Title: EWMBA 207B
1EWMBA 207B
- Lecture 1 March 17
- Theory and Frameworks
- 3 Moral Dilemmas
- Ellen Weinreb
2Parable of the Sadhu Learning Points
- Our purpose blinds us to the needs of others and
paradoxically our own needs as well - Too narrow a focus.. so focused on reaching the
mountain top that they lost site of what is
really important - Lack of leadership, no leader creates a diffusion
of responsibility, group think, whose burden? - Disconnect between group ethic and individual
ethic. - Cultural bias plays a role in ethics and
decisions - Pressures of Conformity. moral commitment from
Stephen to care for Sadhu based on Quaker
upbringing
3Looking for in First Paper
- Critical Thinking. Insight. Ah ha!
- Demonstrate understanding of the theory (more
than using the right jargon) - Application of the theory to the analysis
- Application of frameworks from articles (ie A
Guide to Defining Moments) - If you choose to apply the theory to your own
experience, you will not be graded on the
experience itself
4Theory
5Ring of Gyges
- This passage illustrates that most people are
good because of a desire to maintain an image of
goodness, not for the sake of goodness itself.
If one could do wrong and not be detected, than
most would do so. - About Temptation
- Senior Managers at Enron wore this ring.
- From Platos Republic - conversation between
Glaucon and Socrates
6Aristotle on Virtue
- You character is a function of your behavior.
Our reasoning should allow us to pursue a
virtuous amount neither in deficit or excess. - Imitate virtuousness to be virtuous. What is a
virtuous person/ horseman/ wife? Functioning
well is in accordance with the sum of my
behaviors. - Slippery slope of habit, you can go down this
path. Little things wrong lead to other little
wrong things and leads to unvirtuous character.
7Mill on Utilitarianism
- Actions are right in proportion as they tend to
promote happiness. - Greatest good for the greatest number.
- Sacrificing your own greatest good for the good
of others is in itself a good. - One does not weigh ones own interests it is
benefit v costs for others.
8Kants Categorical Imperative- First Formulation
- UNIVERSALIZABILITY- An action is morally right
for a person in a certain situation if, and only
if, the persons reasons for carrying out the
action is a reason that he or she would be
willing to have every person act on, in any
similar situation. What if everyone did that? - REVERSIBILITY- The persons reasons for acting
must be reasons that he or she would be willing
to have others use, even as a basis of how they
treat him or her. What if you were in his shoes?
(linked to the Golden Rule)
9Kants Categorical Imperative- Second Formulation
- An action is morally right for a person if, and
only if, in performing the action, the person
does not use others merely as a means for
advancing his or her own interests, but also
respects and develops their capacity to choose
freely for themselves. (Similar to Rawls) - i.e. treat human beings as free rational
decision-makers, equals in their pursuit of their
interests
10Ethics of Reciprocity is Universal
- Golden Rule "Do unto others as you would wish
them do unto you. - Buddhism "...a state that is not pleasing or
delightful to me, how could I inflict that upon
another?" Samyutta NIkaya v. 353 Hurt not others
in ways that you yourself would find hurtful."
Udana-Varga 518 - Christianity "Therefore all things whatsoever
ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so
to them." Matthew 712 "...and don't do what you
hate...", Gospel of Thomas 6 - Confucianism "Do not do to others what you do
not want them to do to you" Analects 1523
"Tse-kung asked, 'Is there one word that can
serve as a principle of conduct for life?'
Confucius replied, 'It is the word 'shu' --
reciprocity. Do not impose on others what you
yourself do not desire.'" Doctrine of the Mean
13.3 - Hinduism "One should not behave towards others
in a way which is disagreeable to oneself"
Mencius Vii.A.4 "This is the sum of duty do
naught unto others which would cause you pain if
done to you." Mahabharata 51517 - Islam "None of you truly believes until he
wishes for his brother what he wishes for
himself." Number 13 of Imam "Al-Nawawi's Forty
Hadiths." - Judaism "...thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself.", Leviticus 1918 "What is hateful to
you, do not to your fellow man. This is the law
all the rest is commentary." Talmud, Shabbat 31a - Shinto "The heart of the person before you is a
mirror. See there your own form" - Sikhism Compassion-mercy and religion are the
support of the entire world". Japji Sahib "Don't
create enmity with anyone as God is within
everyone." Guru Arjan Devji 259 "No one is my
enemy, none a stranger and everyone is my
friend." Guru Arjan Dev AG 1299 - Taoism "Regard your neighbor's gain as your own
gain, and your neighbor's loss as your own loss."
T'ai Shang Kan Ying P'ien. "I am good to the man
who is good to me, likewise, I am also good to
the bad man." Tao Te Ching - Yoruba (Nigeria) "One going to take a pointed
stick to pinch a baby bird should first try it on
himself to feel how it hurts."
11Kant differs from Mill
- Kant focuses on motives while Mill focuses on
results - In any example where you have a content majority
and an unhappy minority - Kant says you put yourself in the minoritys
shoes and knowing how that feels, support the
minority. - Mill would say the opposite and favor the
majority (greatest good for the greatest
happiness).
12Kant differs from Mill (continued)
- In Parable of the Sadhu
- Kant- If I were the Sadhu, I would want to be
saved - Mill- Let Sadhu die because he is just one person
- For example,99 non-smoking Ees and 1 unhappy
smoking Ee work in an office together. A just
manager wants to act morally right regarding this
unhappy situation by maximizing happiness (Mill)
or putting himself in the shoes of the unhappy
person (Kant). The outside forces of the world
do not come into play here (ie the fact that
smoking is bad for your health or California
prohibits smoking indoors.) - Kant treat the non-smoker as if you were an
unhappy non-smoker and make the office a
non-smoking environment. - Mill- favor the 99 non-smokers because 99gt1.
13The Veil of Ignorance - Rawls
- The veil of ignorance is a method used to
determine whether a certain practice is fair by
assuming the person choosing this action does so
without knowledge of potential personal
consequences. It relies on the persons pure
sense of right or wrong.
14Is It Better to be Loved or Feared?- Machiavelli
- A different approach- you have to be effective
- This article delves into two methods of
leadership instilling love or fear. It
determines that while both are effective, fear is
more so because beloved leaders are most apt to
bear the wrath of his/her subjects during hard
times. - Cynical duplicitous, encourage fear
- Do what it takes to be effective
15Shortcomings of Kant Mill
.and there are many
- Mill
- How do you measure happiness? What is the value
of the human being happiness? Is one persons
happiness valued differently than another
persons happiness? In the Sadhu example, the
Sadhus death is not weighed heavier than the
hikers not achieving their goal. - Kant
- Reversing reversibility leads to a viscous cycle.
In the smokers example, 99 smokers in a
non-smoking environment are then unhappy and
therefore Kant would return the office to a
smoking environment because he is then putting
himself in the shoes of the smokers.
16All the Theory is about Empathy
- All about empathy. Not about egotism or self
interest - Plato- temptation
- Aristotle- virtuous is not about self interest
- Mill does not count your own interest
- Kant reversibility
- Veil of Ignorance, Rawls
- But not so for Machiavelli
17Frameworks
18A theoretical framework for ethical
decision-making
- What decision would a virtuous person make?
(Aristotle) - What will maintain an image of goodness. Is
temptation a factor? (Plato) - Which decision is more likely to produce the
greatest good for the greatest number? (Mill) - What principles inform each alternative? Would I
be willing to make this principle a universal
rule? (Kant) - If the roles were reversed, would I want the same
course of action to be followed? (Kant) - What is the right decision? Have I taken myself
out of this equation? (Rawls) - What will be most effective? (Machiavelli)
19Stakeholder Analysis
- Who is affected (stakeholder analysis)?
- Who do the stakeholders represent?
- What are my obligations to them? What are their
claims on me (rights)? - What are the companys obligations to them? What
are their claims on the business? - Which stakeholders voice is the loudest?
- Which stakeholder is most important?
20A Guide to Defining MomentsSource The
Discipline of Building Character p. 55
21Cases
22Conflict on the Trading Floor Learning Points
- An example of making decisions in the face of
reality. The protagonist is a junior staff. - An example where the protagonist fulfills his
duties as an employee but violates his fiduciary
duties by participating a deceitful business
practice. - The right path is usually not the easy path.
Because the right path can be so difficult, we
may not choose to take it. - Use personal reflection and individual values to
resolve dilemmas.
23Will She Fit In? Learning Points
- Leverage
- Build networks to support your case
- Respect and power leverages ones position
- In a lose-lose situation, might be best to save
the real battles for another day when the topic
will not be too hot to handle.