This document discusses key concepts in business ethics. It defines doing ethics as deliberating about moral right and wrong, examining one's moral outlook, and questioning the reasoning behind moral decisions. It asks fundamental ethics questions about the greatest good, virtues, duties, and values. It notes that failing to exercise critical thinking and autonomy can lead to confusion, mistaken ideas, stunted growth, and weak reasoning skills. The document outlines elements of ethics like reason, absolutism, relativism, and moral pluralism, and discusses mistaken inferences around cultural differences and exceptions to rules. It distinguishes between prescriptive ethics that judge right and wrong, and descriptive ethics that empirically study norms in societies.
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Chapter 1 ETHICS NOTES
This document discusses key concepts in business ethics. It defines doing ethics as deliberating about moral right and wrong, examining one's moral outlook, and questioning the reasoning behind moral decisions. It asks fundamental ethics questions about the greatest good, virtues, duties, and values. It notes that failing to exercise critical thinking and autonomy can lead to confusion, mistaken ideas, stunted growth, and weak reasoning skills. The document outlines elements of ethics like reason, absolutism, relativism, and moral pluralism, and discusses mistaken inferences around cultural differences and exceptions to rules. It distinguishes between prescriptive ethics that judge right and wrong, and descriptive ethics that empirically study norms in societies.
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Chapter 1 - BUSINESS ETHICS NOTES
What does doing ethics mean?
Deliberating about the rightness or wrongness of actions Examining the soundness of your (and other people’s) moral outlook Questioning whether your moral decision making rests on coherent supporting considerations
The questions of Ethics? What is the greatest good? What goals should I pursue? What virtues should I cultivate? What duties should I fulfill? What value should I put on human life? How important is it to pursue happiness, do justice, and respect rigt
Loss of personal freedom You lose personal freedom when you don’t exercise your autonomy Confused or mistaken views You may be susceptible to ideas that appear clever but are actually the result of faulty reasoning Stunted intellectual and moral growth If you don’t exercise the skills of critical thinking, they will be weak Elements of Ethics Reason: Ethics involves, even requires, critical reasoning. Absolutism: the view that there is a universally correct moral position In contrast, Relativism: the view that moral values are relative to particular environments; moral behaviors are dependent on the particular culture, society, or environment in which they take place (“When in Rome, do as the Romans do")
Moral Pluralism the view that there is no single moral theory or principle that should be accepted as preferable to others; different, diverse, and even mutually inconsistent ethical positions should be recognized and considered reasonable
From moral Pluralism to Ethical Defeat
Mistaken inference 1 From the fact of cultural difference, it follows that there are no universal ethics However, there are some ethics that appear to have universal appeal. Eg. Torture is wrong. Mistaken inference 2 From the fact that there are exceptions to rules in practice, it follows that there are no universal ethical rules However, exceptions do not negate rules Descriptive and Prescriptive Ethics Prescriptive: theories that allow for the judgment of an act as right or wrong; recommending and forbidding certain types of conduct Descriptive: the non-judgmental empirical study of ethics in particular groups or societies o These theories are easily confused when it is believed that how things are done is the way they should be done