Ethics essays and research papers
Last update: June 15, 2015-
Legal Ethics
Introduction * Who are the stakeholders in this case? George, Plant manager Bill, George's boss The employees of Ardnak Plastic Inc., Residents of Hondo The EPA People that are affected by the pollution The Mexican town George has a family and is a manager of a small plant. His plant's emissions were always above EPA guidelines. George was told by his boss that the EPA would enforce fines if they were not compliant with the
Rating:Essay Length: 303 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: July 15, 2010 -
Professional Value and Ethics
Professional Values and Ethics Jamie Simonds, Connie Haynes, Carrie Carrier, Randy Carson, Tonya Gower Instructor: Lisa Jelone July 05, 2010 Values and Ethics Values are our rules, it is an individual belief that people go by and hold themselves accountable to. They are the ideals people choose to live by. A person's values can affect how one may view the world and our actions. The choices we make today can affect us tomorrow. Ethics is
Rating:Essay Length: 1,585 Words / 7 PagesSubmitted: July 18, 2010 -
Ethical Implications of Outsourcing
Ethical Implications of Outsourcing Shawn Schneider University of Phoenix Michael Osby MGT216 May 18, 2009 Ethical Implications of Outsourcing For several years, many companies have turned to outsourcing income tax preparation and income tax return filing to companies in other countries to improve performance. The act of outsourcing a company's tax preparation is reasonable if the company is confident with the servicing company which is contracted; by outsourcing one part of the business they can
Rating:Essay Length: 1,206 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: July 18, 2010 -
An Ethical Dilemma in Counseling: Deciding Between Two Rights
An Ethical Dilemma in Counseling: Deciding between two rights Ethics, considered the study of moral philosophy, is a broad way of defining human duty, right and wrong; essentially, it is more expansive than simply applying a principle. Dilemmas are situations that require a choice between options appearing uniformly favorable, unfavorable or mutually exclusive. Naturally, an ethical dilemma can place a professional counselor in a precarious position, thereby compromising the effectiveness of the therapy, the trust
Rating:Essay Length: 635 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: August 23, 2010 -
Ethics in Business
From a business perspective, working under government contracts can be a very lucrative proposition. In general, a stream of orders keep coming in, revenue increases and the company grows in the aggregate. The obvious downfalls to working in this manner is both higher quality expected as well as the extensive research and documentation required for government contracts. If a part fails to perform correctly it can cause minor glitches as well as problems that can
Rating:Essay Length: 2,291 Words / 10 PagesSubmitted: August 24, 2010 -
Ethical Egoism Vs Social Responsibility
Merriam-Webster collegiate dictionary defines egoism as "a doctrine that individual self-interest is the actual motive of all conscious action." Social responsibility entails one's actions benefiting one's society more than oneself. A cost benefit analysis sided towards the many rather than towards the individual. In the two books The Elements of Moral Society and Ethical Issues in Engineering by James Rachels and Deborah Johnson respectively, the subject of egoism and social responsibility come up. Hannaford in
Rating:Essay Length: 1,192 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: August 27, 2010 -
Immanuel Kant's Ethics of Pure Duty
Immanuel Kant's Ethics Of Pure Duty In Comparison To John Stuart Mill's Utilitarian Ethics Of Justice Immanuel Kant and John Stuart Mill are philosophers who addressed the issues of morality in terms of how moral traditions are formed. Immanuel Kant has presented one viewpoint in The Grounding For The Metaphysics of Morals that is founded on his belief that the worth of man is inherent in his ability to reason. John Stuart Mill holds another
Rating:Essay Length: 2,803 Words / 12 PagesSubmitted: August 30, 2010 -
Utilitarianism and Kantian Ethics
Utilitarianism and Kantian Ethics Ethics is one part of philosophy that will always be studied, and like most subjects in philosophy, will never be viewed the same by everyone. There are so many cultures that have so many different beliefs about the way a person's life should be lived out. Things like religion, poverty, and mental health all contribute to our beliefs in ethics. Some people believe that the mental state of a person or
Rating:Essay Length: 1,240 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: September 2, 2010 -
Ethical Imperative
THE ETHICAL IMPERATIVE Today's businesses are entrenched in a great conflict. The interests of the stockholders and the interests of the populace at large seem to be in constant turmoil. On one hand, stockholders desire profit for themselves, and on the other, the general population does not care to be exploited by those whose sole motive is profit. This is a conflict because those who buy a business's products tend to be in the general
Rating:Essay Length: 2,939 Words / 12 PagesSubmitted: September 3, 2010 -
Business Ethics
Ethics in Business - From a business perspective, working under government contracts can be a very lucrative proposition. In general, a stream of orders keep coming in, revenue increases and the company grows in the aggregate. The obvious downfalls to working in this manner is both higher quality expected as well as the extensive research and documentation required for government contracts. If a part fails to perform correctly it can cause minor glitches as well
Rating:Essay Length: 2,345 Words / 10 PagesSubmitted: September 4, 2010 -
Bio-Ethics
Bio-Ethics By: Travis Redman 4/3/00 The issue of bio-ethics presents a myriad of new dilemmas; all of which have arisen in the recent past, and must be addressed in the near future. The majority of these questions stem from the introduction of new, genetically-engineered organisms. These organisms, or at least many of them, are created in laboratories, by gene splicing, swapping, etc. and essentially, these scientists are playing god, creating biological entities as they want
Rating:Essay Length: 469 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: September 5, 2010 -
Educating Ethical Behavior: Aristotle's Views on Akrasia
EDUCATING ETHICAL BEHAVIOR: ARISTOTLE'S VIEWS ON AKRASIA Deborah Kerdeman University of Washington "Can the teaching of ethics really help cleanse the business world of shady dealings?" Asked by Newsweek magazine during the height of the recent Wall-Street scandals,1 this query resonates with perennial concerns about whether or not virtue can be taught and how such instruction might best be effected. The problem, Newsweek declares, is not that students lack ethical standards or are incapable of
Rating:Essay Length: 4,594 Words / 19 PagesSubmitted: September 7, 2010 -
Personal Ethical Codes
Benjamin Ross Bunnell Ethic: Final Paper Wirtz December 17, 2001 Personal Ethical Codes This is really the first time I've been asked to give description of the ethical codes I live by, so I'll narrow them down the best I can. This papers main theme is "My ethical codes," but I want to show you how I plan to conduct myself in and out of the publics' eyes as a student and in the future
Rating:Essay Length: 640 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: September 18, 2010 -
Business Ethics Essay (grapes of Wrath
Business Ethics Essay Business ethics are a moral code that people conducting any sort of business should feel honorably obligated to follow. People are definitely morally responsible to follow a code of ethics and should never cheat each other. Parts of this code of ethics should be honesty, integrity, fidelity, charity, responsibility, and self-discipline. Those ethics should apply both to a person buying something, and a person selling something. I don't believe that a person
Rating:Essay Length: 449 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: September 19, 2010 -
Ethics in Buddhism and Change over Time
"Ethics" in a particular belief system, is a moral philosophy or set of moral principles and rules of conduct that a group of people believe in and live by. In the Buddhist religion, the fundamental Buddhist teaching is the doctrine of conditionality. Everything is dependent on conditions - nothing has a fixed and final essence and this includes ourselves. Buddhism seeks to minimize any thoughts or actions, that cause humans to suffer and that suffering
Rating:Essay Length: 1,279 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: September 19, 2010 -
Morals and Ethics
Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, and Nietzsche all had their own ideas for which one could reach happiness in his/her life. All have similarities in there reasoning except Nietzshe, who contradicts the others entirely. Plato states that to understand virtue is happiness. In turn virtue suffices for happiness and is necessary. Also he intuits that human reasoning prevails over spirited element or a person?s appetite. Aristotle?s arguments relate with Plato, but he builds more to it and
Rating:Essay Length: 1,211 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: September 21, 2010 -
Business Ethics Are Set to Set to Stage a Comeback - Article Review
Introduction Background The literature being studied is an article written by Hellen O' Sullivan, the Director of Scientific Methods Australia. The article entitled "Business ethics are set to set to stage a comeback" was published on the th page of The Australian Financial Review on the 6th February 1990. Literature Review Basically, the article discussed several important issues about business ethics. One of the most prominent was the remark she made about business ethics making
Rating:Essay Length: 3,310 Words / 14 PagesSubmitted: September 27, 2010 -
Business Ethics
Business Ethics Ethics in Business From a business perspective, working under government contracts can be a very lucrative proposition. In general, a stream of orders keep coming in, revenue increases and the company grows in the aggregate. The obvious downfalls to working in this manner is both higher quality expected as well as the extensive research and documentation required for government contracts. If a part fails to perform correctly it can cause minor glitches as
Rating:Essay Length: 2,347 Words / 10 PagesSubmitted: September 28, 2010 -
Business Ethics
A Role of Ethics and Social Responsibilities in Management. Ethics can be defined as a process of evaluating actions according to moral principal of values(A.Alhemoud). Throughout the centuries people were trying to choose between profit and moral. Perhaps, some of them obtain both, but every time it could have roused ethical issues. Those issues concern fairness, justice, rightness or wrongness; as a result it can only be resolved according to ethical standards. Setting the ethical
Rating:Essay Length: 440 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: September 29, 2010 -
Business: Practical Application Vs. Ethics
Business: Practical application vs. ethics Pete Holiday said "Capitalism needs to function like a game of tug-of-war. Two opposing sides need to continually struggle for dominance, but at no time can either side be permitted to walk away with the rope." It seems that college is just training for a businessperson to deal with that tug of war. Michael Inciardi, a York College Senior, thought that one of the most important skills he acquired from
Rating:Essay Length: 1,048 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: September 29, 2010 -
Accounting Ethics
If someone were to ask you what you thought was the most deceitful profession, certified public accountants would most certainly not be the first to come to mind. That is because CPAs are known and respected for their honesty. The profession goes out of its way to project that image, and there is a certain amount of truth to it. However, not all CPAs are squeaky clean and respected for their honesty. Some are quite
Rating:Essay Length: 645 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: October 2, 2010 -
The Ethical Dimensions of Budhism
The Ethical Dimensions of: Buddhism The Ethical Dimensions of: Buddhism Outline I. Introduction a. What is ethics? b. What is global ethics? c. Purpose of Buddhism regarding ethics and global ethics? II. Buddhism a. Description of Buddhism i. What is it? ii. Where did it originate? iii. When did it originate? iv. How did it originate? b. Perspective i. What is ethical within Buddhism? 1. What makes Buddhism similar or different from other religions?
Rating:Essay Length: 265 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: October 3, 2010 -
Higher Immediacy Contrasted with Ethical and Aesthetic
Question: Explain higher immediacy by contrasting it with the ethical and the aesthetic. Higher immediacy or religious faith is the most important achievement made by a person because only faith offers an individual to have a chance to become a "true self". Self is what is done throughout life which God judges for infinity. Consequently, humans have a huge responsibility because those decided choices in life constitute the eternal salvation or damnation. With the religious
Rating:Essay Length: 470 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: October 4, 2010 -
Advertising Ethics
The age of advertising today is not what it used to be years ago. Pharmaceutical companies are spending on average billions of dollars to market their drugs directly to the consumers. With this comes a potential harm to some consumers due to the fact that they feel like they are free to ask for anything that may stop the symptoms they have. Should the FDA take a stand in putting a stop to how certain
Rating:Essay Length: 1,267 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: October 5, 2010 -
Cloning Is Ethically and Morally Wrong
Cloning is Ethically and Morally Wrong The question shakes us all to our very souls. For humans to consider the cloning of one another forces them all to question the very concepts of right and wrong that makes them all human. The cloning of any species, whether they be human or non-human, is ethically and morally wrong. Scientists and ethicist alike have debated the implications of human and non-human cloning extensively since 1997; when scientist
Rating:Essay Length: 961 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: October 7, 2010