2
Ethical Questions in the Public Square
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
• Discuss the interdependent relationship between ethics and law.
• Describe different sides of the issue of prayer in public schools and apply ethi-
cal theory to the problem.
• Explain how ethics can help resolve conflicting values within a society.
• Describe how ethics can be understood in the context of a historical issue:
women’s suffrage.
• Apply ethical theory to a contemporary social issue: the regulation of
pornography.
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mos85880_02_c02.indd 41 10/28/13 1:15 PM
CHAPTER 2Introduction
Introduction
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can apply them to actual situations, and see what they have to say about moral issues in specific, concrete situations. This approach has two practical advantages. First, by seeing
how a specific ethical theory can be applied to an actual issue, we will see how the theory
can better help us understand what the real problems are. Ultimately, we may not solve
these problems in a way that will satisfy everyone, but we should have a much better
grasp of the problems themselves. This will help us focus our ability to think about these
questions more critically and eliminate some of the detours, side issues, and irrelevant
parts of the debate that may interfere with our understanding of the questions.
Second, by applying the various theories to actual moral problems, we will also come to
better understand the theories themselves. It is one thing to understand what a basic ethi-
cal position is, but it can be very helpful to see how that ethical position works in dealing
with difficult ethical questions.
In this chapter, we will look at questions that arise when individual rights are threatened
or violated, as well as instances when one person’s rights may infringe upon another per-
son’s rights. As examples, we will look specifically at school prayer and pornography. We
will also look at a historical debate over a woman’s right to vote. This historical discussion
should help us realize that some ethical questions can be resolved, and that talking, and
arguing, about them may lead to significant changes in people’s lives.
Each discussion will present a debate on a specific topic. For example, we will give an
argument for why prayer should be allowed in public schools, and then look at the coun-
terargument for why it should be restricted or prohibited. After presenting the debate, we
will show how these positions relate to the ethical theories in Chapter 1—in this case, act
utilitarianism and rule utilitarianism. On other occasions, we may apply the same theory
in two different ways, to demonstrate that a specific ethical theory may give quite differ-
ent results in some cases. This will help remind us that although ethics provides guidance
and insight into moral issues, v ...
ExamplesNow that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory,.docxSANSKAR20
Examples
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can apply them to actual situations and see what they have to say about moral issues in specific, concrete situations. This approach has two practical advantages. First, by seeing how a specific ethical theory can be applied to an actual issue, we will see how the theory can better help us understand what the real problems are. Ultimately, we may not solve these problems in a way that will satisfy everyone, but we should have a much better grasp of the problems themselves. This will help us focus our ability to think about these questions more critically and eliminate some of the detours, side issues, and irrelevant parts of the debate that may interfere with our understanding of the questions.
Second, by applying the various theories to actual moral problems, we will also come to better understand the theories themselves. It is one thing to understand what a basic ethical position is, but it can be very helpful to see how that ethical position works in dealing with difficult ethical questions.
In this chapter, we will look at questions that arise when individual rights are threatened or violated, as well as instances when one person's rights may infringe upon another person's rights. As examples, we will look specifically at school prayer and pornography. We will also look at a historical debate over a woman's right to vote. This historical discussion should help us realize that some ethical questions can be resolved, and that talking, and arguing, about them may lead to significant changes in people's lives.
Each discussion will present a debate on a specific topic. For example, we will give an argument for why prayer should be allowed in public schools, and then look at the counterargument for why it should be restricted or prohibited. After presenting the debate, we will show how these positions relate to the ethical theories in Chapter 1—in this case, act utilitarianism and rule utilitarianism. On other occasions, we may apply the same theory in two different ways, to demonstrate that a specific ethical theory may give quite different results in some cases. This will help remind us that although ethics provides guidance and insight into moral issues, very rarely does it offer solutions that everyone will accept. We will then look at some of the results of the debate and the theories involved, and some of the implications that may emerge from those results. After each specific issue is treated in this way, we will briefly discuss a different, but related, question that will make clear some of the larger issues involved.
A Brief Review of Ethical Theory
The ethical theories being applied in this ...
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can ap.docxcherishwinsland
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can apply them to actual situations, and see what they have to say about moralissues in specific, concrete situations. This approach has two practical advantages. First, by seeing how a specific ethical theory can be applied toan actual issue, we will see how the theory can better help us understand what the real problems are. Ultimately, we may not solve theseproblems in a way that will satisfy everyone, but we should have a much better grasp of the problems themselves. This will help us focus ourability to think about these questions more critically and eliminate some of the detours, side issues, and irrelevant parts of the debate that mayinterfere with our understanding of the questions.
Second, by applying the various theories to actual moral problems, we will also come to better understand the theories themselves. It is onething to understand what a basic ethical position is, but it can be very helpful to see how that ethical position works in dealing with difficultethical questions.
In this chapter, we will look at questions that arise when individual rights are threatened or violated, as well as instances when one person'srights may infringe upon another person's rights. As examples, we will look specifically at school prayer and pornography. We will also look at ahistorical debate over a woman's right to vote. This historical discussion should help us realize that some ethical questions can be resolved, andthat talking, and arguing, about them may lead to significant changes in people's lives.
Each discussion will present a debate on a specific topic. For example, we will give an argument for why prayer should be allowed in publicschools, and then look at the counterargument for why it should be restricted or prohibited. After presenting the debate, we will show howthese positions relate to the ethical theories in Chapter 1—in this case, act utilitarianism and rule utilitarianism. On other occasions, we mayapply the same theory in two different ways, to demonstrate that a specific ethical theory may give quite different results in some cases. Thiswill help remind us that although ethics provides guidance and insight into moral issues, very rarely does it offer solutions that everyone willaccept. We will then look at some of the results of the debate and the theories involved, and some of the implications that may emerge fromthose results. After each specific issue is treated in this way, we will briefly discuss a different, but related, question that will make clear some ofthe larger issues involved.
A Brief Review of Ethical Theory
The ethical theories being applied in this chapter are discussed at greater length in Chapter 1, but as a quick reminder, here are thebasics of the three classical ethical theories:
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism evaluates the morality of an act in terms of its consequences: Act utilitarianism emphasizes the act itself, and whetherwhat one chooses .
The document discusses different views of what ethics means and settles on two key definitions. First, ethics refers to well-founded standards of right and wrong that prescribe human behavior in terms of rights, obligations, virtues, and benefits to society. Second, ethics refers to continually studying and developing one's moral standards and examining whether institutions align with reasonable, well-founded principles. It notes feelings, laws, and social norms can deviate from ethics, so self-examination is needed.
Question 1Discuss with your colleagues the following questions.docxssuser774ad41
Question 1
Discuss with your colleagues the following questions: What is Legality? Specifically how are employees and medical entities legally responsible in Health Service Organizations? Provide two specific real life case examples that you find on the internet or in the print media. Read the background articles but this discussion will take research beyond the above articles. Provide citation of authority to support your initial response to discussion questions. Peers are expected to demonstrate critical thinking in their questions related to the classmates' descriptions. Initial response to dicussion topic must be no later than midnight Thursday and then you must substantively respond to at least 2 classmate submissions no later than 6pm Sunday. See Discussion Requirements in Discussion topic entitled "
Discussion Expectations and Grading"
No duplication. Redundant primary posts will not be graded.
Lecture articles
http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/13-legal-issues-for-hospitals-and-health-systems.html
[Legal issues facing health care professionals]
http://ijahsp.nova.edu/articles/Vol2num1/pdf/lazaro.pdf [ethical and legal analysis of health care case]
Background Readings for week 1 discussion 1
http://www.whitehouse.gov/our-government
[everyone should have a baseline understanding of the U.S. Government, specifically the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches, and legal responsibilities of individuals and organizations from each of the three branches]
https://www.osha.gov/workers.html#6
[This government website outlines employer responsibilities under Occupational Health and Safety Administration federal law.]
http://healthsafety.etsu.edu/docs/Employee_Safety_Handbook.pdf
[This employee handbook identifies a number of state and federal obligations as it relates to employees. Pay special attention to the activities and programs on page 10 of this handbook.]
http://www.wha.org/data/sites/1/emergencyPrep/EthicalResp_HCLeadership_8-08.pdf
Question 2
Discuss with your colleagues 1.What are Ethics? 2. Where do they come from and who is responsible? 3. How do ethics apply to health care organizations and its employees? Provide two specific real life case examples that you find on the internet or in the print media. 4. Research a specific ethics issue applicable to health care organizations, discuss how it was handled, what ethics theory epitomizes the handling of the issue and how would you have handled the issue and which specific ethics theory would apply to your solution. [see below A Framework for Thinking Ethically to help with last question]
Read the background articles but this discussion will take research beyond the above articles. Provide citation of authority to support your initial response to conference questions. Peers are expected to demonstrate critical thinking in their questions related to the classmates' descriptions. Initial response to dicussion topic mu ...
The document provides an overview of ethics and differentiates it from morals. It discusses how ethics refers to external rules from societies and professions, while morals are internal principles of right and wrong. The document examines different views on what constitutes ethics and finds that ethics cannot be reduced to feelings, religion, laws, or social acceptance alone. It concludes that ethics seeks to determine the best course of action in any situation.
This document provides an overview of ethics and discusses ethics in business and information technology. It defines ethics as a set of beliefs about right and wrong behavior within a society. Various philosophical approaches to ethics are described, including virtue ethics, deontology, utilitarianism, and situation ethics. The document also notes that business ethics has become increasingly important due to greater globalization and economic pressures. It discusses the concept of corporate social responsibility and provides approaches for making ethical decisions. Finally, it covers some common ethical issues that arise with information technology.
Ashford 3: - Week 2 - Discussion 2
Your initial discussion thread is due on Day 3 (Thursday) and you have until Day 7 (Monday) to respond to your classmates. Your grade will reflect both the quality of your initial post and the depth of your responses.
The Three Ethical Perspectives
The purpose of this discussion is to help you understand how to construct an ethical argument. Prepare and post a response to the following prompt:
· Identify the basic themes, topics, and concepts that make up the discipline of ethics. Explain the themes or ideas that unite the different ethical theories.
· Describe how you might apply one of the ethical theories or perspectives we have discussed in this class to one of the following social issues:
· Limiting smoking in public places, such as public buildings, restaurants, or city parks
· Municipal governments using public funds to build stadiums for professional sports teams
· Requiring a private landowner to provide habitat for endangered species on their properties
In an effort to present a balanced discussion, describe an alternative perspective to the issue you have addressed.
Your initial post should be at least 250 words in length. Support your claims with examples from the required resources and/or other scholarly sources, and properly cite any references in APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center. Respond to at least two of your classmates’ posts by Day 7.
Carefully review the Discussion Forum Grading Rubric for the criteria that will be used to evaluate this Discussion Thread.
Ashford 3: - Week 2 - Instructor Guidance
Source: http://www.impactlab.net/2009/08/10/
are-local-and-state-governments-in-the-u-s-getting-too-big/
SOC 120 Ethics & Social Responsibility
Week 2 Guidance
Source: http://teachersletterstobillgates.com/
2013/07/05/from-the-common-core-to-the-
common-good-a-new-way-forward/
Weekly Activities
Here is what you will be doing this week:
· Review last week's Chapter 1 in the text: Introduction to Ethics and Social Responsibility
· Review last week's Chapter 2 in the text: Ethical Questions in the Public Square
· Read Chapter 8 in the text: The Environment
· Read the article “Environmental Justice for All” by Leyla Kokmen, from Utne Reader (2008)
· Post to Discussion Board 1 on The Three Ethical Perspectives (due by Day 3, Thursday)
· Post to Discussion Board 2 on Constructing Arguments (due by Day 3, Thursday)
· Respond to two discussion posts by classmates in each discussion (by Day 7, Monday)
· Assignment: Applying Theory: Environmental Issues, PowerPoint slideshow (due by Day 7, Monday)
Ethics, Responsibility and Society
This week we take up the issue of individual rights, and how individual rights are mediated by the responsibilities we have to the social well-being―which includes both our responsibilities to other individuals who we interact with and our responsibilities to the collective good, or the well-being of everyone together. As is often noted, every ri.
Ethics refers to well-founded standards of right and wrong that prescribe how humans ought to act. These standards include obligations to avoid harming others and virtues like honesty. However, ethics cannot be defined by feelings, religion, laws, or social acceptance alone, as these can deviate from ethical standards. Ethics also involves continuously examining and improving one's moral standards through philosophical study and striving to align one's behaviors and institutions with reasonable, well-founded principles of right conduct.
ExamplesNow that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory,.docxSANSKAR20
Examples
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can apply them to actual situations and see what they have to say about moral issues in specific, concrete situations. This approach has two practical advantages. First, by seeing how a specific ethical theory can be applied to an actual issue, we will see how the theory can better help us understand what the real problems are. Ultimately, we may not solve these problems in a way that will satisfy everyone, but we should have a much better grasp of the problems themselves. This will help us focus our ability to think about these questions more critically and eliminate some of the detours, side issues, and irrelevant parts of the debate that may interfere with our understanding of the questions.
Second, by applying the various theories to actual moral problems, we will also come to better understand the theories themselves. It is one thing to understand what a basic ethical position is, but it can be very helpful to see how that ethical position works in dealing with difficult ethical questions.
In this chapter, we will look at questions that arise when individual rights are threatened or violated, as well as instances when one person's rights may infringe upon another person's rights. As examples, we will look specifically at school prayer and pornography. We will also look at a historical debate over a woman's right to vote. This historical discussion should help us realize that some ethical questions can be resolved, and that talking, and arguing, about them may lead to significant changes in people's lives.
Each discussion will present a debate on a specific topic. For example, we will give an argument for why prayer should be allowed in public schools, and then look at the counterargument for why it should be restricted or prohibited. After presenting the debate, we will show how these positions relate to the ethical theories in Chapter 1—in this case, act utilitarianism and rule utilitarianism. On other occasions, we may apply the same theory in two different ways, to demonstrate that a specific ethical theory may give quite different results in some cases. This will help remind us that although ethics provides guidance and insight into moral issues, very rarely does it offer solutions that everyone will accept. We will then look at some of the results of the debate and the theories involved, and some of the implications that may emerge from those results. After each specific issue is treated in this way, we will briefly discuss a different, but related, question that will make clear some of the larger issues involved.
A Brief Review of Ethical Theory
The ethical theories being applied in this ...
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can ap.docxcherishwinsland
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can apply them to actual situations, and see what they have to say about moralissues in specific, concrete situations. This approach has two practical advantages. First, by seeing how a specific ethical theory can be applied toan actual issue, we will see how the theory can better help us understand what the real problems are. Ultimately, we may not solve theseproblems in a way that will satisfy everyone, but we should have a much better grasp of the problems themselves. This will help us focus ourability to think about these questions more critically and eliminate some of the detours, side issues, and irrelevant parts of the debate that mayinterfere with our understanding of the questions.
Second, by applying the various theories to actual moral problems, we will also come to better understand the theories themselves. It is onething to understand what a basic ethical position is, but it can be very helpful to see how that ethical position works in dealing with difficultethical questions.
In this chapter, we will look at questions that arise when individual rights are threatened or violated, as well as instances when one person'srights may infringe upon another person's rights. As examples, we will look specifically at school prayer and pornography. We will also look at ahistorical debate over a woman's right to vote. This historical discussion should help us realize that some ethical questions can be resolved, andthat talking, and arguing, about them may lead to significant changes in people's lives.
Each discussion will present a debate on a specific topic. For example, we will give an argument for why prayer should be allowed in publicschools, and then look at the counterargument for why it should be restricted or prohibited. After presenting the debate, we will show howthese positions relate to the ethical theories in Chapter 1—in this case, act utilitarianism and rule utilitarianism. On other occasions, we mayapply the same theory in two different ways, to demonstrate that a specific ethical theory may give quite different results in some cases. Thiswill help remind us that although ethics provides guidance and insight into moral issues, very rarely does it offer solutions that everyone willaccept. We will then look at some of the results of the debate and the theories involved, and some of the implications that may emerge fromthose results. After each specific issue is treated in this way, we will briefly discuss a different, but related, question that will make clear some ofthe larger issues involved.
A Brief Review of Ethical Theory
The ethical theories being applied in this chapter are discussed at greater length in Chapter 1, but as a quick reminder, here are thebasics of the three classical ethical theories:
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism evaluates the morality of an act in terms of its consequences: Act utilitarianism emphasizes the act itself, and whetherwhat one chooses .
The document discusses different views of what ethics means and settles on two key definitions. First, ethics refers to well-founded standards of right and wrong that prescribe human behavior in terms of rights, obligations, virtues, and benefits to society. Second, ethics refers to continually studying and developing one's moral standards and examining whether institutions align with reasonable, well-founded principles. It notes feelings, laws, and social norms can deviate from ethics, so self-examination is needed.
Question 1Discuss with your colleagues the following questions.docxssuser774ad41
Question 1
Discuss with your colleagues the following questions: What is Legality? Specifically how are employees and medical entities legally responsible in Health Service Organizations? Provide two specific real life case examples that you find on the internet or in the print media. Read the background articles but this discussion will take research beyond the above articles. Provide citation of authority to support your initial response to discussion questions. Peers are expected to demonstrate critical thinking in their questions related to the classmates' descriptions. Initial response to dicussion topic must be no later than midnight Thursday and then you must substantively respond to at least 2 classmate submissions no later than 6pm Sunday. See Discussion Requirements in Discussion topic entitled "
Discussion Expectations and Grading"
No duplication. Redundant primary posts will not be graded.
Lecture articles
http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/13-legal-issues-for-hospitals-and-health-systems.html
[Legal issues facing health care professionals]
http://ijahsp.nova.edu/articles/Vol2num1/pdf/lazaro.pdf [ethical and legal analysis of health care case]
Background Readings for week 1 discussion 1
http://www.whitehouse.gov/our-government
[everyone should have a baseline understanding of the U.S. Government, specifically the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches, and legal responsibilities of individuals and organizations from each of the three branches]
https://www.osha.gov/workers.html#6
[This government website outlines employer responsibilities under Occupational Health and Safety Administration federal law.]
http://healthsafety.etsu.edu/docs/Employee_Safety_Handbook.pdf
[This employee handbook identifies a number of state and federal obligations as it relates to employees. Pay special attention to the activities and programs on page 10 of this handbook.]
http://www.wha.org/data/sites/1/emergencyPrep/EthicalResp_HCLeadership_8-08.pdf
Question 2
Discuss with your colleagues 1.What are Ethics? 2. Where do they come from and who is responsible? 3. How do ethics apply to health care organizations and its employees? Provide two specific real life case examples that you find on the internet or in the print media. 4. Research a specific ethics issue applicable to health care organizations, discuss how it was handled, what ethics theory epitomizes the handling of the issue and how would you have handled the issue and which specific ethics theory would apply to your solution. [see below A Framework for Thinking Ethically to help with last question]
Read the background articles but this discussion will take research beyond the above articles. Provide citation of authority to support your initial response to conference questions. Peers are expected to demonstrate critical thinking in their questions related to the classmates' descriptions. Initial response to dicussion topic mu ...
The document provides an overview of ethics and differentiates it from morals. It discusses how ethics refers to external rules from societies and professions, while morals are internal principles of right and wrong. The document examines different views on what constitutes ethics and finds that ethics cannot be reduced to feelings, religion, laws, or social acceptance alone. It concludes that ethics seeks to determine the best course of action in any situation.
This document provides an overview of ethics and discusses ethics in business and information technology. It defines ethics as a set of beliefs about right and wrong behavior within a society. Various philosophical approaches to ethics are described, including virtue ethics, deontology, utilitarianism, and situation ethics. The document also notes that business ethics has become increasingly important due to greater globalization and economic pressures. It discusses the concept of corporate social responsibility and provides approaches for making ethical decisions. Finally, it covers some common ethical issues that arise with information technology.
Ashford 3: - Week 2 - Discussion 2
Your initial discussion thread is due on Day 3 (Thursday) and you have until Day 7 (Monday) to respond to your classmates. Your grade will reflect both the quality of your initial post and the depth of your responses.
The Three Ethical Perspectives
The purpose of this discussion is to help you understand how to construct an ethical argument. Prepare and post a response to the following prompt:
· Identify the basic themes, topics, and concepts that make up the discipline of ethics. Explain the themes or ideas that unite the different ethical theories.
· Describe how you might apply one of the ethical theories or perspectives we have discussed in this class to one of the following social issues:
· Limiting smoking in public places, such as public buildings, restaurants, or city parks
· Municipal governments using public funds to build stadiums for professional sports teams
· Requiring a private landowner to provide habitat for endangered species on their properties
In an effort to present a balanced discussion, describe an alternative perspective to the issue you have addressed.
Your initial post should be at least 250 words in length. Support your claims with examples from the required resources and/or other scholarly sources, and properly cite any references in APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center. Respond to at least two of your classmates’ posts by Day 7.
Carefully review the Discussion Forum Grading Rubric for the criteria that will be used to evaluate this Discussion Thread.
Ashford 3: - Week 2 - Instructor Guidance
Source: http://www.impactlab.net/2009/08/10/
are-local-and-state-governments-in-the-u-s-getting-too-big/
SOC 120 Ethics & Social Responsibility
Week 2 Guidance
Source: http://teachersletterstobillgates.com/
2013/07/05/from-the-common-core-to-the-
common-good-a-new-way-forward/
Weekly Activities
Here is what you will be doing this week:
· Review last week's Chapter 1 in the text: Introduction to Ethics and Social Responsibility
· Review last week's Chapter 2 in the text: Ethical Questions in the Public Square
· Read Chapter 8 in the text: The Environment
· Read the article “Environmental Justice for All” by Leyla Kokmen, from Utne Reader (2008)
· Post to Discussion Board 1 on The Three Ethical Perspectives (due by Day 3, Thursday)
· Post to Discussion Board 2 on Constructing Arguments (due by Day 3, Thursday)
· Respond to two discussion posts by classmates in each discussion (by Day 7, Monday)
· Assignment: Applying Theory: Environmental Issues, PowerPoint slideshow (due by Day 7, Monday)
Ethics, Responsibility and Society
This week we take up the issue of individual rights, and how individual rights are mediated by the responsibilities we have to the social well-being―which includes both our responsibilities to other individuals who we interact with and our responsibilities to the collective good, or the well-being of everyone together. As is often noted, every ri.
Ethics refers to well-founded standards of right and wrong that prescribe how humans ought to act. These standards include obligations to avoid harming others and virtues like honesty. However, ethics cannot be defined by feelings, religion, laws, or social acceptance alone, as these can deviate from ethical standards. Ethics also involves continuously examining and improving one's moral standards through philosophical study and striving to align one's behaviors and institutions with reasonable, well-founded principles of right conduct.
Exploring the Interplay of Rights Ethics and Duty Ethicssakibxvz
In this thought-provoking presentation, we embark on a journey through the intricate world of ethics, exploring the dynamic interplay between rights ethics and duty ethics. We delve into the core principles of each framework, unravel their distinctions, and uncover the areas where they converge. By recognizing individual rights and embracing collective responsibilities, we discover the power of a harmonious ethical landscape. This presentation encourages ethical discourse, emphasizes the importance of ethical education, and underscores the significance of a balanced approach to ethical decision-making. Join us as we navigate the complex moral challenges of our time, fostering a more just and responsible world. Let's embark on this enlightening journey together and carry the insights forward in our shared quest for a better world.
13 Leadership EthicsDescriptionThis chapter is different from .docxdrennanmicah
13 Leadership Ethics
Description
This chapter is different from many of the other chapters in this book. Most of the other chapters focus on one unified leadership theory or approach (e.g., trait approach, path–goal theory, or transformational leadership), whereas this chapter is multifaceted and presents a broad set of ethical viewpoints. The chapter is intended not as an “ethical leadership theory,” but rather as a guide to some of the ethical issues that arise in leadership situations.
Probably since our cave-dwelling days, human beings have been concerned with the ethics of our leaders. Our history books are replete with descriptions of good kings and bad kings, great empires and evil empires, and strong presidents and weak presidents. But despite a wealth of biographical accounts of great leaders and their morals, very little research has been published on the theoretical foundations of leadership ethics. There have been many studies on business ethics in general since the early 1970s, but these studies have been only tangentially related to leadership ethics. Even in the literature of management, written primarily for practitioners, there are very few books on leadership ethics. This suggests that theoretical formulations in this area are still in their infancy.
One of the earliest writings that specifically focused on leadership ethics appeared as recently as 1996. It was a set of working papers generated from a small group of leadership scholars, brought together by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. These scholars examined how leadership theory and practice could be used to build a more caring and just society. The ideas of the Kellogg group are now published in a volume titled Ethics, the Heart of Leadership (Ciulla, 1998).
Ethical Leadership
Interest in the nature of ethical leadership has continued to grow, particularly because of the many recent scandals in corporate America and the political realm. On the academic front, there has also been a strong interest in exploring the nature of ethical leadership (see Aronson, 2001; Ciulla, 2001, 2003; Johnson, 2011; Kanungo, 2001; Price, 2008; Trevino, Brown, & Hartman, 2003).
Ethics Defined
From the perspective of Western tradition, the development of ethical theory dates back to Plato (427–347 b.c.) and Aristotle (384–322 b.c.). The word ethics has its roots in the Greek word ethos, which translates to “customs,” “conduct,” or “character.” Ethics is concerned with the kinds of values and morals an individual or a society finds desirable or appropriate. Furthermore, ethics is concerned with the virtuousness of individuals and their motives. Ethical theory provides a system of rules or principles that guide us in making decisions about what is right or wrong and good or bad in a particular situation. It provides a basis for understanding what it means to be a morally decent human being.
In regard to leadership, ethics is concerned with what leaders do and who leaders are. It has to do with t.
This document provides a framework for ethical decision making. It begins by defining ethics as standards of behavior for how humans ought to act in different situations, rather than being based on feelings, religion, laws, social norms, or science alone. It then discusses two challenges in identifying ethical standards: determining the basis and applying standards to specific situations. Five approaches are described for deriving ethical standards: utilitarianism, rights, fairness, common good, and virtues. While these approaches may provide different answers, they often lead to similar conclusions. The document concludes by outlining a 10-step process for recognizing ethical issues, gathering facts, evaluating options, making a decision, implementing it, and reflecting on the outcome.
This document provides an overview of ethical thinking and decision making. It discusses that ethics relates to how individuals and groups should behave and interact. The document then examines what ethics is and is not, including that ethics is not based solely on feelings, religion, laws, social norms, or science. It explores five sources of ethical standards: utilitarianism, rights, fairness, common good, and virtues. The document notes challenges in applying these standards but also how they often lead to similar ethical outcomes. It concludes by outlining a framework for ethical decision making.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in ethics. It discusses what ethics is, different views of morality, and relationships between morality, religion, law, and etiquette. It also examines domains of ethical assessment such as actions, consequences, character, and motives. Different ethical theories are outlined, including deontological theories that emphasize duties and teleological theories that focus on consequences.
Morality refers to principles of right and wrong governing an individual's behavior. Ethics is a branch of philosophy dealing with moral principles and values relating to human conduct. The document discusses the concepts of morality and ethics, noting they are often used interchangeably but sometimes distinguished. Morality may refer more to personal principles while ethics refers to the standards of a community or profession. However, ethicists today generally use the terms interchangeably without distinguishing between them. The key aspects are that both morality and ethics concern principles of right and wrong behavior.
Morality refers to personal or social standards of good and bad behavior, while ethics is a branch of philosophy concerning principles of right and wrong conduct. Both terms generally refer to distinguishing between good and bad or right and wrong, though some see morality as more personal and normative while ethics relates to standards of a community. In practice, the terms are often used interchangeably. Ethicists today generally consider morality and ethics to be the same.
This document provides an overview of a course on Business Ethics and Social Responsibility. The course objectives are to explain the nature and importance of business ethics, examine various ethical theories as they relate to firms, dimensions of corporate social responsibility, and the relationship between organizations, sustainability, and the environment. It discusses concepts like the origins of ethics in philosophy, normative and meta ethics theories, and applied ethics issues. It also covers corporate social responsibility and how organizations are part of society, the principles of CSR around sustainability, accountability, and transparency.
1) The document discusses several ethical theories, identifying some as accepted and others as rejected in society.
2) It outlines Kantianism and the categorical imperative as an accepted theory, noting its focus on universal moral rules and treating people as ends rather than means.
3) Social contract theory is also accepted, with the idea that moral rules are agreed upon for mutual benefit and explain rational self-interest between people and governments.
Ethical issues in biotechnology and related areas.
For soft copy of this document please feel free to contact us on info@biotechsupportbase.com or snjogdand@gmail.com
INTRODUCTION THINKING ETHICALLY A Framework for Moral Decisio.docxnormanibarber20063
INTRODUCTION:
THINKING ETHICALLY A Framework for Moral Decision Making
***This article updates several previous pieces from Issues in Ethics by Manuel Velasquez - Dirksen Professor of Business Ethics at Santa Clara University and former Center director - and Claire Andre, associate Center director. "Thinking Ethically" is based on a framework developed by the authors in collaboration with Center Director Thomas Shanks, S.J., Presidential Professor of Ethics and the Common Good Michael J. Meyer, and others. The framework is used as the basis for many programs and presentations at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics.
TAKEN FROM: http://www.scu.edu/ethics/practicing/decision/framework.html
Moral issues greet us each morning in the newspaper, confront us in the memos on our desks, nag us from our children's soccer fields, and bid us good night on the evening news. We are bombarded daily with questions about the justice of our foreign policy, the morality of medical technologies that can prolong our lives, the rights of animals or perhaps the fairness of our children's teachers dealing with diverse students in their classrooms.
Dealing with these moral issues is often perplexing. How, exactly, should we think through an ethical issue? What questions should we ask? What factors should we consider?
WHAT IS ETHICS?
Simply stated, ethics refers to standards of behavior that tell us how human beings ought to act in the many situations in which they find themselves-as friends, parents, children, citizens, businesspeople, teachers, professionals, and so on.
According to The National Institute of Health: “Ethics seeks to determine what a person should do, or the best course of action, and provides reasons why. It also helps people decide how to behave and treat one another, and what kinds of communities would be good to live in.”
“Bioethics is a subfield of ethics that explores ethical questions related to the life sciences. Bioethical analysis helps people make decisions about their behavior and about policy questions that governments, organizations, and communities must face when they consider how best to use new biomedical knowledge and innovation”.
WHAT ETHICS IS NOT:
• Ethics is not the same as feelings. Feelings provide important information for our ethical choices. Some people have highly developed habits that make them feel bad when they do something wrong, but many people feel good even though they are doing something wrong. And often our feelings will tell us it is uncomfortable to do the right thing if it is hard.
Ethics is not religion. Many people are not religious, but ethics applies to everyone. Most religions do advocate high ethical standards but sometimes do not address all the types of problems we face.
• Ethics is not following the law. A good system of law does incorporate many ethical standards, but law can deviate from what is ethical. Law can become ethically corrupt, as some totalitarian regimes have made it..
Business ethics refers to standards of conduct governing morally right and wrong behavior in business. While law defines minimum standards, ethics outlines proper behavior beyond legal requirements. Understanding business ethics is essential for companies and professionals. Setting ethical objectives guides organizations to apply values like trustworthiness, respect, fairness and caring to goals and actions. While law is a formal system of rules, ethics provides moral principles and guidelines to determine right from wrong individually and socially.
The document provides an introduction to business ethics and discusses various ethical perspectives including:
1. Egoism/self-interest which assumes individuals have an obligation to guide conduct by rational calculation of one's own interests.
2. Cultural relativism where ethical standards are derived from cultural values which are not universal or fixed.
3. Utilitarianism which prioritizes competing obligations based on contextual standards and consequences of choices.
4. Deontology where the standard is an obligation to do the "right" thing based on universal principles rather than consequences. Deontological theories hold that actions are intrinsically right or wrong irrespective of outcomes.
The document then discusses deontology in more detail and elabor
Final Research Essay HCCEnglish 1302 Your final assig.docxlmelaine
Final Research Essay
HCC/English 1302
Your final assignment, a research paper, will incorporate the skills you have developed throughout this course and
will develop new skills in research. For this assignment, you will:
• Generate your own personalized topic based upon the prompts.
• Make an argument about your topic. This argument must be clearly stated in a working thesis statement.
All body paragraphs must be focused and organized while clearly relating back to your thesis.
• Research sources appropriate to your topic and effectively use those sources as evidence to support
and prove your thesis.
• Cite all sources using MLA Format. Your paper must include proper parenthetical citations and a Works
Cited page.
Your research paper must be 8-10 pages, typed, double-spaced, in 12-point font, and in MLA
format.
*A Few Notes about Required Sources: Your sources must be reputable and reliable. Good sources
include the following:
newspapers (San Francisco Chronicle, New York Times, etc.)
magazines (Time, Newsweek, etc.)
books
scholarly journals
Remember that a well-researched paper will include a variety of sources. Also remember that for academic papers,
books and scholarly journals tend to provide the best information. All of your sources must be from current (2000
or later) books, articles, and websites.
Due Dates and Other Information Important for this Paper
1. Monday, April 9: You must submit your topic for approval form. At this point, your topic may be broad.
We will work in class on narrowing and focusing topics.
2. Wednesday, April 11: Research Proposal Due
3. Wednesday, April 18: Annotated Bibliography of at least five possible sources.
It is mandatory that you meet each of the three requirements above. Five points will be deducted from
your final grade for each of the requirements missed.
4.
5.
a peer revision workshop on this day. Bring copies (2) of your essay
In Class Workshop
Second draft due. Turn in both drafts of your essay, along with the
revision response forms your peers completed for you. Late second drafts
will receive no credit, but I will give you as much feedback as I can in the time allotted.
Failure to turn in a second draft will result in automatic failure of this course.
Wednesday, April 25: Research Day (Class Will Not Meet)
Monday, April 28: First draft due. (No late first drafts accepted) You will participate in
Wednesday, May 02:
Wednesday, May 09:
Week 2 Discussion
This week you have learned about the importance of workplace training. This week’s learning has introduced you to both the benefits and downfalls of a training session. With your current workplace in mind, analyze the current training setting. Your response should include what works and what does not in the current setting. In addition, expand on the suggestions you might offer to create the perfect training ...
Chapter 3 – Sport Ethics – concepts and cases in sport and recreat.docxwalterl4
Chapter 3 – Sport Ethics – concepts and cases in sport and recreation (2nd Edition)
David Malloy, Saul Ross, Dwight Zakus
2003, Thompson Educational Publishing, Inc. Canada
(slightly abridged)
"That’s cheating!" "No, it's not!"
"That’s wrong!" "No, it's perfectly alright!"
"That's bad!" "No, it isn't!"
"That's improper behavior!" "No, it's not!"
"That's a violation of policy!" "No, it isn't!"
"That may not be an actual violation, "If it's not a violation
but it certainly goes against the of the rules, then
spirit of the rules." it is perfectly acceptable."
Comments such as these all reflect a concern for ethics and ethical behavior. Each comment is an expression of a moral judgment about some behavior exhibited. Each comment uttered is the result of an evaluation or assessment made of the behavior in relation to an explicit or implicit standard. These comments are usually uttered based on observations of the behavior exhibited. The assessments originate from the observer's own set of beliefs about what is right or wrong, what is good or bad, or what is permissible or unacceptable.
A critical question emerges from the preceding comments: From where docs the standard come that the person uses to assess behavior and then render judgment? The beginning of an answer to the possible bases for ethical standards will be presented later in this chapter and a more elaborate treatment is reserved for the fourth chapter, "Sources of Ethical Decision··Making."
From this brief digression we return to an examination of the ways we make moral judgments. Frequently there is no critical examination nor probing of the set of beliefs, the actual basis for rendering moral judgment, used by the person making such comments. In part this is due to the paucity of attention paid to the study of ethics, generally, and to sport ethics, particularly, at all levels of schooling. While each individual has a personal sense of morality, without the serious, disciplined study of ethics it is not surprising to discover that most people are unaware of the bases for moral judgment. This text aims to consider ably reduce this lack of knowledge through the information provided below.
ln ordinary, everyday circumstances, human behavior is not pre-analyzed for us. There are, however, some instances when this does occur. For example, there arc times when teachers, parents, administrators, religious officials, writers of articles for newspapers and magazines, or authors of books discuss certain events. Then, through their analyses, they point out the good and the bad, the right and the wrong. These instances are few compared to the many times when we have to analyze the situation by ourselves. Consequently, there is an obvious need to comprehend the realm of ethics and to learn how to conduct moral.
Ethical Principles and Business DecisionsLearning Object.docxgitagrimston
This document discusses several theories related to the source and foundations of morality:
- Moral objectivism argues that morality is objective, unchanging, and universal, deriving from eternal spiritual truths. Moral relativism argues morality is subjective and culturally dependent.
- Divine command theory holds that God creates moral values through will alone. This is challenged as making morality arbitrary without an underlying rational basis.
- Religion has historically been seen as providing motivation for morality through belief in divine judgment, but modern views find believers are not necessarily more moral than non-believers.
The document attempts to clarify the relationships between morality, ethics, deontology, law, and enforcement. It discusses how:
1) Deontology refers to professional codes of ethics or conduct that aim to guide behavior and evaluate actions.
2) Ethics focuses on living well with and for others in just institutions, while morality concerns principles, norms, and individual duty and conscience.
3) Different ethical theories like consequentialism, deontology, and relativism provide frameworks for moral decision making.
4) There are links between ethics, morality, and law in aiming to define valid social practices, though laws are no longer seen as inherently just or moral. Enforcement of codes relies on relevant bodies having sanction
This document provides an overview of healthcare ethics and moral principles. It begins by laying out learning objectives about ethics, morality, ethical theories and dilemmas. It then defines ethics as the study of right and wrong conduct and morality as codes of conduct. It discusses major ethical theories like consequentialism, deontology and situational ethics. It provides examples of ethical dilemmas in healthcare like end of life decisions and allocating scarce resources. The document aims to provide a foundation for applying ethical theories and principles to resolve practical healthcare dilemmas.
Ethical law represents a set of rules that reflect a society's moral values and guide socially acceptable behavior, even when actions are not illegal. It exists at the intersection of individual ethics and societal standards, balancing personal freedoms with collective responsibilities. Ethical law can be observed in areas like business practices, healthcare, environmentalism, and technology/privacy. While lacking legal enforcement, ethical law influences both social norms and the development of statutory law over time.
1) You must clearly label the answer to each question.2) If you .docxjeremylockett77
1) You must clearly label the answer to each question.
2) If you are unable to draw diagrams in Microsoft Word, you may use scanned copies of hand drawn diagrams.
3) Word count: The suggested word limit for each sub-question is 200-250 words. (1200 to 1500 words altogether)
4) You must clearly acknowledge all sources using Harvard referencing system including the textbook.
Question 1 (a) Explain, with the aid of diagrams, how an outbreak of hostilities in the Middle East might be expected to impact the Australian markets for petrol and passenger cars with large engines that run on petrol. (6 marks)
(b) The latest electric car is expected to be released in Australia shortly at a very affordable price. What impact might this have on the market for cars which run on petrol? Justify your answer. (4 marks)
Question 2 (a) Australian government is encouraging young people to attend universities with a view to increase the proportion of educated youth workforce. While this policy certainly reduces the number of people available for work today it will increase their skills when they eventually complete their university degrees and enter the workforce. Use the production frontier model and graph to show the effects of such a policy on Australian output. (6 marks)
(b) What are the long-term determinants of economic growth and how can government influence economic growth. (4 marks)
Question 3 (a) Suppose the government is thinking of imposing a sales tax on all brands of cigarettes. What will be the likely impact of this tax on the price of cigarettes and who will bear the major burden of the tax? How will your answer change if the tax was imposed on the consumption of coffee instead? Explain with the help of appropriate diagrams. (6 marks)
(b) Coles and Woolworths dominate the Australian supermarket/grocery sector. Which type of market structure does this sector resemble? Provide a brief explanation. Based on the concepts learnt in this unit explain the likely reasons for the prevalence of this market structure in the Australian supermarket sector. (4 marks)
INTRODUCTION:
THINKING ETHICALLY A Framework for Moral Decision Making
***This article updates several previous pieces from Issues in Ethics by Manuel Velasquez - Dirksen Professor of Business Ethics at Santa Clara University and former Center director - and Claire Andre, associate Center director. "Thinking Ethically" is based on a framework developed by the authors in collaboration with Center Director Thomas Shanks, S.J., Presidential Professor of Ethics and the Common Good Michael J. Meyer, and others. The framework is used as the basis for many programs and presentations at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics.
TAKEN FROM: http://www.scu.edu/ethics/practicing/decision/framework.html
Moral issues greet us each morning in the newspaper, confront us in the memos on our desks, nag us from our children's soccer fields, and bid us good night on the evening news. We are bombarded da ...
(No Plagiarism) Explain the statement Although many leading organi.docxtamicawaysmith
(No Plagiarism) Explain the statement: "Although many leading organizations have invested significant resources in developing the culture and routines for this innovation processes, most organizations continue to rely on the efforts of a handful of people and chance. An innovative organization is one that can perfect these routines in addition to creating an innovation culture in the organization that engages people. Five key routines can facilitate its management of the innovation process” (Dooley & O'Sullivan, 2003).
.
What made you choose this career path What advice do you hav.docxtamicawaysmith
The document discusses potential paths and college options after high school but provides little details. It briefly mentions fields of study and interests without elaborating on specific choices or recommendations. The document offers no clear direction or next steps for the reader.
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13 Leadership Ethics
Description
This chapter is different from many of the other chapters in this book. Most of the other chapters focus on one unified leadership theory or approach (e.g., trait approach, path–goal theory, or transformational leadership), whereas this chapter is multifaceted and presents a broad set of ethical viewpoints. The chapter is intended not as an “ethical leadership theory,” but rather as a guide to some of the ethical issues that arise in leadership situations.
Probably since our cave-dwelling days, human beings have been concerned with the ethics of our leaders. Our history books are replete with descriptions of good kings and bad kings, great empires and evil empires, and strong presidents and weak presidents. But despite a wealth of biographical accounts of great leaders and their morals, very little research has been published on the theoretical foundations of leadership ethics. There have been many studies on business ethics in general since the early 1970s, but these studies have been only tangentially related to leadership ethics. Even in the literature of management, written primarily for practitioners, there are very few books on leadership ethics. This suggests that theoretical formulations in this area are still in their infancy.
One of the earliest writings that specifically focused on leadership ethics appeared as recently as 1996. It was a set of working papers generated from a small group of leadership scholars, brought together by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. These scholars examined how leadership theory and practice could be used to build a more caring and just society. The ideas of the Kellogg group are now published in a volume titled Ethics, the Heart of Leadership (Ciulla, 1998).
Ethical Leadership
Interest in the nature of ethical leadership has continued to grow, particularly because of the many recent scandals in corporate America and the political realm. On the academic front, there has also been a strong interest in exploring the nature of ethical leadership (see Aronson, 2001; Ciulla, 2001, 2003; Johnson, 2011; Kanungo, 2001; Price, 2008; Trevino, Brown, & Hartman, 2003).
Ethics Defined
From the perspective of Western tradition, the development of ethical theory dates back to Plato (427–347 b.c.) and Aristotle (384–322 b.c.). The word ethics has its roots in the Greek word ethos, which translates to “customs,” “conduct,” or “character.” Ethics is concerned with the kinds of values and morals an individual or a society finds desirable or appropriate. Furthermore, ethics is concerned with the virtuousness of individuals and their motives. Ethical theory provides a system of rules or principles that guide us in making decisions about what is right or wrong and good or bad in a particular situation. It provides a basis for understanding what it means to be a morally decent human being.
In regard to leadership, ethics is concerned with what leaders do and who leaders are. It has to do with t.
This document provides a framework for ethical decision making. It begins by defining ethics as standards of behavior for how humans ought to act in different situations, rather than being based on feelings, religion, laws, social norms, or science alone. It then discusses two challenges in identifying ethical standards: determining the basis and applying standards to specific situations. Five approaches are described for deriving ethical standards: utilitarianism, rights, fairness, common good, and virtues. While these approaches may provide different answers, they often lead to similar conclusions. The document concludes by outlining a 10-step process for recognizing ethical issues, gathering facts, evaluating options, making a decision, implementing it, and reflecting on the outcome.
This document provides an overview of ethical thinking and decision making. It discusses that ethics relates to how individuals and groups should behave and interact. The document then examines what ethics is and is not, including that ethics is not based solely on feelings, religion, laws, social norms, or science. It explores five sources of ethical standards: utilitarianism, rights, fairness, common good, and virtues. The document notes challenges in applying these standards but also how they often lead to similar ethical outcomes. It concludes by outlining a framework for ethical decision making.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in ethics. It discusses what ethics is, different views of morality, and relationships between morality, religion, law, and etiquette. It also examines domains of ethical assessment such as actions, consequences, character, and motives. Different ethical theories are outlined, including deontological theories that emphasize duties and teleological theories that focus on consequences.
Morality refers to principles of right and wrong governing an individual's behavior. Ethics is a branch of philosophy dealing with moral principles and values relating to human conduct. The document discusses the concepts of morality and ethics, noting they are often used interchangeably but sometimes distinguished. Morality may refer more to personal principles while ethics refers to the standards of a community or profession. However, ethicists today generally use the terms interchangeably without distinguishing between them. The key aspects are that both morality and ethics concern principles of right and wrong behavior.
Morality refers to personal or social standards of good and bad behavior, while ethics is a branch of philosophy concerning principles of right and wrong conduct. Both terms generally refer to distinguishing between good and bad or right and wrong, though some see morality as more personal and normative while ethics relates to standards of a community. In practice, the terms are often used interchangeably. Ethicists today generally consider morality and ethics to be the same.
This document provides an overview of a course on Business Ethics and Social Responsibility. The course objectives are to explain the nature and importance of business ethics, examine various ethical theories as they relate to firms, dimensions of corporate social responsibility, and the relationship between organizations, sustainability, and the environment. It discusses concepts like the origins of ethics in philosophy, normative and meta ethics theories, and applied ethics issues. It also covers corporate social responsibility and how organizations are part of society, the principles of CSR around sustainability, accountability, and transparency.
1) The document discusses several ethical theories, identifying some as accepted and others as rejected in society.
2) It outlines Kantianism and the categorical imperative as an accepted theory, noting its focus on universal moral rules and treating people as ends rather than means.
3) Social contract theory is also accepted, with the idea that moral rules are agreed upon for mutual benefit and explain rational self-interest between people and governments.
Ethical issues in biotechnology and related areas.
For soft copy of this document please feel free to contact us on info@biotechsupportbase.com or snjogdand@gmail.com
INTRODUCTION THINKING ETHICALLY A Framework for Moral Decisio.docxnormanibarber20063
INTRODUCTION:
THINKING ETHICALLY A Framework for Moral Decision Making
***This article updates several previous pieces from Issues in Ethics by Manuel Velasquez - Dirksen Professor of Business Ethics at Santa Clara University and former Center director - and Claire Andre, associate Center director. "Thinking Ethically" is based on a framework developed by the authors in collaboration with Center Director Thomas Shanks, S.J., Presidential Professor of Ethics and the Common Good Michael J. Meyer, and others. The framework is used as the basis for many programs and presentations at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics.
TAKEN FROM: http://www.scu.edu/ethics/practicing/decision/framework.html
Moral issues greet us each morning in the newspaper, confront us in the memos on our desks, nag us from our children's soccer fields, and bid us good night on the evening news. We are bombarded daily with questions about the justice of our foreign policy, the morality of medical technologies that can prolong our lives, the rights of animals or perhaps the fairness of our children's teachers dealing with diverse students in their classrooms.
Dealing with these moral issues is often perplexing. How, exactly, should we think through an ethical issue? What questions should we ask? What factors should we consider?
WHAT IS ETHICS?
Simply stated, ethics refers to standards of behavior that tell us how human beings ought to act in the many situations in which they find themselves-as friends, parents, children, citizens, businesspeople, teachers, professionals, and so on.
According to The National Institute of Health: “Ethics seeks to determine what a person should do, or the best course of action, and provides reasons why. It also helps people decide how to behave and treat one another, and what kinds of communities would be good to live in.”
“Bioethics is a subfield of ethics that explores ethical questions related to the life sciences. Bioethical analysis helps people make decisions about their behavior and about policy questions that governments, organizations, and communities must face when they consider how best to use new biomedical knowledge and innovation”.
WHAT ETHICS IS NOT:
• Ethics is not the same as feelings. Feelings provide important information for our ethical choices. Some people have highly developed habits that make them feel bad when they do something wrong, but many people feel good even though they are doing something wrong. And often our feelings will tell us it is uncomfortable to do the right thing if it is hard.
Ethics is not religion. Many people are not religious, but ethics applies to everyone. Most religions do advocate high ethical standards but sometimes do not address all the types of problems we face.
• Ethics is not following the law. A good system of law does incorporate many ethical standards, but law can deviate from what is ethical. Law can become ethically corrupt, as some totalitarian regimes have made it..
Business ethics refers to standards of conduct governing morally right and wrong behavior in business. While law defines minimum standards, ethics outlines proper behavior beyond legal requirements. Understanding business ethics is essential for companies and professionals. Setting ethical objectives guides organizations to apply values like trustworthiness, respect, fairness and caring to goals and actions. While law is a formal system of rules, ethics provides moral principles and guidelines to determine right from wrong individually and socially.
The document provides an introduction to business ethics and discusses various ethical perspectives including:
1. Egoism/self-interest which assumes individuals have an obligation to guide conduct by rational calculation of one's own interests.
2. Cultural relativism where ethical standards are derived from cultural values which are not universal or fixed.
3. Utilitarianism which prioritizes competing obligations based on contextual standards and consequences of choices.
4. Deontology where the standard is an obligation to do the "right" thing based on universal principles rather than consequences. Deontological theories hold that actions are intrinsically right or wrong irrespective of outcomes.
The document then discusses deontology in more detail and elabor
Final Research Essay HCCEnglish 1302 Your final assig.docxlmelaine
Final Research Essay
HCC/English 1302
Your final assignment, a research paper, will incorporate the skills you have developed throughout this course and
will develop new skills in research. For this assignment, you will:
• Generate your own personalized topic based upon the prompts.
• Make an argument about your topic. This argument must be clearly stated in a working thesis statement.
All body paragraphs must be focused and organized while clearly relating back to your thesis.
• Research sources appropriate to your topic and effectively use those sources as evidence to support
and prove your thesis.
• Cite all sources using MLA Format. Your paper must include proper parenthetical citations and a Works
Cited page.
Your research paper must be 8-10 pages, typed, double-spaced, in 12-point font, and in MLA
format.
*A Few Notes about Required Sources: Your sources must be reputable and reliable. Good sources
include the following:
newspapers (San Francisco Chronicle, New York Times, etc.)
magazines (Time, Newsweek, etc.)
books
scholarly journals
Remember that a well-researched paper will include a variety of sources. Also remember that for academic papers,
books and scholarly journals tend to provide the best information. All of your sources must be from current (2000
or later) books, articles, and websites.
Due Dates and Other Information Important for this Paper
1. Monday, April 9: You must submit your topic for approval form. At this point, your topic may be broad.
We will work in class on narrowing and focusing topics.
2. Wednesday, April 11: Research Proposal Due
3. Wednesday, April 18: Annotated Bibliography of at least five possible sources.
It is mandatory that you meet each of the three requirements above. Five points will be deducted from
your final grade for each of the requirements missed.
4.
5.
a peer revision workshop on this day. Bring copies (2) of your essay
In Class Workshop
Second draft due. Turn in both drafts of your essay, along with the
revision response forms your peers completed for you. Late second drafts
will receive no credit, but I will give you as much feedback as I can in the time allotted.
Failure to turn in a second draft will result in automatic failure of this course.
Wednesday, April 25: Research Day (Class Will Not Meet)
Monday, April 28: First draft due. (No late first drafts accepted) You will participate in
Wednesday, May 02:
Wednesday, May 09:
Week 2 Discussion
This week you have learned about the importance of workplace training. This week’s learning has introduced you to both the benefits and downfalls of a training session. With your current workplace in mind, analyze the current training setting. Your response should include what works and what does not in the current setting. In addition, expand on the suggestions you might offer to create the perfect training ...
Chapter 3 – Sport Ethics – concepts and cases in sport and recreat.docxwalterl4
Chapter 3 – Sport Ethics – concepts and cases in sport and recreation (2nd Edition)
David Malloy, Saul Ross, Dwight Zakus
2003, Thompson Educational Publishing, Inc. Canada
(slightly abridged)
"That’s cheating!" "No, it's not!"
"That’s wrong!" "No, it's perfectly alright!"
"That's bad!" "No, it isn't!"
"That's improper behavior!" "No, it's not!"
"That's a violation of policy!" "No, it isn't!"
"That may not be an actual violation, "If it's not a violation
but it certainly goes against the of the rules, then
spirit of the rules." it is perfectly acceptable."
Comments such as these all reflect a concern for ethics and ethical behavior. Each comment is an expression of a moral judgment about some behavior exhibited. Each comment uttered is the result of an evaluation or assessment made of the behavior in relation to an explicit or implicit standard. These comments are usually uttered based on observations of the behavior exhibited. The assessments originate from the observer's own set of beliefs about what is right or wrong, what is good or bad, or what is permissible or unacceptable.
A critical question emerges from the preceding comments: From where docs the standard come that the person uses to assess behavior and then render judgment? The beginning of an answer to the possible bases for ethical standards will be presented later in this chapter and a more elaborate treatment is reserved for the fourth chapter, "Sources of Ethical Decision··Making."
From this brief digression we return to an examination of the ways we make moral judgments. Frequently there is no critical examination nor probing of the set of beliefs, the actual basis for rendering moral judgment, used by the person making such comments. In part this is due to the paucity of attention paid to the study of ethics, generally, and to sport ethics, particularly, at all levels of schooling. While each individual has a personal sense of morality, without the serious, disciplined study of ethics it is not surprising to discover that most people are unaware of the bases for moral judgment. This text aims to consider ably reduce this lack of knowledge through the information provided below.
ln ordinary, everyday circumstances, human behavior is not pre-analyzed for us. There are, however, some instances when this does occur. For example, there arc times when teachers, parents, administrators, religious officials, writers of articles for newspapers and magazines, or authors of books discuss certain events. Then, through their analyses, they point out the good and the bad, the right and the wrong. These instances are few compared to the many times when we have to analyze the situation by ourselves. Consequently, there is an obvious need to comprehend the realm of ethics and to learn how to conduct moral.
Ethical Principles and Business DecisionsLearning Object.docxgitagrimston
This document discusses several theories related to the source and foundations of morality:
- Moral objectivism argues that morality is objective, unchanging, and universal, deriving from eternal spiritual truths. Moral relativism argues morality is subjective and culturally dependent.
- Divine command theory holds that God creates moral values through will alone. This is challenged as making morality arbitrary without an underlying rational basis.
- Religion has historically been seen as providing motivation for morality through belief in divine judgment, but modern views find believers are not necessarily more moral than non-believers.
The document attempts to clarify the relationships between morality, ethics, deontology, law, and enforcement. It discusses how:
1) Deontology refers to professional codes of ethics or conduct that aim to guide behavior and evaluate actions.
2) Ethics focuses on living well with and for others in just institutions, while morality concerns principles, norms, and individual duty and conscience.
3) Different ethical theories like consequentialism, deontology, and relativism provide frameworks for moral decision making.
4) There are links between ethics, morality, and law in aiming to define valid social practices, though laws are no longer seen as inherently just or moral. Enforcement of codes relies on relevant bodies having sanction
This document provides an overview of healthcare ethics and moral principles. It begins by laying out learning objectives about ethics, morality, ethical theories and dilemmas. It then defines ethics as the study of right and wrong conduct and morality as codes of conduct. It discusses major ethical theories like consequentialism, deontology and situational ethics. It provides examples of ethical dilemmas in healthcare like end of life decisions and allocating scarce resources. The document aims to provide a foundation for applying ethical theories and principles to resolve practical healthcare dilemmas.
Ethical law represents a set of rules that reflect a society's moral values and guide socially acceptable behavior, even when actions are not illegal. It exists at the intersection of individual ethics and societal standards, balancing personal freedoms with collective responsibilities. Ethical law can be observed in areas like business practices, healthcare, environmentalism, and technology/privacy. While lacking legal enforcement, ethical law influences both social norms and the development of statutory law over time.
1) You must clearly label the answer to each question.2) If you .docxjeremylockett77
1) You must clearly label the answer to each question.
2) If you are unable to draw diagrams in Microsoft Word, you may use scanned copies of hand drawn diagrams.
3) Word count: The suggested word limit for each sub-question is 200-250 words. (1200 to 1500 words altogether)
4) You must clearly acknowledge all sources using Harvard referencing system including the textbook.
Question 1 (a) Explain, with the aid of diagrams, how an outbreak of hostilities in the Middle East might be expected to impact the Australian markets for petrol and passenger cars with large engines that run on petrol. (6 marks)
(b) The latest electric car is expected to be released in Australia shortly at a very affordable price. What impact might this have on the market for cars which run on petrol? Justify your answer. (4 marks)
Question 2 (a) Australian government is encouraging young people to attend universities with a view to increase the proportion of educated youth workforce. While this policy certainly reduces the number of people available for work today it will increase their skills when they eventually complete their university degrees and enter the workforce. Use the production frontier model and graph to show the effects of such a policy on Australian output. (6 marks)
(b) What are the long-term determinants of economic growth and how can government influence economic growth. (4 marks)
Question 3 (a) Suppose the government is thinking of imposing a sales tax on all brands of cigarettes. What will be the likely impact of this tax on the price of cigarettes and who will bear the major burden of the tax? How will your answer change if the tax was imposed on the consumption of coffee instead? Explain with the help of appropriate diagrams. (6 marks)
(b) Coles and Woolworths dominate the Australian supermarket/grocery sector. Which type of market structure does this sector resemble? Provide a brief explanation. Based on the concepts learnt in this unit explain the likely reasons for the prevalence of this market structure in the Australian supermarket sector. (4 marks)
INTRODUCTION:
THINKING ETHICALLY A Framework for Moral Decision Making
***This article updates several previous pieces from Issues in Ethics by Manuel Velasquez - Dirksen Professor of Business Ethics at Santa Clara University and former Center director - and Claire Andre, associate Center director. "Thinking Ethically" is based on a framework developed by the authors in collaboration with Center Director Thomas Shanks, S.J., Presidential Professor of Ethics and the Common Good Michael J. Meyer, and others. The framework is used as the basis for many programs and presentations at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics.
TAKEN FROM: http://www.scu.edu/ethics/practicing/decision/framework.html
Moral issues greet us each morning in the newspaper, confront us in the memos on our desks, nag us from our children's soccer fields, and bid us good night on the evening news. We are bombarded da ...
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(No Plagiarism) Explain the statement: "Although many leading organizations have invested significant resources in developing the culture and routines for this innovation processes, most organizations continue to rely on the efforts of a handful of people and chance. An innovative organization is one that can perfect these routines in addition to creating an innovation culture in the organization that engages people. Five key routines can facilitate its management of the innovation process” (Dooley & O'Sullivan, 2003).
.
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The document discusses potential paths and college options after high school but provides little details. It briefly mentions fields of study and interests without elaborating on specific choices or recommendations. The document offers no clear direction or next steps for the reader.
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Patient Population: The student will describe the patient population that is impacted by the clinical issue. With a focus on the diversity of the human condition found within this patient population, the student will describe the influence that cultural values may have on the proposed solution. Proposed
Solution
: The student will set the stage for proposing the best solution to the clinical problem by using appropriate evidence-based data and integrating data from peer-reviewed journal articles. In this paper, the student will: i. Propose a clear solution to the clinical problem that is supported by a minimum of three scholarly, peer-reviewed journal articles.ii. Expand on the ethical considerations when developing the plan.
.
Dr. Paul Murray Bessie Coleman Jean-Bapiste Bell.docxtamicawaysmith
Dr. Paul Murray
Bessie Coleman
Jean-Bapiste Belley
Harriet Elizabeth Brown
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Toni Stone (Marcenia Lyle Alberga)
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Jean Toomer
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Madam C.J. Walker
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Dr. Dorothy Height
Dr. Geneva Smitherman
Michaëlle Jean
Robin Kelly
Mary Macleod Bethune
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Dame Eugenia Charles
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Wilma Rudolph
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Black Wall Street
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Kamala Harris
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Benjamin O. Davis, Jr.
Thurgood Marshall
Doris "Dorie" Miller
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Bayard Rustin
Dr. Eliza Ann Grier
Matthew Henson
Jesse Owens
Nina Simone
Wendell Scott
Adam Clayton Powell
Percy Julian
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Thomas "Fats" Waller
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Josephine Baker
Joe Louis
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In depth analysis of your physical fitness progress Term p.docxtamicawaysmith
In depth analysis of your physical fitness progress
Term paper should include details of:
▪ What worked and why (include all documentation)
▪ What didn’t and why
▪ Are your physical fitness results in alignment with your health continuum goals (include documentation)
▪ What are your current goals
▪ What are your future goals
▪ Develop a road map to get achieve those goals Due no later than November 30, 2020.
samples
Physical fitness benchmark assessments
Fitness assessment data sheet
Exercise charts
Personal physical fitness progress chart
Self assessment: Individual Health Continuum
.
Information systems infrastructure evolution and trends Str.docxtamicawaysmith
Information systems infrastructure: evolution and trends
Strategic importance of cloud computing in business organizations
Big data and its business impacts
Managerial issues of a networked organization
Emerging enterprise network applications
Mobile computing and its business implications
Instructions:
9- 10 pages (does not include Title page and references )
can Include images (not more than two)
Minimum six (6) sources – at least two (2) from peer reviewed journals
Include an abstract, introduction, and conclusion
.
⦁One to two paragraph brief summary of the book. ⦁Who is the.docxtamicawaysmith
⦁One to two paragraph brief summary of the book.
⦁Who is the author and his/her background?
⦁Does the author have any particular ideological viewpoint that he or she is trying to advance or do you consider the author to have been neutral and presented both sides of controversial issues? (You will find asking this same question will help you in other courses and your future career.)
⦁When was this book written? Does the author reflect the views (biases) of the time when the book was written? Why or why not?
⦁What did you find most interesting in the book? Least interesting?
⦁What additional topics should the author have included in the book? Why?
⦁How had people before the age of the telegraph attempted to communicate faster over distances?
⦁How did the telegraph reflect scientific and technological developments, both in the United States and other countries?
⦁Why did the telegraph represent such a revolutionary development and not just an incremental improvement in communication?
⦁How did the telegraph impact politics, journalism, business, military strategy and society in general?
⦁How were the American and European experiences similar or different in developing the telegraph? Did the telegraph have a similar impact in the United States and Europe?
⦁What do you think of the author’s title? Is the Victorian-era telegraph really the equivalent of today’s internet in terms of its impact or is that an exaggeration? Why or why not?
⦁Do you think the author makes the material interesting, understandable and relevant to the general public? Why or why not?
⦁If you were the editor in the publishing company, what changes would you make to the author’s draft?
⦁Did the book increase your interest in a particular issue that you would like to learn more about?
⦁Do you think it is worthwhile learn about the historical impact of scientific and technological developments?
⦁Would you recommend this book to a friend? Why or why not?
⦁Would you recommend that I continue to use this book in this course with future students?
.
100.0 Criteria10.0 Part 1 PLAAFP The PLAAFP thoroughly an.docxtamicawaysmith
This document provides information about a student named Alicia for the purposes of developing her IEP. It includes her background information and diagnoses of ADD and dyscalculia. Her strengths include average reading skills and interest in dance, while her challenges involve focus, organization, math skills, and independence. The PLAAFP section will use this information to outline Alicia's present levels of performance, while her transition plan will address independence, employment, and post-secondary education goals based on her interests.
102120151De-Myth-tifying Grading in Sp.docxtamicawaysmith
10/21/2015
1
De-Myth-tifying Grading
in Special Education
1980 2015
10/21/2015
2
Primary Purpose
• “the primary purpose of…grades…
(is) to communicate student
achievement to students, parents,
school administrators,
post-secondary institutions and
employers.” and
• To provide teachers with information
for instructional planning.
Taken from “Reporting Achievement at the Secondary School Level: What and How?”, in Communicating Student
Learning: ASCD Yearbook 1996, p. 120.
What makes grading so
hard?
• Teacher preparation programs seldom include course work or
even discussions of recommended practices for grading
students in general, much less for students who may be
struggling learners. As a result, teachers at all grade levels
grapple with issues of fairness in grading.
• Despite the magnitude of this problem, few recommendations
for grading struggling learners can be found in the research
literature or in education policy.
• Urban Grading Legends
10/21/2015
3
Urban Legends:
Bigfoot/Sasquatch
Urban Legends
• I can’t fail a special education
student.
• I give all my Life Skills students an
85.
• The report card grade does not really
mean anything.
10/21/2015
4
Urban Legends
• The grade on the report card can’t be less
than the IEP mastery level (default 70%)
• I teach a lot in my classroom, but I can
only grade the things that are on the IEP.
• I don’t do the grades for my special
education students in my classroom, the
special education teacher does that for
me.
What’s the
problem??
• Some students are not getting REAL
grades.
• Multiple court cases regarding failing
students who are not receiving
appropriate specially designed instruction
or students only get “A’s” and it doesn’t
truly reflect how he/she really performs in
relation to the curriculum
10/21/2015
5
What does the law really
say?
• Neither the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
(IDEA) nor any other federal education laws contain
requirements for grading. Therefore, each state has
discretion on the issue.
• The TEC is the set of state laws our state legislators have
passed that relate to education. ARD committees do not
have the authority to override state laws. The Texas
Administrative Code (TAC) is the set of rules that the State
Legislature has authorized Texas Education Agency (TEA)
or the State Board to write. ARD committees must also
follow these rules.
• The state statutes apply to all public school students in
Texas regardless of special education eligibility.
Local Grading Policies
TEC §28.0216
(1) “must require a classroom teacher to assign a grade that
reflects the students’ relative mastery of an assignment;
[and]
(2) may not require a classroom teacher to assign a
minimum grade for an assignment without regard to the
student’s quality of work.”
(3) may allow a student a reasonable opportunity to make up
or redo a class .
100.0 %Criteria
30.0 %Flowchart Content
The flowchart skillfully depicts the two possible discipline paths following the manifestation determination. In addition, there are two comprehensively aligned IEP goals for each determination.
40.0 %Legal Issues Analysis
A compelling analysis is included regarding any legal issues raised by the change in Carrie's transportation, proficiently incorporating relevant statutes, regulations, and case decisions.
5.0 %Research
Research strongly supports the information presented. Sources are timely, distinctive and clearly address all of the criteria stated in the assignment.
5.0 %Rationale Organization
The content is well organized and logical. There is a sequential progression of ideas related to each other. The content is presented as a cohesive unit and the audience is provided with a clear sense of the main idea.
5.0 %Overall Flowchart Presentation
The work is well presented. The overall appearance is neat and professional. Work would be highly desirable for public dissemination.
10.0 %Mechanics of Writing (includes spelling, punctuation, grammar, language use)
Submission is virtually free of mechanical errors. Word choice reflects well-developed use of practice and content-related language. Sentence structures are varied and engaging.
5.0 %Documentation of Sources (citations, footnotes, references, bibliography, etc., as appropriate to assignment and style)
Sources are documented completely and correctly, as appropriate to assignment and style, and format is free of error.
100 %Total Weightage
.
100 words agree or disagree to eac questions Q 1.As her .docxtamicawaysmith
100 words agree or disagree to eac questions
Q 1.
As her defense attorney, I will argue that the officer did not only not read Sally's Miranda rights; he also did not respect her right to consul. After Sally made her allegedly verbal utterance, the Officer should have known to read Sally her rights. I will bring up that during New Jersey v. James P. Kucinski, Oct 26, 2016, the defendant was arrested for the bludgeoning death of his brother. The defendant was taken to police headquarters for questioning after the defendant was advised of his Miranda rights; he requested an attorney. The law enforcement officers terminated the interrogation, spoked with their supervisor, and approximately eight minutes later, the officers returned into the room and advised the defendant that he was being charged with murder. The scare tactic worked, and the defendant asked to speak with the officers. The defendant reluctantly answered a series of questions. Before trial, the defendant moved for suppression motion because the officers did not honor his request for counsel. The court denied the motion, during further questioning the defendant claimed to have acted in self-defense, the defense counsel moved for a mistrial. The trial court denied the motion for mistrial but instructed the jury that the defendant's right to remain silent should be limited to assessing his credibility. The defendant was charged with first-degree murder and third-degree possession of a weapon for unlawful purposes The Appellate Division reversed the defendant's conviction and motion for a new trial due to the prosecutor's question doing cross-examination was improper. The panel concluded that the defendant invoked his right to remain silent by telling law enforcement officers that he did not want to talk or answer questions. The Appellate Division found that the trial court instructions to the jury were flaws, and the supreme court agreed and affirmed. The officers should have stopped all questioning and contacted the defendant's attorney.
New Jersey v. Kucinski (2017). https://law.justia.com/cases/new-jersey/supreme-court/2017/a-58-15.html
Q 2.
My last name begins with a K. so I am answering in the role of prosecutor. Sally was originally pulled over because she had shown probable cause of drunk driving. Upon her traffic stop, Sally was then searched after being arrested and the handgun and drugs were found on her body. The police asked about the two items but did not “interrogate” her. Sally voluntarily answered the arresting officers’ questions and in doing so piled new charges onto her initial arrest charge. I believe that the judge will deny the request to suppress the admission of Sally’s statements. Sally does have rights under the Fifth Amendment, but her statements to the police officers were not coerced out of her. The Cornell Law School website states that the Fifth Amendment, under the self-incrimination clause, if an individual makes a spo.
101118, 4(36 PMCollection – MSA 603 Strategic Planning for t.docxtamicawaysmith
10/11/18, 4(36 PMCollection – MSA 603 Strategic Planning for the Admin ...
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Post: dis 4
Author:
Posted Date: October 9, 2018 8:50 PM
Status: Published
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Brian Mcleod
I would say that for them to move the work and still be ethical defensible are work conditions,
respect for labor laws of the parent company, and job opportunities for the long-term
employees.
To expand on this would be the work conditions. The conditions that the workers have to work
under should be the same conditions that workers in the US have to work under. This involves
safety and environmental protection for the workers.
Labor laws of the host country and “most” of the internally recognized laws must be observed.
Overtime and child labor are a couple of items.
The long-term employees should be given the opportunity to move to another US based plant if
possible or to the new country.
Sometimes because of the state of the industry companies do have to make these decisions or
face possible bankruptcy. This alternative may not be the perfect solution but better than
bankrupting a company that still has operation in the US.
← OK
�
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Thread: DB4
Post: DB4
Author:
Posted Date: October 10, 2018 8:51 PM
Status: Published
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(Post is Read)
Christina Lacroix
It is ethically defensible to outsource production when the outcome of not outsourcing
would negatively impact stakeholders. Organizations define their most important
stakeholders, often the shareholders, as they invested capital. While some risk is
assumed by shareholders as a fiduciary managers have an obligation to the
shareholders to protect their interest when possible. A company risks shareholder
investment (access to capital) and jeopardizes all other stakeholders such as
employees, suppliers, and creditors. An organization cannot risk itself and the other
stakeholders depending upon in order to save employees.
The organization should do its due diligence in securing its outso.
100 words per question, no references needed or quotations. Only a g.docxtamicawaysmith
100 words per question, no references needed or quotations. Only a general idea or opinion.
A.
· Compare and contrast two works from the Italian Baroque period with two works from the Renaissance. Be sure to note the appearance in the works of the defining characteristics from each period.
· Discuss why artistic expression shifted from the restrained stoicism of the Renaissance to that of the heightened emotion in the religious and other works of the Baroque.
B. From video
Goya -
The Third of May
- If you cannot see this video, click here -
https://youtu.be/e7piV4ocukg
Respond in writing to the following questions after reading Chapter 12, watching the video, and exploring the sites above.
1. Heroism, nationalism, and passion are themes associated with Romanticism. Which
three
landmarks of the nineteenth century are most representative of these themes? You can discuss art, philosophy, or literature.
2. Compare Neoclassicism and Romanticism as styles and sensibilities. What do their differences reflect about patronage, popular taste, and historical change? Provide specific examples from the chapters.
C.
1. From the arts of West Africa, what are some characteristics of African cultural heritage?
2. How did their religious beliefs influence their art and music.
D.
Watch video below
Manet -
Déjeuner
sur
l’herbe -
If you cannot see this video, click
https://youtu.be/3xBGF8H3bQ4
1. Viewers of Manet’s
Déjeuner sur l’herbe
initially responded to its public display by attacking the canvas with their umbrellas. Why?
2. What kind of art has evoked a comparable response in our own time? Do some research online. Find a recent work of art that caused controversy. Summarize the reasons for the controversy and your reaction to it. Try not post the same article as someone else. (This board is not POST FIRST, so you will be able to see what others have posted right away.) If you can, attach a picture of the image you are describing to your posting.
E.
Watch the video below. If you cannot see the video, click here:
https://youtu.be/XyLNPumMMTs
George Braque, Violin and Pitcher, (1909)
•
Pablo Picasso, Guernica, (1937)
•
Marcel Duchamp, Nude Descending a Staircase, (1912)
Respond in writing to the following question after reading Chapter 14 in your text, watching the video above, viewing the Web Assignments, and the sites above.
1. Describe how they three have departed from styles such as symbolism and impressionism of the late nineteenth century.
F.
Take some time to reflect on all we have covered in this course. Then, respond in writing to the following question.
1. After your experience in this course, describe why you feel the humanities are important.
.
100A 2
2 4 4
5
1A 1034 5
1B 1000 10
1C 1100 1
1D 1123 20
1E 1210 5
20 10 10
7
1A 2180 20
1B 1283 20
1C 3629 5
1D 3649 3
1E 4051 15
1F 4211 1
1G 5318 5
100B 1
2 4 1
3
1A 2180 10
1B 1283 10
1C 3629 5
100C 2
0 0 0
3
1A 6774 5
1B 6869 5
1C 6879 2
0 0 0
4
1A 6774 2
1B 6869 5
1C 6879 1
1D 7555 10
100D 1
10 5 3
3
1A 2180 5
1B 3649 2
1C 4211 3
Self-care and Residency Reflection Paper Scoring Rubric -
Content
80 Points
Points Earned
Additional Comments:
All key elements of the assignment are covered in a substantive way.
Write a 700- to 1,050-word paper to reflect on your residency experience and outline your plan for self-care. Please use the self-care and residency reflection paper template posted in Student Materials for this assignment.
Consider the following questions when writing your reflection:
a) What have you learned about yourself during residency?
b) What have you learned about yourself as a counselor-in-training during residency?
c) What are aspects of residency that you enjoyed? Why did you enjoy these aspects?
d) What aspects of residency did you not enjoy? Why did you not enjoy these aspects?
e) What is counselor self-care? Why is it important? Include two separate in-text and end of work references.
f) What strategies for maintaining self-care did you try throughout this program? How can you implement these strategies?
g) How will you know when you are experiencing burnout? What can you do to prevent this?
The content is comprehensive, accurate, and /or persuasive.
The paper links theory to relevant examples of current experience and industry practice and uses the vocabulary of the theory correctly. This refers to the use of literary references. Generally you will need one separate literary reference for each main point (objective) of your paper.
Major points are stated clearly and are supported by specific details, examples, or analysis.
Organization / Development
35 Points
Points Earned
Additional Comments:
The paper has a structure that is clear, logical, and easy to follow.
The paper develops a central theme or idea, directed toward the appropriate audience.
The introduction provides sufficient background on the topic and previews major points.
The conclusion is logical, flows from the body of the paper, and reviews the major points.
Transitions between sentences/ paragraphs/sections aid in maintaining the flow of thought.
The tone is appropriate to the content and assignment.
Mechanics
35 Points
Points Earned
Additional Comments:
The paper, including the title page, reference page, tables, and appendices follow APA guidelines for format.
Citations of original works within the body of the paper follow APA guidelines.
The paper is laid out with effective use of headings, font styles, and white space.
Rules of grammar, usage, and punctuation are followed.
Sentences are complete, clear, concise, and varied.
Spelling is correct.
.
10122018Week 5 Required Reading and Supplementary Materials - .docxtamicawaysmith
10/12/2018
Week 5 Required Reading and Supplementary Materials - MGMT 670 9042 Strategic Management Capstone (2188)
https://learn.umuc.edu/d2l/le/content/333174/viewContent/13406413/View
/2
Required Readings:
From the UMUC library: (Note: You must search for these articles in the UMUC library. In the case of video links in the UMUC library, exact directions are given on how to find the video.)
Porter's Five-Forces model. (2009). In Encyclopedia of management (6th Ed., pp. 714-717).
From Other websites:
Evaluating the industry. (2012). In Mastering strategic management. Washington, DC: Saylor Academy. Retrieved from https://saylordotorg.github.io/text_mastering-strategic-management/s07-03-evaluating-the-industry.html
The impact of external and internal factors on strategy. (2016, 31 May). In Boundless Management. Retrieved from https://courses.lumenlearning.com/boundless-management/chapter/strategic-management/
Mapping strategic groups. (2012). In Mastering strategic management. Washington, DC: Saylor Academy. Retrieved from https://saylordotorg.github.io/text_mastering-strategic-management/s07-04-mapping-strategic-groups.html
The PESTEL and SCP frameworks. (2016, 26 May). In Boundless management. Retrieved from https://courses.lumenlearning.com/boundless-management/chapter/external-inputs-to-strategy/
The relationship between an organization and its environment. (2012). In Mastering strategic management. Washington, DC: Saylor Academy. Retrieved from https://saylordotorg.github.io/text_mastering-strategic-management/s07-01-the-relationship-between-an- or.html
Strategic group mapping. (2010, October 5). MBA lectures. Retrieved from http://mba-lectures.com/management/strategic- management/1000/strategic-group-mapping.html
Supplementary Materials:
From the UMUC library: (Note: You must search for these articles in the UMUC library. In the case of video links in the UMUC library, exact directions are given on how to find the video.)
Anand, B. N. (2006). Crafting business strategy and environmental scanning [Video]. Harvard Business School Faculty Seminar Series.
Follow these steps to find this video:
Go to http://sites.umuc.edu/library/index.cfm
Type in the entire name of the article: "Crafting business strategy and environmental scanning," into the search box and click on "search."
Click on "multimedia" in the upper left hand corner of the webpage (under "Ask a Librarian.)
Type in the entire name of the article: "Crafting business strategy and environmental scanning," in the box at the top of the page to the left of the word, "Search."
Make sure only "Business Videos" and "Find all my search term" are the only boxes that are checked. Uncheck both "Image Collection" and "Apply equivalent
subjects"
Click on "Search" at the bottom right hand corner of the webpage. It is a small word in a box. The next page shows the article. Click on the article.
Dahab, S. (2008). Five forces. In S. R. Clegg & J. R. Bailey (Eds.), International en.
101416 526 PMAfter September 11 Our State of Exception by .docxtamicawaysmith
10/14/16 5:26 PMAfter September 11: Our State of Exception by Mark Danner | The New York Review of Books
Page 1 of 11http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2011/10/13/after-september-11-our-state-exception/?printpage=true
After September 11: Our State of Exception
Mark Danner OCTOBER 13, 2011 ISSUE
We are in a fight for our principles, and our first responsibility is to live by them.
—George W. Bush, September 20, 2001
1.
We are living in the State of Exception. We don’t know when it will end, as we don’t know when the War on Terror will
end. But we all know when it began. We can no longer quite “remember” that moment, for the images have long since
been refitted into a present-day fable of innocence and apocalypse: the perfect blue of that late summer sky stained by acrid
black smoke. The jetliner appearing, tilting, then disappearing into the skin of the second tower, to emerge on the other
side as a great eruption of red and yellow flame. The showers of debris, the falling bodies, and then that great blossoming
flower of white dust, roiling and churning upward, enveloping and consuming the mighty skyscraper as it collapses into the
whirlwind.
To Americans, those terrible moments stand as a brightly lit portal through which we were all compelled to step, together,
into a different world. Since that day ten years ago we have lived in a subtly different country, and though we have grown
accustomed to these changes and think little of them now, certain words still appear often enough in the news—
Guantánamo, indefinite detention, torture—to remind us that ours remains a strange America. The contours of this
strangeness are not unknown in our history—the country has lived through broadly similar periods, at least half a dozen or
so, depending on how you count; but we have no proper name for them. State of siege? Martial law? State of emergency?
None of these expressions, familiar as they may be to other peoples, falls naturally from American lips.
What are we to call this subtly altered America? Clinton Rossiter, the great American scholar of “crisis government,”
writing in the shadow of World War II, called such times “constitutional dictatorship.” Others, more recently, have spoken
of a “9/11 Constitution” or an “Emergency Constitution.” Vivid terms all; and yet perhaps too narrowly drawn, placing as
they do the definitional weight entirely on law when this state of ours seems to have as much, or more, to do with politics
—with how we live now and who we are as a polity. This is in part why I prefer “the state of exception,” an umbrella term
that gathers beneath it those emergency categories while emphasizing that this state has as its defining characteristic that it
transcends the borders of the strictly legal—that it occupies, in the words of the philosopher Giorgio Agamben, “a position
at the limit between politics and law…an ambiguous, uncertain, borderline fringe, at the intersection of the legal and the
political.”
Call it, then, the s.
100 words per question, no references needed or quotations. Only.docxtamicawaysmith
100 words per question, no references needed or quotations. Only a general idea or opinion.
A.
· Compare and contrast two works from the Italian Baroque period with two works from the Renaissance. Be sure to note the appearance in the works of the defining characteristics from each period.
· Discuss why artistic expression shifted from the restrained stoicism of the Renaissance to that of the heightened emotion in the religious and other works of the Baroque.
B. From video
Goya -
The Third of May
- If you cannot see this video, click here -
https://youtu.be/e7piV4ocukg
Respond in writing to the following questions after reading Chapter 12, watching the video, and exploring the sites above.
1. Heroism, nationalism, and passion are themes associated with Romanticism. Which
three
landmarks of the nineteenth century are most representative of these themes? You can discuss art, philosophy, or literature.
2. Compare Neoclassicism and Romanticism as styles and sensibilities. What do their differences reflect about patronage, popular taste, and historical change? Provide specific examples from the chapters.
C.
1. From the arts of West Africa, what are some characteristics of African cultural heritage?
2. How did their religious beliefs influence their art and music.
D.
Watch video below
Manet -
Déjeuner
sur
l’herbe -
If you cannot see this video, click
https://youtu.be/3xBGF8H3bQ4
1. Viewers of Manet’s
Déjeuner sur l’herbe
initially responded to its public display by attacking the canvas with their umbrellas. Why?
2. What kind of art has evoked a comparable response in our own time? Do some research online. Find a recent work of art that caused controversy. Summarize the reasons for the controversy and your reaction to it. Try not post the same article as someone else. (This board is not POST FIRST, so you will be able to see what others have posted right away.) If you can, attach a picture of the image you are describing to your posting.
E.
Watch the video below. If you cannot see the video, click here:
https://youtu.be/XyLNPumMMTs
George Braque, Violin and Pitcher, (1909)
•
Pablo Picasso, Guernica, (1937)
•
Marcel Duchamp, Nude Descending a Staircase, (1912)
Respond in writing to the following question after reading Chapter 14 in your text, watching the video above, viewing the Web Assignments, and the sites above.
1. Describe how they three have departed from styles such as symbolism and impressionism of the late nineteenth century.
F.
Take some time to reflect on all we have covered in this course. Then, respond in writing to the following question.
1. After your experience in this course, describe why you feel the humanities are important.
Edit question's body
.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
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Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
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Reimagining Your Library Space: How to Increase the Vibes in Your Library No ...Diana Rendina
Librarians are leading the way in creating future-ready citizens – now we need to update our spaces to match. In this session, attendees will get inspiration for transforming their library spaces. You’ll learn how to survey students and patrons, create a focus group, and use design thinking to brainstorm ideas for your space. We’ll discuss budget friendly ways to change your space as well as how to find funding. No matter where you’re at, you’ll find ideas for reimagining your space in this session.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
2Ethical Questions in the Public SquareLearning Object.docx
1. 2
Ethical Questions in the Public Square
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
• Discuss the interdependent relationship between ethics and
law.
• Describe different sides of the issue of prayer in public
schools and apply ethi-
cal theory to the problem.
• Explain how ethics can help resolve conflicting values within
a society.
• Describe how ethics can be understood in the context of a
historical issue:
women’s suffrage.
• Apply ethical theory to a contemporary social issue: the
regulation of
pornography.
Courtesy Everett Collection
CN
CO_LO
2. CO_TX
CO_BL
CT
CO_CRD
mos85880_02_c02.indd 41 10/28/13 1:15 PM
CHAPTER 2Introduction
Introduction
Now that we have discussed the basics of ethical theory, we can
apply them to actual situations, and see what they have to say
about moral issues in specific, concrete situations. This
approach has two practical advantages. First, by seeing
how a specific ethical theory can be applied to an actual issue,
we will see how the theory
can better help us understand what the real problems are.
Ultimately, we may not solve
these problems in a way that will satisfy everyone, but we
should have a much better
grasp of the problems themselves. This will help us focus our
ability to think about these
questions more critically and eliminate some of the detours,
side issues, and irrelevant
parts of the debate that may interfere with our understanding of
the questions.
Second, by applying the various theories to actual moral
problems, we will also come to
better understand the theories themselves. It is one thing to
3. understand what a basic ethi-
cal position is, but it can be very helpful to see how that ethical
position works in dealing
with difficult ethical questions.
In this chapter, we will look at questions that arise when
individual rights are threatened
or violated, as well as instances when one person’s rights may
infringe upon another per-
son’s rights. As examples, we will look specifically at school
prayer and pornography. We
will also look at a historical debate over a woman’s right to
vote. This historical discussion
should help us realize that some ethical questions can be
resolved, and that talking, and
arguing, about them may lead to significant changes in people’s
lives.
Each discussion will present a debate on a specific topic. For
example, we will give an
argument for why prayer should be allowed in public schools,
and then look at the coun-
terargument for why it should be restricted or prohibited. After
presenting the debate, we
will show how these positions relate to the ethical theories in
Chapter 1—in this case, act
utilitarianism and rule utilitarianism. On other occasions, we
may apply the same theory
in two different ways, to demonstrate that a specific ethical
theory may give quite differ-
ent results in some cases. This will help remind us that although
ethics provides guidance
and insight into moral issues, very rarely does it offer solutions
that everyone will accept.
We will then look at some of the results of the debate and the
theories involved, and some
4. of the implications that may emerge from those results. After
each specific issue is treated
in this way, we will briefly discuss a different, but related,
question that will make clear
some of the larger issues involved.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 42 10/28/13 1:15 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.1 Can Ethical Principles Conflict With
the Law?
2.1 Can Ethical Principles Conflict With the Law?
Laws, for a given society, are designed to guarantee those rights
recognized in a society, as well as guarantee the security of
those who live in it. Debate has raged for thousands of years
about what specific rights and responsibilities are involved
here. Some argue for a minimal state that does little but
guarantee contracts and protect
the safety of citizens by providing secure borders and such
minimal services as police
and fire departments. Others argue for a much bigger role for
the state, insisting that the
state function to provide health care, education, parks, libraries,
unemployment support,
and many other social services to support a well-functioning
and productive society. Of
course, there are also many positions in between these two.
Often individual or group ethical principles conflict with the
laws that govern the state in
which the person or group lives. As we know from history, one
might be a member of a
5. A Brief Review of Ethical Theory
The ethical theories being applied in this chapter are discussed
at greater length in Chapter 1, but
as a quick reminder, here are the basics of the three classical
ethical theories:
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism evaluates the morality of an act in terms of its
consequences: Act utilitarianism
emphasizes the act itself, and whether what one chooses to do
will produce, given any other
alternative, the greatest good for the greatest number of those
affected by that choice. Rule utili-
tarianism focuses on whether the choice conforms to a rule that,
in general, produces the greatest
benefit for the greatest number of those affected. Because it
focuses on the results of an act in its
evaluation, utilitarianism is a consequentialist theory of ethics.
Deontology
Deontological theories focus on duty, and the rules one is
required to follow to be moral; this can
be seen in the etymology of its root word deon, a Greek work
meaning “necessity” or “obligation.”
Deontology does not regard the results of an act as relevant to
the moral evaluation of that act,
and is thus a nonconsequentialist theory of ethics.
Virtue Ethics
Virtue ethics emphasizes the moral character—the virtue—of
the agent in evaluating its morality.
Thus, instead of looking at the results of the act (as in
6. utilitarianism) or the necessary rules that
constitute morality (as in deontology), virtue ethics turns its
attention to the person carrying out
the act, and whether that act demonstrates, adds to, or subtracts
from the virtue of that person.
In addition, there are other approaches to ethics that were also
discussed. Particularly significant
for the current discussion is relativism:
Relativism
Relativism argues that there are no objective moral truths, but
that any moral evaluation is relative
to someone, whether a single person or a larger group, such as
one based on language, culture,
gender, ethnicity, ideology, or another type of community.
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
Remy de la Mauviniere/Associated Press
Many French Muslims saw the ban on full-face veils as a
restriction of their religious freedom.
religious minority in a society where
virtually all the other members of the
society follow a distinct religious tra-
dition, or even in a country that has
an official state religion. But even in
a society that is diverse and places
a high value on tolerance, this issue
can arise. Whenever a society enacts
laws, there is the potential that those
7. laws will conflict with the views of
some of the individuals in that soci-
ety. For instance, a state may outlaw
a drug, or ritual, that a group living
in that state regards as sacred and
fundamental to its religious practice.
In 2011, France outlawed the wearing
of full-face veils (the niqab) (Erlanger,
2011); many French Muslims (and
others) objected to this as a restriction
of religious practice, while the French government saw the law
as fundamental to preserv-
ing traditional French culture. Numerous such examples of this
kind of conflict—between
a state and the values of those who live in that state—can be
found throughout the world.
The issue this raises for ethics is how one deals with the
confrontation between one’s
morals and the laws of one’s state when the two conflict. A
state cannot survive if people
choose to ignore its laws, but does that mean a person must
either leave the state—if that
is even possible—or accept laws that are fundamentally at odds
with his or her most
profound ethical (and possibly religious) views? Traditionally,
in a democratic society,
citizens have the right to organize, express their opinions, and
use the democratic process
to change, eliminate, or enact laws. But while that seems to be a
theory with many attrac-
tive features, it may be a daunting thing to accomplish. Ethics
helps us clarify our ethical
choices, but can it help us with having our ethical choices
respected? Can it show us how
we can guarantee that our moral views aren’t violated? And can
it give us any guidance
8. when there is a harsh contradiction between one’s moral
viewpoint and the laws of one’s
society? These are difficult questions that arise within ethics,
and particularly when ethics
is combined with an examination of the political process. They
may be difficult to answer,
but they are good questions to keep in mind when thinking
about ethics and the moral
values one’s state chooses to enforce as its rules and its laws.
2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
Prayer is a particularly personal topic, and thus the role of
prayer for an individ-ual has led to some of the most divisive
arguments over religious practice, such as prayer in public
schools. Here, will we look at this debate, and then apply the
theory
of utilitarianism in two different ways to clarify the issues
involved.
Let’s examine some of the arguments over whether organized
prayer should be allowed in
public schools and try to clarify the issues involved by
distinguishing between “allowing”
mos85880_02_c02.indd 44 10/28/13 1:15 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
prayer and “promoting” prayer, as well as noting the difference
between an individual
praying privately and a group participating in an organized,
coordinated prayer.
9. The Argument for Prayer in Public Schools
The relationship between a person and God is the most precious
relationship of all. Society
must respect that relationship, and, recognizing this, the First
Amendment to the Consti-
tution of the United States prohibits any interference with
religion. Because prayer can be
considered the most sacred right a religious person possesses,
the government absolutely
cannot, and should not, interfere with that right by preventing
someone from praying. As
the First Amendment states, “Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” (U.S. Const.
amend. I). To prohibit school
prayer is to prohibit the free exercise of one’s religion. Thus,
not only is eliminating prayer
from public schools wrong, it is also unconstitutional. Moral
and legal reasons demon-
strate that prayer in public school should, therefore, be allowed.
Clearly, one’s right to prayer is protected by the Constitution;
however, there are many
other benefits to allowing prayer in public schools. Religious
values, such as honesty,
charity, and nonviolent problem solving are important to a well-
functioning society. Few
places are more important than public schools to emphasize
these values; indeed, pub-
lic schools provide a tragic example of how these values have
been neglected. Teenage
pregnancy, STDs, gang violence, and drug and alcohol abuse are
common in many public
schools. Reminding students that these are wrong and that there
are ways of avoiding
them are valuable moral lessons students need now more than
10. ever.
This is not an argument for a specific religion’s view to be
imposed on public school stu-
dents; that would, indeed, violate the language of the First
Amendment and what is
known as the Establishment Clause. Rather, the argument here
is for voluntary prayer for
students who wish to participate. This allows these students to
exercise their religious
rights and to promote important moral values. Furthermore,
most religions promote the
same kinds of moral values. The
Golden Rule, for instance, can be
found in many different religions
and in many different cultures. To
remind students to treat others as
they would want to be treated estab-
lishes no specific religion and
reinforces a value fundamental to a
well-ordered and moral society.
History and current practice also sup-
port allowing prayer in school. From
the founding of the United States, and
for almost 200 years, public schools
allowed voluntary prayer. Thomas
Jefferson refers to the unalienable
rights of American citizens as hav-
ing been granted by their “Creator”
in the Declaration of Independence.
Fuse/Thinkstock
Some would argue that since fewer people have objected
11. to the custom of saying the Pledge of Allegiance in schools,
history and practice support allowing prayer in school.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 45 10/28/13 1:15 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
Mike Brinson/The Image Bank/Getty Images
Opponents of prayer in school argue that prayer at school
events could be seen as involuntary.
Both the Senate and the House of Representatives maintain a
chaplain, who begins each
legislative session with a prayer; legal tender (money) in the
United States reads “In God
We Trust”; the Pledge of Allegiance includes the phrase “One
nation under God”; and
presidents of both political parties frequently end speeches by
saying “God bless Amer-
ica.” Few people have seen these practices as violations of the
First Amendment.
To prevent students from the exercise of their religion is to
require students to obey the
dictates of a nonreligious minority. A short prayer at a
commencement exercise, at a foot-
ball game, or at a school assembly not only reminds students of
the importance of reli-
gious and moral values but is generally regarded to reflect the
wishes of a large part of
the student body in most public schools. Thus, to prevent it
violates the Constitution and
distorts the wishes of the students themselves, as well as their
12. parents. To deny one the
right to have prayer in public schools, therefore, is immoral and
unconstitutional, pre-
vents important moral lessons from being made and reinforced
for a large group of stu-
dents who may need those lessons, neglects the history of the
United States, and conflicts
with the desires of the majority of students and their parents.
Therefore, prayer should be
allowed in public schools.
The Argument Against Prayer in Public Schools
The United States is a remarkably diverse country, particularly
in terms of its citizens’ reli-
gious affiliations. In addition to the numerous Christian
denominations, there are Jews,
Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Taoists, Zoroastrians, Wiccans,
Sikhs, and Native Ameri-
cans with their varied spiritual practices. There are also many
who do not identify with
any religious affiliation, including agnostics and atheists. All
Americans have the right to
religious expression, or no expression, and to impose state-
sanctioned prayer on them is
to violate their constitutional rights. Parents have the right, as
well, to have their views
respected, and a student whose religious views (or lack of
religious views) are at odds
with those of a school prayer may not only be offended, but that
student’s constitutional
rights are also being violated.
A prayer at a school assembly or foot-
ball game may seem innocent enough,
but if one’s religious views are funda-
mental to that person, then a prayer
13. that specifies a particular concep-
tion of God, or a particular relation-
ship between a person and God, may
well make that student feel singled
out. On the other hand, if the prayer
is so vague and general that it really
offers very little specific content, it
is not clear what purpose it serves;
in addition, it will still impose a reli-
gious viewpoint on those students
who do not share that viewpoint.
A student can be required to attend
certain school functions; if a prayer
is part of that function, the student is
mos85880_02_c02.indd 46 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
not participating in that prayer voluntarily. In addition to
having his or her views possibly
contradicted, the role of peer pressure and embarrassment
should not be underestimated.
Many students may prefer to stay in a setting where a prayer is
being offered instead of
leaving and thus identifying themselves even further as,
somehow, not “belonging.” Com-
bining a school-sanctioned prayer with such peer pressure
makes clear that such an activity
is not in any genuine sense voluntary.
Furthermore, it is not the role of public schools to impose
specific religious values on their
students. Schools are quite free to teach about religion, its
14. history, and its role in society;
schools are not permitted to do anything that could be
interpreted as endorsing a par-
ticular religious viewpoint. Schools have important obligations
to see that their students
receive a quality education in such subjects as English,
mathematics, natural sciences,
history, and foreign languages. Given the relatively low
achievements in these areas, rela-
tive to other countries in the developed world, public schools
clearly need to do a better
job in carrying out their educational mission. Spending such
valuable time on prayer and
imposing specific religious viewpoints on students is neither
part of the mission of public
schools, nor is it an efficient use of time. Moreover, many
parents prefer that specific reli-
gious and moral teachings not be part of the school curriculum.
For this last reason, even many religious parents demand that
religious material be
excluded from school curricula. These parents argue that
religious values are, indeed,
extremely important. For that very reason, they insist that the
public schools should not
interfere with parents’ desire to teach these values at home, and
at places of worship: pre-
cisely those places where it is appropriate to focus on religious
teachings.
The Constitution does not allow public schools to promote any
specific religion or reli-
gious viewpoint. Any school-sanctioned prayer would either
violate this constitutional
requirement or be so vague as to be meaningless. Given a
diverse student body, no prayer
15. can respect all the religious views of those students, particularly
if one considers that
some of those students may have no religious values or even
reject religion entirely. Public
schools have more important things to devote their time to as
part of their legitimate mis-
sion. Many parents do not want the values they teach their
children contradicted in the
public schools and prefer that the religious and moral teachings
be provided by parents,
not schools. School-sanctioned prayer, due to its setting and to
peer pressure, cannot be
regarded as voluntary. Therefore, due to both constitutional
issues and other compelling
moral and social challenges, prayer in public schools should be
prohibited.
Morality and Civil Law
As we will see throughout this and later chapters, in a
community of any size, conflicts
will arise between the laws that community adopts and the
personal morality of the indi-
viduals in that community. Familiar controversies such as
abortion, euthanasia, and many
others will display this conflict. If one lives in a community
that insists on a law that vio-
lates one’s own moral principles, there are few options
available: working to change the
law in question, ignoring it, changing one’s behavior, or leaving
the community. Each of
these, of course, has its problems: to leave one’s community is
costly, and many wouldn’t
want to do so unless the laws involved were especially onerous;
changing a law is a time-
consuming and expensive thing to do, and often not successful;
to ignore a law risks suf-
16. fering the penalties involved (fines or even prison); changing
one’s behavior may require
a person to do something that violates an important, even
sacred, principle.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 47 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
The tension between civil law and morality is clearly expressed
in the question of school
prayer in public schools. An individual has the right to pray, but
it has also been found
by the courts that official school prayer violates the
Establishment Clause of the First
Amendment. In this case, a compromise has been sought,
allowing individuals to pray,
and allowing groups to gather to pray voluntarily—before
school, during lunch, or after
school—on their own. This allows these individuals to express
their own religious views,
and the school avoids seeming to endorse a specific
denomination, practice, or prayer by
having prayers at official school functions. Many involved in
this dispute are unhappy
with this compromise: Some regard prohibiting prayers at
assemblies and graduation cer-
emonies as an infringement upon their rights, while others see
public schools as religious-
free zones, and urge banning songs and holiday references that
include specific religious
terms.
In a society as large and as diverse as the United States, with
17. members of many different
religions, ethnicities, races, languages, and cultural traditions,
such compromises may be
necessary. On the one hand, it may be argued that the laws of a
country should reflect the
values of the majority. On the other hand, if certain freedoms
are actually rights, presum-
ably those rights should not be subject to the endorsement or
veto of the majority.
Be the Ethicist
Moral Decisions, Legal Responsibilities
Some scenarios may help bring out the tension between the law
and morality. After responding
to the following from your own personal perspective, consider
how you might approach the issue
from the perspective of someone who has a different view than
you have. How are the responses
different? How might you go about helping developing laws that
would both respect individual
freedoms but also provide for a stable community that respects
everyone’s individual rights?
• Your new neighbor appears to be living with several women;
when you meet him, he intro-
duces himself and his wives. After several months, you have
spent a good bit of time with
the neighbor and his wives, and get to know them well; you are
all good friends, and while
you don’t really approve of polygamy, they seem to be very
happy with the arrangement.
Another neighbor, however, objects strongly, and tells you she
is planning to call the police
or other authorities to report them. What do you tell her?
18. • You have known your best friend’s daughter since she was an
infant; she treats you almost
as if you are a parent, having spent a lot of time in your home
and having confided many
things to you that only her parents and very best friends know.
She comes to your house
one evening and asks to speak to you in private. She tells you
that she was raped by her
uncle, and is pregnant. She needs $500 dollars to have an
abortion. She cannot tell her
parents, and you are the only one who knows about her
situation. What do you tell her?
• You have worked at the same company for 20 years, and one
other person has worked
with you the entire time. She has had a rough go of it, with an
abusive husband, problems
with alcohol and drugs, and a son in jail. She has divorced her
husband, quit drinking, and
entered a drug rehab program. She is a candidate for a
significant promotion at work,
which will give her a substantially higher salary. You know that
in the past couple of years
she has occasionally smoked marijuana at home, on the
weekends; it has not affected her
work. The manager comes to ask you if you think she should
receive the promotion, mak-
ing it clear that she will not get it if she is still using drugs of
any kind. What do you tell the
manager?
mos85880_02_c02.indd 48 10/28/13 1:16 PM
19. CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
Applying the Theories
One of the difficulties in studying ethics is determining the
appropriate way to apply a
given theory. The basic utilitarian principle dictates to do that
which will produce the
greatest good for the greatest number. But one of the difficulties
with applying utilitarian-
ism is identifying the group in question: in other words, “the
greatest number of whom?”
We will demonstrate this problem by examining the arguments
for and against school
prayer from the perspective of utilitarianism. As we will see,
different conclusions follow
from how we describe and apply our use of the utilitarian
principle. This doesn’t mean
the principle is wrong, however. But it does mean that in
applying the principle, we need
to be careful, and precise, in that application.
There’s an old saying, “As long as there are math tests, there
will be prayer in school.”
The idea here, of course, is that individual students cannot be
prevented from engaging in
prayer on their own, as individuals. Such prayer is voluntary
and engaged in only by the
individual. Furthermore, the Supreme Court has ruled that
students are allowed to orga-
nize, voluntarily, religious clubs—which can include prayer and
Bible study—at public
schools, just as they might any other kind of club.
As we noted earlier, it is important to differentiate between
allowing prayer and promot-
ing it. The legal challenges that have been brought have often
20. objected to a school offi-
cially endorsing a prayer at recognized school-wide events. On
some views, this moves
from permitting individuals to pray—a protected right—to
endorsing prayer by officially
recognizing it, which may well violate a person’s rights.
Act Utilitarianism
A utilitarian might well argue that in a given school or school
district, or community, the
majority (and even a vast majority) of its members belongs to a
specific faith tradition.
The greatest good for the greatest number, in this case, would
seem to allow that majority
to pray and participate in religious activities in the way they
desire. This might include
prayers at football games, school assemblies, and graduation
ceremonies. To prevent the
majority from expressing its religious views this way is to bend
to the dictates of a minor-
ity. But even if it could be shown that the minority may
maximize its utility by eliminat-
ing such prayers, it is clear that allowing those prayers produces
the greatest good. Some
might regard this as an application, specifically, of act
utilitarianism: The act of allowing
prayers for the majority of a given community creates the
greatest good for the greatest
number; therefore, prayer should be allowed.
Rule Utilitarianism
A contrasting approach to utilitarianism, which might be
regarded as rule utilitarian-
ism, argues otherwise. Again applying the principle of the
“greatest good for the greatest
number,” the rule utilitarian will argue that allowing the
21. majority’s religious views to be
imposed on a minority does not create the greatest good for the
greatest number. In addi-
tion to the minority’s rights being ignored (which decreases the
happiness of those in the
minority), many in the majority may also recognize that
ignoring legitimate rights of a
minority is harmful, both to those suffering the harm and to
those doing the harm. Partici-
pating in something that causes harm (harm, here, to the rights
of the minority) decreases
mos85880_02_c02.indd 49 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
the happiness of those who participate, even passively, in that
harm. Therefore, in general,
the rule utilitarian will see simply applying the “greatest good
greatest number” principle
in a situation that ignores or violates the legitimate rights of
members of the community
does not lead to allowing prayer in school in general. Rather, it
leads to preventing school
prayer in situations, such as school assemblies and graduation
ceremonies, that cannot be
regarded as voluntary in any genuine sense.
Here, then, we see two distinct applications of the utilitarian
principle: one leading to the
result that school prayer, in a very general way, should be
allowed, and the other leading
to the result that school prayer, in a very general way, should
not be allowed. What this
22. seems to tell us is that the rights of the individuals involved
must be looked at very care-
fully, to determine where one person’s rights begin to conflict
with another person’s. It
also seems to indicate that when we look at the happiness, or
utility, of a given group, we
need to be aware that how we specify the community makes a
difference. Within a public
school, is the community we are concerned with everyone who
attends the school? Those
who are religious who attend the school? Those members of the
dominant religious tra-
dition, if any, of those who attend the school? Do we include,
for that matter, those who
might end up attending this school, or who graduated from this
school, and thus are part
of its extended community? These questions aren’t always easy
to answer, but the issues
they raise need to be factored in when evaluating the overall set
of questions involved.
Case Study
Prayer in Schools
It can be difficult, in a religiously diverse society, to make
accommodations for everyone. In Ottawa,
Canada, there has been a request for permanent prayer rooms to
be set aside for Muslim students
in the public schools.
You can see a video about the case here:
http://bcove.me/y7obfdow
You can see the whole story (and the video) here:
http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews
24. http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews/canada/archives/2012/0
9/20120922-152050.html
http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews/canada/archives/2012/0
9/20120922-152050.html
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
of distinct religious traditions or one is religious and the other
is not. It is unlikely that any
ethical result will satisfy everyone and that these conflicts will
be resolved in a way that
makes everyone happy. But ethics can provide valuable insight
into clarifying these issues
and offer very helpful ways of thinking about such conflicts in a
way that can address
them.
With respect to both the legal results
and a more general way of regard-
ing religion, increasing attention has
been paid to the idea of prayer in
public schools being voluntary. An
individual cannot be prevented from
praying in public school; religious
student organizations are permitted
the same opportunities as other stu-
dent organizations. These activities
are regarded as voluntary. In contrast,
school-sanctioned events, whether
football games or graduation exer-
cises, tend to be recognized by the
courts as the kinds of events where
it is inappropriate to have prayer, in
that a prayer at such an event auto-
matically brings with it an official or
25. unofficial school endorsement. Of course, attendance at a high
school football game isn’t
something we regard as mandatory, but, as the courts
recognized, such a game is an offi-
cial school function and also may involve an element of peer
pressure. Fundamentally, the
argument is that one should be able to attend the football games
of one’s public school
without having to participate in a prayer that contradicts one’s
beliefs, whether one fol-
lows a different religious faith or is not religious at all. And, as
many religious people have
argued, to insist on a prayer that is so general that it doesn’t
conflict with another’s beliefs
(religious or otherwise) seems to make pointless the very notion
of “prayer.”
Of course, exceptions to what an ethicist might argue, or what
the courts have ruled, can
be found; often these cases receive a great deal of publicity and
seem to indicate either that
a “war on religion” is being waged by public schools, or that
minorities are having their
own religious rights “violated and trampled.” It may be the case
that the publicity these
instances receive implies that these issues arise more frequently
than they actually do. To
be sure, a teacher who prevents a Christian student from
carrying the Bible violates that
student’s rights, just as a teacher violates the rights of a Jewish
student by insisting that he
write an essay on the topic “Why Jesus loves me.” (These are
both actual cases.) The goal
of ethics not only allows us to see that these actions violate an
individual’s religious rights
26. but also provides us with a way of arguing why they violate
them.
What Role Does Conscience Play?
People identify themselves in many different ways: through
their ethnicity, race, coun-
try of origin, class, gender, sexual orientation, and religion,
among many others. Often
people regard themselves as members of a relatively cohesive
group because of one
Monkey Business/Thinkstock
Religion can be an important part of a person’s identity.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 51 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.2 The Issue: Prayer in Public Schools
or more of these factors: thus, a person might consider herself
an African American
Roman Catholic, while another may consider himself a member
of a Spanish-speaking
Protestant community. Belonging to such a community brings
certain commitments:
Perhaps one insists on a particular interpretation of “marriage”
or “science”; perhaps
one’s religious or cultural community requires that women and
men act in specific
and different ways, in terms of dress, occupation, worship, and
so on. Clearly enough,
the values of these communities may differ, and even sharply
conflict. If the values of
your culture or community conflict too much with that of the
27. surrounding community,
you are confronted with a difficult problem. As a simple
example, if one’s commu-
nity accepts polygyny (a husband having more than one wife),
while the larger com-
munity rejects it, how does one resolve this conflict?
These kinds of conflicts occur with some frequency, of course,
but most people learn to
adjust: Perhaps they aren’t entirely satisfied with the values of
the larger community, but
the advantages of participating in that community make it more
practical to tolerate that
dissatisfaction. For instance, a parent may be suspicious about
the science behind climate
change but otherwise be quite pleased with the education
offered by the school; the par-
ent accepts it, and perhaps offers an alternative view to that
presented in the school.
In the case of religion in public school, some parents find it a
better solution to send
their children to private, parochial, or religious schools, or to
home school their children.
These parents, of course, don’t withdraw from the community
entirely; they simply leave
part of it.
When more serious conflicts do arise, some find it impossible to
remain within the com-
munity. Although these cases are relatively rare, they provide a
way of examining the
role an individual’s conscience plays when evaluating one’s
membership in a larger com-
munity. If one’s values compel one to reject the values of that
larger community, one has
to confront the choice between somehow tolerating something
28. consistently offensive, or
withdrawing entirely from that community in order to live, in a
different way, with people
who share those values. There may also be serious ethical
concerns relative to those shared
values that conflict with those of the larger community. Some
have chosen to form sepa-
rate communities, in part, to avoid living among African
Americans, or Roman Catholics,
or Jews, or members of other groups defined as not sharing the
values of that community.
Other separate communities have been formed on the basis of
economic complaints—
specifically, tax laws—and on the basis of specific religious
values. An ethical investiga-
tion here might ask whether the dictates of conscience, in this
case, should be respected,
or critically scrutinized.
Most of us live between the two extremes of our values never
being challenged by some-
thing in society and our values being so consistently violated
that we decide to leave the
community entirely. But this raises a number of important
ethical questions about living
in a community with others who may not share one’s values. At
what point should we
object, when we find our values being violated? How can we
make sure our rights are
respected? Can our values be preserved without infringing on
the rights of others? In
our desire to protect our own moral values, do we forget to
consider the moral values of
others? Ethics offers some insight into these questions,
although, again, without offering
a solution that will be satisfactory to everyone. In a society that
29. is increasingly pluralistic
and diverse, it is very likely that conflicts among the values of
the members of a society
will persist (if not increase), and we will continue to need to
address these questions.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 52 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
Where Do We Go From Here?
As noted earlier, the United States is a diverse society and is
particularly diverse in terms
of both the faith traditions followed by Americans as well as an
increasing number of
Americans who have no religion. Even though the diversity in
the United States has
increased dramatically, Christianity has been and continues to
be the dominant faith tra-
dition in the United States.
The implication of these characteristics seems to indicate that
we recognize how impor-
tant religious values are to many people. But that importance
also makes it compelling
to recognize others’ religious beliefs, as well as the beliefs of
those who have no religion.
It seems likely that one result is that there will continue to be a
good bit of give and take
over this issue, with some substantial conflicts arising between
those who don’t think
religion in public schools is given sufficient recognition and
those who think otherwise.
30. Some will think a certain religious tradition is too specifically
identified, which may be
unconstitutional; others may think any mention of religion
should be omitted entirely
from the public schools; still others may think that religion is
too important to allow the
public schools to interfere with it at all.
So perhaps the implications of this debate are to recognize that
diversity can lead to such
conflicts, and that those in the majority may need to be
particularly sensitive to the beliefs
of others, religious or otherwise. Such sensitivity is, of course,
a two-way street, and so
this sensitivity may also increase the need for tolerance. No
solution will satisfy everyone,
but insisting that prayer in public school always be voluntary,
and that religion be treated
in public schools in a way that recognizes a diversity of beliefs
and tolerance for those
beliefs, may go a long way toward minimizing these conflicts,
although it may be too
much to ask for these conflicts to be eliminated entirely.
2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right to Vote
It is a good thing to remember that ethics can make a
difference; not all ethical argu-ments are abstract discussions of
hypothetical cases, but we can see that they have brought about
significant change. In this case, we will look at the arguments
over giv-
ing women the right to vote in the United States, known as the
question of “women’s
suffrage.” As we will see, something we may now take as
obvious and “common sense”
wasn’t always regarded that way, and ethical considerations
31. were important in making
it possible for women to vote. It is probably worth noting that
some of the arguments
may sound pretty dubious as this point, but when made they
were found by many to be
extremely persuasive. Here we will look at the issue from the
perspective of virtue eth-
ics and from the perspective of deontology, as they might have
been presented when this
issue was still a volatile topic of discussion.
This issue of women’s voting rights is a good example of how
moral and ethical argu-
ments can both provide clarity to our understanding of the
issues and produce a genuine
difference.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 53 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
The Argument Against Women’s Suffrage
It is unquestionable that men and women are fundamentally
distinct. This is obviously
the case in terms of biology; the very differences can be
immediately observed, and they
are even more obvious in reproduction, where men and women
play radically distinct
roles. Because of the role women play in carrying, delivering,
and raising children, they
have a specific approach to things, in terms of their compassion,
their abilities to nurture,
and their willingness to compromise and avoid conflict. These
32. differences, both physi-
ological and psychological, have long been noted. Aristotle, 400
years before the birth of
Christ, noted that
The female is softer in disposition than the male, is more
mischievous, less
simple, more impulsive, and more attentive to the nurture of the
young;
the male, on the other hand, is more spirited than the female,
more savage,
more simple and less cunning. The traces of these differentiated
character-
istics are more or less visible everywhere, but they are
especially visible
where character is the more developed, and most of all in man.
(Aristotle,
2005)
This is also reflected in our very language: The word
“hysterical” comes from the Latin
term referring to the womb, and gives us the English word
“uterus.” Perhaps less well
known is that the term “lady” originally comes from the Old
English term for “one who
kneads, or makes, bread” and that the very term “feminine”
originates from a term for
breast feeding. Terms associated with women have, in English
and in other languages,
always emphasized softness and delicacy, and their importance
as wives and mothers—
the Bible reinforces this; Delilah, Jezebel, and Salome represent
women who behave
immorally (that is, in a treacherous or adulterous manner),
whereas Mary, whose humility
and maternal aspects are emphasized, represents the virtuous
33. woman.
It is clear from the way the term “woman” devel-
oped in English that the virtues of a woman are to
be praised; for a well-functioning society, women
are indispensable to keep the home running well,
to ensure that children are raised appropriately,
and to take care of, efficiently and effectively, all
those things that fall within a woman’s many
areas of expertise. But politics is an entirely dis-
tinct realm, where women lack the temperament,
the attitude, the understanding, and the experi-
ence to function effectively. Thus, women are not
suited to participate in politics, either as elected
officials or as voters.
In addition to these somewhat abstract and philo-
sophical reasons, we can add a few specific points
and summarize the position as follows. Women
have a crucial role in society—to take care of the
home; politics is a separate sphere and is really
only suitable for men. Only by keeping these
spheres separate can women play their important
Courtesy Everett Collection
Opponents of women’s suffrage believed
that a woman’s place was in the home.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 54 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
34. role in maintaining the values and civility of society. The need
for this separation is clearly
seen in the distinct physiological and psychological makeup of
women, as opposed to
men. Women, by their very temperament, are not suited to the
unpleasant and sometimes
violent confrontations required by politics. In any case, many
women do not want the
vote, believing it will dilute the very real power they in fact
have over their husbands
already. Furthermore, it will give the vote to an enormous
number of people who have
neither the background nor the understanding to make good
political decisions. For all of
these reasons, women neither need, nor should they be given,
the right to vote.
The Argument for Women’s Suffrage
Women are human beings. They are expected
to care for themselves, their families, their hus-
bands, their children, and their homes. As such,
they have some of the most significant responsi-
bilities that can be entrusted to anyone. Yet, while
shouldering these responsibilities and others, a
woman is deprived of the fundamental right of
political representation. She works hard, often
for no salary, and often harder than any man, and
helps make the society in which she lives func-
tion; indeed, women make that society possible.
Yet that same society prevents her from the right
any man has, simply by accident of his being born
a man: the right to vote. A woman’s contributions
to society are absolutely indispensable. In addi-
tion to being a human being, with certain rights
that cannot morally be violated—such as the right
to vote—women deserve to have an equal say in
35. how that society is organized and how its poli-
tics should be structured. As Susan B. Anthony
stated, “There never will be complete equality
until women themselves help to make laws and
elect lawmakers.”(Anthony, 1987, p. 901–908)
If the Declaration of Independence indicates that all people are
created equal, this has
clearly not been the case for women. They are expected to
fulfill all their responsibilities
while being denied one of their fundamental rights. If “no
taxation without representa-
tion” was justification for the American Revolution, what does
that tell women, who toil
as hard as men, have responsibilities equal or greater than those
of men, live with men
under the same rules and laws of society, yet have no
representation? Depriving women
of the right to vote is both immoral, in that it denies women a
fundamental right, and
unjust, by not allowing them what is due them: the rights that
coexist with responsibili-
ties. If a woman is expected to take on those responsibilities,
then she must be accorded
the rights due her, and one of those rights is the right to vote.
Perhaps someone will suggest that husbands or fathers represent
women. Would any man
be willing to switch positions in this and regard it as fair were
wives and daughters taken
to represent their views accruately? Is it sensible, or fair, for
half the population to hope
Mary Evans Picture Library/
The Womens Library/Everett Collection
36. Supporters of women’s suffrage argued that
as contributing members of society, women
were entitled to vote.
mos85880_02_c02.indd 55 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
that their views are represented by the other half? Might there
not be a perspective on
important political issues that women bring into consideration
that would be otherwise
ignored? Wouldn’t political decisions be better informed, and
thus be better decisions, if
such an important perspective were taken into account? And
who better to present the
political perspectives women have than women?
The argument, then, is simple. Women are human beings, with
rights and responsibilities.
One of those rights, perhaps as fundamental as any, is the right
to vote. Having deprived
women of this right for so long doesn’t mean it is fair, or just; it
means that something
unfair and unjust has gone on for far too long. One of the
fundamental principles of a
free and fair society is that its members deserve representation,
and deserve to represent
themselves. The only correct result, therefore, as a matter of the
moral law and as a matter
of justice, is to provide women with what they are due: their
right to vote.
37. Applying the Theories
Women’s suffrage may be firmly resolved in the United States,
but as we have seen, the
issue still offers some insights into how social questions are
deliberated and finally estab-
lished in law. Now that we have considered two sides of the
issue, we will discuss the
ways a virtue ethicist and a deontologist might approach this
debate.
Virtue Ethics
The extraordinary thing about women is their virtue: their
remarkable abilities to handle
so many different things and to handle them well. They are
caring, generous, nurturing,
and practical; they are good friends, and, when their virtues are
present in the appropriate
way, they make good sisters, daughters, wives, and mothers.
Virtue ethics sees these virtues as precisely the things to
emphasize for a virtuous woman:
never in their extremes, but always aiming at an appropriate and
moderate degree, a
Golden Mean. The virtue ethicist might then argue as follows:
The virtues of a woman are
best seen when displayed in the proper place and in the proper
and appropriate way—in
the home as a wife and mother, in the elementary school as a
teacher, in the hospital as a
nurse. These are roles women have excelled in for centuries,
and society functions most
efficiently and most productively when they continue to do so.
On this same view, politics can often be contentious, ugly,
confrontational, and even vio-
lent. Women do not do well in this kind of environment, and the
38. virtues that women
possess cannot be developed and improved, therefore, by
engaging in politics. Women
also lack the educational background and the general
temperament for participating in
politics. Giving women the vote will force them into an arena
where their skills are inade-
quate, and will simultaneously prevent them from spending their
time where they should
be, and where their virtues are most evident. Any decision that
has such disastrous moral
results cannot be a good one, and thus the virtue ethicist would
have to conclude that giv-
ing a woman the right to vote would be wrong, both for her and
for her society.
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
Deontology
The deontologist, of course, disputes much of this
characterization of women, and may
well reject the idea that women have some set of “virtues” that
are fundamentally dis-
tinct from those of men. Men aren’t defined in terms of being a
husband, a brother, a
father. Why are women characterized solely in terms of their
roles, rather than as free,
independent, and creative human beings? Women may well be
good wives and moth-
ers, but that doesn’t mean they can’t be more than (or
something other than) wives and
39. mothers. Women may well be good teachers, but can’t they also
be good college profes-
sors? Women may well be good nurses, but can’t they also be
good doctors? Restricting a
woman’s educational opportunities, then criticizing her for a
lack of education, is about as
fair as putting a person in prison and criticizing her for not
doing much traveling.
The deontologist also has a traditional method to identify
something as fundamentally
unfair. If Bob is doing something unfair to Carolyn, Carolyn
can simply ask Bob if he
would be happy if that same unfair thing were done to him.
Thus, more generally, women
can ask men the same thing: If men had the responsibilities that
women do, would they
object if they didn’t possess the right to vote? The Golden Rule
seems to provide a much
stronger argument than the appeal to the Golden Mean.
In any case, the right to vote doesn’t seem to the deontologist to
be a right for men to
possess, but a right for human beings to possess. As such, any
woman who qualifies as a
human being should possess the right to vote. To deny her that
right is to treat her as less
than a human being, to treat her as a means to an end, and thus
to act unethically.
Case Study
Augusta National Golf Club
Since it began in 1933, the Augusta National Golf Club has
been famous for hosting the Masters,
40. one of the four “majors” that help determine who is the best
golfer in the world. More recently,
Augusta National was famous for not allowing African
Americans and women to join.*
The former Chairman of Augusta National argued that, as a
private club, it was only the member-
ship of the club who determined who should and who should not
be admitted. Thus, if that mem-
bership wished to stay all White and all male, it was a matter
that should be determined only by the
membership.
His argument is presented here:
http://www.golftoday.co.uk/news/yeartodate/news02/augusta5
.html.
Unsurprisingly, others saw things differently. Some saw the
club’s policies as simply discriminatory
and immoral; others argued that, as the most widely viewed
tournament on television, with well-
known sponsors, its policies went beyond an internal, private
decision.
Some of these views are provided here:
http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2012/08/20/augusta-national-
admits-first-2-female-members/.
(continued)
mos85880_02_c02.indd 57 10/28/13 1:16 PM
http://www.golftoday.co.uk/news/yeartodate/news02/augusta5.h
tml
http://www.golftoday.co.uk/news/yeartodate/news02/augusta5.h
41. tml
http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2012/08/20/augusta-national-
admits-first-2-female-members/
CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
iStockphoto/Thinkstock
Today, the right of women to vote requires little to no
justification.
Some Conclusions
It is rather hard to imagine a politi-
cian today proposing that women
not be allowed to vote: Such a sug-
gestion would be generally regarded
as ridiculous. But it was a long, hard
struggle; the 19th Amendment was
passed 144 years after the Declara-
tion of Independence, finally giving
women a right we now take as one
that requires little or no justification.
With the benefit of hindsight, we see
that many of the arguments proposed
were based on a conception of women
(and men) that had a very long history,
a conception that restricted women to
specific roles in society. Critical scru-
tiny of this conception led to the real-
ization that it functioned to prevent
women from being full participants in their society. Even
though women were regarded
as sufficiently responsible to do many of the things society
42. deemed extremely important,
they were denied the rights that accompanied those
responsibilities. From many ethical
perspectives, denying women the right to vote was wrong for
two reasons. First, it denied
the rights that one acquires with responsibilities, such as the
case of the right to possess a
firearm, which brings with it an unspoken responsibility to
handle that firearm safely and
Case Study (continued)
Imagine you are a White male—which, of course, you may in
fact be—and you are asked to join
your local country club. Most of the important business and
political leaders in your community
belong to this club, and joining will greatly increase your
ability to meet and talk with them. You
realize that this could do a great deal to help you expand your
own business interests.
However, the club you are asked to join is restricted: it does not
allow women or African Americans
as members (although they can come as guests).
• Assume you follow virtue ethics: Explain how, on that theory,
you might try to justify your
decision to join the club.
• Assume you follow utilitarianism: Explain how, on that
theory, you might try to justify your
decision not to join the club.
• Assume you are a relativist: What might you say to a co-
worker (who happens to be both
female and African American) in explaining to her why you
43. decided to go ahead and join
the club.
*Augusta National did change its policies; it permitted African
Americans to become members in
1990 and women to become members in 2012.
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
appropriately. Second, and more fundamental, denying women
the right to vote was to
deny them a right they presumably possess as human beings,
although a right that was
only won after many decades of struggle. Thus, one is forced
either to recognize their right
to vote, or to argue, somehow, that they are not human beings.
We also see from this discussion that ethical values and
political values can frequently be
in tension with each other, as well as how one applies a specific
theory in ethics may well
determine the results of that application. For instance, imagine
that we adopt a simple
utilitarian perspective, and assume (safely enough) that
allowing citizens to vote increases
the happiness, or maximizes the utility, of those citizens. The
clear result is that the great-
est good for the greatest number is achieved by giving all
eligible citizens the right to vote.
But who is an “eligible citizen”? Is it all adults 18 and older?
All adults 21 and older? Or
44. should more restrictions be placed on who is eligible to vote, as
has often been done in the
past? Obviously enough, some people were not allowed to vote
on the basis of race and
sex (or gender); but other conditions have been imposed, such
as being able to read and
write, or owning property, to restrict the right to vote. Ethics
provides us with one way to
examine such restrictions to see if they are justified on the basis
of good, moral reasons,
or, as seems often to have been the case, to allow those already
in power to maintain their
advantages. If we apply our utilitarian principle to a group, such
as males, or Whites, the
greatest good for the greatest number of that group may well
result in a situation that
is quite unfair, were a larger group considered. So even taking a
very basic utilitarian
approach to a question may require us to think long and hard
about what we mean by
“the greatest number.” In other words, when we consider the
greatest good for the great-
est number, we also have to ask: the greatest number of whom?
And determining who
belongs, and who doesn’t belong, in the group in question may
not always be that easy.
Do Ethical Principles Change Over Time?
Communities often define themselves as much by whom they
exclude as whom they
include; that is, to be a member of a community, or society, is
often determined by establish-
ing who does not belong. For centuries, the long history of
racial exclusion in the United
States prohibited African Americans from genuinely
participating in society, obviously
45. enough through the institution of slavery, but also through other
means, such as requir-
ing them to use separate facilities (waiting rooms, movie
theatres, bathrooms, drinking
fountains, etc.), preventing them from even registering to vote
(let alone actually voting),
forcing them to attend segregated schools from kindergarten
through universities, and
many other formal and informal ways of sending the message,
“You don’t really belong.”
Women were also prevented from voting, owning property, and
being given credit in their
own names, along with other more informal ways of excluding
them from society. Native
Americans, Jews, and others were similarly prevented from
being full participants within
what we now regard as their own society.
Does this indicate that the fundamental principles of morality
changed? If so, that would
seem to show that rather than being principles, they are the
kinds of things that are not eter-
nal and permanent, but simply ideas that gain sufficient support
to be adopted in a given
society. Many ethicists would argue, instead, that moral
principles do not change; rather,
society changes—often by expanding—those to whom those
principles apply. Less than
50 years ago, it was illegal in a number of places in the United
States for people of different
races to marry; we generally now regard such “miscegenation
laws” as discriminatory and
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46. CHAPTER 2Section 2.3 A Historical Debate: A Woman’s Right
to Vote
ignorant. The principle of “rights” didn’t change,
in this case; rather, the idea of the right to marry
was extended to be more inclusive. The Supreme
Court, in 1967, declared it unconstitutional to
prohibit people of different races to marry; since
then, geneticists and other biologists have seemed
to conclude that the very notion of “race” isn’t a
useful biological term at all. Thus, both the ethi-
cal principles and the law reflected the fact that
it was wrong to exclude certain groups of people
from exercising their rights, and thus the commu-
nity expanded its conception of who belonged to
that community.
These changes often don’t come very easily; there
can be a great deal of resistance to them, and
even when laws are in place to prevent excluding
groups from voting, buying a house, or marrying
someone, those laws will often continue to be vio-
lated. A community, that is, may simply adopt an
informal practice to prevent someone from doing
something; in spite of a law prohibiting that
practice, the majority of a given community may
enforce it through peer pressure and other means.
As the point may be put in legal terms, a law that
is in force practically is a de facto law, in spite of
it being illegal de jure, or against the official laws
under which a community lives. If someone can successfully
exclude African Americans
from eating in his restaurant, that exclusion is in place as a de
facto rule, even though
47. illegal de jure.
Thus, even though ethical principles themselves may not change
over time, we can see
how they do change in application. In the United States, for
instance, views about extend-
ing certain rights—to serve openly in the military, to marry—to
homosexuals have rap-
idly changed. The question here is not whether one’s rights
should be respected, but who
should, and who should not, be included as part of the group
that has such rights. Again,
we see that ethics doesn’t resolve such an issue, but it helps
clarify what is at stake in the
various resolutions that have been proposed. In any diverse
community, the restrictions
and expansions of rights, and the question of what kinds of
things really are “rights,” will
continue to arise and be the source of debate. It should be clear,
in any case, that ethics has
a good deal to offer in identifying the terms of the debate, as
well as determining what is
at stake in these arguments.
Where Do We Go From Here?
Ethics can often seem like a sterile exercise, with little
relevance for everyday life and the
kinds of decisions we actually have to confront. Should I steal
food to feed my starving
family? I find the wallet of a person I know to be a drug dealer,
and it has $1,000 in it; what
iStockphoto/Thinkstock
Less than 50 years ago, it was illegal in
the United States for people of different
48. races to marry. Ethicists would argue that
it was not moral principles that changed,
but society. Do you agree? What other
examples can you think of in which this has
been the case?
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
should I do with it? One very standard example in ethics asks
this: If you were able to
divert a train to kill one person, in order that the train did not
kill five people, what would
you do? It seems pretty clear that these kinds of examples are
good to help us see what is
at stake in applying and understanding ethical theory, even
though we don’t expect to be
in the positions described here. Some might suggest that ethics,
and philosophy in gen-
eral, don’t have a lot to say that is relevant. But, as we’ve seen
in the preceding historical
example, ethical questions and scrutiny of the moral values of a
society can, in fact, have
a significant effect in changing a society.
This is not to say that all we need to do to address an unfair or
immoral situation in our
society is to pass out ethics textbooks and convince people to
read the relevant pages. But
familiarity with ethical theories, and familiarity with various
ways of identifying things
that are unfair, can at least help move the discussion along. Our
49. values do not exist in some
kind of vacuum, of course; they exist in a large, complex
context of competing values,
politics, and social structures such as educational institutions
and religious viewpoints.
Many other factors, no doubt, also play a role in understanding
the ethical challenges we
confront. But the more familiar we are with techniques in
explaining and understanding
those challenges, the better prepared we are to deal with them.
This is, of course, not to
guarantee that we will solve them, and we almost certainly
won’t solve them in a way that
everyone finds satisfactory. But the better prepared we are to
clarify the ethical problems
we do have to deal with, the better prepared we are to address
them and, in some cases,
fix them.
Of course, fixing—or at least improving—a specific case of
injustice hardly means the mat-
ter is settled. One might think that giving women the right to
vote accomplished political
equality, but it was only a step in that direction. Many other
factors can still function as
obstacles to that equality. Philosophers might suggest that the
right to vote is a necessary
condition for political equality, even though it is not at all a
sufficient condition. In other
words, without the right to vote, one cannot hope to gain that
kind of equal participation
in the political structures of one’s society, but the right to vote
doesn’t, by itself, establish
this participation. Many obstacles may still need to be
overcome, and, presumably, this is
an ongoing competition to determine the scope and limits of
50. one’s rights. But at least we
can see that ethics can, in fact, contribute important things to
the debate over such issues
and can play a significant and productive role in how society
addresses such questions.
Now that we have thoroughly examined a historical social
question, let’s return to one
of contemporary relevance: the charged issue of pornography
and whether it should or
should not be regulated.
2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate or Not?
A rguments over pornography raise a number of ethical issues.
Pornography is often regarded as a question of freedom of
speech; however, more recently it has been harshly criticized
for how it is produced and the images of women it endorses.
Some, in contrast, regard the consumption of pornography as a
“victimless crime,” and
believe that, because it does not harm others, it should not be
restricted extensively.
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
Neil Setchfield/Lonely Planet Images/Getty Images
Those who oppose extensive regulation of pornography
note that adults in the United States are allowed to engage
in many activities that some may not approve of, so long as
those activities do not harm others.
51. Here we will examine the two sides of the debate, looking at
both the consumption and
the production of pornography. We will utilize utilitarianism
and emotivism to provide
some theoretical analysis of the issue.
The Argument Against Extensive Regulation
Adults in the United States are
allowed to do many things that oth-
ers may condemn. They may smoke,
drink to excess, fail to exercise, watch
too much television, eat too much
junk food, and do many other things
that aren’t “good” for them. Yet they
are free to do so: As adults, they are
allowed to do those things that the
state cannot demonstrate pose a gen-
uine threat to others. I cannot change
the oil in my car and legally pour the
old oil down the storm drain: That
poses a threat to the environment
and can harm others. I can, however,
if I wish, have root beer, pickles, and
pizza for breakfast every morning;
it may not be a good or nutritious
choice, but it is a choice I am free to
make.
In the same way, adults are allowed to read and watch whatever
they choose, unless the
state can show a compelling reason to prevent them from doing
so. For instance, in the
United States, one can read books about bomb making and
terrorism; one can see websites
where overthrowing the government is advocated. One can find
52. material that supports
various kinds of hatreds against ethnic and religious minorities,
as well as conspiracy
theories blaming different groups for a remarkably wide range
of things, including the
U.S. government being responsible for the attacks on the World
Trade Center on Septem-
ber 11, 2001. These materials are available because the First
Amendment to the Constitu-
tion insists on freedom of speech; unless one can show a
genuine threat, restrictions on
speech are prohibited. Even though many people find such
things distasteful—and much
worse—the freedom to read and watch this material is
guaranteed as a fundamental free-
dom in the United States.
Pornography, which is very difficult to define, is precisely this
kind of material. Many find
it extremely offensive. However, they have no right to dictate to
those who wish to con-
sume pornography that they cannot. Adults in the United States
are free to read and view
pornography; they can be prevented from doing so only if the
state can show a compelling
reason to restrict it.
Some restrictions have been imposed; producing child
pornography is illegal because it
harms children. Thus, the possession of child pornography is
also illegal, in that its pur-
chase supports an illegal activity. Access to pornography is
limited to adults, just as are
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53. CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
various other products, such as alcohol and tobacco; various
other restrictions prevent
those who do not wish to see it from being exposed to it. Thus,
certain controls are imposed
on bookstores; network television does not show material that is
regarded as too indecent
by those who run it, and cable television has various controls in
place, such as parental
controls and various payment requirements. These and other
restrictions have been put in
place to do two things: to prevent the involuntary exposure of
pornography to those who
wish to avoid it, and to allow those who wish to consume
pornography to access it.
Some have argued that the production of pornography involves
the exploitation and mis-
treatment of women; thus, consumers of pornography support an
industry that harms
women. This may be true, but it has little bearing on restricting
the rights of adult access
to pornography. Many people work in industries that involve
serious threats in hazardous
situations: coal miners, electricians, and farmers, among others.
To argue that pornogra-
phy should be highly regulated, or censored, because some
people have been mistreated
in its production is the same as arguing that restaurants should
be closed because some
restaurants have had health code violations.
54. Finally, if pornography is highly regulated, there is a genuine
danger of a slippery slope
appearing. Historically, some things now regarded as great
literature, and great art, were
characterized as pornography and banned. This isn’t to say all
pornography is great art;
it is to say that when one group of people is allowed to
determine what other adults
may read and watch, there is always the risk that they will be
willing to regulate or ban
material that should not be regulated or banned. Furthermore,
how does society choose
who does the regulating, and whose standards should be
followed? For good reason, the
courts have consistently decided that when in doubt, free speech
must be tolerated, and
that any regulations on pornography must be minimal and
shown to respond to what
would otherwise be a substantial danger to the public.
The Argument for Extensive Regulation
Love between two people, including its sexual expression, is
one of the most cherished
values human beings possess. Pornography damages this value
by dehumanizing those
who appear in it and reducing them to objects that become
simply a means to satisfy some
other person’s crude desires. This coarsens relationships
between people and reduces the
dignity each human being deserves. Pornography thus makes it
more difficult to treat
others with respect, and thus should be strictly regulated; it may
even, in some cases, be
censored or banned.
There is a well-known and traditional way of arguing for the
55. strict regulation of por-
nography. On this argument, we can state that pornography is
sexually explicit material
designed to generate a specific kind of response in the viewer.
It is obscene, degrades its
subjects, and harms the values of society. If most people in a
society regard pornography
as violating its standards, then the society is well within its
rights to restrict or even ban
pornography. Otherwise, the moral standards of the society are
attacked and undermined
by a minority, which has no legitimate right to reject the moral
standards of the majority.
Furthermore, it corrupts not just society as a whole but also the
individual who consumes
it. Adults are allowed to engage in some risky activities, but the
state has a legitimate
role in preventing them from harming others and harming
themselves. Even though the
state may allow people to make unhealthy choices, it strictly
regulates them: Alcohol and
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
tobacco are highly regulated, for instance. The state can require
people to wear seat belts
and motorcycle helmets. These regulations prevent, or at least
limit, the things adults can
do; because pornography is harmful to the individual, the state
has a legitimate right to
regulate it just as it does any activity that may harm an
56. individual, society as a whole,
or—as in this case—both.
A second, more recent argument, against pornography
distinguishes it from “erotica.”
Erotica is the artistic presentation of human love, including its
sexual expression. In
contrast, pornography involves the degradation of people,
particularly women, and
often employs violence—including rape—in its depiction. It
may also include other acts
designed to humiliate and dehumanize women by presenting
them as submissive victims
who enjoy being mistreated. Adopting this conception of
pornography, it is seen as doing
substantial harm: not just to the women depicted but also to the
more general way women
are regarded in society as a whole. In this way, the
dehumanizing of women is seen to be
a general harm to women that makes legitimate the state’s
ability to regulate, restrict, and
even ban pornography. In addition, the production of
pornography also causes harm to
those women involved in that production. These women are
coerced, threatened, humili-
ated, and exploited in making pornography; since the industry
poses a genuine harm to
these women, the state has not just the right but the obligation
to prevent that harm.
Pornography coarsens and degrades the moral values of a
society and harms the person
consuming it. Pornography harms women, both by exploiting
them in its production and
in providing a consistently demeaning image of women for the
consumer of pornography
57. that also affects the way women are regarded more generally in
society. The state has a
legitimate role in preventing harm from coming to its citizens,
and because pornography
harms people in the various ways described, the state has a
legitimate role—in fact, an
obligation—to restrict and regulate pornography.
Applying the Theories
As we can see, whether or not to regulate pornographic material
is a more complicated
question than it might seem at first glance. Ethics can help us to
approach and analyze the
challenging arguments on both sides.
Utilitarianism
The most prominent and influential utilitarian theorist was John
Stuart Mill. In Mill’s clas-
sic text On Liberty, he puts forth what is now known as the
“harm principle”:
[T]he only purpose for which power may be rightfully exercised
over any
member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent
harm to
others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not sufficient
warrant.
(Mill, 1977/1859, Chapter 1: Introductory, para. 9)
In other words, Mill is saying that the state must not be allowed
to prevent someone from
doing something, even if it is harmful to that person. The only
legitimate way the gov-
ernment can step in to prevent some activity is if it can be
shown to harm others. Among
social scientists, there are passionate debates and a great deal of
58. controversy over pornog-
raphy. Many have insisted that its harms are obvious; others
have responded that those
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
Photos.com/Thinkstock
Utilitarian John Stuart Mill’s harm principle
argues that restrictions are justified only if
the activity harms others.
harms have been exaggerated. Mill’s point, how-
ever, is that even if one grants that pornography
harms those who consume it, one can only restrict
it if it can be definitively demonstrated that it
also harms others. From the perspective argued
here, that harm to others has not been sufficiently
demonstrated.
How does Mill’s harm principle relate to the tra-
ditional slogan of utilitarianism, that one should
do what produces the greatest good for the great-
est number? The connection isn’t made as explicit
as one might like by Mill, but it seems fairly clear
how it is made. Society is better off if its mem-
bers are freer, and best off if they have the great-
est amount of freedom possible—as long as one
person’s freedom doesn’t interfere with that of
another person. Thus, what generates the great-
est freedom for the citizens of a state, or society, is
59. the moral thing to do, which also means that the
fewer restrictions, the greater the freedom. The
greatest good for the greatest number is thus pro-
duced by a state with the fewest restrictions on its
citizens, a state with the greatest amount of freedom. The
greatest amount of freedom, in
Mill’s view, is achieved by following the harm principle.
Therefore, the harm principle is
essential to a state that produces the greatest good for the
greatest number.
Clearly enough, applying the harm principle and utilitarianism
supports the idea that
restrictions and regulations of pornography must be imposed
only if they can be shown
to prevent harm from being done to others. The presumption,
then, is that only the kind of
restrictions mentioned earlier—such as the prohibitions against
child pornography—are
legitimate interventions by the state. One might argue that in a
given society, if a majority
wishes to ban pornography, then that would presumably produce
the greatest good for
the greatest number. Thus, it would be both moral and just to
ban it. Mill might respond to
this by arguing that it is short-sighted to apply the utilitarian
principle in this way. Rather,
one should see that, in general, fewer restrictions on freedom
generate the greatest good
for the greatest number. Therefore, in general, one should
always use the greatest caution
in imposing any restrictions, even though, in some cases, this
may conflict with the views
of the overwhelming majority of the community. In short, using
the utilitarian principle
60. in this general way, in combination with the harm principle,
indicates that pornography
should not be extensively regulated, banned, or censored.
Emotivism
Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart once famously said that
he had given up trying to
define obscenity; rather, he observed, “I know it when I see it.”
This is analogous to some
treatments of obscenity—and because it can be regarded as
obscene, to some treatments
of pornography—offered by the ethical view of emotivism. We
may not be able to define
“obscenity” and “pornography” to everyone’s satisfaction, and
we may not be able to
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
explain why it is wrong. But we are confident in our view that it
is obscene, and that it is
wrong, when we see it. The emotivist gives us an ethical theory
supporting that response.
The emotivist does not try to give reasons, or facts, or evidence,
or even arguments for
a given evaluation, including moral evaluations. To say
something is “bad” or “wrong”
is really just an indication of one’s attitude or response to it.
For this reason, emotivism
is known as a “noncognitivist” position in ethics.
Noncognitivism denies that there are
61. moral properties, or moral facts; in fact, it denies that certain
kinds of claims are the kinds
of things that can be true or false. You may like ice cream, want
to listen to jazz, or hope
to attend a football game. You express those attitudes by saying
and doing things that
express your approval of them. In the same way, you may not
like artichokes, don’t want
to listen to bluegrass music, and hope to avoid going shoe
shopping. Here you express
those attitudes by saying and doing things that express your
disapproval of them.
Those who object to pornography may respond in the same way,
agreeing with Pot-
ter Stewart that, insofar as it is obscene, they know it when they
see it. One can express
this attitude—this disapproval—in a number of ways.
Importantly, though, the various
expressions of this attitude in a social context can be designed
to convince others that it
is a reasonable, and even correct, attitude, and that they should
also express their own
disapproval. In a community, if a sufficient number of people
share a common emotivist
response to something, that reaction can provide the basis for
designing policy for the
community. In other words, the emotivist not only may indicate
his or her own attitude
but is free to persuade others to adopt that same attitude.
Ultimately, then, the emotivist
may insist that in a given community, there is sufficient
disapproval of pornography that
the preferences of the members of that community should be
respected, and thus pornog-
raphy should be strictly regulated and, perhaps, censored or
62. even banned.
Be the Ethicist
At the Movies
Alice and Kate live next door to each other, and have for years.
They consider themselves very good
friends. Alice’s 11 year-old daughter Naomi and Kate’s 11-
year-old daughter Amy are the best of
friends. Naomi and Amy spend a lot of time together, and on
weekends frequently spend the night
at each other’s homes.
One morning, Naomi comes home from having spent the night at
Amy’s and tells her mother that
she watched a movie; her mother quickly realizes that the movie
was extremely violent and had a
substantial amount of nudity. She would never allow Naomi to
watch such a movie, and she is out-
raged that her friend Kate allowed Naomi to do so.
Alice is so angry with Kate that she realizes that she needs to
cool off before talking to her in per-
son, or even on the phone. So she decides to write Kate an old-
fashioned letter, explaining her
anger and her disappointment that Kate allowed her daughter
(and Kate’s daughter, for that mat-
ter) to watch such a film.
If Alice is, generally, a deontologist, how might she write her
letter to explain to Kate why what she
did was unethical, or immoral? Identify two distinct reasons
Alice might point to in order to con-
vince Kate that what she did was wrong.
63. (continued)
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CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
Some Conclusions
In the case of pornography, we see a sharp conflict between
those who argue for mini-
mal restrictions on adults—including restrictions on access to
pornography—and those
who argue that substantial restrictions are legitimate. On the
one hand, we see those who
advocate minimal restrictions adopting a position that one might
call libertarian: that the
state has no right to interfere with adult behavior that cannot be
shown to harm others. On
the other hand, those who advocate greater restrictions see
pornography as harming the
values of society, coarsening interpersonal relationships, and
flooding society—through
books, magazines, TV, films, and the Internet—with degrading
and obscene images. The
issue seems to revolve around the notion of what, if any, harms
are involved, and what the
legitimate role of the state is in addressing any such harms.
Two other results can be identified as emerging from this
debate. One is a causal claim that
those who consume pornography—especially pornography that
is particularly degrading
to women and that includes violence—are more likely to carry
out the kinds of things they
64. see. A standard pornographic fantasy involves a woman who is
forced to do something
against her will, only to see her come to enjoy it. Is it more
likely that one who repeat-
edly reads about or sees such images will act on those ideas?
The argument is that seeing
violence, for instance, in a film will cause one to act more
violently; thus, it is legitimate
to minimize exposure to those things that will tend to cause that
violence. If pornogra-
phy contains the violent treatment of women and can be shown
to cause actual violence
against women, doesn’t the state have a legitimate right to
restrict it? Others respond, of
course, that no such causal connections have been shown, and
that, in any case, there are
plenty of other examples of violence of all kinds available to
people. If such exposure to
violence in, for instance, films is said to cause actual violence,
then wouldn’t that exposure
also need to be highly regulated? On this view, basing an
argument on an unsubstanti-
ated causal claim may well lead to a slippery slope where any
number of things could be
restricted, banned, or censored, limiting the legitimate rights of
free speech guaranteed
by the First Amendment. This response has been criticized by
some who see this not as a
restriction on speech, but on action, in that the speech in
question causes real behavior that
does genuine harm to others.
The second result that has emerged in recent years is the
emphasis on those who produce
pornography. On this argument, pornographic films almost
invariably involve coercing,
65. threatening, and exploiting women (and perhaps men) in their
production. Often such
women do not really “choose” to work in this industry, but find
themselves there due
to financial need and the financial opportunities involved.
Those who have focused on
Be the Ethicist (continued)
Imagine, now, that Kate is a relativist. She decides to respond
to Alice from that perspective.
Identify two distinct things Kate might appeal to in order to
justify showing that movie to two
11-year-olds.
Finally: Alice and Kate realize that they are too good of friends
(as are their daughters) to lose their
friendship over this incident. How might they resolve their
dispute? Is it possible for a relativist
and a deontologist to do so? If they both adopted a third ethical
theory, would they have a better
chance of resolving this dispute?
mos85880_02_c02.indd 67 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Section 2.4 The Issue: Pornography—To Regulate
or Not?
this aspect of pornography have argued that both physical and
psychological intimida-
tion is frequently involved in the production of pornography,
and that it takes advantage
of women who may be financially or psychologically
vulnerable; thus, it does not really
66. involve the kind of “free” or “autonomous” choice that should
be respected. Those who
have put forth this perspective also insist that the images of
women found in pornogra-
phy continue to reinforce very negative and oppressive
conceptions of women, leading to
that conception of women being pervasive in society. Given the
size of the pornography
industry in the United States, this argument insists that the kind
of images of women
found in pornography must have an effect on how women are
perceived in other contexts,
a result that is clearly harmful to women and to society in
general.
Where Do We Go From Here?
Many important issues arise in this
discussion; however, the one that has
gotten a great deal of attention is the
causal claim regarding violence in por-
nography. Does seeing violence com-
mitted against women cause actual
violence against women? More impor-
tantly, does a person who sees this
kind of violence, on a regular basis,
become more likely to commit that
violence? Social scientists continue to
gather data on this issue, interpret that
data, and debate the implications. But
this is, of course, not limited simply to
pornography.
A standard claim in the literature on
television violence is that the average
child will have seen 8,000 murders on
TV by the end of elementary school,
67. and 200,000 acts of violence on TV by
age 18. Many have argued that these kinds of numbers indicate
a considerable worry
about exposure to violence. Some argue that such exposure to
violence causes those so
exposed to be more violent. Others argue that even if such a
causal claim cannot be estab-
lished, such extensive exposure to violence makes it appear to
be a common feature of life,
futile to try to prevent, and even an acceptable solution to
problems.
The availability of information—of all kinds—has dramatically
increased, and access to
that information is also widely available. Books, magazines,
newspapers, films, television,
and especially the Internet offer an almost unlimited amount of
content. Those whose
arguments are based on Mill’s harm principle and the First
Amendment insist that wide
latitude be given to this content and people’s access to it; to
restrict it without show-
ing conclusively that otherwise people will be harmed is not
only a violation of the First
Amendment, but is, more generally, an illegitimate extension of
the government’s power
over its citizens. In contrast, those who advocate more extensive
regulation simply point
Ryan McVay/Photodisc/Thinkstock
The debate over pornography can be broadened to include
exposure to violence on television and other media.
Should media be regulated more stringently, or should
First Amendment rights and Mill’s harm principle take
precedent?
68. mos85880_02_c02.indd 68 10/28/13 1:16 PM
CHAPTER 2Chapter Summary
to the levels of violence, the degradation of culture, and the
negative images and values
that seem to pervade society. Surely something should be done
to indicate our disap-
proval of that situation? Furthermore, from this perspective,
even though some controls
may have been imposed on certain content, including
pornography, to allow those who
wish to avoid it from being so exposed, the pervasive nature of
objectionable material
makes it impossible to avoid. Thus, one must take extraordinary
steps to avoid it, and this
also requires more effort on the part of some parents to keep
their children from being
exposed to things that they regard as obscene, immoral, and
wrong. On this view, one
shouldn’t be forced to make extraordinary efforts to avoid being
confronted with indecent
and objectionable material. Rather, one should have the
legitimate expectation not to be so
confronted; those who wish to consume pornography and similar
material should have,
minimally, the obligation to make an extra effort to do so.
Chapter Summary
This chapter has explored some of the ethical concepts we’ll
look at in more detail throughout the text. It has also considered
how these ethical questions play out in a society founded on a
69. set of ideals and governed by a particular set of principles yet
populated by highly diverse cultures, which sometimes clash
with each other. The chal-
lenge of applying ethical theory in a democratic society is one
with which many philoso-
phers have grappled over the centuries.
Democracy is a pretty old idea, going back at least to ancient
Athens. The idea, of course,
is that people know best what they want and need, and
democracies allow their views to
be expressed in the fairest way. Whether a democracy is direct
(where people vote directly
on all issues) or representative (where people elect others to
represent their views), the
majority view will prevail; if more voters want a particular law
passed, for instance, it will
pass. Majority rule is at the heart of democratic theory;
however, a worry also arises. The
point was made by Socrates and Plato about the Athenian
democracy and has ever since
been an issue for the idea of democracy: What if the majority
chooses in such a way that
the rights of the minority are infringed? Is that fair? And are
there ways of preventing it?
This can, naturally, be a substantial issue when a group is
evenly divided. Imagine a com-
munity voting on a specific law; 51% are in favor, and 49%
oppose it. The minority, in this
case, may find the law deeply offensive, but just over half of
the people support the law
and thus are able to impose it on almost half the community.
Such circumstances have led
to the common concern that in democracies, there may be a
temptation for this kind of
thing to happen, an objection commonly known as the tyranny
70. of the majority.
A number of the individual rights we have looked at—if, of
course, they are “rights”—can
be seen as raising this issue. Certain constitutional protections
exist; however, what if the
majority of a community decides to ban certain reading material
or certain expressions of
religious belief? We are also familiar with instances of this
from American history; often
African Americans were subject to various forms of abuse and
injustice simply because
they were in a minority and had little or no access to the
machinery of political power.
In a famous case in the 1940s, some schoolchildren in West
Virginia refused to stand for
the Pledge of Allegiance. As Jehovah’s Witnesses, they were
forbidden to act in a way
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CHAPTER 2Key Terms
that, as they saw it, treated the American flag as a sacred object
and thus, refused to say
the Pledge. As is easy to imagine, this was a very unpopular
view, particularly during the
height of World War II. The Supreme Court found that these
students were protected by
the Constitution. Here, the legal protections were provided, but
it is fairly easy to see how
such a view would have been regarded by the majority and to
picture the various informal
71. ways members of that community might have expressed their
displeasure.
Socrates and Plato were particularly concerned that
democracy—in this case, specifically,
direct democracy—left decisions up to a majority that might
well lack sufficient under-
standing to make those decisions correctly. As Socrates might
put it, one goes to a doctor
for medical care because the doctor is trained to be an expert in
medicine. One goes to a
car mechanic for repairs because the mechanic is trained to be
an expert in automobile
repair. Yet direct democracies allow the majority to decide
issues that are considerably
more important for society than auto repair: whether to go to
war; what taxes should be
in place and what tax revenue should be used for; what the
standards should be for water,
air, and food; and many other crucial issues. Do the majority of
citizens have the expertise
and knowledge to make these kinds of decisions?
Defenders of democracy have a variety of responses. One,
generally attributed to a 1947
speech by Winston Churchill, is to acknowledge the flaws of
democracy: “Democracy
is the worst form of government except all those other forms
that have been tried from
time to time.” That is, democracy has many flaws, just not as
many as any other form of
government. Others have argued for such things as
“proportional representation”; coun-
tries such as the Netherlands, Japan, and Israel have adopted a
parliamentary system
with many different parties. In this situation, if 5% of the voters
72. find a particular party
most suitable, they will, at least in theory, be able to elect
someone to represent their view.
The representation, that is, is proportional to the various views
within the society. Many
democracies have taken this path, in contrast to the United
States, where generally a two-
party system is in place; one chooses whichever party is closer
to one’s own views. (The
drawback of this approach is often expressed as one voting for
“the lesser of two evils.”)
Some political theorists have advocated proportional
representation and alternative ways
of voting methods in the United States to address the problem of
minority rights being
represented. In any case, we see that in spite of certain
constitutional protections, the
question of individual rights, and particularly the threat to the
rights of minorities within
a system that gives political power to the majority, will
continue to generate discussion
and debate about the extent and limits of those individual
rights.
Key Terms
act utilitarianism A consequentialist ethi-
cal theory that claims an action is right if it
is the act that generates the greatest good
for the greatest number.
deontology A nonconsequentialist ethical
theory that claims an act is to be evaluated
in terms of its accordance with a specified
set of rules.
73. emotivism A meta-ethical view that
claims ethical statements are merely
expressions of one’s emotion toward a
given act, not based on facts or moral
realities.
relativism The view that moral claims are
relative to an individual or community,
and do not have objective value or truth.
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CHAPTER 2Exercises
rule utilitarianism A consequentialist
ethical theory that claims an action is right
if it is in accordance with a rule that gen-
erates the greatest good for the greatest
number.
utilitarianism A consequentialist ethical
theory that evaluates moral claims in terms
of their outcomes, and to the extent these
outcomes generate the greatest benefit for
the greatest number.
virtue ethics An ethical theory that
focuses on the character of the agent in
evaluating moral behavior, in contrast to
deontology or deontology; often associated
with Aristotle.
Critical Thinking Questions