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Ethical Philosophies Utilitarianism (Bentham & Mills) Deontology Ethics Ethics of consequences (Kant) of Duty (Ethical laws) Principles willed into Universal laws Treat people as ends (not means) Virtues (Aristotle) Ethics of Character Philosophical Ethics Teleological Deontological Results oriented Actions have no intrinsic ethical character (acquire moral status from their consequences) or Act oriented Actions are inherently right or wrong (e.g., lying, cheating, stealing) Philosophically Based Ethics (another perspective) Utilitarianism (Bentham & Mills) Deontology Ethics Ethics of consequences (Kant) of Duty (Ethical laws) Principles willed into Universal laws Treat people as ends (not means) Virtues (Aristotle) Ethics of Character Bentham’s Hedonistic Calculus Bentham (not originally called Utilitarianism) Moral science (vs. ascetic religious) Quantifying pleasure Pleasure good, pain bad Hedonistic calculus (7 aspects) 1. Intensity (Intrinsic strength of the pleasurable or painful feelings produced.) 2. Duration (how long they last) 3. Certainty / Uncertainty (likelihood of sensations being produced by given action. 4. Propinquity / Remoteness (how soon they will be felt) 5. Fecundity (whether actions lead to pleasure) 6. Purity (whether actions lead to pain) 7. Extent (number of people affected) Open, public, objective, fair Mill’s types of pleasure (quality vs. quantity) Business Systems Economic systems (underlying ideologies) “normative” beliefs Motivation? Basic purpose(s)? Function of society Market Free-Market John Locke’s (rights) All are free and equal Rights of freedom, property, and protection Negative / positive rights? Rights versus justice? Individualistic assumption? Adam Smith’s (utilitarian) Market competition serves society better than government Unrealistic assumptions of perfect competition Business Systems Keynesian Free-markets Not the most efficient Social Darwinism Survival of the fittest Penalties alone are not enough for incompetence and ignorance Naturalistic fallacy Free-Trade Benefits of specialization and trade Comparative (rather than absolute) advantage Production costs are not constant Means of production is portable. Business Systems Command Marx’s economic substructure / social superstructure Exploitation of workers “surplus” Separation (alienation) of workers from product Subordination of government to ruling class’ interests State control is victimized by individuals Mixed Economy Retains Market and Private Property system Relies on governmental policies Business Ethics Legal Responsibility Cell 1 Ethical Responsibility Cell X Cell 3 Cell2 Economic Responsibility Business Ethics Legal Responsibility Ethical Responsibility Cell X Cell “X” Profitable, Legal and Ethical EconomicProceed with enthusiasm! Responsibility Business Ethics Cell 1 Ethical Responsibility and Ethical Legal Cell 1 Legal NotResponsibility Profitable: Seek Profitable alternatives Economic Responsibility Business Ethics Ethical Responsibility Legal Responsibility Cell 2 Profitable and Legal Proceed cautiously Cell2 Economic Responsibility Business Ethics Cell 3 Legal Ethical ethical Responsibility Responsibility Profitable and Likely, also legal; Proceed cautiously Cell 3 Economic Responsibility Bremer’s “big picture” perspective Question Level Personal Organizational Industry or Professional Societal 1 2 3 4 What is? What ought to be? Getting from 1 - 2? Motivation? Three Models of Managerial Ethics Moral Management Amoral Management Unintentional Intentional Immoral Management Ethical Standards? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Integrity • Possessing and adhering to high principles • Fair, just, truthful and morally upright • Loyalty, allegiance, accuracy • Voluntarily helping those in need • Ability to endure hardship, accepting different views • Accountable, willing to take a stand • Ability to motivate or restrain oneself Honesty Fidelity Charity Tolerance Responsibility Self-Discipline