things being equal) there is a moral reason to choose ...
... that (again, other things being equal) there is a moral reason to choose ...
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.