Title: Ethical Principles, Quick Tests, And Decision-Making Guidelines
1- Ethical Principles, Quick Tests, And
Decision-Making Guidelines
2Outline
- Decision criteria for ethical reasoning
- Ethical relativism A self-interest approach
- Utilitarianism A consequentialist
(results-based) approach - Universalism A deontological (duty-based)
approach - Rights An entitlement-based approach
- Justice Procedures, compensation, retribution
3Decision Criteria for Ethical Reasoning
- A first step in addressing ethical dilemmas is to
identify the problem and related issues. - Laura Nash developed twelve questions to ask
yourself during the decision-making period to
help clarify ethical problems.
4Why?
- These twelve questions can help individuals
- Openly discuss the responsibilities necessary to
solve ethical problems - Facilitate group discussions
- Build cohesiveness and consensus
- Serve as an information source
- Uncover ethical inconsistencies
- Help a CEO see how managers think
- Increase the nature and range of choices
5Decision Criteria for Ethical Reasoning
- The following three criteria can be used in
ethical reasoning - Moral reasoning must be logical
- Factual evidence cited to support a persons
judgment should be accurate, relevant, and
complete - Ethical standards used should be consistent
- A simple but powerful question can be used
throughout your decision-making process in
solving ethical dilemmas - What is my motivation for choosing a course of
action?
6Decision Criteria for Ethical Reasoning
- A major aim of ethical reasoning is to gain a
clearer and sharper logical focus on problems to
facilitate acting in morally responsible ways. - Two conditions that eliminate a persons moral
responsibility for causing harm are - Ignorance
- Inability
- Mitigating circumstances that excuse or lessen a
persons moral responsibility include - A low level of or lack of seriousness to cause
harm - Uncertainty about knowledge of wrongdoing
- The degree to which a harmful injury was caused
or averted
7Ethical Relativism A Self-Interest Approach
- Ethical relativism holds that no universal
standards or rules can be used to guide or
evaluate the morality of an act. - This view argues that people set their own moral
standards for judging their actions. - This is also referred to as naïve relativism.
- The logic of ethical relativism extends to
culture.
8Ethical Relativism A Self-Interest Approach
- Benefits include
- Ability to recognize the distinction between
individual and social values, customs, and moral
standards - Problems include
- Imply an underlying laziness
- Contradicts everyday experience
- Relativists can become absolutists
- Relativism and stakeholder analysis.
9Utilitarianism A Consequentialist
(Results-Based) Approach
- The basic view holds that an action is judged as
right, good, or wrong on the basis of its
consequences. - The moral authority that drives utilitarianism is
the calculated consequences or results of an
action, regardless of other principles that
determine the means or motivations for taking the
action. - Utilitarianism includes other tenets.
10Utilitarianism A Consequentialist
(Results-Based) Approach
- Problems with utilitarianism include
- No agreement exists about the definition of the
good to be maximized - No agreement exists about who decides
- How are the costs and benefits of nonmonetary
stakes measured? - Does not consider the individual
- Principles of rights and justice are ignored
- Utilitarianism and stakeholder analysis.
11Universalism A Deontological (Duty-Based)
Approach
- This view is also referred to as deontological
ethics or nonconsequentialist ethics and holds
that the means justify the ends of an action, not
the consequences. - Kants principle of the categorical imperative
places the moral authority for taking action on
an individuals duty toward other individuals and
humanity. - The categorical imperative consists of two parts.
12Universalism A Deontological (Duty-Based)
Approach
- The major weaknesses of universalism and Kants
categorical imperative include - Principles are imprecise and lack practical
utility - Hard to resolve conflicts of interest
- Does not allow for prioritizing ones duties
- Universalism and stakeholder analysis.
13Rights An Entitlement-Based Approach
- Moral rights are based on legal rights and the
principle of duty. - Rights can override utilitarian principles.
- The limitations of rights include
- Can be used to disguise and manipulate selfish,
unjust political interests and claims - Protection of rights can be at the expense of
others - Limits of rights come into question
- Rights and stakeholder analysis.
14Justice Procedures, Compensation, Retribution
- The principle of justice deals with fairness and
equality. - Two recognized principles of fairness that
represent the principle of justice include - Equal rights compatible with similar liberties
for others - Social and economic inequality arrangement
- Four types of justice include
- Compensatory
- Retributive
- Distributive
- Procedural
15Justice Procedures, Compensation, Retribution
- Problems using the principle of justice include
- Who decides who is right and who is wrong?
- Who has moral authority to punish?
- Can opportunities and burdens be fairly
distributed? - Justice, rights, and power are really
intertwined. - Two steps in transforming justice
- Be aware of your rights and power
- Establish legitimate power for obtaining rights
- Justice and stakeholder analysis.