Ethics
Ethics
Ethics
Ethics studies human acts In hectic working environments, people can become blind to the
- those actions that are done by the human person based on moral dilemmas they face, by failing to see the moral
knowledge and the full consent of the will dimensions of their choices
Competing values
- moral dilemma is a situation where the decision-maker has
to give priority to one moral value over another
- moral Dilemma is not about 2 or more
- opposing choices but of opposing values
- Existence Precedes Essence
argues that we cannot explain human nature in the same way that we
describe a manufactured article
7. Make a decision
- There is no painless decision, sometimes the best decisions
are the toughest to make
- Justify your decision!
- What do you have?
Reasoned process
Sartre believed that if there is no God, then there is no
You cannot make this on every decision that you have to make given human nature precisely because there is no God to
Do this in important decisions that you have to make have a conception of it. Human nature cannot be defined in
Be patient! advance because it is not completely thought in advance.
Process
1. Gather the fact
2. Stakeholders
3. Articulate the Dilemma (Values)
4. List the alternative (Options)
5. Compare the alternative with values
6. Weigh the consequences
7. Make a decision
Absolute Freedom * Should the husband have done that? Why do you think so?
- act of choosing
- man chooses alone for he is the one and final arbiter of his Kohlberg is not really interested in whether the subject says
choice "yes" or "no" to this dilemma but in the reasoning behind the
- freedom in this regard is absolute answer.
Story of Heinz
In response to the Heinz dilemma, stage 5 respondents make it clear
that they do not generally favor breaking laws; laws are social
contracts that we agree to uphold until we can change them by
democratic means. Nevertheless, the wife’s right to live is a moral
right that must be protected. Thus, stage 5 respondent sometimes
defend Heinz’s theft in strong language: “It is the husband's duty to
save his wife. The fact that her life is in danger transcends every
other standard you might use to judge his action. Life is more
important than property.”
Story of Heinz
In actual practice, Kohlberg says, we can reach just decisions by
looking at a situation through one another's eyes. In the Heinz
dilemma, this would mean that all parties—the druggist, Heinz, and
his wife-- take the roles of the others.
Summary
At stage 1 children think of what is right as that which authority says
is right. Doing the right thing is obeying authority and avoiding
punishment.