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IP: Business Ethics

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Title: IP: Business Ethics


1
IP Business Ethics
  • Organising Principles for an Ethical Framework

2
What is Ethics? Some classic answers
  • Ethics is the way things are done around here.
  • Aristotle
  • Ethics is treating other people as you would be
    treated.
  • Confucius, St Paul, Kant
  • Ethics is doing whatever brings the best results.
  • Bentham, Mill, Singer
  • Ethics is becoming the right kind of person -
    acquiring the virtues.
  • Aristotle, MacIntyre

3
Objections to business ethics
  • Ethics is subjective/relative.
  • If its legal, its ethical - at least for
    corporations.
  • Ethics is about following rules. If you know the
    rules, thats all you need to know.
  • I dont give a damn about ethics.

4
Is Ethics subjective and relative?
  • Everyone disagrees about ethics. Who is to say
    what is right?
  • Ethics is relative to your culture, so it is
    offensive to impose your values on to someone
    else.
  • Clearly we do differ, but do we not also share
    values?

5
A thought experiment
  • Think of someone who is an ethical example to
    you and of the core ethical values they embody.
  • One word only (no hyphens)
  • Serious (not punctual or polite)
  • Non-religious (not pious or prayerful)
  • Non-legal (not law-abiding)

6
Our guess about your answers
  • Honesty
  • Integrity
  • Fairness
  • Compassion

7
Although history has long forgotten them, Lambini
Sons are generally credited with the Sistine
Chapel floor.
8
Law and ethics a model
  • Law is the floor, ethics the ceiling.
  • Ethics is a higher standard, but without law is
    unlikely to be effective.
  • Ethics and law are complementary they cannot
    substitute for each other.

9
Isnt ethics just about following rules?
  • Rules are essential because they allow for
    predictability, the definition of roles and
    responsibilities, and the definition of
    boundaries.
  • But
  • Human conduct cannot be reduced to rules
    rules are derived from conduct.
  • Rules date.
  • Rules cannot cover all contingencies.
  • Rules must be tempered by judgment there can
    be many ways to get things wrong and more than
    one way to get them right.

10
Rules and standards
  • Rules are one way of proclaiming standards.
  • Standards are important for consistency, but they
    are a minimum.
  • Businesses and managers must have standards, but
    only as a minimum they should aim higher, like
    an archer.

11
Ethical defeat
  • Almost no one accepts that there is nothing
    ethical to be said for them, even if they have
    committed horrible offences.
  • Tale of a New York drug dealer.
  • Stephen Cohen has called this resistance to
    ethical defeat.

12
Ethics are trumps
  • Consider these reasons for accepting a bribe.
  • You would just be doing your job - only more
    quickly.
  • You wouldnt be hurting anyone - you would be
    helping someone.
  • You and your family would be better off.
  • If you didnt do it someone else would.
  • You deserve better pay anyway.
  • And this reason for rejecting a bribe.
  • Its unethical.

13
Ethics presents the most serious kinds of reason
  • That is why we are reluctant to impose our
    views on others and vice-versa. People become
    heated about ethical issues because they are
    serious.
  • We cant impose our views, but we can argue hard
    and seriously for them. Why wouldnt we if they
    are truly important?

14
An ethical opinion
  • Is not just self-interested
  • Has regard for others
  • Could apply to anybody - is reversible
  • Takes account of context
  • Overrides other considerations
  • Has to be lived with.

15
What is involved in ethical justification?
  • Being accountable in terms of
  • the law
  • professional codes
  • employers values statements
  • common morality
  • informed ethical judgment (conscience)

16
Trust
  • Basic to humanity - we need to trust and be
    trusted. Trust builds trust.
  • Basic to relationships - friendships of pleasure,
    utility and affinity.
  • Allows confidence and predictability.
  • Reduces stress.
  • Lowers transaction costs and increases
    productivity.
  • Encourages risk-taking discourages risk-aversion.

17
Underwriting trust the Ring of Gyges
  • Gyges was a shepherd in Lydia who discovered a
    magic ring which made him invisible.
  • With this ring, he was able to seduce the queen,
    murder the king and take his kingdom.
  • Who would not do forbidden things if one could
    get away with them? (Plato, Republic)

18
What the bagel man found out
  • Payment rates were higher when he was the known
    provider. Care or surveillance?
  • An open basket is a temptation. A money box is
    safer.
  • People who steal bagels dont steal the money
    boxes - dont perceive taking bagels as theft?
  • Law firms and telecoms have notable failings and
    executives seem to be the worst offenders!
  • Firms with high morale seem to be more honest.
  • Smaller firms are more trustworthy - the shame
    factor?

19
Bagel behaviour
  • An office with low paying staff rarely becomes an
    honest payer, and vice versa. Hence Paul F.
    believes that honest people remain honest, and
    cheaters will cheat regardless of the
    circumstance.
  • Against Glaucon (Platos brother) who tells the
    tale of Gyges, Paul F. knows that people are
    honest 89 of the time. The bagels prove it.

20
A simple framework
  • Do no evil. Pursue goods reasonably.
  • Prevent evil. Dont be an innocent by-stander.
  • Remove evil.
  • Do good. Be excellent.
  • William Frankena

21
What is ethics?
  • The liberal might answer
  • Ethics is the responsible use of freedom.
  • Surely this is correct. Is not misconduct the
    irresponsible use of freedom, say, to damage
    others and look after ourselves?
  • But this definition is too limited it does not
    commit us to anything in particular. What goods
    matter to us ethically?

22
Can we name these goods?
  • John Finnis has nominated the following
  • Life - health, security
  • Friendship - friends, community
  • Freedom - personal, political, economic
  • Knowledge - many forms
  • Aesthetics - art, nature
  • Play - spontaneous, organised
  • Belief systems - like religion
  • Trust

23
Ethics and impartiality
  • The house next door is on fire.
  • Your children are in the house. You rush into
    the fire to rescue them. Other children are in
    the house too.
  • Does ethics require you to rescue the children
    impartially, i.e. without special regard for
    saving your own children?

24
Do we not properly favour those whom we recognise?
  • Peter Singer argued that favouring kin was a
    survival device of evolutionary biology that
    fairness and justice should now supercede.
  • But what of loyalty, love, affection and
    intimate knowledge of the good in those we know?
  • These values relate less to favouring than to
    the ethics of care.

25
What principles should steer ethical judgment?
  • Four accounts
  • 1. Acts are intrinsically right or wrong. Ethical
    requirements are expressed in duties deontology
    (Kant)
  • 2. Right and wrong means producing a surplus of
    good over evil consequences - consequentialism,
    e.g. utilitarianism (Mill)
  • 3. The ethics of care.
  • 4. Virtue and character. Human endowments can be
    improved by the acquisition of virtues that can
    be learned.

26
Intentions are basic to responsibility
  • Think of Bratmans examples.
  • If we intend to kill, it doesnt matter if we
    actively kill or passively let die.
  • Intention changes the nature of acts.
  • Intention introduces responsibility

27
Results are integral to ethics
  • Ethics is about consequences even if it is not
    only about consequences.
  • If there were no significance to consequences,
    ethics would matter little. It is because ethics
    guides conduct that it matters.
  • It is also because of this that ethics links with
    economics.

28
Intentions and Causality
  • Can we blow up a cave to save ourselves at the
    expense of another?
  • Bratman says that a principled view would forbid
    this.
  • But the death of the person is not the means to
    our deliverance. It is a foreseen but unintended
    consequence.

29
A business example
  • Can a firm take over a smaller company knowing
    that this will cause people to lose their jobs
    and possibly never work again?
  • Can one corporation take over another in order to
    make money from its assets?
  • Is this analogous to killing and letting die?
  • Is a corporation obliged to do more than avoiding
    evil?

30
Management Ethics
  • Management excellence requires human virtues.
  • All social virtues built on friendship, but
    professional virtues include
  • High practice standards
  • Trustworthiness and honesty
  • Integrity
  • Compassion

31
Abbreviated Laura nash on Ethical decision
making. Cf. Kidder
  • Note the presence of principle, outcomes and
    care.
  • Define the problem.Would it look this way if you
    stood on the other side of the fence?
  • To whom and to what do you give your loyalty?
  • What is your intention in making this decision?
  • How does this intention compare with the probable
    results? Who could be injured? Are you confident
    that your will look good in the long term?
  • Can you discuss the problem with the affected
    parties before you make your decision?
  • Could you disclose without qualm your decision or
    action to your boss, your CEO, your family,
    society as a whole?
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