Reasoning about what should be done is known as _____ reasoning.

Networking

  • network traffic

    Network traffic is the amount of data that moves across a network during any given time.

  • dynamic and static

    In general, dynamic means 'energetic, capable of action and/or change, or forceful,' while static means 'stationary or fixed.'

  • MAC address (media access control address)

    A MAC address (media access control address) is a 12-digit hexadecimal number assigned to each device connected to the network.

Security

  • security information and event management (SIEM)

    Security information and event management (SIEM) is an approach to security management that combines security information ...

  • Evil Corp

    Evil Corp is an international cybercrime network that uses malicious software to steal money from victims' bank accounts and to ...

  • Trojan horse

    In computing, a Trojan horse is a program downloaded and installed on a computer that appears harmless, but is, in fact, ...

CIO

  • green IT (green information technology)

    Green IT (green information technology) is the practice of creating and using environmentally sustainable computing.

  • benchmark

    A benchmark is a standard or point of reference people can use to measure something else.

  • spatial computing

    Spatial computing broadly characterizes the processes and tools used to capture, process and interact with 3D data.

HRSoftware

  • employee self-service (ESS)

    Employee self-service (ESS) is a widely used human resources technology that enables employees to perform many job-related ...

  • learning experience platform (LXP)

    A learning experience platform (LXP) is an AI-driven peer learning experience platform delivered using software as a service (...

  • talent acquisition

    Talent acquisition is the strategic process employers use to analyze their long-term talent needs in the context of business ...

Customer Experience

  • BOPIS (buy online, pick up in-store)

    BOPIS (buy online, pick up in-store) is a business model that allows consumers to shop and place orders online and then pick up ...

  • real-time analytics

    Real-time analytics is the use of data and related resources for analysis as soon as it enters the system.

  • database marketing

    Database marketing is a systematic approach to the gathering, consolidation and processing of consumer data.

Cards Return to Set Details

Term
The study of ethics is different from the study of psychology and sociology in that the latter fields are
Definition
Term
Individual codes of conduct regarding how one should live, how one should act, what one should do, what kind of a person should one be, etc. is sometimes referred to as:
Definition
Term
Ethical business leadership is the skill to create circumstances in which good people are able to do good, and in which bad people are taught to do good.
Definition
Term
The primary aim of ethical values is that the well-being promoted through it is not of a/an __________ and _________ nature.
Definition
personal, selfish (check)
Term
All decisions within an organization can be covered by economic, legal, or company rules and regulations.
Definition
Term
This attribute inclines one to act or to choose one way rather than another.
Definition
Term
Few disciplines face the skepticism that a business ethics course commonly confronts.
Definition
Term
A firm's ethical reputation can provide competitive advantage or a disadvantage in the marketplace and with customers, suppliers, and employees.
Definition
Term
The branch of ethics that deals with the reasoning about how one should act is called
Definition
Term
Those beliefs and principles that provide the ultimate guide in a company's decision-making are called
Definition
Term
The basis of normative ethics is that these disciplines
Definition
presuppose some underlying values
Term
Examining business institutions from a social rather than an individual perspective is referred to as
Definition
decision-making for social responsibility
Term
Ethics requires that the promotion of human welfare be done
Definition
in a manner that is acceptable and reasonable from all relevant points of view
Term
Which among the following branches of study raises questions about justice, law, civic virtues, and political philosophy?
Definition
Term
Derived from an understanding of the definition of values, it is possible that the corporate culture in any organization can also
Definition
Term
DESCRIPTIVE sciences seek to provide an account of how and why people do act the way they do
Definition
Term
Ethically responsible business decision makers should move beyond a narrow concern with company stockholders and understand how decisions will affect a wide range of stakeholders
Definition
Term
Which among the following phrases indentifies norms that guide employees, implicitly more often than not, to behave in ways that the firm values and finds worthy?
Definition
Term
Since it is not required by the law, treating employees disrespectfully in not considered unethical
Definition
Term
The topic of 'social ethics' raises questions of justice, public policy, law, civic virtues, organizational structure, and political philosophy
Definition
Term
At its most basic level, ________ is/are concerned with how we act and how we live our lives.
Definition
Term
Philosophically speaking, values do not need to be positive or ethical in nature.
Definition
Term
In context to the subject, Nazi Germany and apartheid in South Africa reflect that
Definition
obedience to law is insufficient to fulfill one's ethical duties
Term
A/an ________ approach to business is at the center of business ethics
Definition
Term
Adherence to the prescribed law and compliance factors in a given country automatically ensures that the organization is ethically sound.
Definition
Term
As practiced by many social scientists, provides a descriptive and empirical account of those standards that actually guide behavior, as opposed to those standards that should guide behavior. Contrast with normative ethics, below.
Definition
Term
Those properties of life that contribute to human well-being and a life well lived. Ethical values would include such things as happiness, respect, dignity, integrity, freedom, companionship, health.
Definition
Term
Derived from the Greek word ethos, which refers to those values, norms, beliefs, and expectations that determine how people within a culture live and act. Ethics steps back from such standards for how people do act, and reflects on the standards by which people should live and act. At its most basic level, ethics is concerned with how we act and how we live our lives. Ethics involves what is perhaps the most monumental question any human being can ask: How should we live? Following from this original Greek usage, ethics can refer to both the standards by which an individual chooses to live her/his own personal life, and the standards by which individuals live in community with others (see morality below). As a branch of philosophy, ethics is the discipline that systematically studies questions of how we ought to live our lives.
Definition
Term
Sometimes used to denote the phenomena studied by the field of ethics. This text uses morality to refer to those aspects of ethics involving personal, individual decision making. "How should I live my life?" or "What type of person ought I be?" is taken to be the basic question of morality. Morality can be distinguished from questions of social justice , which address issues of how communities and social organizations ought to be structured.
Definition
Term
Ethics as a normative discipline that deals with norms, those standards of appropriate and proper (or "normal") behavior. Norms establish the guidelines or standards for determining what we should do, how we should act, what type of person we should be. Contrast with descriptive ethics, above.
Definition
Term
Those standards or guidelines that establish appropriate and proper behavior. Norms can be established by such diverse perspectives as economics, etiquette, or ethics.
Definition
Term
Involves reasoning about what one ought to do, contrasted with theoretical reasoning , which is concerned with what one ought to believe. Ethics is a part of practical reason.
Definition
Term
The area of ethics that is concerned with how we should live together with others and social organizations ought to be structured. Social ethics involves questions of political, economic, civic, and cultural norms aimed at promoting human well-being.
Definition
Term
In a general sense, a stakeholder is anyone who can be affected by decisions made within a business. More specifically, stakeholders are considered to be those people who are necessary for the functioning of a business.
Definition
Term
Involves reasoning that is aimed at establishing truth and therefore at what we ought to believe. Contrast with practical reasoning, which aims at determining what is reasonable for us to do.
Definition
Term
Those beliefs that incline us to act or to choose in one way rather than another. We can recognize many different types of values: financial, religious, legal, historical, nutritional, political, scientific, and aesthetic. Ethical values serve the ends of human well-being in impartial, rather than personal or selfish ways.
Definition
Term
Even if it may not be the best decision made, using a simple __________ might appear to relieve one of accountability for the decision.
Definition
Term
Among the following, identify the step that typically follows - considering available alternatives.
Definition
Comparing and weighing the alternatives
Term
A person who acts in a way that is based upon a careful consideration of _______ has acted in a more ethically responsible way than a person who acts without deliberation.
Definition
Term
Cosidering ways to mitigate harmful consequences, or to increase and promote beneficial consequences is part of
Definition
comparing and weighing alternatives
Term
Upon discovering a lost baseball glove, Joe decides to keep it, concluding that if he did not keep it, someone else would anyway. He figures, that if not the owner, at least he may benefit from it. This is an indication of a cognitive barrier arising from
Definition
considering only limited alternatives
Term
Which among the following distinguishes good people who make ethically responsible decisions from good people who do not?
Definition
Term
In the context satisficing, the very fact that a decision was reached by __ can convince everyone involved that it must be the most reasonable decision
Definition
Term
Which among the following steps involves predicting the likely, foreseeable, and the possible consequences to all the relevant stakeholders?
Definition
Compare and weigh the alternatives
Term
cognitive barriers to responsible, ethical decision-making.
Definition
An ignorance that is willful and intentional, considering limited alternatives, and satisficing
Term
One helpful exercise for considering the effects of a decision on others to
Definition
Term
In the broadest sense, which among the following can help explain ethical disagreements
Definition
Term
Identify the first step in making responsible ethical decisions
Definition
Term
Monitoring one's actions accordingly when faced with similar challenges in the future, and to evaluate the implications of one's decisions are all an ongoing part of
Definition
monitoring and learning from the outcomes of the decisions
Term
While considering the fact that anyone can make unethical choices, the questions that are most difficult to answer are often those that are most important to answer in
Definition
Term
Consequences, justifications, principles, rights, or duties are all methods to
Definition
compare and weigh alternatives
Term
The ability of losing sight of the ethical aspects while involved in the financial aspect of decisions is called
Definition
Term
Specifically, in some people, a set of __ inclines them to, without deliberation, act ethically
Definition
Term
The model for making ethically responsible decisions suggest that a certain type of __ can lead to making bad ethical choices
Definition
Term
Within a business setting, individuals must consider the ethical implications of
Definition
both personal and professional decision-making
Term
Identify the step that precedes monitoring the outcome in making an ethically resposible decision
Definition
Term
Philosophical ethics argues that a key test of ethical legitimacy is whether or not a decision would be acceptable from the point of view of all involved.
Definition
Term
Business or economic decisions and ethical decisions are not mutually exclusive
Definition
Term
Consequences or justifications are not the only means for comparing alternatives
Definition
Term
One of the major challenges associated with ethical decision-making is better understood by realizing that decisions involve
Definition
the interests of multiple stakeholders
Term
Moral imaginiation is one element that distinguishes good people who make ethically resposible decisions from good people who do not.
Definition
Term
The study of various character traits that can contribute to, or obstruct, a happy and meaningful human life is part of
Definition
Term
Utilitarianism opposes policies that aim to benefit only a small social, economic, or political minority
Definition
Term
The essence of utilitarianism is
Definition
its reliance on consequences
Term
Deontological ethical traditions direct us to act on the basis of moral principles such as respecting human rights
Definition
Term
What according to the authors will prove best for optimally satisfying the various interests in the two approaches to utilitarianism?
Definition
Term
Role-based duties concerned with professionals in business (lawyers, accountants, financial analysts, bankers, etc.) are often termed as
Definition
Term
An ethical tradition that directs us to decide based on overall consequences of our actions is termed
Definition
Term
A social contract functions to organize and ease relations between individuals
Definition
Term
According to the text, if child labor produces overall positive consequences to the economy, utilitarianism will support it.
Definition
Term
The utilitarian tradition has a long history or relying on __ for deciding on the ethical legitimacy of alternative decisions
Definition
Term
Among the ethical theories, the use of competitive markets as the most efficient means of maximizing happiness, would fall under the utilitarianism ethics theory
Definition
Term
Immanuel Kant's version which directs us to act according to those rules that could be universally agreed by all people forms part of the famous "Kantian __."
Definition
Term
__ was part of the same social movement that gave rise to modern democratic market capitalism.
Definition
Term
Which of the following focuses on the concept of practices and what type of people these practices are creating?
Definition
Virtue ethics framework of ethics
Term
According to which type of ethical framework would child labor in any country be tolerated?
Definition
Term
Virtue ethics remind us to look to the actual practices within businesses and ask what type of people these practices are creating
Definition
Term
Which ethical framework is based on the foundations of rules and the need for them to be followed, no matter the consequences?
Definition
Deontological framework of ethics
Term
WHich among the following provides a strong support for democratic institutions and policies?
Definition
Term
If a basic human value is individual happiness, then an action that promotes more of that is more reasonable and more justifiedfrom an ethical point of view.
Definition
Term
According to the utilitarian movement imbibing the tradition of Adam Smith, business managers should focus on profit maximization
Definition
Term
Which version of utilitarianism argues that questions of safely and risk should by determined by experts who establish standards that the business is required to meet
Definition
Term
Immanuel Kant argued that there is one fundamental ethical principle that one has to follow, no matter what the consequence. Identify it.
Definition
Respect the dignity of individuals
Term
One sector of economists that view profit maximization as a central idea to corporate responsibility are the following the
Definition
utilitarian framework of ethics
Term
Philosophical ethics seeks foundations that all reasonable people can accept, regardless of their
Definition
Term
Fundamentally, the concept of ___ is central to the deontological tradition.
Definition
Term
Requires a persuasive and rational justification for a decision. Rational justifications are developed through a logical process of decision making that gives proper attention to such things as facts, alternative perspectives, consequences to all stakeholders, and ethical principles.
Definition
ethical decision-making process
Term
When one is facing an ethical decision, the ability to envision various alternative choices, consequences, resolutions, benefits, harms.
Definition
Term
The tendency to ignore, or the lack of the ability to recognize, ethical issues in decision making.
Definition
Term
Psychologists and philosophers have long recognized that individuals cannot perceive the world independently of their own conceptual framework. Experiences are mediated by and interpreted through our own understanding and concepts. Thus, ethical disagreements can depend as much on a person's conceptual framework as on the facts of the situation. Unpacking our own and others' conceptual schema plays an important role in making ethically responsible decisions.
Definition
Term
Individuals within a business setting are often in situations in which they must make decisions both from their own personal point of view and from the perspective of the specific role they fill within an institution. Ethically responsible decisions require an individual to recognize that these perspectives can conflict and that a life of moral integrity must balance the personal values with the professional role-based values and responsibilities.
Definition
personal and professional decision making
Term
From the Greek for "self-ruled," autonomy is the capacity to make free and deliberate choices. The capacity for autonomous action is what explains the inherent dignity and intrinsic value of individual human beings.
Definition
Term
An imperative is a command or duty; "categorical" means that it is without exception. Thus a categorical imperative is an overriding principle of ethics. Philosopher Immanual Kant offered several formulations of the categorical imperative: act so as the maxim implicit in your acts could be willed to be a universal law; treat persons as ends and never as means only; treat others as subjects, not objects.
Definition
Term
The sum of relatively set traits, dispositions, and habits of an individual. Along with rational deliberation and choice, a person's character accounts for how she or he makes decisions and acts. Training and developing character so that it is disposed to act ethically is the goal of virtue ethics.
Definition
Term
Ethical theories, such as utilitarianism, that determine right and wrong by calculating the consequences of actions.
Definition
consequentialist theories
Term
Derived from the Greek word for "duty," deontological ethics stresses the ethical centrality of such things as duties, principles, and obligations. It denies that all ethical judgments can be made in terms of consequences.
Definition
Term
Those obligations that one is bound to perform, regardless of consequences. Duties might be derived from basic ethical principles, from the law, or from one's institutional or professional role.
Definition
Term
As a psychological theory, egoism holds that all people act only from self-interest. Empirical evidence strongly suggests that this is a mistaken account of human motivation. As an ethical theory, egoism holds that humans ought to act for their own self-interest. Ethical egoists typically distinguish between one's perceived best interests and one's true best interests.
Definition
Term
A character trait that involves the disposition to make sacrifices for the well-being of the object of loyalty, whether it be one's friend, country, or employer.
Definition
Term
Function to protect certain central interests from being sacrificed for the greater overall happiness. According to many philosophers, rights entail obligations: your rights create duties for others either to refrain from violating your rights ("negative" duties) or to provide you with what is yours by right ("positive" duties).
Definition
Term
In general, the theory that the rights and responsibilities of individuals are derived from a hypothetical contract between all members of that society. As a model of corporate social responsibility within business ethics, it argues that the responsibilities of business and management are derived from a hypothetical social contract between business institutions and society.
Definition
Term
An ethical theory that tells us that we can determine the ethical significance of any action by looking to the consequences of that act. Utilitarianism is typically identified with the policy of "maximizing the overall good" or, in a slightly different version, of producing "the greatest good for the greatest number."
Definition
Term
A heuristic device developed by philosopher John Rawls to ensure that decision making is done in impartial and fair ways. Rules accepted by parties behind a veil of ignorance are those made without knowledge of one's own characteristics, interests, and desires.
Definition
Term
An approach to ethics that studies the character traits or habits that constitute a good human life, a life worth living. The virtues provide answers to the basic ethical question "What kind of person should I be?"
Definition

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Reasoning about what should be done is known as _____ reasoning.

Reasoning about what should be done is known as _____ reasoning.

Reasoning about what should be done is known as _____ reasoning.