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Chapter One Ethical Theory and Business Practice

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Title: Chapter One Ethical Theory and Business Practice


1
Chapter OneEthical Theory and Business Practice
  • Ethical Theory and Business, 6th Edition
  • Tom L. Beauchamp Norman E. Bowie

2
Objectives
  • After studying this chapter the student should be
    able to
  • Distinguish between morality and ethical theory.
  • Distinguish between morality and prudence.
  • Distinguish between morality and law.
  • Explain the three approaches to the study of
    morality.
  • Describe the moral theory of relativism.

3
Objectives
  • Discuss the egoism moral theory.
  • Explore some of the problems of the egoism
    theory.
  • Interpret the different types of utilitarian
    theory.
  • Discuss some of the problems of the utilitarian
    theory.
  • Apply Kantian ethics using different scenarios.

4
Objectives
  • Explain the principles behind the common morality
    theories.
  • Explore the concept of rights theories.
  • Distinguish between virtue ethics, and feminist
    theories and the ethics of care.

5
Overview
  • Morality
  • Approaches to the Study of Morality
  • Relativism
  • Egoism
  • Utilitarian Theories
  • Kantian Ethics
  • Common Morality Theories

6
Overview
  • Rights Theories
  • Virtue Ethics
  • Feminist Theories and the Ethics of Care
  • Analysis of Cases

7
Morality
  • Principles or rules of moral conduct that people
    use to decide what is right or wrong.

8
Morality v. Ethical Theory
  • Morality is concerned with the social practices
    defining right and wrong.
  • Ethical theory and moral philosophies provide
    guidelines for justification of right or wrong
    actions when settling human conflict.
  • No one moral philosophy is accepted by everyone!

9
Morality v. Prudence
  • Rules of prudence promote self-interest, doing
    what is prudent for oneself.
  • Rules of morality promote the interest of other
    people.
  • Morality and prudence should generally work
    hand-in-hand if a business is to succeed.

10
Law
  • Public's agency for translating morality into
    explicit social guidelines and practices and for
    stipulating punishments for offenses.

11
Morality v. Law
  • Statutory law v. case law
  • Statutory laws are federal / state statutes and
    their accompanying administrative regulations.
  • Case laws are judge-made laws that establish
    influential precedents that provide material for
    reflection on both legal and moral questions.
  • Morality and ethics begin where the law is
    unclear or not defined!

12
Rule of Conscience
  • Consciences
  • Vary from person to person and time to time.
  • Are altered by circumstance, religious belief,
    life experiences, and training.
  • Are not consistent from day to day.
  • Moral justification must then be based on a
    source external to conscience itself.

13
Approaches to the Study of Morality
  • Descriptive approach - provides a factual
    description and explanation of moral behavior and
    beliefs, as performed by anthropologists,
    sociologists, and historians.
  • Referred to as the scientific study of ethics.
  • Conceptual approach - analyzes meanings of
    central terms in ethics such as right,
    obligation, justice, good, virtue, and
    responsibility.

14
Approaches to the Study of Morality
  • Prescriptive approach - attempts to formulate and
    defend basic moral norms or standards by
    determining what ought to be done versus what is
    being done.
  • Referred to as normative ethics.

15
Relativism
  • An ethical theory that claims right and wrong is
    subjectively determined by each culture.

16
Relativism
  • What is good is socially accepted and what is bad
    is socially unacceptable in a given culture.
  • There is no such thing as universal truth in
    ethics, there are only the various cultural codes
    and nothing more.
  • An argument against relativism
  • There are some basic moral principles that all
    societies will have in common, because those
    rules are necessary for society to exist.

17
Methods to Easing Moral Disagreements
  • Obtaining objective information
  • Definitional clarity
  • Example-counterexample
  • Analysis of arguments and positions

18
Egoism
  • A moral theory that contends all choices either
    involve or should involve self-promotion as their
    sole objective.

19
Psychological Egoism
  • Everyone is always motivated to act in his or her
    own perceived self-interest.
  • A main argument against psychological egoism is
    that there may be no purely altruistic moral
    motivation to help other people unless there is
    personal gain.

20
Ethical Egoism
  • The only valid standard of conduct is the
    obligation to promote one's own well being above
    everyone else's.
  • Ethical egoists believe that people should not be
    their brothers keeper, because people do not
    completely understand the true needs of others.
  • Its every man for himself in this world!

21
Utilitarian Theories
  • Moral theories that assert an actions rightness
    is determined by the actual or probable
    consequences that the action will have for the
    greatest number of people affected by that action.

22
Utilitarian Theories
  • Utilitarian theories hold that the moral worth of
    actions or practices are determined solely by
    their consequences.
  • An action or practice is right if it leads to the
    best possible balance of good consequences over
    bad consequences for all the parties affected.

23
Utilitarian Theories
  • Act utilitarianism
  • Argues that in all situations the utility of an
    action is based on an act that leads to the
    greatest good for the greatest number.
  • Treats rules as useful guidelines to help
    determine ethical behavior.
  • Will break a moral rule if breaking the rule
    leads to the greatest good for the greatest
    number.

24
Utilitarian Theories
  • Rule utilitarianism
  • The morality of an action should be evaluated on
    the basis of principles or rules designed to
    promote the greatest utility for the greatest
    number.
  • Rule utilitarians hold that rules have a central
    position in morality that cannot be compromised
    by the demands of particular situations.

25
Utilitarian Theories
  • Utilitarian decision-making relies on tools such
    as cost-benefit analysis and risk assessment to
    determine the greatest utility.
  • Main argument against utilitarianism is
    questioning whether units of happiness or some
    other utilitarian value can be measured and
    compared in order to determine the best action
    among alternatives.

26
Kantian Ethics
  • A moral theory that holds you should follow only
    those rules which you would will to be universal
    laws for everyone, including yourself.

27
Kantian Ethics
  • Categorical imperative principle states "I ought
    never to act except in such a way that I can also
    will that my maxim should become universal law."
  • The principle is categorical because it admits of
    no exceptions and is absolutely binding, and is
    imperative because it gives instruction on how
    one must act.
  • Respect-for-persons principle states persons
    should never be used as a means to an end.

28
Kantian Ethics
  • Kant believed that morality should follow
    absolute rules that admit no exceptions, which
    has been a major argument against this theory.
  • Another argument against Kantian theories is that
    they are narrow and inadequate to handle various
    problems in the moral life.

29
Common Morality Theories
  • A moral theory based on the concept there is a
    common morality that all people share by virtue
    of communal life.

30
Common Morality Theories
  • The greatest obligation in any given circumstance
    must be found based on the greatest balance of
    right over wrong in that particular context.
  • Obligations and rights are not inflexible
    standards, but rather strong prima facie moral
    demands that may be overridden in circumstances
    of competition with equal or stronger moral
    claims.

31
Rights Theories
  • A moral theory based on the concept that all
    people have human rights that form the justifying
    basis of obligations because they best express
    the purpose of morality, which is the securing of
    liberties or other benefits for a right-holder.

32
Rights Theories
  • Human rights are held independent of membership
    in a state or other social organization.
  • Human rights evolved from the notion of natural
    rights.
  • Natural rights are rights that belong to all
    persons purely by virtue of their being human.
  • Negative rights pertain to the obligations on the
    part of other people to refrain from interfering
    with our freedom of action.

33
Rights Theories
  • Positive rights impose obligations on people to
    provide other people with goods or services.
  • A primary problem with this theory is that there
    is no hierarchy for rights claims
  • How does someone determine which right takes
    precedence or has more value over other rights?

34
Virtue Ethics
  • This moral theory suggests that morality is
    comprised of virtue, which has to do with a
    person's character and the types of actions that
    emanate from that character.

35
Virtue Ethics
  • Some typical virtuous traits in the business
    arena would be integrity, honesty, truthfulness,
    courage, loyalty, courteousness, and
    conscientiousness.
  • Virtuous traits are acquired and developed
    throughout our life experiences.
  • A primary problem with this theory is that people
    have varying definitions of what traits are
    considered virtuous.

36
Feminist Theories and the Ethics of Care
  • This moral theory focuses on a set of character
    traits that are deeply valued in close personal
    relationships.

37
Feminist Theories and the Ethics of Care
  • Typical traits would include sympathy,
    compassion, fidelity, love, friendship, and the
    like.
  • This theory grew out of two feminist
    presuppositions
  • The subordination of women is as wrong as it is
    common.
  • The experiences of women are worthy of respect
    and should be taken seriously.

38
Feminist Theories and the Ethics of Care
  • An argument against this theory is that the focus
    is on how power is used to oppress women only,
    whereas traditional ethics is based on the
    assumption that its values and rules apply to all
    rational persons equally.

39
Analysis of Cases
  • The case method in law is used to show examples
    of established precedents of evidence and
    justification.
  • The case method in business is used to present
    managerial situations so managers will know how
    to think when confronted with a dilemma.

40
Analysis of Cases
  • The casuistical method for case analysis in
    ethics is used to show conclusions on ethical
    matters, then to compare and contrast the central
    features of the morally clear and settled cases
    with the features of unsettled cases.
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