Module 8 Ethical Principles in Business
Module 8 Ethical Principles in Business
Module 8 Ethical Principles in Business
Ethical Principles
in Business
Module 8
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Learning Objectives
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Five Questions to Moral Decision
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I. Utilitarianism: Weighing Social
Costs and Benefits
Utility – the result of combining the beneficial and costly
consequences of an action
The ethical action is the one that had the most beneficial
consequences for society or that at least minimized the
harmful consequences.
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I. Utilitarianism: Weighing Social
Costs and Benefits
Happiness – eudaemonia
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Utilitarianism: Weighing Social
Costs and Benefits
Key Takeaways:
1. Advocates policies that provide the greatest
benefits – “the greatest amount of good for the
greatest number of people”
2. Impartially considers everyone’s interests –
betterment of the society as a whole
3. Explains why some activities are right or wrong –
actions that foster happiness are right and actions
that causes unhappiness are wrong
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Utilitarianism: Weighing Social
Costs and Benefits
Criticisms:
1. Distasteful - I don’t like it or It doesn’t
suit my way of thinking
2. Impossibility – to apply because
happiness cannot be
quantified or measured
3. Impracticality – we cannot calculate all
the effects for all the
individuals
4. Insufficiency (of scope) – some values
can be conflicting
with other
values
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Utilitarianism: Weighing Social
Costs and Benefits
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II. Rights and Duties
A right is an entitlement
To act in a certain way.
To have others act in a certain way towards the
right-holder
2 kinds of Right
Moral Rights
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Rights and Duties
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Rights and Duties
Contractual Rights
Special rights
Conferred only by parties involved
Require publicly accepted rules
Require (1) the parties know what they are agreeing to
(2) no misrepresentation
(3) no duress or coercion
(4) no agreement to an immoral act
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Rights and Duties
Criticism
Nozick’s Claim about Rights and Freedom
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Justice & Fairness
John Rawl’s Justice Principles
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Justice & Fairness
Conditions of Just Punishment
2. Certitude
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Justice & Fairness
Conditions of Just Compensation
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IV. Ethics of Care
Feminist ethics
Partiality
Importance of Relationships
communitarian ethics
Caring for those dependent on
and related to us
Argues that since the self requires
caring relationships with others,
those relationships are valuable and
should be nurtured
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V. Virtue Ethics
VIRTUE VICE
Habituation Achievement
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Aristotle’s Virtue Ethics
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Aristotle’s Virtue Ethics
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Virtue Ethics
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Roles of Psychology, Culture and
Social Institutions
X-SYSTEM C-SYSTEM
unconscious conscious
Schema or Prototypes/Archetypes
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Roles of Psychology, Culture and
Social Institutions
Moral Intuition
our ability to understand something quickly, without the need for
conscious reasoning
HARDWIRED
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Challenge Accepted
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