*Task 1
4.2 Divide into small groups of five to seven persons. Select a group discussion leader and a person to record responses. Use the brainstorming guidelines to conduct a five-minute brainstorming session on the following topic. Your goal is to identify creative solutions to the problem: Employees in large companies often complain that personal worth perception is low. They feel that the company does not overtly reward them for their contributions and set procedures that allow them to be most productive and creative.
* Based on the problem given in 4.2, complete the following tasks:
a. Brainstorm how the company can reward efforts and increase the perception of personal worth other than issuing pay increases.
b. Use nominal group technique to find the best solution to the employee personal-worth perception problem. Consider the solutions from the brainstorming activity and select the "best" solution from that set.
c. Use consensus decision making with the goal of selecting a solution to the employee personalworth perception problem to which all members of the group can commit
*Task 2
5.1 Develop a set of general frames to codify the following:
• A horse
• A student
• An airline pilot
Use these frames and describe the following:
• Flashdance, an 18-hand thoroughbred
• Brenda, a medium-height, fourth-year liberal arts students
• Fred, a 30-year veteran airline captain
*Task 3
5.2 Someone suggested two types of potential knowledge developers: “Send me a well-developed computer programmer or a programmer competent in several languages, and we’ll make him or her into a successful knowledge developer.”
and
“Send me a talented generalist with well-developed interpersonal skills or somewhat more delicately, ‘a user friendly person’ and a rigorously analytical mind, and we’ll team him or her with a competent knowledge developer.”
In your opinion, which approach would be more successful in knowledge development? Why?
*Task 4
Task 1: Implementation of Knowledge Management
7.1 Give your views on failure of implementation of knowledge management at a global company based on five distinct stages of knowledge management:
Stage 1: Advocate and learn Stage
2: Develop strategy Stage
3: Design and launch KM initiatives Stage
4: Expand and support initiatives Stage
5: Institutionalize knowledge management
Case study: A global company (Source: Chua, A. and Lam, W., “Why KM projects fail: a multi-case analysis”, Journal of Knowledge Management, vol. 9, no. 3 (2005).)
A global company, which was one of the top ten organizations in its industry, lost a number of deals because of its inability to offer integrated solutions in the order handling line of business. In response, the management commissioned a KM project known as Alpha with the objective to create a “blueprint for gaining and maintaining global order handling services market leadership”. Underpinning Alpha was a comprehensive attempt to manage the knowledge across the company.
W.
Thinking like a global manufacturer. Not an IT vendor.
The challenges of protecting brand equity
The challenges of managing operational scale
The challenges of decision-making and control
How The Craft can help you in RFP or ABM situations
Read more at https://thecraft.consulting
21st century skills are a key requirement for any potential or existing employee to showcase. These contemporary skills are an indicator to an employer that you as an applicant are a well-rounded individual that is able to adapt and succeed in the role. In fact, employers often rate graduates who can demonstrate generic skills (sometimes referred to as ‘soft’ skills, professional skills or transferable skills) as preferential candidates as opposed to those who simply rely on academic results alone.
Explore the top 21st Century skills that employers are looking for in graduates, and consider how these skills relate to the skills, values and strengths you identified in the previous activities.
1. Collaboration
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Work effectively as a team member
· Coordinate, cooperate and interact with others
· Contribute and participate with others
· Demonstrate ability to work effectively and respectfully with diverse teams
· Assume shared responsibility for collaborative work
2. Communication
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Select your channel and methods of communication (e.g. face-to-face, email, phone, chat)
· Adapt communication to ensure it is professional and fit for purpose and culture
· Continuously reflect on how your communication style is perceived by others
3. Community Engagement
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Actively engage and connect to your local community
· Effectively operate in different communities and cultural settings
· Engage and work collaboratively to make a difference in community activities with a diverse group of people
4. Creativity
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Use your imagination and ideas to create something new
· Demonstrate originality and inventiveness
· Push conceptual and practical boundaries
5. Critical Thinking
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Apply logic in a holistic manner
· Use criteria and reflection to measure the impact of your thinking
· Recognise that learning and thinking are ongoing skills to acquire
· measure
· reflection
· measures
6. Enterprise Ready
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Create new work opportunities
· Gather resources to support business start ups
· Use your business skills to improve business outcomes (e.g. relationship building / networking)
7. Global Outlook
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Understand your rights and responsibilities as a global citizen
· Value diversity and be informed about the social and political world
· Support initiatives, values and practices that prioritise peace, security and human rights around the world
8. Innovation
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Recognise opportunities to develop and apply new ideas
· Reflect on project outcomes and revise for ongoing improvement
· Work with a future mindset and identify opportunities for continuous improvement
9. Leadership
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Negotiate, persuade and influence others
· Direct and g ...
CIS337– Networking in Business Unit 5 Assignment FinalVinaOconner450
CIS337– Networking in Business
Unit 5 Assignment: Final Project Part II: Building the Network
Copyright 2022 Post University, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Due Date: 11:59 pm EST Sunday of Unit 5
Points: 25
Overview:
Your medium-sized organization is expanding both nationally and internationally and
you have been tasked to implement a Wide Area Network (WAN) topology. The
organization has expanded to 5 different geographical locations and has directed you to
design the WAN. In essence, you need to submit a plan to your Executive board and
get approval to install the WAN.
Background Information:
• Your Executive Board consists of the CEO, CFO, CIO.
• Your IT/Security Team consists of CISO, Security Manager, Data Center
manager, IT Manager.
• Employees of the organization will expand from 20 to 60 (globally).
• Currently, there are 20 employees at Location A. There will be another location of
30 employees at Location B and 10 new employees in France. Some new
employees at Location B will be remote users.
• Your new network must be scalable for future growth.
Instructions:
For this section, you will work in a group. One person will be assigned to submit the
paper for the entire group.
Write a 2-3-page proposal to the Executive Board including:
1. Who would you give advice to regarding the design of the building and network
cable planning that would help reduce network errors? Give details of the advice
you would give.
a. Your organization will need you to provide IP details for both LAN and
WAN topologies for static and DCHP.
Copyright 2022 Post University, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
2. Include a plan for remote access and VPN usage.
3. Create an ER diagram of the network based on your above recommendations for
the company.
4. Submit a cost-benefit analysis of costs that may generate from the project. There
is a sample cost-benefit analysis template in Unit 5.
Requirements:
• 2-page min. paper excluding the network diagram, cost analysis, Title, and
Reference pages.
• Submit a Word document in APA 7 format.
• At least two resources.
Be sure to read the criteria below by which your work will be evaluated before
you write and again after you write.
Evaluation Rubric for Unit 5: Final Project Part II Assignment
CRITERIA Needs
Improvement
Proficient Exemplary
0-1 Points 2 Points 3-4 Points
Network
Proposal
Network
proposal is
missing or
inadequate.
Network
proposal is
mostly present.
Network
proposal is fully
explained in
detailed.
Remote
access plan
Remote access
plan and VPN
plans are
missing or
inadequate.
Remote access
and VPN plans
are mostly
present.
Remote access
plan and VPN
plan details are
explained in
detail.
0-2 Points 3 Points 4-5 Points
Cost-Benefit
Analysis
Cost analysis
is missing.
Cost analysis
presents some
costs that may
generate from
the project.
Cost analysis
presen ...
AI Data Engineering for SMEs - some tricks and toolsScott Turner
A collection of tips and tools for using Generative AI that might be of use to SMEs and others. Use for data Analysis, summarising resources.
Presented as part of a workshop at AI for Business and Enterprise 16th May 2024 at Canterbury Christ Church University https://cccub2b.my.site.com/AIConference/s/
Thinking like a global manufacturer. Not an IT vendor.
The challenges of protecting brand equity
The challenges of managing operational scale
The challenges of decision-making and control
How The Craft can help you in RFP or ABM situations
Read more at https://thecraft.consulting
21st century skills are a key requirement for any potential or existing employee to showcase. These contemporary skills are an indicator to an employer that you as an applicant are a well-rounded individual that is able to adapt and succeed in the role. In fact, employers often rate graduates who can demonstrate generic skills (sometimes referred to as ‘soft’ skills, professional skills or transferable skills) as preferential candidates as opposed to those who simply rely on academic results alone.
Explore the top 21st Century skills that employers are looking for in graduates, and consider how these skills relate to the skills, values and strengths you identified in the previous activities.
1. Collaboration
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Work effectively as a team member
· Coordinate, cooperate and interact with others
· Contribute and participate with others
· Demonstrate ability to work effectively and respectfully with diverse teams
· Assume shared responsibility for collaborative work
2. Communication
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Select your channel and methods of communication (e.g. face-to-face, email, phone, chat)
· Adapt communication to ensure it is professional and fit for purpose and culture
· Continuously reflect on how your communication style is perceived by others
3. Community Engagement
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Actively engage and connect to your local community
· Effectively operate in different communities and cultural settings
· Engage and work collaboratively to make a difference in community activities with a diverse group of people
4. Creativity
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Use your imagination and ideas to create something new
· Demonstrate originality and inventiveness
· Push conceptual and practical boundaries
5. Critical Thinking
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Apply logic in a holistic manner
· Use criteria and reflection to measure the impact of your thinking
· Recognise that learning and thinking are ongoing skills to acquire
· measure
· reflection
· measures
6. Enterprise Ready
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Create new work opportunities
· Gather resources to support business start ups
· Use your business skills to improve business outcomes (e.g. relationship building / networking)
7. Global Outlook
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Understand your rights and responsibilities as a global citizen
· Value diversity and be informed about the social and political world
· Support initiatives, values and practices that prioritise peace, security and human rights around the world
8. Innovation
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Recognise opportunities to develop and apply new ideas
· Reflect on project outcomes and revise for ongoing improvement
· Work with a future mindset and identify opportunities for continuous improvement
9. Leadership
Is a skill relating to how well you:
· Negotiate, persuade and influence others
· Direct and g ...
CIS337– Networking in Business Unit 5 Assignment FinalVinaOconner450
CIS337– Networking in Business
Unit 5 Assignment: Final Project Part II: Building the Network
Copyright 2022 Post University, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Due Date: 11:59 pm EST Sunday of Unit 5
Points: 25
Overview:
Your medium-sized organization is expanding both nationally and internationally and
you have been tasked to implement a Wide Area Network (WAN) topology. The
organization has expanded to 5 different geographical locations and has directed you to
design the WAN. In essence, you need to submit a plan to your Executive board and
get approval to install the WAN.
Background Information:
• Your Executive Board consists of the CEO, CFO, CIO.
• Your IT/Security Team consists of CISO, Security Manager, Data Center
manager, IT Manager.
• Employees of the organization will expand from 20 to 60 (globally).
• Currently, there are 20 employees at Location A. There will be another location of
30 employees at Location B and 10 new employees in France. Some new
employees at Location B will be remote users.
• Your new network must be scalable for future growth.
Instructions:
For this section, you will work in a group. One person will be assigned to submit the
paper for the entire group.
Write a 2-3-page proposal to the Executive Board including:
1. Who would you give advice to regarding the design of the building and network
cable planning that would help reduce network errors? Give details of the advice
you would give.
a. Your organization will need you to provide IP details for both LAN and
WAN topologies for static and DCHP.
Copyright 2022 Post University, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
2. Include a plan for remote access and VPN usage.
3. Create an ER diagram of the network based on your above recommendations for
the company.
4. Submit a cost-benefit analysis of costs that may generate from the project. There
is a sample cost-benefit analysis template in Unit 5.
Requirements:
• 2-page min. paper excluding the network diagram, cost analysis, Title, and
Reference pages.
• Submit a Word document in APA 7 format.
• At least two resources.
Be sure to read the criteria below by which your work will be evaluated before
you write and again after you write.
Evaluation Rubric for Unit 5: Final Project Part II Assignment
CRITERIA Needs
Improvement
Proficient Exemplary
0-1 Points 2 Points 3-4 Points
Network
Proposal
Network
proposal is
missing or
inadequate.
Network
proposal is
mostly present.
Network
proposal is fully
explained in
detailed.
Remote
access plan
Remote access
plan and VPN
plans are
missing or
inadequate.
Remote access
and VPN plans
are mostly
present.
Remote access
plan and VPN
plan details are
explained in
detail.
0-2 Points 3 Points 4-5 Points
Cost-Benefit
Analysis
Cost analysis
is missing.
Cost analysis
presents some
costs that may
generate from
the project.
Cost analysis
presen ...
AI Data Engineering for SMEs - some tricks and toolsScott Turner
A collection of tips and tools for using Generative AI that might be of use to SMEs and others. Use for data Analysis, summarising resources.
Presented as part of a workshop at AI for Business and Enterprise 16th May 2024 at Canterbury Christ Church University https://cccub2b.my.site.com/AIConference/s/
Mis 535 Education Specialist-snaptutorial.comrobertledwes14
For more classes visit
www.snaptutorial.com
This Tutorial contains 4 Set of Midterm Exam (Scroll down to see Question Details)
MIS 535 Final Exam Guide (4 Set) 1
Task Strict APA format - 250 words.Why is it important for busi.docxjosies1
Task: Strict APA format - 250 words.
Why is it important for business strategy to drive organizational strategy and IS strategy? What might happen if the business strategy was not the driver?
please cite properly in APA
At least Three scholarly source should be used in the initial discussion thread.
.
Task observe nonverbal communication between two or more individual.docxjosies1
Task: observe nonverbal communication between two or more individuals. Focus on ONE individual and identify and anaylze specific nonverbal behaviors.
Requirments: You must incorporate terminology and ideology discused in class.
section 1- Introduction: presents a breif overview that includes how the paper is organized. Following this, present and define nonverbal communication and discuss why this concept is useful.
section 2- Body Language & Self-Presentation:
-Select and discuss 5 nonverbal behaviors observed. They must include: Eye contact, facial expressions, gestures, posture and space.
-For each behavior selected, you must do the following: 1-State the specific behavior being discussed as a heading, 2-describe and summerize in detail, using CONCRETE language, how the individual used the behavior(i should be able to visualize exactly what you describe.) 3-Analyze WHY the individual acted that particular way for each behavior. What did it mean? What message were they trying to convey? Why did they use that behavior?
Section 3-Conclution: Create and overall anaysis about nonverbal behavior of the individual(s), what did you learn about nonverbal? In what ways did this assignment help you with analyzing messages conveyed through nonverbal behavior.
.
Task Research Sophos (Intrusion Detection System) and consider .docxjosies1
Task: Research Sophos (Intrusion Detection System) and consider the following questions:
Are you able to monitor and manage networked devices including mobile devices from the cloud?
Can you initiate a scan of all devices from one computer to another?
Are you notified if there is an attack on one of your devices?
Does it detect Infrastructure Attacks?
Can you manage vulnerability information?
Can you generate a cybersecurity intelligence report?
What is the risk management process?
Do not use graphics or logos on the title page (must be plain according to APA).
.
Task Mode Task Name DurationStart Time Finish1Set .docxjosies1
Task Mode
Task Name
Duration
Start Time
Finish
1
Set up project organization
3 days
Mon. 1/7/2020
Thu 4/7/2020
2
Create project plan draft
1 day
Fri 5/7/2020
Sat 6/7/2020
Nominate in house relocation coordinator
4 days
Sun 7/7/2020
Thu 11/7/2020
3
Planning
8 days
Fri 12/7/2020
Sat 20/7/2020
4
Requirements
5 days
Sun 25/7/2020
Fri 30/7/2020
5
Design and Prototype
10 days
Sat 31/7/2020
Wed 10/8/2020
6
Information system Development
22 days
Thu 11/8/2020
Mon 2/8/2020
7
Testing
5 days
Tue 3/8/2020
Sun 8/8/2020
8
Deployment
6 days
Mon 9/8/2020
Sun 15/8/2020
9
Operation and Maintenance
20 days
Mon 16/8/2020
Sun 6/9/2020
10
Project Summary/ System Hanover
7 days
Tue 8/9/2020
Tue 15/9/2020
1
Running Head: Information System Project Plan
2
Information System Project Plan
Project Plan
With only two years of operation, LiniolMR company has experienced tremendous growth and a growing client base. The company is expected to grow by sixty percent in the eighteen months. With such growth, the company ought to increase the capacity of data collection and analysis. An advanced information system is to be developed in leveraging data collection. The anticipated information will support the business of the company.
The first task is to assess the current information technology in the company, i.e., the hardware and software that support the company’s operation. This will be done in the first two days of the project. The hardware and software are redesigned to meet the needs outlined by the organization. The team leader of the project will consult several companies to allow the team to integrate their technologies and IT solutions in connection with the development of a technological system.
The on-site solution shall be leveraged in the development of the information system. It is a great resource for the project as it helps in delivering efficient, measurable, and engaging on-site experiences without the limitation of complexity and size of the events (Cha & Maytorena-Sanchez 2019). Reporting and analytics will be done towards the end of the project. Cloud computing technologies and software as-a-Service is of interest in the project.
The cloud computing technology, i.e., the hardware, software, and infrastructure will be incorporated in the system to enable the delivery of cloud computing services like infrastructure as service (IaaS), platform as a service(PaaS), and software as a service(SaaS) through a chosen network like the internet. The project will be pursued in different phases according to the system development life cycle. These phases will mark the project timelines for each event.
System planning is the first phase of the information system development project. It is the most crucial stage in developing an effective system. It will entail defining the objectives, problem, and outlining the relevant resources, i.e., costs and personnel. A study is conducted to identify how the product can be developed better th.
Task Name Phase 4 Individual Project Deliverable Length General.docxjosies1
Task Name: Phase 4 Individual Project
Deliverable Length: General order proposal of 1,000–1,250 words
Details:
Weekly tasks or assignments (Individual or Group Projects) will be due by Monday, and late submissions will be assigned a late penalty in accordance with the late penalty policy found in the syllabus. NOTE: All submission posting times are based on midnight Central Time.
Recently, your police department has received media coverage and community activist criticism because of the detective bureau's techniques of interrogation. Your chief of detectives has assigned you to develop a general order for the chief of police to consider implementing on this topic. The chief will use your drafted general order to prepare his response to the media at a press conference scheduled for next week. Therefore, time is critical. Consider the following:
•Miranda warnings and waiver of rights form
•Use of audio and video equipment
•Note-taking
•Developing a plan
•Knowledge of the subject and incident
This general order should provide sufficient detail on each of the topics, and it should address the legal and ethical considerations and implications of conducting interviews and interrogations. Research general orders so that your submission reflects a format that is typical of what might be seen in a police department general order.
Please submit your assignment.
.
More Related Content
Similar to Task 14.2 Divide into small groups of five to seven persons. Se.docx
Mis 535 Education Specialist-snaptutorial.comrobertledwes14
For more classes visit
www.snaptutorial.com
This Tutorial contains 4 Set of Midterm Exam (Scroll down to see Question Details)
MIS 535 Final Exam Guide (4 Set) 1
Task Strict APA format - 250 words.Why is it important for busi.docxjosies1
Task: Strict APA format - 250 words.
Why is it important for business strategy to drive organizational strategy and IS strategy? What might happen if the business strategy was not the driver?
please cite properly in APA
At least Three scholarly source should be used in the initial discussion thread.
.
Task observe nonverbal communication between two or more individual.docxjosies1
Task: observe nonverbal communication between two or more individuals. Focus on ONE individual and identify and anaylze specific nonverbal behaviors.
Requirments: You must incorporate terminology and ideology discused in class.
section 1- Introduction: presents a breif overview that includes how the paper is organized. Following this, present and define nonverbal communication and discuss why this concept is useful.
section 2- Body Language & Self-Presentation:
-Select and discuss 5 nonverbal behaviors observed. They must include: Eye contact, facial expressions, gestures, posture and space.
-For each behavior selected, you must do the following: 1-State the specific behavior being discussed as a heading, 2-describe and summerize in detail, using CONCRETE language, how the individual used the behavior(i should be able to visualize exactly what you describe.) 3-Analyze WHY the individual acted that particular way for each behavior. What did it mean? What message were they trying to convey? Why did they use that behavior?
Section 3-Conclution: Create and overall anaysis about nonverbal behavior of the individual(s), what did you learn about nonverbal? In what ways did this assignment help you with analyzing messages conveyed through nonverbal behavior.
.
Task Research Sophos (Intrusion Detection System) and consider .docxjosies1
Task: Research Sophos (Intrusion Detection System) and consider the following questions:
Are you able to monitor and manage networked devices including mobile devices from the cloud?
Can you initiate a scan of all devices from one computer to another?
Are you notified if there is an attack on one of your devices?
Does it detect Infrastructure Attacks?
Can you manage vulnerability information?
Can you generate a cybersecurity intelligence report?
What is the risk management process?
Do not use graphics or logos on the title page (must be plain according to APA).
.
Task Mode Task Name DurationStart Time Finish1Set .docxjosies1
Task Mode
Task Name
Duration
Start Time
Finish
1
Set up project organization
3 days
Mon. 1/7/2020
Thu 4/7/2020
2
Create project plan draft
1 day
Fri 5/7/2020
Sat 6/7/2020
Nominate in house relocation coordinator
4 days
Sun 7/7/2020
Thu 11/7/2020
3
Planning
8 days
Fri 12/7/2020
Sat 20/7/2020
4
Requirements
5 days
Sun 25/7/2020
Fri 30/7/2020
5
Design and Prototype
10 days
Sat 31/7/2020
Wed 10/8/2020
6
Information system Development
22 days
Thu 11/8/2020
Mon 2/8/2020
7
Testing
5 days
Tue 3/8/2020
Sun 8/8/2020
8
Deployment
6 days
Mon 9/8/2020
Sun 15/8/2020
9
Operation and Maintenance
20 days
Mon 16/8/2020
Sun 6/9/2020
10
Project Summary/ System Hanover
7 days
Tue 8/9/2020
Tue 15/9/2020
1
Running Head: Information System Project Plan
2
Information System Project Plan
Project Plan
With only two years of operation, LiniolMR company has experienced tremendous growth and a growing client base. The company is expected to grow by sixty percent in the eighteen months. With such growth, the company ought to increase the capacity of data collection and analysis. An advanced information system is to be developed in leveraging data collection. The anticipated information will support the business of the company.
The first task is to assess the current information technology in the company, i.e., the hardware and software that support the company’s operation. This will be done in the first two days of the project. The hardware and software are redesigned to meet the needs outlined by the organization. The team leader of the project will consult several companies to allow the team to integrate their technologies and IT solutions in connection with the development of a technological system.
The on-site solution shall be leveraged in the development of the information system. It is a great resource for the project as it helps in delivering efficient, measurable, and engaging on-site experiences without the limitation of complexity and size of the events (Cha & Maytorena-Sanchez 2019). Reporting and analytics will be done towards the end of the project. Cloud computing technologies and software as-a-Service is of interest in the project.
The cloud computing technology, i.e., the hardware, software, and infrastructure will be incorporated in the system to enable the delivery of cloud computing services like infrastructure as service (IaaS), platform as a service(PaaS), and software as a service(SaaS) through a chosen network like the internet. The project will be pursued in different phases according to the system development life cycle. These phases will mark the project timelines for each event.
System planning is the first phase of the information system development project. It is the most crucial stage in developing an effective system. It will entail defining the objectives, problem, and outlining the relevant resources, i.e., costs and personnel. A study is conducted to identify how the product can be developed better th.
Task Name Phase 4 Individual Project Deliverable Length General.docxjosies1
Task Name: Phase 4 Individual Project
Deliverable Length: General order proposal of 1,000–1,250 words
Details:
Weekly tasks or assignments (Individual or Group Projects) will be due by Monday, and late submissions will be assigned a late penalty in accordance with the late penalty policy found in the syllabus. NOTE: All submission posting times are based on midnight Central Time.
Recently, your police department has received media coverage and community activist criticism because of the detective bureau's techniques of interrogation. Your chief of detectives has assigned you to develop a general order for the chief of police to consider implementing on this topic. The chief will use your drafted general order to prepare his response to the media at a press conference scheduled for next week. Therefore, time is critical. Consider the following:
•Miranda warnings and waiver of rights form
•Use of audio and video equipment
•Note-taking
•Developing a plan
•Knowledge of the subject and incident
This general order should provide sufficient detail on each of the topics, and it should address the legal and ethical considerations and implications of conducting interviews and interrogations. Research general orders so that your submission reflects a format that is typical of what might be seen in a police department general order.
Please submit your assignment.
.
Task Identify 3 articles which relate to information security and pr.docxjosies1
Task Identify 3 articles which relate to information security and provide a summary of each within 500 of more words. Provide the articles in proper APA format and a brief summary below it.
Article 1
Summary 1
Article 2
Summary 2
Article 3
Summary 3
.
Task Develop a posteron a specific ethics topic and a writt.docxjosies1
Task: Develop a posteron a
specific ethics topic
and a written document
You will need to:
Clearly identify the specific ethics topic and outlined why it was/is an issue
Choose one way (medium) of presenting this information as a specific resource
Have a separate word document with your topic aim, overview of content, intended target audience and reference list.
.
Task 6 reading material · Module 4 Leading Across the Inciden.docxjosies1
Task 6 reading material
· Module 4: Leading Across the Incident: Preparedness, Response, and Recovery (Evaluation): the following areas of the commentary:
· Part I: Leadership Across the Phases:
· Leading for Recovery: Evaluation and the After-Action Review
· Part II: Responding to a Critical Incident: Engaging the Response Simulation
· Part III: Summary
· U.S. Fire Administration/Technical Report Series Special Report: The After-Action Critique: Training Through Lessons Learned http://www.usfa.fema.gov/downloads/pdf/publications/tr_159.pdf
· Donahue, A. & Tuohy, R. (2006, July). Lessons we don’t learn: A study of the lessons of disasters, why we repeat them, and how we can learn from them. http://www.hsaj.org/?fullarticle=2.2.4
· Jackson, B.A., Faith K.S., & Willis, H.H. (2010). Evaluating the Reliability of Emergency Response Systems for Large-Scale Incident Operations, Santa Monica, CA: RAND http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2010/RAND_MG994.pdf Chapter 6: After Action Reports p. 95-116.
· Garvin, D. (2000). The U.S. Army’s After Action Reviews: Seizing the Chance to Learn. http://www.wildfirelessons.net/documents/Garvin_AAR_Excerpt.pdf
· Department of Homeland Security. Homeland Security Exercise Evaluation Program, http://www.fema.gov/media-library/assets/documents/32326
· Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP): Volume III: Exercise Evaluation and Improvement Planning: http://montanadma.org/sites/default/files/HSEEP%20Volume%203.pdf
.
Task Groups in the School SettingPromoting Children’s Socia.docxjosies1
Task Groups in the School Setting:
Promoting Children’s Social and
Emotional Learning
Patricia Van Velsor
San Francisco State University
Through social and emotional learning (SEL), individuals develop skill in
negotiating relationships successfully and expressing emotions appropriately.
The socially and emotionally intelligent child reaps benefits in school and later
life. Counselors are best qualified to promote children’s SEL and the task group
in the classroom provides an excellent opportunity for them to do so. In the task
group, students can learn and practice crucial skills in vivo while they work
together to complete a task. The counselor’s strategic attention to promoting task
completion while facilitating SEL can serve to highlight the benefits of group work
in the school learning environment.
Keywords: schools; social and emotional learning; task groups
Because humans are social beings, they spend a great deal of time
interacting with others and much of that interaction takes place in
groups. As Sonstegard and Bitter (1998) so aptly stated, ‘‘to be human
is to ‘live’ in groups’’ (p. 251). The group (e.g., family, peer) serves as
the ‘‘primary socializing influence’’ in children’s development (Kulic,
Horne, & Dagley, 2004) and the nature of the social environment in
those groups leads children down a path toward either prosocial or
antisocial behavior and beliefs (Hawkins, Smith, & Catalano, 2004).
Children develop social skills and prosocial behaviors through
social and emotional learning (SEL). Although there are various defi-
nitions of SEL, Zins, Bloodworth, Weissberg and Walberg (2007)
define it succinctly as ‘‘the process through which children enhance
their ability to integrate thinking, feeling, and behaving to achieve
important life tasks’’ (p. 6). Five competency areas—self-awareness,
self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible
Patricia Van Velsor, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Department of Counseling at
San Francisco State University. Correspondence concerning this article should be
addressed to Patricia Van Velsor, Department of Counseling, San Francisco State
University, BH 524, 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94132. E-mail:
[email protected]
THE JOURNAL FOR SPECIALISTS IN GROUP WORK, Vol. 34 No. 3, September 2009, 276–292
DOI: 10.1080/01933920903033495
# 2009 ASGW
276
decision-making—are basic to negotiating school, work, and life
responsibilities effectively (Collaborative for Academic, Social, and
Emotional Learning, 2000–2009).
Social and emotional intelligence, acquired through SEL, has been
associated with various positive outcomes in school and life. A socially
and emotionally intelligent child is less likely to develop aggressive-
ness, depression, and=or violent behaviors (Poulou, 2005). Children
who develop social and emotional intelligence are also more resistant
to difficulties related to drugs, teen pregnancy, and gangs (Elias et al.,
1997). Moreo.
Task Case Description· An individual task. It consists of .docxjosies1
Task: Case Description:
· An individual task. It consists of the design and execution of a quantitative research project using the methodology of a survey.
· This is an academic paper, so make sure to quote relevant publications, such as academic journals and books, to support your arguments.
Formalities:
· For the document: From 2000 to 2500 words.
· Cover, Table of Contents, References and Appendix are excluded of the total wordcount.
· Font: Arial 12,5 pts.
· Text alignment: Justified.
· The in-text References and the Bibliography have to be in Harvard’s citation style.
Submission:
SUNDAY 11th APRIL 2021, 23:59HRS ON MOODLE
Weight:
Resit – worth 100% of the overall grade – Please remember resits are capped at 70%
Task
1) Research Objective: identify attitudes towards an issue of your choice that may affect society.
2) Define de universe of people that could be affected by that issue. Explain why. Provide the necessary background information based on secondary research sources.
3) Choose a sample that represents that universe. Provide a complete sample profile, considering demographics and psychographics.
4) Write a questionnaire using a least five different types of questions.
5) Apply the questionnaire through a survey and obtain a least fifty completed questionnaires.
· You may use Survey Monkey or a similar tool.
6) Present a report of findings supported with charts, followed by conclusions and recommendations.
.
Task Identify 3 articles which relate to information security an.docxjosies1
Task Identify 3 articles which relate to information security and provide a summary of each within 500 of more words. Provide the articles in proper APA format and a brief summary below it.
Article 1
Summary 1
Article 2
Summary 2
Article 3
Summary 3
.
Task Details What do we know about COVID-19 risk factors What h.docxjosies1
Task Details What do we know about COVID-19 risk factors? What have we learned from epidemiological studies? Specifically, we want to know what the literature reports about: Data on potential risks factors Smoking, pre-existing pulmonary disease Co-infections (determine whether co-existing respiratory/viral infections make the virus more transmissible or virulent) and other co-morbidities Neonates and pregnant women Socio-economic and behavioral factors to understand the economic impact of the virus and whether there were differences. Transmission dynamics of the virus, including the basic reproductive number, incubation period, serial interval, modes of transmission and environmental factors Severity of disease, including risk of fatality among symptomatic hospitalized patients, and high-risk patient groups Susceptibility of populations Public health mitigation measures that could be effective for control
.
Task descriptionA list with information about movies needs to .docxjosies1
Task description
A list with information about movies needs to be organised in a database.
The list contains the following data, for each movie:
Movie Title, year of release, country, runtime; director name with their year of birth and nationality, main actors name with their year of birth and nationality.
The database should be populated with the data listed below, and queries should be created so that the users can:
List name and surname of all actors in alphabetical order
List name and surname of all directors in alphabetical order
List title of all English movies in descending order of publication year
List name and surname of all people who have had a role of both director and actor in the same film
List name and surname of all people who have acted in a film produced in the same country as their nationality, in ascending order of year of birth.
List the name, surname and year of birth of all people who are both actors and directors.
Create a view for listing name and surname of all people who have acted in more than one movie, indicating the number of movies they have acted in.
Create a view showing all people and the title of the movies they have directed, so that those who have directed no movies have a null value shown against them.
Are the views in (7) and (8) updatable? Why? Give an example of updatable view.
Give an example of correlated nested query on the assignment database, explaining why it is correlated.
Deliverable:
Produce a report including:
a brief description of the ER model of the database and its mapping into tables;
the SQL statements for creating the tables;
the SQL statements for populating the tables;
the SQL statements for solving the queries (1) to (8);
your answer to questions (9) and (10).
data for populating the database:
Silence of the Lambs, 1991, USA, 118min, DIRECTOR: Jonathan Demme, 1944, USA ACTORS: Anthony Hopkins, 1937, Welsh Jodie Foster, 1962, USA
Last of the Mohicans, 1992, USA, 122min, DIRECTOR: Michael Mann, 1943, USA ACTORS: Daniel Day-Lewis, 1957, English
Life is Beautiful, 1997, Italian, 124min, DIRECTOR: Roberto Benigni, 1952, Italian, ACTORS: Roberto Benigni, 1952, Italian
The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, 1966, Italian, 180min, DIRECTOR: Sergio Leone, 1929, Italian, ACTORS: Clint Eastwood, 1930, USA, Lee Van Cleef, 1925, USA
Dr. Strangelove, 1964, English, 93min, DIRECTOR: Stanley Kubrick, 1928, USA ACTORS: Peter Sellers, 1925, English
Escape from Alcatraz, 1979, USA, 112min, DIRECTOR: Donald Siegel, 1912, USA, ACTORS: Clint Eastwood, 1930, USA
Eyes Wide Shut, 1999, USA, 160min, DIRECTOR: Stanley Kubrick, 1928, USA, ACTORS: Tom Cruise, 1962, USA Nicole Kidman, 1967, USA
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, 1997, USA, 155min, DIRECTOR: Clint Eastwood, 1930, USA, ACTORS: Kevin Spacey, 1959, USA
American Beauty, 1999, USA, 121min, DIRECTOR: Sam Mendes, 1965, English, ACTORS: Kevin Spacey, 1959, USA
.
Task 4 Cenere, Gill, Lawson, and Lewis (2015) state that Everyth.docxjosies1
Task 4:
Cenere, Gill, Lawson, and Lewis (2015) state that "Everything we do in meetings comes down to the decision making aspects" (p. 374). Discuss this statement in 350 words.
Task 6
: Go to your local council website's recycling page. Discuss how it disseminates information, paying particular attention to the website's use of different channels and/or media. (350 words)
Task 9:
Locate a brief audio file online (from digital radio, You Tube, etc). Using the audio file as an example, discuss audio as an effective channel of communication. Include the audio file link in your blogpost. (350 words)
.
Task A. [20 marks] Data Choice. Name the chosen data set(s) .docxjosies1
Task A. [20 marks] Data Choice.
Name the chosen data set(s) (from module resources, UCI ML Repository or other open data sources or own collection) and describe the data (e.g. attribute types and values, source of data) Comment by Abdulrahman Alkandari: In this part on the red section is a link where I got the data and their a summary on the data
[5 marks]
Adult data set for salary prediction of 50K less or more
http://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/adult
Describe the data mining problem (and background) you will address e.g. as a classification, prediction, association, clustering, or text mining related exercise
[5 marks] Classification and predicting, association rule task mining Comment by Abdulrahman Alkandari: The data mininig problem chosen to view this data
Introduce the specific data mining question(s) related to the problem, with specific reference to the dataset(s) and the expected or proposed outcome of the data mining task upon completion Comment by Abdulrahman Alkandari: In the red section the questions are.
How to predict the salaries based on the genders and other charateristics.
And finding the income of the adults
[10 marks]
Predicting the salaries and the best rules needed in knowing the income of the adults by reading the data.
The main aim of this coursework is to critically analyse data sources and data sets, critically evaluate possible data analytics challenges and solutions, choose, design and implement data mining algorithms to the chosen data, and apply the data mining techniques to specific case studies. The coursework is worth 100 marks, and the distribution of marks is detailed on the marking scheme.
You are expected to explore one or two chosen data set(s) of your choice from open data mining/machine learning (re)sources, to develop case studies and apply data mining techniques on the data set(s) for supervised and/or unsupervised learning, as motivated and decided by which is suitable (depending on the data set characteristics). Tasks A, B, and G are compulsory, and you must choose 2 tasks from C, D, E, and F:
Task A. [20 marks] Data Choice.
Name the chosen data set(s) (from module resources, UCI ML Repository or other open data sources or own collection) and describe the data (e.g. attribute types and values, source of data)
[5 marks]
Adult data set for salary prediction of 50K less or more
http://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/adult
Describe the data mining problem (and background) you will address e.g. as a classification, prediction, association, clustering, or text mining related exercise
[5 marks] Classification and predicting, association rule task mining
Introduce the specific data mining question(s) related to the problem, with specific reference to the dataset(s) and the expected or proposed outcome of the data mining task upon completion
[10 marks]
Predicting the salaries and the best rules needed in knowing the income of the adults by reading the data.
Task B. [20 marks] Data.
Task A Restaurant have an interested in creating a new grading s.docxjosies1
Task
A Restaurant have an interested in creating a new grading system for their customers. This is critical as the restaurant wants to delivery high standard satisfaction outcomes to improve and standardize the quality of the service they deliver and to have the possibility to partnership with other restaurants in the region. The new system ideally should assess fairly the waiters and waitresses, the cooks, and the suppliers.
· Analyze the main clients and stakeholders (restaurants, customers, suppliers) and build a research method to assess the actual picture of satisfaction of all stockholders. This method will to assess the new grading system as soon as the project is put into practice in the restaurant.
· Identify and prepare the information to convince your boss that your project makes sense and it is necessary to put into practice. You need to be convincing. Prepare a power point with 5 slides that you will have to use to convince the board of directors. Enclose it in Moodle too.
· Create an action plan: tell how are you going to create your team and how you will coordinate it. Which are the tasks and timing will be necessary
· Build up a task list
· Establish and action plan
· Schedule and Budget (and a justification)
· Close the project and assess on the risks of failure Formalities
· Individual work.
· Length of the assignment 1500 words
· Relate your work to the concepts delivered in class.
· Font: Arial 12,5pts. Line-spacing: default. Text-align: Justified.
· Bibliography/References, if needed, has to be quoted in Harvard style.
· You may use Appendixes. These and the References do not count for the total wordcount.
LAUNCH: WEEK 8 / DELIVERY: WEEK 10 – Submission by 23:59hrs GMT+1 (Barcelona’s time). This task is worth 40% of your overall grade for this subject.
It assesses the following learning outcomes:
· Describe the need for a project-based approach inside organizations
· Understand the role of project management as a strategic element inside organizations
· Critically assess the roles and responsibilities of a project manager
· Evaluate how to select, develop, plan, schedule and measure its outcomes and risks.
Rubrics
Exceptional 90-100
Good 80-89
Fair 70-79
Fail <70
Critical analysis (25%)
Student effectively assesses the impact of project on the company. Student engages with theory/data in a critical manner.
Student fairly assesses the impact of project on the company. Students attempt to engage with theory/data in a critical manner.
Student fairly assesses the impact of project on the company, although some key aspects might be missing. Student may be unsuccessful in attempts to engage critically with theory/data.
Student fail to assesses the impact of project on the company, although some key aspects might be missing. Student makes no attempt to engage with theory/data in a critical manner.
Critical evaluation (25%)
Student effectively engages in critical e.
Task 3 - Week Three Discussion - TCPIP Transport Layer Features.docxjosies1
Task 3 - Week Three Discussion - TCP/IP Transport Layer Features
There are five main features of TCP/IP that are highlighted in the book. List and describe each of the features and describe if any of these features are supported by UDP. You initial post should be no less than 350 words.
.
Task 1 Which groups are you going to deal withWhen thinking.docxjosies1
Task 1
Which groups are you going to deal with?
When thinking of all the groups associated with Incident Response you need to understand the different focus each might have. Pick one group from the book, in the news, or in your workplace and discuss their varying objectives. How do they influence the contingency plans?
Examples:
Executive Leadership
Site Security
Information Security
Facilities
Note: I need in one page only and I need references and citation and plagiarism free
APA format
Task 2
End User participation
Why do you think it is important to include end users in the process of creating the contingency plan? What are the possible pitfalls of end user inclusion?
Note: I need in one page only and I need references and citation and plagiarism free,
APA format
.
TASK 2 Describe your nutrition education teaching sessio.docxjosies1
TASK 2: Describe your nutrition education teaching session with your patient and/or their family. What teaching methods will you use (explanation, discussion, demonstration, handouts, etc.)? In your own words, write a paragraph detailing three specific points that you will need to teach your patient about his/her new diet. In addition, give at least one tip to avoid potential herb/nutrient/drug interactions.
· Add more specifics into this education plan
Nutritional Education
One of the critical parts of providing care to women during gestation period is nutritional education (Bedgood, 1983). There exists a correlation between the health of a mother and her child and the nutritional education she receives during her gestation period. Adhering to a nutritional plan provided by the doctor may be challenging if the mother is not properly educated on the need of proper nutrition as well as how to take the nutritious food.
My education teaching session of the client will be done during the first Saturdays of every month throughout the gestation period. The main objective of the teaching education sessions is to help the client transition to the newly modified diet. The client is expected to come along with her husband for the sessions. The teaching sessions have been scheduled on Saturdays of every month to correspond to her clinic appointments. Apart from helping her transition smoothly to a prescribed diet, the session will also allow me to assess her health condition particularly her recovery process. Any changes in her diet plan will be made during these sessions based on how she responds.
The method of teaching will be verbal and visual. Passing information verbally is direct and will give her opportunity to ask questions and engage in meaningful discussions. Visuals learning will be provided to help her engage better with materials as well as to boost her thinking skills throughout the learning sessions. Each learning session is scheduled to last for three hours. Different ways of preparing food will be demonstrated during the program. I also expect questions from the husband and her concerning ways of supporting her through the gestation period to ensure that she takes the right diet in the right quantities and at the right time.
Goals of The Nutrition Education Teaching Session:
· Smooth transition from regular diet to the prescribed nutrition plan. This involves developing a positive attitude towards healthy eating and providing motivation.
· Healthy mental being through positive thinking and engagement in various activities. A healthy diet goes in hand with maintaining a positive mental health.
· Assist the client on ways in which she can source dilatory foods without spending a lot of resources. Based on her financial condition, she needs to understand how source food with the limited resources.
· The program will teach her how to prepare various foods without destroying the nutrients required by the body. For example, avoidin.
Task 1 Kirk (2016) states that the topic of color can be a mine.docxjosies1
Task 1:
Kirk (2016) states that the topic of color can be a minefield. The judgement involved with selecting the right amount of color for a particular application can be daunting. With regards to visualizations, there are different levers that can be adjusted to create the desired effects (Kirk, 2016). The levers are associated with the HSL (Hue, Saturation, Lightness) color cylinder. Select and elaborate on one of the following:
Color Hue Spectrum
Color Saturation Spectrum
Color Lightness Spectrum
.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
Let’s explore the intersection of technology and equity in the final session of our DEI series. Discover how AI tools, like ChatGPT, can be used to support and enhance your nonprofit's DEI initiatives. Participants will gain insights into practical AI applications and get tips for leveraging technology to advance their DEI goals.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Safalta Digital marketing institute in Noida, provide complete applications that encompass a huge range of virtual advertising and marketing additives, which includes search engine optimization, virtual communication advertising, pay-per-click on marketing, content material advertising, internet analytics, and greater. These university courses are designed for students who possess a comprehensive understanding of virtual marketing strategies and attributes.Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida is a first choice for young individuals or students who are looking to start their careers in the field of digital advertising. The institute gives specialized courses designed and certification.
for beginners, providing thorough training in areas such as SEO, digital communication marketing, and PPC training in Noida. After finishing the program, students receive the certifications recognised by top different universitie, setting a strong foundation for a successful career in digital marketing.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
The simplified electron and muon model, Oscillating Spacetime: The Foundation...RitikBhardwaj56
Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Task 14.2 Divide into small groups of five to seven persons. Se.docx
1. *Task 1
4.2 Divide into small groups of five to seven persons. Select a
group discussion leader and a person to record responses. Use
the brainstorming guidelines to conduct a five-minute
brainstorming session on the following topic. Your goal is to
identify creative solutions to the problem: Employees in large
companies often complain that personal worth perception is
low. They feel that the company does not overtly reward them
for their contributions and set procedures that allow them to be
most productive and creative.
* Based on the problem given in 4.2, complete the following
tasks:
a. Brainstorm how the company can reward efforts and increase
the perception of personal worth other than issuing pay
increases.
b. Use nominal group technique to find the best solution to the
employee personal-worth perception problem. Consider the
solutions from the brainstorming activity and select the "best"
solution from that set.
c. Use consensus decision making with the goal of selecting a
solution to the employee personalworth perception problem to
which all members of the group can commit
*Task 2
5.1 Develop a set of general frames to codify the following:
• A horse
• A student
• An airline pilot
Use these frames and describe the following:
• Flashdance, an 18-hand thoroughbred
• Brenda, a medium-height, fourth-year liberal arts students
• Fred, a 30-year veteran airline captain
*Task 3
5.2 Someone suggested two types of potential knowledge
developers: “Send me a well-developed computer programmer
2. or a programmer competent in several languages, and we’ll
make him or her into a successful knowledge developer.”
and
“Send me a talented generalist with well-developed
interpersonal skills or somewhat more delicately, ‘a user
friendly person’ and a rigorously analytical mind, and we’ll
team him or her with a competent knowledge developer.”
In your opinion, which approach would be more successful in
knowledge development? Why?
*Task 4
Task 1: Implementation of Knowledge Management
7.1 Give your views on failure of implementation of knowledge
management at a global company based on five distinct stages
of knowledge management:
Stage 1: Advocate and learn Stage
2: Develop strategy Stage
3: Design and launch KM initiatives Stage
4: Expand and support initiatives Stage
5: Institutionalize knowledge management
Case study: A global company (Source: Chua, A. and Lam, W.,
“Why KM projects fail: a multi-case analysis”, Journal of
Knowledge Management, vol. 9, no. 3 (2005).)
A global company, which was one of the top ten organizations
in its industry, lost a number of deals because of its inability to
offer integrated solutions in the order handling line of business.
In response, the management commissioned a KM project
known as Alpha with the objective to create a “blueprint for
gaining and maintaining global order handling services market
leadership”. Underpinning Alpha was a comprehensive attempt
to manage the knowledge across the company.
Within Alpha several functions and teams such as business
architecture, IT and knowledge content and design were formed.
One of Alpha’s priorities was to build a network of “knowledge-
enabled worktables” to provide staff customized access to
Alpha’s knowledge base. Due to the teething problem of using
new technology and the poor translation of design requirements
3. to system functionalities, the IT team could not complete the
first worktable for the sales function on schedule. Meanwhile,
the knowledge content and design team had already developed a
large amount of content. Fearing that the delay could dampen
interest in KM, the team engaged a vendor to develop an
intranet system as a quick alternative to making its content
available. This move was perceived by the IT team as an
invasion into its territory. Furthermore, the intranet was treated
with skepticism from the rest of the functions in Alpha. By the
end of the year, the viability of the worktable was in doubt.
Given the high dependence and unsustainable expenditure on
external IT resources, Alpha was perceived to be losing control
over its ITrelated projects. Thus, the management curtailed the
worktable project and disbanded Alpha completely when it
eventually lost faith in knowledge management.
The main reasons for the failure of Alpha were as follows:
• Knowledge was managed within silo-oriented communities.
Thus, business-critical knowledge that straddled across multiple
functional groups was neglected.
• There was an over-reliance on IT systems to manage
knowledge in Alpha. Tacit knowledge and behavioral issues, on
the other hand, received insufficient attention.
• Three different external consulting firms were engaged at
different stages of Alpha’s development. Inputs from these
consultants confounded instead of facilitated the KM initiative.
• As time passed, the cost to sustain the KM initiative ballooned
beyond control. The management decided to cut its losses and
terminated the initiative altogether.
Introduction to Business Ethics
James Fieser
University of Tennessee at Martin
4. Alexander Moseley
fie66722_00_fm_i-xx.indd 1 3/2/12 9:32 AM
James Fieser
Alexander Moseley
Introduction to Business Ethics
AVP, Editor-in-Chief: Erik Evans
Editorial Director and Sponsoring Editor: Steve Wainwright
Director of Editorial Technology: Peter Galuardi
Development Editor: Shannon Lemay Finn
Assistant Editor: Nick Devine
Editorial Assistant: Laura Wilson
Media Editor: Kim Purcell
Printing Services: Bordeaux
Composition/Illustration: Lachina Publishing Services
Cover Image: plusphoto/a.collectionRF
ISBN 10: 1-935966-72-3
ISBN 13: 978-1-935966-72-2
7. Preface xix
chapter 1
Ethical Principles and Business Decisions 1
1.1 Introduction 2
1.2 Where Moral Values Come From 3
Moral Objectivism and Moral Relativism 4
Religion and Morality 5
1.3 Ethics and Psychology 7
Egoism and Altruism 7
Gender and Morality 8
1.4 Moral Standards 9
Virtues 10
Duties 11
Utilitarianism 13
1.5 Morality and Government 15
The Social Contract 15
Human Rights 17
Principles of Governmental Coercion 19
1.6 Conclusion 21
Summary 22
Discussion Questions 23
Key Terms 24
Contents
fie66722_00_fm_i-xx.indd 5 3/2/12 9:32 AM
8. CONTENTS
chapter 2
Capitalism 27
2.1 Introduction 28
2.2 Capitalism and Socialism Defined 29
Capitalism 29
Socialism 31
2.3 Adam Smith’s Capitalism 33
Selfish Desire for Luxury Goods 33
The Invisible Hand 34
Limited Role of Government 36
2.4 Karl Marx’s Socialism 37
Alienated Labor 37
Class Struggle 39
Revolution 40
2.5 Assessment of Capitalism and Socialism 41
Criticisms of Capitalism 42
Criticisms of Socialism 42
Moderate Versions 43
2.6 Anticompetitive Practices 44
Monopolies and Oligopolies 44
Price Fixing, Bid Rigging, and Price Gouging 46
2.7 Regulating the Free Market 47
Reasons for Government Regulation 47
Mechanisms for Government Regulation 49
9. Antitrust Acts 49
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) 49
2.8 Conclusion 50
Summary 51
Discussion Questions 52
Key Terms 52
chapter 3
Corporations 55
3.1 Introduction 56
3.2 The Nature of Corporations 57
Corporate Structure 57
Four Features of Corporations 58
Creation by Statute 58
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CONTENTS
Perpetual Existence 59
Recognition as Legal Persons 59
Limited Liability 60
Shell Corporations 60
Moral Agency of Corporations 61
Position 1: Corporations Can Be Genuine Moral Agents 62
Position 2: Corporations Cannot Be Moral Agents 62
Issues at Stake 62
10. 3.3 Punishing Corporations 63
Six Types of Corporate Punishment 63
Fines 64
Equity Fines 65
Corporate Incapacitation 65
Corporate Death Penalty 65
Corporate Shaming 66
Community-Service Order 66
Federal Sentencing Guidelines 67
Consumer Retaliation 67
3.4 Ethical Corporate Culture 69
Stakeholders and Corporate Social Responsibility 69
Mission Statements and Codes of Ethics 71
3.5 Threats to Ethical Corporate Culture 74
The Profit Motive 74
Strategic Misrepresentation 76
Groupthink and Organizational Schizophrenia 77
Groupthink 77
Organizational Schizophrenia 78
3.6 Conclusion 79
Summary 79
Discussion Questions 80
Key Terms 81
chapter 4
Consumers 83
4.1 Introduction 84
11. 4.2 Consumer Advocacy 85
History of Consumer Advocacy 85
Governmental Agencies Established 86
Responding to Business Conduct 87
Consumer Bill of Rights 87
Consumer Product Safety Commission 88
U.N. Guidelines for Consumer Protection 88
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CONTENTS
4.3 Product Safety 89
Safety and User Reviews 89
Unsafe Automobiles 91
Ralph Nader and the Chevrolet Corvair 92
The Ford Pinto 92
4.4 Deceptive Advertising 94
Deceptive Food Packaging 96
Deception Versus Puffery 97
Punishment for Deceptive Advertising 98
Unofficial Punishment 98
Official Punishment 99
Corrective Advertising 100
4.5 Targeting Vulnerable Groups 101
Child Advertising 102
4.6 Unfair Sales Tactics 104
12. Misuse of Legal Tactics 105
Sales Commissions 105
Direct-to-Consumer Advertising 105
Default Opt-In 106
4.7 Conclusion 107
Summary 108
Discussion Questions 109
Key Terms 109
chapter 5
Discrimination in the Workplace 111
5.1 Introduction 112
5.2 Discrimination 113
Features of Discrimination 113
Social Institutions and Discrimination 114
Types of Discrimination 114
Evidence of Discrimination 115
5.3 Affirmative Action 117
Features of Affirmative Action 118
Preferential Treatment 118
Compensation for Discrimination 119
Arguments for Affirmative Action 120
Helps Create Fairness 120
Helps Reduce Poverty 121
Helps Reduce Racism 121
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13. CONTENTS
Arguments Against Affirmative Action 121
Creates Reverse Discrimination 121
Creates Social Tension and Negative Attitudes About Minorities
122
Exceeds Sufficient Nondiscrimination Without Preferential
Treatment 123
5.4 Affirmative Action in U.S. Law 123
Two Laws and Two Governmental Agencies 124
Enforcing Title VII and Executive Order No. 11246 125
Protected Classes and Minorities 125
Compliance Guidelines and Plans 126
Supreme Court Cases 128
5.5 Conclusion 131
Summary 132
Discussion Questions 133
Key Terms 133
chapter 6
Employees 137
6.1 Introduction 138
6.2 Ethical Theories of Employment 139
The Capitalist View 139
The Socialist View 140
The Middle Ground: Virtue Ethics 140
Employment and Social Power Conflicts 141
14. The Case of Company Towns 142
6.3 Hiring and Firing 143
Interviews 144
Unstructured Versus Structured Interviews 145
Background Checks 146
Due Diligence 147
Negligent Hiring 148
Firing 148
Employment at Will 149
6.4 Wages 149
Fair Pay 150
Minimum Wage 150
Salary Caps 151
6.5 Working Conditions 152
Occupational Health and Safety 152
Understanding Hazards 153
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CONTENTS
6.6 Unions 154
History of Unions 154
Professional Unions 156
6.7 Whistleblowing 157
Types of Whistleblowing 157
Whistleblowing Guidelines 158
15. Whistleblowing Laws 159
The False Claims Act of 1863 159
The Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989 160
The No FEAR Act of 2002 160
6.8 Conclusion 160
Summary 161
Discussion Questions 161
Key Terms 162
chapter 7
Financial Ethics 165
7.1 Introduction 166
7.2 The Ethics of Accounting 167
Impartiality 168
Berle and Means Versus Henry Manne: Two Views of Corporate
Corruption 168
Berle and Means: We Need Regulation 169
Manne: The Marketplace Can Decide 169
Cooking the Books 170
Example of Cooking the Books: Computer Associates 171
Example of Cooking the Books: Enron 171
Transfer Pricing and Costing 172
The Ethics of Deception 173
U.S. Accounting and Reporting History 174
Early Reforms 175
Sarbox 175
16. 7.3 Commercial Conflicts of Interest 175
The Buyer-Beware Principle 176
Complex Products 176
Should Customers Do Their Homework? 177
7.4 Insider Trading 178
Insider Trading Defined 178
Examples of Insider Trading 178
Example of Getting Away with Insider Trading: Vincent
Chiarella 178
Example of Insider Trading: Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky
179
Example of Insider Trading: Martha Stewart 179
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CONTENTS
The Free Market Perspective 180
An Issue of Fairness 181
Legal Theory of Misappropriation 181
7.5 Rogue Trading 182
Example of Rogue Trading: Nick Leeson 183
What Can Be Done? 184
7.6 Conclusion 184
Summary 185
Discussion Questions 185
Key Terms 186
chapter 8
17. International Business and Multinationals 187
8.1 Introduction 188
8.2 Tax and Environmental Issues 189
Multinationals and Tax Avoidance 189
Gift Giving and Bribery 190
Environmental Restrictions 191
8.3 Labor Issues 193
Child Labor 193
A Historical Perspective 193
Protecting Children 194
In Defense of Children’s Right to Work 195
Won’t Child Labor Just Disappear? 195
Sweatshops 196
A Historical Note 196
The Benefits of Sweatshops 197
Illegal-Immigrant Workers 198
8.4 Technology Issues 199
Intellectual Property Theft 199
Technological Transfers 200
8.5 Ethically Evaluating Multinational Business Activities 201
Relativism: Western Cultural Norms Affecting Other Cultures
201
Ethical Imperialism 202
Pros and Cons of Multinational Businesses 203
Creating a Global Business Ethic 205
8.6 Conclusion 207
18. Summary 207
Discussion Questions 208
Key Terms 208
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CONTENTS
chapter 9
Environmental Issues 211
9.1 Introduction 212
9.2 Environmentalist Ethics 213
Economic Growth and Environmental Damage 213
Mastering the Planet 213
Destroying the Planet 214
Varieties of Environmentalist Positions 214
Free Market Response to Environmentalism 216
9.3 Pollution 217
The Right to Trade in Emissions 218
Emissions Regulations 218
Does Emissions Trading Work? 218
9.4 Habitat Destruction 219
The Environmentalist Critique 219
The Regulatory Response 221
The Organic Act of 1897 221
19. The National Forest Management Act of 1976 222
Privatizing Government Lands 222
9.5 Resource Depletion and Sustainability 224
Peak Oil 224
Should Consumers Change Their Behavior? 224
9.6 Global Warming/Climate Change 226
Problems with the Science 226
Environmentalist Claims 227
Free Market Response 227
Could Businesses Lead the Way? 227
Alternative Energy Sources 228
Nuclear Energy 228
9.7 Environmental Restriction Versus Economic Freedom 229
U.S. Laws Restricting Access 230
Private Trusts Restricting Access 230
The Problem of the Beautiful Valley 230
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Environmental Responsibility 231
Social and Private Costs 232
9.8 Conclusion 233
Summary 234
Discussion Questions 234
Key Terms 235
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CONTENTS
20. chapter 10
Investments 237
10.1 Introduction 238
10.2 Ethical Investing 239
Features of Ethical Investing 239
Sustainable Investing 240
Community-Development Financing 240
Impact Investing 241
Socially Responsible Investing Funds and Green Funds 242
10.3 Potentially Unethical Investments 243
Environmentally Damaging Products 243
Genetically Modified Foods 244
Pharmaceutical Products 245
Military Weapons 247
10.4 Investing Versus Spending 250
The Economic Harm of Hoarding 250
Does Investment Harm Recession Recovery? 251
10.5 Conclusion 252
Summary 252
Discussion Questions 253
Key Terms 253
Glossary 255
References 267
fie66722_00_fm_i-xx.indd 13 3/2/12 9:32 AM
21. Dr. James Fieser is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Tennessee at Martin. He received
his BA from Berea College, and his MA and PhD in philosophy
from Purdue University. He is
author, co-author, or editor of ten textbooks, including Socrates
to Sartre and Beyond (9/e 2012),
Ethics: Discovering Right and Wrong (7/e 2012), Business
Ethics and the Bottom Line (2012), A
Historical Introduction to Philosophy (2003), and Moral
Philosophy through the Ages (2001). He
has edited and annotated the ten-volume Early Responses to
Hume (2/e 2005) and the five-vol-
ume Scottish Common Sense Philosophy (2000). He is founder
and general editor of the Internet
Encyclopedia of Philosophy website (www.iep.utm.edu). His
personal website can be accessed at
www.utm.edu/staff/jfieser.
Dr. Alexander Moseley earned his degrees in England, Ontario,
and Scotland and was an Assis-
tant Professor in Economics for the University of Evansville
before setting up a tutorial company
in the English Midlands. He is the author of several books,
including An A–Z of Philosophy, Intro-
duction to Political Philosophy, and A Philosophy of War. He
has published papers in the field of
military ethics and on the philosophy of John Locke and is an
active member of military ethics
societies in Europe. He is currently working on a third novel
and expanding his business so he can
one day open up an independent school.
About the Author
fie66722_00_fm_i-xx.indd 15 3/2/12 9:32 AM
22. www.iep.utm.edu
www.utm.edu/staff/jfieser
In the preparation of this book, we wish to thank Steve
Wainwright, Shannon LeMay-Finn, Daniel
Moneypenny, and the rest of the talented editorial staff at
Bridgepoint Education for their exper-
tise and good nature. Thanks also to the following Ashford
professors who made valuable sugges-
tions for improving the book manuscript: Carolyn Broner, Frank
Czarny, Anthony Biduck, Richard
Hassler, Stephen Carter, and Ronald Cubit.
Acknowledgments
fie66722_00_fm_i-xx.indd 17 3/2/12 9:32 AM
Businesses are among the most important institutions that we
have. They are responsible for
making our lives happy with products that we could never
acquire on our own. They give us jobs
that help define who we are as people. And, more generally,
they push society forward through
cultural advancement.
But there is a sinister side to the business world, where a
company might do anything in its power,
moral or immoral, to beat the competition and make profits. It is
the same insatiable drive for
money that fuels society’s progress yet at the same time
oppresses workers, misleads consum-
ers, destroys the environment, and cannibalizes the very
23. economy that gives it life. By ignoring its
good, we fail to give credit to the driving force that pulled
humans out of the Stone Age. But by
ignoring its bad, we unleash a conscienceless predator upon
society. This is a real life drama that
we all witness and participate in as workers, consumers, and
entrepreneurs. The task of business
ethics is to understand that drama and suggest ways to maximize
the good and minimize the bad.
Discussions of business ethics are exceptionally varied. Some
approaches are theoretical and
explore the nature of ethical obligation, human greed, and the
limits of economic freedom. Other
business ethics discussions are more concrete and, like a social
scientist, attempt to itemize and
describe the numerous types of questionable business practices
that have outraged society. There
are deceptive advertising, price fixing, and unsafe working
conditions, just to name a few. In many
ways, the heart of business ethics involves identifying and
describing the most common unethical
practices. By knowing concretely what these various areas of
concern are, we may be more alert
to abuses when we enter into those territories on the job.
Still other discussions of business ethics emphasize specific
cases in which businesses have notori-
ously gone astray, such as the Union Carbide chemical plant
explosion in India, the Exxon Valdez oil
spill in Alaska, and the Enron financial collapse. We learn by
example, and when we see dramatic
instances of corporate moral failure, the stories stick with us.
Finally, there are business ethics discussions that offer practical
advice for avoiding unethical busi-
24. ness decisions. For example, we might learn that apathy toward
society promotes governmental
intervention, or that heavy pressure from top management to
meet performance goals sets a
climate for illegal action. The practice of drawing a moral
conclusion at the close of a business
ethics discussion is itself a skill that everyone in business can
and should learn. Here is an area of
corporate abuse: What can we learn from it to help us avoid
going down that path?
Preface
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PREFACE
This book adopts all of these approaches. The first three
chapters are more theoretical, establish-
ing a broad framework of ethical and social concepts.
Specifically, they deal with ethical principles,
capitalism, and the corporation. The three next chapters focus
on business issues that affect peo-
ple individually: specifically, as consumers, as minorities who
might face discrimination, and as
workers. From here, the scope of the chapters broadens to
include internal practices of finance,
accounting, and investment. The scope widens further with
chapters on multinationals and the
environment.
Throughout this book, the discussions reflect an appreciation of
the free market system, what it
has done to advance both the personal lives of people and
25. civilization as a whole. At the same
time, though, it exposes how unethical business practices can
transform a beneficial social institu-
tion into one that can potentially cause great harm and human
suffering. As ethical people, we
must respect the rights and dignity of those around us, and this
is the fundamental moral lesson
that children learn from their parents right from the start. As
ethical business people, we must
continue that lesson regarding how we treat consumers,
coworkers, and society at large. That,
ultimately, is what it takes for a business to be ethical.
To be sure, many business ethics issues covered in this book are
hotly debated, such as the nature
of capitalism, corporate personhood, and worker’s rights.
However, these debates teach us that
some of our most important social and economic values may not
be as firmly established as we
might think, and we must show respect toward those on the
opposite side of the issue. We can-
not be good business colleagues—or good citizens for that
matter—if we are contentious on value
issues where reasonable people may disagree.
fie66722_00_fm_i-xx.indd 20 3/2/12 9:32 AM
Ethical Principles and Business
Decisions
Learning Objectives
After completing this chapter, you should be able to:
26. • Describe moral objectivism, moral relativism,
and divine command theory.
• Explain the theories of psychological egoism
and psychological altruism, and the relation
between gender
and morality.
• Explain how virtue theory, duty theory, and
utilitarianism provide standards of morality.
• Describe the relation between morality and
government in social contract theory, human-
rights theory,
and the four principles of governmental coercion.
Comstock
1
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.1 Introduction
Chapter Outline
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Where Moral Values Come From
Moral Objectivism and Moral Relativism
Religion and Morality
1.3 Ethics and Psychology
Egoism and Altruism
27. Gender and Morality
1.4 Moral Standards
Virtues
Duties
Utilitarianism
1.5 Morality and Government
The Social Contract
Human Rights
Principles of Governmental Coercion
1.6 Conclusion
1.1 Introduction
Some jobs have higher moral reputations than
others, and national surveys are routinely con-
ducted to reveal public attitudes about various
professions. One poll asked people to rate
the
honesty and ethical standards of people in
different fields (Jones, 2010). The results of
the survey
were as follows (the numbers indicated the percentage
of those surveyed who ranked the respec-
tive vocations very high in terms of honesty and
ethical standards):
Nurses: 81%
Military officers: 73%
Druggists, pharmacists: 71%
28. Grade school teachers: 67%
Medical doctors: 66%
Police officers: 57%
Clergy: 53%
Day care providers: 47%
Judges: 47%
Auto mechanics: 28%
Nursing home operators: 26%
Bankers: 23%
TV reporters: 23%
Newspaper reporters: 22%
Local officeholders: 20%
Lawyers: 17%
Business executives: 15%
Stateofficeholders: 12%
Advertising practitioners: 11%
Members of Congress: 9%
Lobbyists: 7%
29. Car salespeople: 7%
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Where Moral Values Come From
There is a clear pattern here. The highest ranking
professions involve helping people, and nurses,
who are at the very top, are clear examples. Among
the lowest ranking occupations are those
associatedwith the business world: bankers, business
executives, advertisers, and, at the very
bottom, car salespeople.
What is it that makes us have such low
opinions of the moral integrity of the
business world? Part
of it may be that, in contrast with nurses,
businesses have the reputation of caring only
for them-
selves and not for others. Part of it may also be
that the competitive nature of business pushes
even the most decent of people to put profits
above responsibility to the public. The concept
of
business ethics is by no means new; in fact,
someof the earliest written documents in
human
civilization wrestle with theseissues. The
Mesopotamian Codeof Hammurabi, from almost
4,000
years ago, had this to say about the
30. responsibility of building contractors:
If a builder builda house for someone, even
though he has not yet completed
it; if then the walls seemtoppling, the builder
must make the walls solid from his
own means.
. . .
If a shipbuilder builda boat for someone, and do
not make it tight, if during
that same year that boat is sent awayand suffers injury,
the shipbuilder shall
take the boat apartand put it together tight at his
own expense. (trans. 1915 by
L. W. King, sections 233 and 235; see
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/
hamcode.asp#text)
This entire book is devoted to understanding the
ethical challenges that businesses face and
what
can be done to meet those challenges. In this
chapter, we will explore several basicand time-
tested principles of morality. Some of history’s
greatest minds have reflected on the nature of
morality and devised theories of where morality
comes from and how moral principles should
guide our conduct. Many of theseprinciples have
direct application to ethical issues within
busi-
ness, and we will explore that connection.
1.2 Where Moral Values Come From
31. A good definition of ethics is that it is an
organized analysis of values relating to human
conduct,
with respect to their rightness and wrongness. Ethics
is not the same as etiquette, which merely
involves customarycodes of polite behavior, such as
how we greetpeople and how we seat guests
at a table. The issuein ethics is not what is
polite, but what is obligatory. Ethics is
closely related
to morality, and although someethicists make subtle
distinctions between the two, they are more
oftenused interchangeably, as will be done throughout
this book.
One of the most basicethical issues involves an
understanding of where our moral values
come
from. Consider the moral mandates that we should
not kill, steal, or lie. Are theseuniversal and
unchanging truths that are somehow embedded in
the fabric of the universe, or are they change-
able guidelinesthat we humans have created ourselves to
suit our needs of the moment? The
question of where our moral values come
from ofteninvolves two issues: The first is a
debate
between objectivism and relativism, and the second
concerns the relation between morality and
religion. We will look at each of these.
fie66722_01_c01_001-026.indd 3 3/2/12 9:40 AM
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/hamcode.asp#text
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/hamcode.asp#text
32. CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Where Moral Values Come From
Moral Objectivism and Moral Relativism
Some years ago, the Lockheed Corporation was
caught offering a quarter of a billion
dollars in
bribes overseas. A major U.S. defense contractor,
Lockheed fell on economic hard times. The U.S.
government commissioned the company to design a
hybrid aircraft, but after one crashed, the
government canceled orders. Because of this and
othermishaps, Lockheed believed that the solu-
tion to its financial woes was to expand its aircraft
sales into foreign countries. To get military
aircraft contracts with foreign governments, it made
a series of payoffs to middlemen who
had
political influence in West Germany, Japan, Saudi
Arabia, and several othercountries. The com-
pany was eventually caught and punished with a
heavy fine, and its chairman and president were
forced to resign. A consequence of this event
was the creation of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Prac-
tices Act, which includes an anti-bribery provision
that involves stiff fines and prison terms for
offenders. The message of the law was that, when in
Rome, you should not do as the Romans
do.
There are overarching standards of ethical conduct
that business are expected to follow, regard-
less of where they are in the world and what
the local business practices are there.
When Lockheed engaged in systematic bribery,
33. did it violate a universal standard of
morality that
is binding on all human societies, or did it
just violate a standard of morality that is
merely our
personal preference in the United States? On
the one side of this question is the theory of
moral
objectivism, which has threekey components:
1. Morality is objective: Moral standards are not
created by human beings or human societ-
ies. According to many objectivists, they exist in
a higher spirit realm that is completely
apartfrom the physical world around us.
2. Moral standards are unchanging: Moral standards
are eternal and do not change
throughout time or from location to location. No
matter where you are in the world or at
what pointin history, the same principles apply.
3. Moral standards are universal: There is a
uniform set of moral standards that is the
same for all people, regardless of human differences
like race, gender, wealth, and social
standing.
The classic champion of this view is the ancient
Greek philosopher Plato(424 BCE–347 BCE),
who
argued that moral truths exist in a higher
level of reality that is spiritual in nature.
According to
34. Plato, the universe as a whole is two-tiered.
There is the lower physical level that
consists of
rocks, trees, human bodies, and every other
material object that we see around us. All of
this is
constantlychanging, either decaying or morphing into
somethingelse. Within this level of the
universe, nothing is permanent.
On the otherhand, Platoargued, thereis a higher
level of the universe, which is nonphysical
and is the home of eternal truths. He called
this the realm of the forms, which are
perfect pat-
terns or blueprints for all things. Mathematical
principles are good examples. They are completely
unchanging and in no way dependent for their
existence on the changing physical world. Even if
the entire physical universe were destroyed, and
another emerged, the principles of mathematics
would remain the same, unchanged.
According to Plato, moral principles are just
like mathematical principles in that respect, and
they
also exist in the higher realm of the forms.
Just as the principle that 1 + 1 = 2
exists perma-
nently in this realm, so too do moral
principles of goodness, justice, charity, and many
others. The
greatest appeal of Plato’s theory is that it
gives us a sense of moral stability.
When someone is
35. murdered, we oftenbelieve that an absolute and
unchanging moral principle has been violated
fie66722_01_c01_001-026.indd 4 3/2/12 9:40 AM
CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Where Moral Values Come From
that goes well beyond the shifting preferences of
our
particular human community.
On the otherside of this dispute is the theory of
moral
relativism, which has threecontrasting key
features:
1. Morality is not objective: Moral standards are
purely human inventions, created by either
individual people or human societies.
2. Moral standards are not unchanging: Moral
standards change throughout time and from
society to society.
3. Moral standards are not universal: Moral
standards do not necessarily apply universally
to all people, and their application depends
on human preference.
Defenders of moral relativism are typically
skeptical
about the existence of any higher realm of
absolute
truth, such as Plato’s realm of the forms.
36. Although
notions of eternal moral truths are appealing,
the fact
is, says the moral relativist, we do not have any
direct
experience that such higher realms exist.
What we
know for sure is the physical world around
us, which
contains societies of human beings that are ever-
changing. The moral values that we see throughout
thesesocieties are ones that are created by human
preference and change throughout history and
with
geographical location. Simply put, morality is a
human
creation, not an eternal truth.
Between moral objectivism and moral relativism,
which is right? Some philosophical
questions are
not likely to be answered any time soon, and
this is one of them. However, we can take
inspira-
tion from both sidesof the debate. With the Lockheed
bribery incident, the position of the U.S.
government was that thereis a standard of
integrity in business that applies worldwide,
not just
within U.S. borders. This is a concession to
moral objectivism. On the otherhand, some
business
practices are culturally dependent. In Japan, new
businesses typically have an opening ceremony
in which a Shinto priest blesses the
37. company building. U.S. companies operating in
Japan often
follow this practice, and this is a concession to
moral relativism.
Religion and Morality
An organization called the Center for Christian
Business Ethics Today offers a Christian
approach to
ethical issues in business. According to the
organization, God is the ultimate source of
moral val-
ues: “God’s standards as set forth in God’s Word,
the Bible, transcend while incorporating both
the
law and ethics” (Center for Christian Business Ethics
Today, n.d.). This view is by no means
unique,
and is in fact part of a long history of efforts
to ground morality in someaspect of
religion. Accord-
ing to the classic view of religious ethics, true
morality does not emerge from human thought
processes or human society alone. It begins
with God establishing moral truths, instilling
moral
Associated Press/Jim Mone
Many hospitals have password protected
medication cabinets to prevent drug theft.
But is stealing always wrong? Would your
answer change if you knew the person
stealing the drug needed it for her cancer
treatment? What if she were stealing it for
38. her child?
fie66722_01_c01_001-026.indd 5 3/2/12 9:40 AM
CHAPTER 1Section 1.2 Where Moral Values Come From
convictions within human nature, and reinforcing
those moral truths through scripture.
Religious
believers who follow God’s path will be motivated to
follow God’s established moral truths,
per-
haps more so than non-believers who view ethics as a
purely human invention. This classic view of
religious ethics raises two questions:
1. Is God the creator of moral values?
2. Do religious believers have better access to
moral truth than non-believers?
Regardingthe first question—whether God creates moral
values—a position called divine command
theory answers yes: Moral standards are created by
God’s will. God in essence creates them from
nothing, not even basing them on any prior standard of
reason or logic. God pronounces them into
existence through a pure act of will. There are
two challenges that divine-command theory
faces:
1. It presumes in the first place that God exists,
and that is an assumption that non-believers
would reject from the start.Many religious
believers themselves would hold that belief in
39. God is a matter of personal faith, not
absolute proof, and so we must be cautious
about
the kinds of activities that we ascribe to God,
such as creating absolute moral truths.
2. The moral standards that God willfully creates
would be arbitrary if they were made
purely from scratch, without relying on any prior
standard of reason. What would pre-
vent God from willfully creating a random set of
moral values, which might include prin-
ciples like “lying is OK” or “stealing is OK”?
God could also willfully change his mind about
which moral principles he commands. Maybe he
could mandate that stealing is wrong on
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, but that stealing is
OK during the rest of the week.
Many ethicists throughout history—even ones who
were devout religious believers—have rejected
divine command theory for this reason. To avoid
arbitrariness, it seems that morality would
need to
be grounded in somestable rational standard, such as
with Plato’s view of absolute moral truths. That is,
God
would merely endorse these absolute moral
truths
sincethey seemrationally compelling to him; and he
does not literally create them from nothing. If moral-
ity, then, is really grounded in preexisting truths,
40. then
we humans can discover them on our own, and do
not
need to depend on God for our moral knowledge.
Again, the second question raised by the classic
view
of religious ethics is whether believers have
better
access to moral truth than non-believers. The answer
to this throughout much of history was yes:
Religion is
an essential motivation for moral conduct. To
behave
properly, people need to believe that a divine
being is
watching them and will punish them in the afterlife
for
immoral conduct. The French moral philosopher
Vol-
taire (1694–1778) famously stated that “if God did
not
exist, it would be necessary to invent him,”
precisely
because moral behavior depends so much on
belief
in divine judgment (quoted in Gay 1988, pg.
265). In
more recent times, this position has fallen out of
favor,
and thereis wider acceptance of the view that
believ-
ers are not necessarily more moral than non-
believers.
41. Copyright Bettmann/Corbis/AP Images/Anonymous
Voltaire (1694–1778), the French philoso-
pher who famously stated that “if God
did not exist, it would be necessary to
invent him.”
fie66722_01_c01_001-026.indd 6 3/2/12 9:40 AM
CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Ethics and Psychology
One reason for this change in attitude is that
our society as a whole has become much
more
secularized than Voltaire’s was, and, from our experience,
non-believers do not appear to be par-
ticularly bad citizens. Also, it appears that
believers fall into the same moral traps as
everyone else.
The upshot is that both components of classic
religious ethics are difficult to establish: It is
not
clear that God creates moral values, assuming that
God exists, and it is not clear that believers
have a special advantage in following moral rules.
It is undeniable that, for many believers,
religion
is an important source of moral inspiration,
and that fact should not be minimized.
Undoubtedly,
this is true for the members of the Center for
Christian Business Ethics Today. At the same
time,
42. though, thereare plenty of nonreligious motivations
to do the right thing, such as a fear of
going
to jail, a desire to be accepted by one’s
family and friends, or a sense of
personal integrity. In the
business world thereare additional motivations to be
moral, such as the desire to avoid
lawsuits,
costly fines, or tarnishing the company name.
1.3 Ethics and Psychology
An important set of ethical issues involves our
psychological makeup as human beings. There
is
no doubt that our personal expectations, desires,
and thought processes have an impact on what
motivates us to behave morally. In this section,
we will look at two issues of moral
psychology;
one focuses on our psychological inclination to be
selfish, and the otheron how gender shapes
our moral outlook.
Egoism and Altruism
When the U.S. Gulf Coast was pummeledby
Hurricane Katrina, the home-improvement company
Lowe’s donated millions of dollars and coordinated
busloads of volunteers to help with the
cleanup.
Working alongside the nonprofit organization Habitat
for Humanity, they helped rebuild homes
for
people across the Gulf Coast region. Since
the time of Katrina, Lowe’s has continued the
43. practice
of partneringwith charitable organizations to help rebuild
disaster-stricken areas. Why do they do
this? Is it purely from a sense of goodwill
towards those in need, or do they expect
to get some
benefit out of it, such as free publicity? We can
ask this same kind of question about our conduct
as individuals: Are we capable of acting solely
for the benefit of others, or do we always
act in ways
that ultimately benefit ourselves? There are two
competing theories that address this question:
• Psychological egoism: Human conduct is
selfishly motivated and we cannot perform
actions from any othermotive.
• Psychological altruism: Human beings are at
least occasionally capable of acting selflessly.
Both of thesetheories are “psychological” in the
sense that they are making claims about
what
motivates human behavior.
Psychological egoism maintains that all of our actions,
without exception, are motivated by some
selfish drive. Even when I am doing
something, like donating to charity, that appears
to be purely
for the benefit of someone else, thereare hidden
selfish motives at work within me and I
am only
acting to benefit myself. Maybe through my
44. charitable action I secretly hope that I will
receive a
Citizen of the Year award. Maybe I desire to
hear the recipient of my charity thank me
with gush-
ing words of appreciation so that I can feel
good about myself. The English philosopher
Thomas
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.3 Ethics and Psychology
Hobbes (1588–1679) argued that
all acts of charity could be reduced
to our private desire to exercise
control over other people’s lives.
For Hobbes, I am the one who
decides whether a poor person
will have enough food to eat today,
and I am on a private power trip if
I help that person out (1650/1811
Human Nature). A psychological
egoist would look at Lowe’s with
similar suspicion: Their public acts
of charity are greatpublic-relations
tools that associate their name and
products with social responsibility.
Through pressreleases and adver-
tisements, Lowe’s spreads the news
of its charitable work far and wide.
The rival theory of psychological
altruism concedes that much of
45. our human conduct is indeed motivated by selfish
desire. But, according to the altruist, thereis
more going on with us psychologically than just
that. We have the capacity to break free of
the grip
that selfishness has on us and at least occasionally
act purely for the betterment of otherpeople.
Perhaps we have an instinct of human kindness
that exhibits itselfwhen we see people who
are
truly in need. Our hearts go out to them and
we want to help, regardless of whether thereis
any
benefit to ourselves. Maybe someof that is behind
Lowe’s charitable programs. Its corporate offi-
cers and managers are personally moved by
tragedies such as Katrina and recognize that Lowe’s
has unique resources to help. The public relations
benefit it gains from those acts is
secondary,
and the spark that ignites its charitable response is
genuine concern.
Like the dispute between objectivism and relativism,
this debate between psychological egoism
and altruism will not be resolved any time soon.
But even if psychological egoists are correct
that all of our actions are selfishly motivated,
the fact remains that human beings do
perform
acts of charity, and, morally speaking, it is good
for us to do so. What matters is that
Lowe’s
46. engages in charitable projects, regardless of whether
their main motivation is to bolster their
corporate image.
Gender and Morality
A recent study suggested that businesses led by
women place a higher value on social
responsibil-
ity than do those led by men. According to
the director of the study, “women are taking
the lead in
showing that profit and social responsibility can go
hand-in-hand” (Llanza, 2011). Women tend to
look for a balance between profits and non-
economic goals such as environmental sustainability,
charity, and community involvement. Do businessmen
and businesswomenreally have differing
attitudes about the role of ethics within their
companies?
Underlying this question is the issueof whether
men and women generally speaking have differ-
ent ways of thinking about morality. The long
standing assumption about morality has been
that
Associated Press/Shane Bevel
Do companies like Lowe’s, which donated supplies such as this
shipment of water to Hurricane Katrina victims, act charitably
out of a sense of goodwill towards those in need, or do they
expect to get some other benefit out of it?
fie66722_01_c01_001-026.indd 8 3/2/12 9:40 AM
47. CHAPTER 1Section 1.4 Moral Standards
thereis only one way of thinking about it,
regardless of gender. There are moral rules
that guide
our conduct; we all need to learnthose rules and
follow them in our behavior. It is much
like any
othertask that we perform: If I am playing a
sport, performing on a musical instrument,
or operat-
ing a circular saw, thereare clear rules for how I
should proceed. If I do not follow those
rules, then
I will not be good at the task. So too with
morality: We all need to understand the rules of
ethics
and follow them in order to be morally good
people.
However, in recent years, this one-size-fits-all
assumption about morality has been called
into
question based on a reexamination of the
different psychological tendencies of men and
women.
Consider the types of college majors that attract
men and women, respectively. Some are very
male
dominated, such as mathematics, physics, and
engineering. Others are dominated by women,
such
as psychology, social work, nursing, and
education. This suggests that men have a thought
48. process
that emphasizes rules and are thus attracted to those
disciplines that emphasize them. Women,
by contrast, place greater value
on nurturing and caring for others
and are thus attracted to those dis-
ciplines. It may well be that these
gender issues are operating on our
conceptions of morality: For men,
morality mainly involves following
rules, and for women, it mainly
involves caring for others.
A recent theory called care ethics
advances this view, maintaining
that women see morality as the
need to care for people who are
in situations of vulnerability and
dependency. They are not suggest-
ing that we should leave the task
of caring and nurturing to women,
while letting men adhere to their
rule-following inclinations. Rather,
the task of moral care falls upon all
of us, although we should expect
women to place greater emphasis
on this than men.
Within the business world, it may well be that
women are more predisposed to integrate social
concern with profit-driven business goals, as the
study mentioned before suggests. But again,
this
does not mean that socially responsible conduct
should be left to women. Rather, men may
49. just
need to try harder at integrating ethical values
into business planning.
1.4 Moral Standards
So far we have looked at where morality comes
from and how it is shaped by human
psychology.
Although thesetheories are important for telling us
about the nature of morality, they do not
nec-
essarily tell us how we should behave, and what
the moral standards are that we should follow.
Associated Press/Manuel Balce Ceneta
In this 2009 photo, first lady Michelle Obama stands at the
Capital Area Food Bank with Jill Biden (left) and Vicki Escarra
(right). Escarra was the chief marketing officer of Delta Air
Lines
before becoming the CEO of Feeding America, “the nation’s
leading domestic hunger-relief charity” (Feeding America,
n.d.).
Within the business world, are women are more predisposed
to integrate social concern with profit-driven business goals?
fie66722_01_c01_001-026.indd 9 3/2/12 9:40 AM
CHAPTER 1Section 1.4 Moral Standards
We turn next to that issueand explore threeapproaches
to moral standards: virtue theory, duty
theory, and utilitarianism.
50. Virtues
One of the strangest business stories in recent
years is that of Bernard Madoff, who
scammed
investors out of $65 billion in a Ponzi
scheme. He started out as a small-time
investment manager,
but, courting wealthy investors from around the globe,
he eventually built his roster of clients up
to 4,800. Offering a steady return of about
10% per year, he covered thesepayouts with money
coming in from new investors. But when his clients
rushed to withdraw $7 billion during a
major
stock-market decline, he could not cover those
expenses and he confessed to the fraud.
The humiliation for Madoff’s whole family was so
greatthat he and his wife attempted suicide,
and shortly afterward their son did kill himself. When
we look at Madoff as a human being,
we
see that his immoral business conduct was a
consequence of his flawed character. His desire
for money, power, and a lavish lifestyle became
so excessive that it created a trap for him
from
which he could not break free. He
had what moral philosophers call
vices: bad habits of character that
51. result in a serious moral failing. He
was unjust, deceitful, intemper-
ate, overambitious, and immod-
est. What Madoff lacked were
virtues—the opposite of vices—
which are good habits of character
that result in morally proper behav-
ior. He did not have the virtues of
justice, truthfulness, temperance,
restraint, and modesty.
Virtue theory is the view that
morality is grounded in the virtu-
ous character traits that people
acquire. The ancient Greek phi-
losopher Aristotle (384 BCE–322
BCE) developed the most influen-
tial analysis of virtues, which even
today is considered the standard view of the
subject (trans. 2002 by J. Sachs). It all
begins with
our natural urges. For example, we all have natural
desires for pleasure, and we automatically
gravitate towards pleasurable activities such as
entertainment, romance, eating, and even social
drinking. With each of thesepleasurable activities, though,
thereare threedistinct habits that we
can develop. On the one hand, we might eat
too much, drink too much, and become
addicted
to all sorts of pleasurable activities. This is the
vice of overindulgence. At the opposite
extreme,
we might reject every form of pleasure that
comes our way, and live like monks locked in
52. their
monasterycells. This is the vice of insensibility,
insofar as we have become desensitized to
the
happiness that pleasures can bring us. There is,
though, a third habitual response to pleasure
that
stands midway between thesetwo extremes: We can
enjoy a wide range of pleasures in
moderate
amounts, and this is the virtue of temperance.
Jeff Daly/Picture Group via AP Images
This 2011 photo shows rows of Bernie Madoff’s shoes, which
U.S. marshals put up for auction, along with many of his other
belongings, to help repay the victims of his crimes.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.4 Moral Standards
According to Aristotle, most virtues and vicesmatch
this scheme:
• There is a natural urge,
• there is a vice of excess,
• there is a vice of deficiency, and
• there is a virtue at the middle
position between the two extremes.
Take the virtue of courage, which is driven by
our natural fear of danger. If we go to an
excess, we
53. develop the vice of rashness, where we lose all
fear of danger and rush into hazardous situations
that might kill us. If we are deficient in
courage, we become timid and develop the
vice of coward-
liness. The virtuous middle ground of courage is
one in which we respect the dangers before
us
but, when the circumstances are right, we rise
above our fears.
A largepart of our childhood involves cultivating
virtuous habits and avoiding vicious ones,
and
during our formative years our parents bear much
of the responsibility to shape us in
virtuous
directions. As I become older, though, the
responsibility becomes mine alone, and I must
think
carefully about exactly where that virtuous middle
ground is. How much habitual eating can I
do
before I become overindulgent? How much can I
habitually hide from danger before I become a
coward? Finding that perfect middle ground,
Aristotle says, is not easy,but it is something
that
the moral person must figure out nonetheless.
Madoff did not even come close. His desires
for
wealth, power, and fame were so all-consuming that
the virtue of temperance became out of
reach for him.
54. Duties
A small computer software company named Plurk
accused the software giantMicrosoft of com-
putercode theft. The product in question was
blogging software that Microsoft developed for its
market in China and which it hoped would
catch hold in that country the way Facebook
has in
the United States. Around 80% of the computer
code for Microsoft’s product was lifted directly
from blogging software created by Plurk. Microsoft
apologized for the episode and said that the
fault rested with an outside company it had hiredto
develop the blogging software. It was that
outside company that copied Plurk’s computer code
(Nystedt, 2009). The irony is that Microsoft
zealously guards against software piracy and code
theft of its own products, but here it did that
very thing, even if only indirectly. In this
situation, therewas no moral gray area: Theft is
wrong,
the evidence for code theft was incontestable, and
Microsoft had no choice but to immediately
admit to it and apologize.
This Microsoft case highlights the fact that thereare at
least someprinciples of morality that we all
clearly recognize and endorse. One moral theory in
particular emphasizes the obvious and intui-
tive nature of moral principles. Duty theory is
the position that moral standards are grounded in
instinctive obligations—or duties—that we have.
It is also called deontological theory, from
55. the
Greek word for duty.The idea behind duty theory is
that we are all born with basicmoral prin-
ciples or guidelinesembedded in us, and we use
theseto judge the morality of people’s actions.
There are two approaches to duty theory. First,
somemoral theorists hold that we have a long
catalog of instinctive obligations. The list of
the Ten Commandments is a classic
example. Among
those listed are obligations not to kill, steal,
bear false witness, or covet your neighbor’s
things.
These are all basicmoral principles that cultures
around the world have endorsed from the earliest
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.4 Moral Standards
times. If you are thinking about stealing your
neighbor’s car, theseprinciples tell you that it
would
be wrong to do so. With enough principles like
these, we will have somestandard for judging a
wide range of human actions. Many moral
philosophers have developed and expanded the list of
our intuitive duties beyond the Ten Commandments
to include a few dozen of them.
56. The second approach is that thereis a single
instinctive principle of duty that we all should
fol-
low; the Golden Rule is the best example of this.
That is, I should do to others what I
would want
them to do to me. If I am thinking about
stealing someone’s car, I should consider
whether I
would want someone to steal my car. If I am
thinking about lyingto someone, I should
consider
whether I would want someone to lie to me. So
too with good actions: When considering
whether
I should donate to charity, I should
consider how I would feel if I were a
needy person dependent
on the charity of others. Like those in the
Ten Com-
mandments, the Golden Rule is a time-honored
moral
principle that we find in cultural traditions around
the
world, dating back thousands of years.
In more recent times, one of the most influential
theo-
ries of duty is that developed by the German
philoso-
pher Immanuel Kant (1724–1804). Inspired by
the
Golden Rule, Kant offered a single principle of
moral
duty,which he called the “categorical
imperative”—
57. a term which simply means “absolute
command”
(1785/1996). The categorical imperative, for Kant,
was this: Treat people as an end, and never
merely as
a means to an end. His pointwas that we should
treat
all people as beings that have value in and of
them-
selves, and not treat anyone as a mere instrument
for
our own advantage.
There are two parts to his point. The first
involves
treating people as ends that have value in
and of
themselves. We value many things in life,
such as our
cars, our homes, and a good job. Mostof the things
we value, though, have only instrumental value, that
is, value as a means for achieving something
else. Our
cars are instruments of transportation. Our homes
are
instruments of shelter. Our jobs are instruments of
obtaining money.
Other times, though, we appreciatethings because
they have intrinsic value: We value them for
the special qualities that they have in and of
themselves, and not because of any instrumental
value that they have. Human happiness has
58. intrinsic value, and so too do experiences of
beauty
and friendship. The first part of the categorical
imperative, then, says that we should treat all
people as beings with intrinsic value and regard
them as highly as we would our own
happiness.
If I steal someone’s car, I am not respecting
the owner the way I value my own
happiness. The
second part of the categorical imperative is
that we should not treat people as things
that have
mere instrumental value. People are not tools or
objects that we should manipulate for our
own
gratification. If steal a car, I am using the
owner for my own gain.
Copyright Bettmann/Corbis/AP Images
Immanuel Kant (1724–1804), the German
philosopher who developed the moral
principle of the categorical imperative, stat-
ing that we should treat people as an end,
and never merely as a means to an end.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.4 Moral Standards
Like the Golden Rule, the categorical imperative
provides a litmus test for determining
whether
59. any action is right or wrong. It not only detects
immoral actions such as lyingand stealing, but it
also tells us when actions are moral. When I
donate to charity, for example, I am
thinking of the
value of the needy people who will benefit
from my contribution; I am not merely
thinking of any
benefit that I may receive through my charity.
In the business world, thereare occasionally times
when an action is so obviously wrong
that
thereis no pointin defending it. That was true of
Microsoft and also of Madoff, who immediately
admitted to his crime once his company became
insolvent. In cases like these, duty theory is
at its
best. In othercases, though, morality is a little
more blurry. Napster is a good example. Napster
was the first widely used peer-to-peer file-sharing
program, and it enabled usersto easily pirate
MP3 music files,directly violating the copyrights of
record companies. While this at first appears
to be a clear case of a software product that
intentionally enabled usersto steal, many
people
within the music industry itselfdefended Napster.
Record companies had become stuck in
their
old ways of selling records and CDs and had not
developed a good mechanism for consumers to
60. purchase MP3 files separately at a reasonable price.
Napster entered the music market as a
rogue
competitor, and forced record companies to be
moreresponsive to the needs of their
consumers.
In a sense, Napster was a positive forcewithin
the music industry. Duty theory may not be
well
suited for making moral pronouncements in
complex cases like Napster’s;othermoral
theories
discussed in this chapter may need to be drawn
upon.
Utilitarianism
Some years ago, a pesticide factory in Bhopal,
India, owned by Union Carbide, exploded,
killing
2,500 people and injuring an additional 300,000.
The active ingredient for the pesticide was stored
in 600-gal tanks. The size of the tanks
themselves was a problem. Larger tanks
are economically
efficient, sincethey hold more gas, but they pose greater
risks in case of a tank leak. For this rea-
son, regulations at a similar Union Carbide
factory in Germany required tank sizes to be
restricted
to 100 gal. Also, the tank that exploded in the
Indian plantwas supposed to be refrigerated to
0 °C.
Instead, the refrigeration unit was not working and
61. the tank was at roomtemperature. Although
the Indian factory had safety features to prevent
disasters, several of the safety systems were
not
functioning. The explosion started when someone
added water to a 600-gal tank of the
chemical,
perhaps an act of sabotage by a disgruntled
employee.The temperature in the tank rose in a
chain
reaction, and the tank blew up. A fog of the gas
drifted through the streets of Bhopal, killing
people
on the spotswhere they stood. Although Union
Carbide responded quickly and compassionately
to the disaster, the tragedy raised questions about
their views on safety in developing
countries.
All businesses make decisions based on a
cost-benefit analysis: They research both the costs
and
the benefits of a particular decision, then determine
whether the costsoutweigh the benefits or
vice versa. In Union Carbide’s case, they determined
that economic savings outweighed the eco-
nomic costsof stricter safety protocols. In
retrospect, it is clear that the company
miscalculated
and should have given greater weight to safety.
Cost-benefit analysis is the distinguishing feature of
the moral theory of utilitarianism: An action
is morally right if the consequences of that action
are more favorable than unfavorable to every-
62. one. When determining the morality of any given
action, we should list all of the good and
bad
consequences that would result, determine which
side is weightier, and judge the action to be
fie66722_01_c01_001-026.indd 13 3/2/12 9:40 AM
CHAPTER 1Section 1.4 Moral Standards
right if the good outweighs the bad. There are three
components to this theory. First, it empha-
sizes consequences. One of the founders of
utilitarianism was the British philosopher Jeremy
Ben-
tham (1748–1832), who argued that by focusing on
consequences, we make our moral judgments
more scientific (1789/1907). To ground morality in
the will of God requires that we have a special
ability to know God’s thoughts. To ground
morality in conscience or instinctive duties
requires that
we have special mental faculties and know how to
use them properly. None of this is precise,
and
it all relies too much on hunches. According
to Ben-
tham, a more scientific approach to morality
would
look only at the facts that everyone can plainly see,
and consequences of actions are those facts. If
63. I steal a
car, thereare very clear consequences: I gain a vehicle,
but I cause financial harmand distress to the
victim
and put myself at risk of a long stay in prison.
We all
can see theseconsequences and assess their weights.
Bentham held that we can even give numerical values
to the various consequences and mathematically cal-
culate whether the good outweighs the bad, a prac-
tice that we now call the utilitarian calculus. Not all
utilitarians go this far, but it does highlight the
central
role that publicly observed consequences play in the
utilitarian conception of morality.
The second component of utilitarianism is that it
focuses on the consequences of happiness and unhap-
piness. While businesses assess costs and
benefits
in terms of financial gains and losses,
utilitarianism
focuses instead on how our actions affect human
hap-
piness. Some utilitarians, like Bentham, emphasize
pleasure and pain; others emphasize goodness
and
badness; and still others emphasize overall benefit
and disbenefit. What they have in common, though,
is
that moral conduct is in someway linked with
human
64. happiness and immoral conduct with unhappiness.
The third component of utilitarianism is that we
need to assess the beneficial consequences of
actions as everyone is affected. If I am
thinking about stealing a car, I need to
consider the conse-
quences of my conduct for myself, my family,
the victim, the victim’s family, and anyone
else who
might be affected by my action. This is
reflected in utilitarianism’s famous motto that
we should
seek the greatest good for the greatest number of
people.
Because businesspeople are so familiar with financial
cost-benefit analysis, utilitarianism is a natu-
ral way to make moral assessments with
business decisions. Take the Bhopal catastrophe as
an
example. In retrospect, we can see that the
company and its stockholders gained a certain
amount
of benefit through financial savings from lax safety
regulations. However, at the sametime,we can
see that this was greatly outweighed by the
disbenefit from the deaths and injuries. It also
created
disbenefits for the company itselfin terms of
bad public relations, lawsuits, and decreased stock
value. At the time,of course, Union Carbide
could not have known with certainty that its
lax safety
standards would have resulted in a disaster of
65. such magnitude. However, an impartial risk assess-
ment of its facility would have revealed that there
were serious safety hazards, and that alone
would have tipped the utilitarian scale.
Associated Press/nmg
Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832), the Brit-
ish philosopher who developed the moral
principle, which we now call the utilitarian
calculus, that morality is determined by
numerically tallying the degree of pleasure
and pain that arises from our actions.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.5 Morality and Government
1.5 Morality and Government
In this final section, we will examine somemoral
theories that pertain to governments and the
laws that they create. From the start,it is
important to look at the boundaries that
separate moral-
ity and the law that governments create. What
they have in common is that they both command
us to behave in certain ways, and oftentheir
edicts are the same. It is immoral to
steal, and it is
also illegal. It is immoral to assault someone,
and it is also illegal.
However, there are many instances where
morality and legality do not overlap. Adultery, for
66. example, is immoral, but in the United States it
is not illegal in most states. So too with
cheating
on school exams. Similarly, thereare someactions
that are illegal but not immoral. Going 36 in
a
35-mph zone is illegal but not necessarily
immoral. Similarly, someinstances of mercy killing
may
be morally justifiable, even though they are
currently illegal.
Morality is an important source of inspiration
for the law, but it is not the last word on
the issue. In
business ethics, it is oftenimportant to consider
issues of morality and legality separately.
Perhaps
we will find someimmoral actions in business which
are not illegal but should be. Or we might
find
somemorally permissible actions that are illegal,
but should be made legal.
The threemain issues that we will focus on are
social-contract theory, human-rights theory, and
theories of governmental coercion. The driving
questions here are: What is the origin of
govern-
mental authority? What is the main purpose that
governments serve? What are the limits to
the
laws that governments can create?
The Social Contract
67. Business by its very nature is dog-eat-dog, where
one company tries to draw customers awayfrom
the competition, perhaps to the pointof putting
the competition out of business. Sometimes
efforts to succeed can go too far and involve
intentionally sabotaging the competition by
steal-
ing tradesecrets, publishing misleading attack
ads, or even vandalizing property. For example, an
owner of a pizza restaurant in Philadelphia
was charged with releasing mice into two competing
pizzerias. The owner went into the bathroom of one
competitor and placed a bag of mice in
the
drop ceiling. He then crossed the street, entered a
second one, and placed another bag of mice
into a garbage can. When caught and arrested, he
claimed that he was just getting even for his
competition doing the same thingto him (Kim,
2011).
Even though business is inherently cutthroat, thereare
still requirements for civil behavior and
limits on how far one can go in defeating the
competition. Without those requirements,
business
competition would descend into gang warfare and
ultimately destroy the economic playing field
that is required for businesses to even exist.
This is precisely the rationale behind social contract
theory: To preserve our individual lives, we
agree to set asideour hostilities towards each otherin
exchange for the peace that a civilized
68. society offers. The champion of this view is Thomas
Hobbes, who, as we saw earlier, defended the
theory of psychological egoism. Hobbes began by
having us thinkabout what the world would
be
like if therewere no governments and laws to keep
society peaceful. In his words, what would
the
state of nature be like, in which every person
was seeking to survive in competition with
everyone
else, without the protection of the government? His
answer was that it would be a condition of
war between every person, and two factors make
this so:
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.5 Morality and Government
1. First, life’s necessities are scarce, and it
is a constant struggle for us to adequately
supply
our basicneeds like food, clothing, and shelter.
2. Second, we are not by nature generous, and
we will not be inclined to share what we
have with others.
As a psychological egoist, Hobbes held that we
will
always be interested in our own personal
interests
69. and that we are not capable of acting towards
others
with true altruism. If we were capable of acting
self-
lessly, then we would peacefully divide up
the scarce
resources that we all need. If I find an apple,
and then
see that you are hungry, I will naturally be
inclined to
split the apple with you. But, according to Hobbes,
our
natural inclination towards selfishness prevents us
from
doing this. The result, then, is that the state of
nature
is really a state of war, which he vividly
describes here:
In such condition there is no place for
industry, because the fruit thereof is
uncertain, and consequently, no culture
of the earth, no navigation, nor use of
the commodities that may be imported
by sea, no commodious building, no
instruments of moving and removing
such things as require much force, no
knowledge of the face of the earth, no
account of time,no arts, no letters, no
society, and which is worst of all, con-
tinual fear and danger of violent death,
and the life of man, solitary, poor, nasty,
brutish, and short. (Hobbes, 1651/1994)
Within the state of nature, thereis no pointin
my even trying to growa garden, builda
70. home, or
furnish it: Someone would just come along
and take it from me by force.
How, then, do we escape from the horrible
conditions of the state of nature? The answer
for
Hobbes was the social contract, which has three
steps:
1. First, I must recognize that seeking peace is
the best way for me to preserve my life. I
will
always be selfish, and that will never change.
However, I must see that I can better my
own situation by seeking peace with my competition.
2. Second, I must negotiate a peace settlement
with you: I will set asidemy hostilities
towards you if you set asideyour hostilities towards
me. If we mutually agree to be civil
to each other, then we will both have the hope of
living better lives.
3. Third, we must establish a governmental
authority that will punish us if we break
our
agreement. Talk is cheap, and I can verbally
agree to a peace treaty with you but
then
attack you when your guard is down. And
you can do exactly the same thingto me. But if
we create a policing power to watch over
us, then I will be strongly motivated to hold to
71. my agreementwith you, and so will you.
Copyright Bettmann/Corbis/AP Images/Anonymous
Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679), the English
philosopher who developed the concept
of the social contract, and famously stated
that in the state of nature, “the life of man
[is] solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.5 Morality and Government
In the business world, it is essentially a
social-contract agreementthat keeps us from
sabotaging
our competitors. Our natural selfish inclination
might be to destroy our competition by
any means
necessary, but doing so would lead to a
savage state of war where we would all be
losers. The
best business strategy, then, is a negotiated peace
settlementwhere all businesses play by a
set of
rules. To keep us from cheating on those rules,
thereare governing bodies such as governments
and professional business associations that can punish
us when we break them. Business is
still
motivated by self-interest, but it is now constrained
to be civil.
72. Human Rights
The U.S. CivilWar was in many ways the result of
a business-ethics dispute. The earliest Spanish
settlers of North America brought African slaves
with them to help cultivate the land and build
towns, and slavery quickly became integral to
business activities throughout the colonies. By
the
time of the American Revolution, slavery in the
North had declined, partly because of a
manufac-
turing economy where it cost more to own and
maintain slaves than the slaves could
economically
produce. However, in the agricultural economy of
the South, slavelaborwas still cost-effective.
As the antislavery movementtook hold,Southern
slaveholders asked who would compensate
them for their financial investment in their slaves if
the slaves were to be freed. There were no
clear answers to this question, and so the slaveholders
saw abolitionism as a direct threat to
their
economic rights. They saw the North as posturing to
steal their property and gut their capacity to
compete in the agricultural marketplace.
We now see slavery as one of the worst
chapters in American history, regardless of the
economic
argumentsof the slaveholders. And even today, we
are horrified to hear of slavery-like condi-
tions around the world, where laborers are
sometimes kidnappedor otherwise coerced into
73. working in sweatshops or on farms with
grueling hours, horrible conditions, and meager
pay. We
see theseas rights violations that can never be
morally justified by any economic benefit to
the
business owner.
The central idea here is that of a right, which
is a justified claim against another
person’s behavior.
For example, I can rightfully claim that you cannot
steal from me, torture me, enslave me, or kill
me. I am making a claim about what you
can and cannot do. When asserting our various
rights, it
is important to distinguish between two types:
• Legal rights are those created by
governments. The government, for example, has
estab-
lished laws that grantme the right to drivewhen I
reach a certain age, or carrycertain
types of weapons, or visit publicly owned parks.
• Human rights—alsocalled natural rights—are not
created by governments but are rights
all people around the world have regardless of
the country in which they live. The rights
against slavery and torture are commonly listed
among these.
There are threedistinct features of human rights:
• They are natural in the sense that we
are born with them. They are not given to us
74. by the
government or any otherhuman institution, but
are part of our identity by our merely
being born as human beings.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.5 Morality and Government
• They are universal in that all humans
worldwide
possess them. No matter who you are or where
you live, you have human rights.
• They are equal in the sense that we all
have the
same list of fundamental human rights, and no
one has more or fewer than another person.
The concept of human rights was first developed by
the English philosopher John Locke (1632–1704),
who
argued that by nature everyone has the basicrights
to life, health, liberty, and possessions. God gives
us
thesewhen we are born, and we retain them
through-
out life, so long as we do not violate the rights
of oth-
ers. For Locke, the right to acquire possessions
was
75. the source of our economic freedom and the ability
to conduct business transactions. Once I
rightfully
acquire possessions, I can keep them or sell them as
I
see fit. However, just as Hobbes warned, the world
is
a nasty place, and many out therewill want to
violate
my rights and take what I have. According to
Locke,
we establish governments specifically for the pur-
pose of protecting our fundamental rights: We sub-
contract to the government the job of keeping
the
peace. If the government adequately performs
its
task of protecting our rights, then we all benefit. If
the government fails in that task, however, we have a
right to overthrow the government and
replace it with a better one that can more
adequately do its job.
Thomas Jefferson, when penning the Declaration of
Independence, latched onto this exact part
of Locke’s theory:
We hold thesetruths to be self-evident, that all
men are created equal, that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these
are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.
That, to secure theserights, Gov-
76. ernments are instituted among Men,deriving their just
Powers from the consent
of the governed. That, whenever any form of
Government becomes destructive
of theseends, it is the Right of the People
to alter or to abolish it, and to institute
new Government.
Through Jefferson, the concept of human rights
has become embedded into the American mind-
set, and it has inspired countries around the world
to similarly acknowledge human rights.
But the concept of human rights took its modern
form through a document called the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, which was adopted
by the United Nations General Assembly in
1948.
The Universal Declaration reiterates the same core set of
human rights as Locke and Jefferson:
“Everyone has the right to life, liberty and
security of person” (1948, Article 3).
However, the docu-
ment continues by listing a range of very specific
rights, such as thesepertaining to businesses:
Copyright Bettmann/Corbis/AP Images/Anonymous
John Locke (1632–1704), the English phi-
losopher who developed the concept of
natural rights and the right of citizens to
overthrow governments that fail to protect
their rights.
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77. CHAPTER 1Section 1.5 Morality and Government
1. Everyone has the right to work,
to free choice of employment,
to just and favourable condi-
tions of work and to protection
against unemployment.
2. Everyone, without any discrimi-
nation, has the right to equal
pay for equal work.
3. Everyone who works has the
right to just and favourable
remuneration ensuring for him-
self and his family an existence
worthy of human dignity, and
supplemented, if necessary, by
othermeans of social protection.
4. Everyone has the right to form
and to join tradeunions for the
protection of his interests.
Everyone has the right to rest and leisure,
including reasonable limitation of work-
ing hours and periodic holidays with pay.
(Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
1948, Articles 23–24)
Although not all of the human rights listed in
the Uni-
versal Declaration have yet become a reality
around
78. the world, it is nevertheless the standard
towards
which all countries within the United Nations
have
pledged to work.
Principles of Governmental Coercion
To effectively compete in the marketplace,
businesses
are continually pushing the boundaries of tasteful
adver-
tising. Presenting shocking and even offensive images
in advertisements will attract attention, and may gen-
erate sales. A quick online image search
for “offensive
advertisement” will reveal a range of troubling
ads that
are sexually explicit, demeaning to women or
minority
groups, or offensive to religious groups. A case in
point
is an advertisement by the Italian clothing
company
Benetton that contained an altered image of the
Catho-
lic pope romantically kissing a Muslim imam. In
keeping with the company’s theme of
multicultural-
ism, a spokesperson said that “the meaning of this
campaign is exclusively to combat the culture
of
hatred in all its forms” (Rocca, 2011). When
the Vatican threatened to sue, Benetton
removed the ad.
79. What Would You Do?
Say you are a midlevel supervisor at
a sportswear company that special-
izes in athletic footwear. You have just
found out that someof your manu-
facturing facilities in Bangladesh hire
childworkers as young as age 10. They
work 14 hours a day, 7 days a week,
and receive wages as low as 20 cents
an hour. You know that this is a clear
human-rights violation.
1. Would you discuss your moral
concerns with your superiors in
the company?
2. Suppose you did discuss your con-
cerns with them and their response
was essentially that this was stan-
dard practice in Asian countries,
and what your company was doing
was no different from what any
othercompany does that has tex-
tile facilities in those countries.
Also, if your company set higher
standards, it would not be able
to compete in the marketplace.
Would this explanation satisfy you?
3. Suppose that the response of your
superiors was that they acknowl-
edged the problem and were
working on it, but that it would
take several years before this prac-
80. tice could be eliminated. Would
this explanation satisfy you?
4. Suppose that your company stated
in its advertising and packaging
that no childlaborwas used in
manufacturing its products. You
knew, though, that this was not
true. Would you bring this to the
attention of a government agency?
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.5 Morality and Government
While ads like Benetton’s may be offensive to
somepeople, they nevertheless may be perfectly
legal. That raises the question of how bad an
action needs to be before the government
stepsin
and makes it illegal. All governments are
coercive in the sense that they forceus to
conform to
laws under threat of punishment. PepsiCo would
not burn down Coca-Cola’s company headquar-
ters, even if it wanted to, because of how the
government would punish it. But governments
can-
not randomly single out someactions as criminal
and allow others to be legal. There
are reasons
why someactions are prohibitedand others are not.
There are four common justifications of gov-
ernmental coercion: the harmprinciple, the offense
81. principle, the principle of legal paternalism,
and the principle of legal moralism.
The first is the harm principle: Governments may restrict
our conduct when it harms otherpeople.
Burning down Coca-Cola’s headquarters could
injure and kill many people, and would
undoubt-
edly cause financial harmto the company. However,
for the government to step in and outlaw
harmful actions, the injury must be serious, not
trivial. For example, almost all fast-food
products
are harmful in comparison to organic food
alternatives. However, serving unhealthy food is
far less
serious than serving food tainted with salmonella,
which causes severe illness and even death.
Thus, the government cannot reasonably outlaw
fast food, whereas it justifiablycan do so
with
salmonella-tainted food.
Second is the offense principle: Governments may
keep us from offending others. We cannot
walk naked through the streets, be publicly
intoxicated, or shout obscenities in
playgrounds. As
with the harmprinciple, the offense principle also looks
at the degree to which a particular action
is objectionable: Is it outrageously offensive or
merely a nuisance? Benetton’s ad touches on
this
very issue. It was certainly offensive to specific
82. groups of Catholics and Muslims, but whether it
was deeply offensive to society at largeis another
matter. Again, Benetton’s ad was perfectly
legal,
which means that in our present cultural
climate, it was not offensive enough to be
illegal.
Third is the principle of legal paternalism, which
is a sister concept to the harmprinciple.
While
the harmprinciple focuses on the harmour actions
cause to otherpeople, legal paternalism looks
at the harmthat we cause ourselves through our
actions and maintains that the government can
restrict such conduct. I can hurt myself by
participating in a dangerous sportsuch as cliff
diving or
by working in a dangerous occupation such as
tree trimming. When the government mandates
that I wear a seat belt when driving, the concern
is principally with protecting me from my own
careless conduct. The term paternalism comes from
that Latin word for father, which implies
that
the government is overseeing my conduct in
the way that parents try to protect their
children. But
does the government have any business in doing
this? Yet again, the question is one of degree.
With our stupidest and most dangerous actions, we may
want the government to protect us from
ourselves. However, with an action that does not cause
83. serious harmto me, I may want the gov-
ernment to just leave me alone.
Finally, thereis legal moralism: Governments may
restrict conduct that is especially sinful or
immoral. Prime examples of this are laws against
blasphemy and somesex acts, such as sodomy.
The question here is not whether a type of conduct
is harmful to others, publicly offensive, or
harmful to oneself. It is a matter of
whether an act, even when done privately, crosses
some
moral boundary that justifies the government’s
stepping in. Of all the principles of govern-
mental coercion, legal moralism is probably the
weakest. One reason is that many moral
and
religious standards vary widely, and by outlawing an
action solely on moral or religious
grounds,
the government may be unfairly adopting the
standards of one cultural group and applying
them to everyone.
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CHAPTER 1Section 1.6 Conclusion
Although legal moralism may be the weakest of the
four principles, someof the others may also be
seri-
ously questionable. The British philosopher John
Stuart Mill argued that, in fact, only one principle of
84. governmental coercion is justifiable, namely the
harm
principle. The government has no right to restrict
our
conduct on the otherthreegrounds. In Mill’s words:
The only purpose for which power can
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 a
sufficient warrant (1859/1999).
The reason, according to Mill, is that a wide sphere
of personal liberty is essential for a happy
society,
and that includes the possibility of offending others,
harming ourselves, or crossing sometraditional moral
boundary. Do we want to decide for ourselves what
makes us happy, or do we want the government
to do
so? From Mill’s perspective, I am a better
judge of my
own happiness than the government ever could be,
and society on the whole will be a happier
place when
we are each allowed that freedom.
All of theseprinciples of governmental coercion apply
to businesses just as they do to individual
people.
85. Again, with Benetton, although their ad was offensive
to somegroups, the offense was not serious or
widespread enough to justify its being
illegal. But
with many ad campaigns, merely being legal
may not be good enough. Public opinion can be
as
coercive as any government-imposed restriction. If
Microsoft, PepsiCo, or any otherFortune 500
company published an ad with the pope kissing a
Muslim, the backlash would likely be
financially
crippling. Catholics and Muslims worldwide might
boycott their products. Benetton is a much
smaller company, with a specialized market niche
and a history of using shocking ads to
get con-
sumers’ attention. Not so with Microsoft and PepsiCo,
which have much broader customer bases
worldwide. With them, consumer coercion is as
powerful as governmental coercion.
1.6 Conclusion
In this chapter we have looked at a wide
spectrum of classic moral theories and showed
how
they apply to an equally broad spectrum of
business ethics issues. These are moral
theories
that, 1,000 years from now, will be just as
important as they are today; in a sense,
they define
the moral thought process for humans. The
philosophers who proposed thesevarious theories
were not always in agreementwith each other; in
fact, they rejected many rival moral theories.
86. Bentham believed that all moral and social issues
should be decided solely using the
utilitarian
principle, not through theories about religion, virtue,
duty,social contracts, or human rights.
Copyright Bettmann/Corbis/AP Images/Anonymous
John Stuart Mill (1806–1873), a British
philosopher who defended personal lib-
erty and argued that government should
restrict our conduct only when we harm
others, not when we merely offend others,
harm ourselves, or behave immorally.
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CHAPTER 1Summary
Similarly, Kant believed that the categorical imperative
was the single moral litmus test. But
exclusive claims like theseare much like efforts at
brand loyalty in the business world.
Walmart
would like us to shop at only their stores. Coca-
Cola would like us to drink only their beverages.
Exxon would like us to buy only their gas. But in
the real world, our purchasing habits are
more
diverse and we are drawn to a range of
different stores and products.
So too with moral theories: In the real world,
87. when we reflect on moral issues, some
theories will
be more relevant or illuminating than others.
Bentham’s utilitarianism may be helpful with
some
types of moral evaluations, but not with others.
The same is true for the othertheories that we
have examined.We are trapped in a morally
complex world that demands that we make
moral
choices. One way or another we will do that, and
drawing on all of the various moral
theories can
help make the job easier.
In the following chapters of this book, all of
the issues covered can be analyzed using
theseclassic
moral theories. As authors, though, we have not
forced that approach. Issues such as pricefixing,
corporate punishment, consumer advocacy, insider trading,
and others are challenging enough in
their own right, without the added intricacies of
a utilitarian or duty-theory analysis. Neverthe-
less, classic moral theories are always lurking in
the background of most of thesediscussions.
Does
a particular government regulation serve the greatest
good for the greatest number of people? Do
affirmative action policies violate the rights of
majority groups? Do we have special moral
duties
to protect the environment? A full evaluation of
business-ethics issues may greatly benefit from
the contributions of classic moral theories.
88. Summary
We began this chapter looking at theories of
where morality comes from and the debate
between
moral objectivism and moral relativism. Moral
objectivists claim that moral standards are
not cre-
ated by human beings, are unchanging, and are
universal. Moral relativists hold the opposite view,
that moralstandards are created by human beings,
change from society to society, and are not
universal. Also relevant to the question of where
morality comes from is the connection
between
religion and ethics. Divine command theory is
the position that moral standards are created by
God’s will, but we saw somechallenges to this
view. Religious ethical theories also commonly
hold
that religious believers have a special moral ability;
we looked at challenges to this view as
well.
We next looked at ways in which our human
psychological makeup might affect how we
view
morality. One issueconcerns our ability to act
selflessly. Psychological egoists hold that human
conduct is selfishly motivated and we cannot
perform actions from any othermotive. By
contrast,
psychological altruists hold that people are at least
occasionally capable of acting selflessly. Also
89. of relevance is how gender shapes men’s and
women’s conceptions of morality. Care ethics is
the
theory that women see morality as the need to
care for people who are in situations of vulner-
ability and dependency.
One of the central concerns of ethical theory is
to present and explain the moral standards
that
guide our behavior. One such approach is virtue
theory, which is the view that morality is
grounded
in the virtuous character traitsthat people acquire.
According to Aristotle, virtues are good mental
habits that regulate our urges and stand at a
mean between vicesof deficiency and vicesof
excess.
Another approach is duty theory, which holds
that moral standards are grounded in instinctive
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CHAPTER 1Summary
obligations. Some duty theories propose a list of
obligations, such as the Ten Commandments,
and
others propose a single principle, such as the
Golden Rule. Kant offered a single
principle that he
called the categorical imperative, which states
90. that we should treat people as an end and
never
as a means to an end. A third approach is
the theory of utilitarianism, which holds
that an action
is morally right if the consequences of that action
are more favorable than unfavorable to every-
one. Bentham developed the idea of the utilitarian
calculus, whereby numerical values could be
assigned to the positive and negative consequences of
actions.
The final component of this chapter explored the
relationship between morality and government.
One major theory on this is social contract
theory. Hobbes described a warring state of
nature gen-
erated by human selfishness and scarcity of
necessities. The solution is the social
contract, which
holds that, to preserve our individual lives, we
agree to set asideour hostilities towards each
other
in exchange for the peace that a civilized society
offers. A second important theory on the
relation-
ship between morality and government is the concept
of human rights. These are rights that
are
not created by government, but are held equally by
all people around the world regardless of
the
country in which they live. The theory was
developed by Locke, who held that by nature,
everyone
has the basicrights to life, health, liberty, and
91. possessions. People establish governments for
the
purpose of protecting those fundamental rights,
and governments can be overthrown when
they
fail to perform that task. A third theory on the
relation between morality and government
involves
four principles of governmental coercion. They are the
harmprinciple, whereby governments may
restrict our conduct when it harms otherpeople;
the offense principle, which restricts our behav-
ior that offends others; legal paternalism, which
restricts an individual’s actions that harmhim- or
herself; and legal moralism, which restricts especially
sinful or immoral conduct. Mill argued that
only the harmprinciple is justified, and the otherthree
are not.
Discussion Questions
1. There are several theories about where
moral values come from, including moral
objec-
tivism, moral relativism, and divine-command
theory. Which if any of thesetheories
works best when understanding the moral
obligations of businesses?
2. Assume that the theory of psychological egoism
is true, that all human actions are self-
ishly motivated. Is therea way that the decision-
making process within a largecorpora-
tion can overcome this fact of human selfishness?
Could the corporation, for example,
92. establish a charity program that was designed only to
benefit the needy, with no public
relations benefit to the company at all?
3. According to virtue theory, to be morally
good people we should develop virtuous habits
like courage, temperance, wisdom, and justice. Can
therebe such a thingas a “virtuous
corporation”? If so, what are the virtuous habits
that it would need to have?
4. According to duty theory, thereare fundamental
principles of moral obligation that we
all know instinctively, such as do not kill or
steal. Are thereany fundamental principles of
business ethics that everyone in business
automatically knows they should follow?
5. According to Kant’s theory of the
categorical imperative, we should treat people
as an
end, and never merely as a means to an
end. Think of an example in business that
vio-
lates this principle and explain how it does that.
6. Consider the issueof childlabormentioned in
the “What Would You Do?”box. Use a
utilitarian analysis to determine whether use of such
laborwould be morally permissible
for your company.
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93. CHAPTER 1Summary
7. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
lists several rights that pertain to businesses
(see that list in the chapter). Would you agree
that all of those are genuine human
rights? Explain.
8. There are four principles of governmental
coercion that explain why the government is
justified in restrictingour actions. It is clear how
the harmprinciple applies directly to
businesses: Businesses should not engage in
conduct that causes serious harmto others,
such as by manufacturing unsafe products, dumping
toxicwaste, or having unsafe work-
ing conditions for employees. Explain how the
otherthreeprinciples of governmental
coercion might apply to business conduct.
Key Terms
care ethics The theory that women see moral-
ity as the need to care for people who are in
situations of vulnerability and dependency.
categorical imperative The moral principle
proposed by Immanuel Kant that we should
treat people as an end, and never merely as a
means to an end.
cost benefit analysis The economic model-
ing of a project to check whether the