Transcript weiss_ch03
Chapter Three
Ethical Principles, Quick
Tests, And DecisionMaking Guidelines
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Learning
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Decision Criteria for Ethical
Reasoning
The following three criteria can be used in
ethical reasoning:
Moral reasoning must be logical
Factual evidence cited to support a person’s
judgment should be accurate, relevant, and
complete
Ethical standards used should be consistent
A simple but powerful question can be used
throughout your decision-making process in
solving ethical dilemmas:
What is my motivation for choosing a course
of by
action?
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Ethical Relativism:
A Self-Interest Approach
Ethical relativism holds that no universal
standards or rules can be used to guide or
evaluate the morality of an act.
This view argues that people set their
own moral standards for judging their
actions.
This is also referred to as naïve
relativism.
The logic of ethical relativism extends to
culture.
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Ethical Relativism:
A Self-Interest Approach
Benefits include:
Problems include:
Ability to recognize the distinction
between individual and social values,
customs, and moral standards
Imply an underlying laziness
Contradicts everyday experience
Relativists can become absolutists
Relativism and stakeholder analysis.
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Utilitarianism:
A Consequentialist (Results-Based) Approach
The basic view holds that an action is
judged as right, good, or wrong on the
basis of its consequences.
The moral authority that drives
utilitarianism is the calculated
consequences or results of an action,
regardless of other principles that
determine the means or motivations
for taking the action.
Utilitarianism includes other tenets.
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Utilitarianism:
A Consequentialist (Results-Based) Approach
Problems with utilitarianism include:
No agreement exists about the definition
of the “good” to be maximized
No agreement exists about who decides
How are the costs and benefits of
nonmonetary stakes measured?
Does not consider the individual
Principles of rights and justice are ignored
Utilitarianism and stakeholder
analysis.
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Universalism:
A Deontological (Duty-Based) Approach
This view is also referred to as
deontological ethics or
nonconsequentialist ethics and holds that
the means justify the ends of an action,
not the consequences.
Kant’s principle of the categorical
imperative places the moral authority for
taking action on an individual’s duty
toward other individuals and humanity.
The categorical imperative consists of
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Universalism:
A Deontological (Duty-Based) Approach
The major weaknesses of universalism
and Kant’s categorical imperative
include:
Principles are imprecise and lack
practical utility
Hard to resolve conflicts of interest
Does not allow for prioritizing one’s
duties
Universalism and stakeholder analysis.
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Rights:
An Entitlement-Based Approach
Moral rights are based on legal rights and
the principle of duty.
Rights can override utilitarian principles.
The limitations of rights include:
Can be used to disguise and manipulate
selfish, unjust political interests and claims
Protection of rights can be at the expense of
others
Limits of rights come into question
Rights and stakeholder analysis.
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Justice:
Procedures, Compensation, Retribution
The principle of justice deals with
fairness and equality.
Two recognized principles of fairness that
represent the principle of justice include:
Equal rights compatible with similar liberties
for others
Social and economic inequality arrangement
Four types of justice include:
Compensatory
Retributive
Distributive
Procedural
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Justice:
Procedures, Compensation, Retribution
Problems using the principle of justice
include:
Justice, rights, and power are really
intertwined.
Two steps in transforming justice:
Who decides who is right and who is wrong?
Who has moral authority to punish?
Can opportunities and burdens be fairly
distributed?
Be aware of your rights and power
Establish legitimate power for obtaining rights
Justice and stakeholder analysis.
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Immoral, Amoral, Or Moral
Management
Immoral management means intentionally
going against ethical principles of justice and
of fair and equitable treatment of other
stakeholders.
Amoral management happens when others
are treated negligently without concern for
the consequences of actions or policies.
Moral management places value on
equitable, fair, and just concern of others
involved.
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Individual Ethical
Decision-Making Styles
Stanley Krolick developed a survey
that interprets individual primary and
secondary ethical decision-making
styles, that include:
Individualism
Altruism
Pragmatism
Idealism
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Quick Ethical Tests
The Center for Business Ethics at
Bentley College suggests six questions
to be asked before making a decision.
Classical ethical tests:
The Golden Rule
The Intuition Ethic
The Means-End Ethic
Test of Common Sense
Test of One’s Best Self
Test of Ventilation
Test of Purified Idea
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