
Integrity and Ethics,Mr.Shiva Hari Adhikari
... wrong that prescribe what ought to do, usually in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society, fairness, or specific virtues. Higher ethical standard and practices is critical in administering work to gain public trust. ...
... wrong that prescribe what ought to do, usually in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society, fairness, or specific virtues. Higher ethical standard and practices is critical in administering work to gain public trust. ...
A Critique of Personhood Author(s): S. F. Sapontzis Source: Ethics
... about the world rather than being merely things in the world. In everyday experience personn" is just another name for human beings, and personsd are commonly distinguished from inanimate objects, machines, plants, animals, and spirits.3 This distinction is made on the basis of both bodily shape and ...
... about the world rather than being merely things in the world. In everyday experience personn" is just another name for human beings, and personsd are commonly distinguished from inanimate objects, machines, plants, animals, and spirits.3 This distinction is made on the basis of both bodily shape and ...
Ethical Behavior
... What is considered ethical varies among moral reasoning approaches. What is considered ethical can vary across cultures. Ethical dilemmas arise as tests of personal ethics and values. People have tendencies to rationalize unethical behaviors. ...
... What is considered ethical varies among moral reasoning approaches. What is considered ethical can vary across cultures. Ethical dilemmas arise as tests of personal ethics and values. People have tendencies to rationalize unethical behaviors. ...
Chapter Five
... corporations does not confine its or its employees’ responsibilities to profit making – often only business has the know-how, talent, experience, and organizational resources to tackle problems. Objection to second argument: Corporations already promote consumerism and materialism – but from a bro ...
... corporations does not confine its or its employees’ responsibilities to profit making – often only business has the know-how, talent, experience, and organizational resources to tackle problems. Objection to second argument: Corporations already promote consumerism and materialism – but from a bro ...
Moral realism - A Level Philosophy
... the normative facts, then they will also agree on the value. So we can understand values as a type of fact. Moral realism accepts that it can be very difficult to establish whether a natural fact constitutes a reason for believing something is right or wrong, and how strong this reason is. But this ...
... the normative facts, then they will also agree on the value. So we can understand values as a type of fact. Moral realism accepts that it can be very difficult to establish whether a natural fact constitutes a reason for believing something is right or wrong, and how strong this reason is. But this ...
Chapter 1
... • Scholars argue cases for and against corporate social responsibility. • Social business and social entrepreneurship point the way in social responsibility • Failures of ethics and social responsibility prompt calls for stronger governance. ...
... • Scholars argue cases for and against corporate social responsibility. • Social business and social entrepreneurship point the way in social responsibility • Failures of ethics and social responsibility prompt calls for stronger governance. ...
Technology And Society
... are immediate, stakeholders sometimes can assess costs and negotiate remedies and compensations—although when the costs and benefits accrue to different communities and demographic (ethnic) groups, both analysis and remediation can be difficult. When negative impacts of technological ...
... are immediate, stakeholders sometimes can assess costs and negotiate remedies and compensations—although when the costs and benefits accrue to different communities and demographic (ethnic) groups, both analysis and remediation can be difficult. When negative impacts of technological ...
Biocentric Ethical Theories
... Schweitzer considered that people are ethical only when they obey the compulsion to help all life they are able to assist, and to the degree it is capable of feeling. Although the ethics concerning humans was very profound and vibrant, it was incomplete. An integrated ethics calls for kindness (bene ...
... Schweitzer considered that people are ethical only when they obey the compulsion to help all life they are able to assist, and to the degree it is capable of feeling. Although the ethics concerning humans was very profound and vibrant, it was incomplete. An integrated ethics calls for kindness (bene ...
or - COKY - WordPress.com
... The word business derives from the Middle English terms for busy and ness, and its primary meaning is to engage in purposeful activity. ...
... The word business derives from the Middle English terms for busy and ness, and its primary meaning is to engage in purposeful activity. ...
Chapter 4
... 6. to whom organizations are socially responsible. 7. for what organizations are socially responsible. 8. how organizations can choose to respond to societal demands for social responsibility. 9. whether social responsibility hurts or helps an organization’s economic performance. ...
... 6. to whom organizations are socially responsible. 7. for what organizations are socially responsible. 8. how organizations can choose to respond to societal demands for social responsibility. 9. whether social responsibility hurts or helps an organization’s economic performance. ...
CHAPTER 1 - WHAT IS MORALITY
... characteristics. For example, does moral goodness involve some relation to happiness or pleasure? Does the good involve excellence of some sort? Or harmony and creativity? Is it possible to be amoral – of being indifferent to right and wrong? What things are non moral? For example, my pen that I wri ...
... characteristics. For example, does moral goodness involve some relation to happiness or pleasure? Does the good involve excellence of some sort? Or harmony and creativity? Is it possible to be amoral – of being indifferent to right and wrong? What things are non moral? For example, my pen that I wri ...
Mark Scheme June
... moral virtues throughout life would help a person make a decision about extramarital sex. They may also discuss following the example of virtuous people. Candidates may discuss whether extramarital sex would make a person more virtuous and discuss the values involved. They may also discuss whether e ...
... moral virtues throughout life would help a person make a decision about extramarital sex. They may also discuss following the example of virtuous people. Candidates may discuss whether extramarital sex would make a person more virtuous and discuss the values involved. They may also discuss whether e ...
KAUSALITÄT UND MOTIVATION BEI EDITH STEIN
... moral experience, the unconditioned means here an inalienable guideline for acting, since it involves reason, whose judgements strive towards truth, and it does not mean a merely formal universale law with which the maximes of acting had to be measured. But if Husserl’s categorical imperative is not ...
... moral experience, the unconditioned means here an inalienable guideline for acting, since it involves reason, whose judgements strive towards truth, and it does not mean a merely formal universale law with which the maximes of acting had to be measured. But if Husserl’s categorical imperative is not ...
24 Character Development and Good Sporting
... Social learning approach Good sporting behavior and attitudes are learned through models, reinforcement, and social comparison. Structural–developmental approach ...
... Social learning approach Good sporting behavior and attitudes are learned through models, reinforcement, and social comparison. Structural–developmental approach ...
Glossary of Ethics - Lonergan Resource
... morally preferable, like the early ending of a war. Proponents include Immanuel Kant and Paul Ramsey. Outcomes Ethics. Also called ―teological ethics,‖ from telos, the end or the goal. Actions are judged to be morally good in light of expected outcomes. Goal Ethics. An act right only if its goal is ...
... morally preferable, like the early ending of a war. Proponents include Immanuel Kant and Paul Ramsey. Outcomes Ethics. Also called ―teological ethics,‖ from telos, the end or the goal. Actions are judged to be morally good in light of expected outcomes. Goal Ethics. An act right only if its goal is ...
CSR – FROM ECONOMICS TO LAW AND ETHICS. A CASE AND
... problems. Poor people tend to justify their bad deeds saying that they should be forgiven because they are poor. The question is whether they would have done differently, had they been rich. This can be easily called an ethics of survival, an ethics that allows people use poverty as an argument. An ...
... problems. Poor people tend to justify their bad deeds saying that they should be forgiven because they are poor. The question is whether they would have done differently, had they been rich. This can be easily called an ethics of survival, an ethics that allows people use poverty as an argument. An ...
Kantian Ethics
... This theory states that for any action to have any moral worth we can only look at the motives or intentions behind the act ...
... This theory states that for any action to have any moral worth we can only look at the motives or intentions behind the act ...
Moral Absolutism: a Response to Relativists
... rights which supersede cultural relativism, as well as particular moral policies relative to cultures. She discusses the issue of female circumcision, a medical procedure condoned, and even encouraged, by Sudan’s current ethical policies. The procedure is both harmful and dangerous, of which “chroni ...
... rights which supersede cultural relativism, as well as particular moral policies relative to cultures. She discusses the issue of female circumcision, a medical procedure condoned, and even encouraged, by Sudan’s current ethical policies. The procedure is both harmful and dangerous, of which “chroni ...
What Should We Want From a Robot Ethic?
... Consider this: A robot is given two conflicting orders by two different humans. Whom should it obey? Its owner? The more socially powerful? The one making the more ethical request? The person it likes better? Or should it follow the request that serves its own interests best? Consider further: Does ...
... Consider this: A robot is given two conflicting orders by two different humans. Whom should it obey? Its owner? The more socially powerful? The one making the more ethical request? The person it likes better? Or should it follow the request that serves its own interests best? Consider further: Does ...
Is Carmela Soprano a Feminist? - AST-TOK
... Carmela acknowledges the pain a marital separation will cause the children, but also accepts hat this pain can no longer be postponed by shouldering all of the hurt herself. Carmela has actually succeeded in using mature care ethics to reason through her moral dilemma. She is finally able to balance ...
... Carmela acknowledges the pain a marital separation will cause the children, but also accepts hat this pain can no longer be postponed by shouldering all of the hurt herself. Carmela has actually succeeded in using mature care ethics to reason through her moral dilemma. She is finally able to balance ...
ETHICS: BACKGROUND AND OVERVIEW
... Identify the consequences for them Identify their claims or rights Identify the obligations to them Consider your own character and integrity Think creatively about potential actions Discuss your decision with others Check your gut feeling ...
... Identify the consequences for them Identify their claims or rights Identify the obligations to them Consider your own character and integrity Think creatively about potential actions Discuss your decision with others Check your gut feeling ...
Slide 1 - Faculty Personal Homepage
... that there really are not any justifiable, reliable ethical standards. ...
... that there really are not any justifiable, reliable ethical standards. ...
Consequentialism

Consequentialism is the class of normative ethical theories holding that the consequences of one's conduct are the ultimate basis for any judgment about the rightness or wrongness of that conduct. Thus, from a consequentialist standpoint, a morally right act (or omission from acting) is one that will produce a good outcome, or consequence. In an extreme form, the idea of consequentialism is commonly encapsulated in the English saying, ""the ends justify the means"", meaning that if a goal is morally important enough, any method of achieving it is acceptable.Consequentialism is usually contrasted with deontological ethics (or deontology), in that deontology, in which rules and moral duty are central, derives the rightness or wrongness of one's conduct from the character of the behaviour itself rather than the outcomes of the conduct. It is also contrasted with virtue ethics, which focuses on the character of the agent rather than on the nature or consequences of the act (or omission) itself, and pragmatic ethics which treats morality like science: advancing socially over the course of many lifetimes, such that any moral criterion is subject to revision. Consequentialist theories differ in how they define moral goods.Some argue that consequentialist and deontological theories are not necessarily mutually exclusive. For example, T. M. Scanlon advances the idea that human rights, which are commonly considered a ""deontological"" concept, can only be justified with reference to the consequences of having those rights. Similarly, Robert Nozick argues for a theory that is mostly consequentialist, but incorporates inviolable ""side-constraints"" which restrict the sort of actions agents are permitted to do.