The doctor is at the store-buying snack when he sees the store clerk and the child start arguing. The clerk confronts the child for stealing and threatens to call the police. The doctor stops the clerks by offering the amount due for the child’s food. The clerk greedily accepts the money and tells the child do not return or next time the police will come. After the confrontation, the clerk asks the doctor “why did he pay for a common theft?” The doctor humbly replies, “That once was me.” The child challenged the doctor’s ethics because he knew that it was wrong to steal, but when you have very little to your name a person will steal to survive. Persuasion comes into play when the doctor had to convince the clerk with money to let the child …show more content…
Yes it is wrong to kill another for revenge, however if it is a loved one killed for no reason, the mind will be persuaded by hate to kill. Yes it is morally wrong to murdered, however persuasion by emotions can cause major damaged to ones ethics. Ethics are hard to agree with because not everyone has the same point of view, yet persuading someone can be the bigger challenge. The one thing that starts all the arguments is when you challenge another person’s morals. It all goes back to the doctor and the clerk. The clerk wanted to get the child in trouble because the child stole from him, however the doctor put was in the position at one point. By the doctor convincing the clerk that not everyone who is down on his or her luck just needs another chance, the clerk let the child leave.
In certain situations ethics can be thrown out the window but with the right persuasion it can be changed. You cannot expect someone to say that “this is the laws of ethics, follow them.” More than likely every time there will be an argument, ethics are not set in stone, they are meant to be challenged or persuaded to change the mind of others. Put yourself in that person’s shoes and try to understand that person’s point of view. The argument is meant to be creative persuade your ethics onto others for them to eventually not necessarily agree with you point but to