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Summary Everything you need to pass Business Ethics

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Based on the course of the best university in Germany, TUM, this summary contains everything you need for Business Ethics

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May 19, 2022
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Business Ethics

General Perception


 “Greed”: Main cause of economic misconduct
 Ford Pinto
o Car of the lower compact class developed by Ford
o Problem:
 Fuel tank behind the rear-wheel
 Possibility of leaking fuel, danger of explosion
 Engineers hinted to the problem
 Managers reasoned about the costs
o Protecting with rubber shell: 137.5 m USD vs. costs of not attaching: 49.5 m
USD
o Ethical evaluation?
 No contravention (prevailing rule: tank has to remain intact at the
speed of 20 mph)
 Pinto was statistically as secure as every other vehicle
o Problems for Ford:
 Loss of reputation (especially when the calculation was discovered)
 Trial
 First company accused of manslaughter
o Starting point for Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
 Long-term ethics and commercial success compatible
 What is the value of life?



Basic Concepts


 Problems in Business Ethics as Interaction Problems (between people)
o Robinson Crusoe and Friday
 Individuals are competing for limited resources
 Scarcity becomes a social problem
 Interaction problem as an economic problem
o Basic elements of problems in business ethics
 At least two actors and an environment of scarcity
 Cooperation as a solution to scarcity problems
o Distributive Justice: How should the cake be split?
 Existing quantity of goods is immutable
 Distribution based on rules

,  Result should be as equitable as possible
 Problem:
 Problem of scarcity itself is not addressed and persists
o How distribution is made affects future production
o Allocative Justice: How can we improve the supply of goods quantitatively or
qualitatively to satisfy more demand than before?
 Best possible allocation of scarce production factors
 Gains from cooperation, problem of scarcity should be mitigated
 Limits of individual moral actions
o Decoupling of motive and result  morality is interpreted as an unintended
result of intentional action
 Business Ethics should not be based on actions and their motives, but on the
conditions under which they are carried out
o Individual virtues cannot solve structural problems
o Problems in business ethics are by nature systemically interaction and
interdependence problems
o Conditions of modern world
 Rising degree of complexity in economic relations
 Prevalence of mutual interdependences between individuals, firms
and nation states



Ethics and Morality


 Classification of Philosophy
o Theoretical Philosophy
 What does exist? (Ontology)
 What is the order of the world? (Metaphysics)
 What can I know? (Epistemology, Philosophy of Science)
 What is the relation of language and reality? (Philosophy of Language)
o Practical Philosophy
 What should I do? (Ethics)
 What is the best means to achieve an end? (Economics)
 What is the best order of society? (Political Philosophy)
o History of Philosophy

 Morality: complex of rules and norms that should determine people’s actions
o Aggregate of rules of action, standards, norms, values, conceptions of
significance that guide or ought to guide the actions of human beings
 Violation leads to violations of oneself and/or others
 Ethics: theory of morality (reflecting on morality)

,  Descriptive Ethics (describing)
o Description, systematization and explanation of normative systems
o E.g., moral psychology, evolutionary biology, behavioural economics
 Normative Ethics (judging)
o Conditions for approval and compliance
o Evaluation of an economic order as “just” or “unjust”
o Contains many empirical constituent parts
o Definition: Ethics is the analysis of human conduct from the perspective of
"good" and "bad" respectively "morally right" and "morally wrong"
o Different from psychology and humanities
 Meta-Ethics
o Focuses on nature of morality, often relies on semantic analysis of moral
judgments
o Difference between cognitivism and non-cognitivism (can moral statements be
true?)
o Not directly related to content of rules or norms
o Moral Semantics:
 What is the meaning pf moral terms or judgments?
o Moral Ontology:
 What is the nature of moral judgments?
o Moral Epistemology
 How may moral judgments be supported or defended?
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