Chapter 4: Business Ethics 1. Ethical dilemma is a decision that ‘invites’ a conflict of values; every good course of action has some significant negative consequences. 3 examples of ethical dilemmas: a. My father’ employee have just done a good job on a project. My father has promised him that my father would give him 20% bonus. Yet‚ due to company politics‚ my dad was unable to give him the bonus. My dad also implied that if he was to submit inflated expense reports for the next 2 months‚
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Questions 1. Question : The purpose of law is to Student Answer: provide a way of measuring our actions. punish us when our actions break the law. provide moral decision-making standards. a and b. Points Received: 3 of 3 Comments: 2. Question : The study of a branch of philosophy related to morals‚ moral principles‚ and moral judgments is called Student Answer: ethics. law. medical practice acts. utilitarianism
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This paper will discuss the hypothetical scenario and case problem 4.4 and its implications on unintentional tort or negligence. It can be found on page 124 of our textbook Business Law Today: Essentials‚ written by Roger LeRoy Miller and Gaylord A. Jentz. As read in the case‚ “Kim went to Ling ’s Market to pick up a few items for dinner. It was a rainy‚ windy day‚ and the wind had blown water through the door of Ling ’s Market each time the door opened. As Kim entered through the door‚ she slipped
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liable bec: (1) he actively managed the business; (2) there was evidence that CFTI obtained reasonably adequate insurance; and (3) there was a corporate tort in this case. Our jurisprudence is wanting to the definite scope of “corporate tort.” Essentially‚ “tort” consists in the violation of a right given or the omission of a duty imposed by law. Simply stated‚ it is a breach of legal duty. PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK‚ petitioner‚ vs. THE COURT OF APPEALS‚ RITA GUECO TAPNIO‚ CECILIO GUECO and
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repugnant epidemic that is currently plaguing the nation‚ especially in the medical field. The instances where minorities have had truly appalling treatment in hospitals are shameful‚ while others have been the victims of racial profiling. No matter the examples‚ racism has been around for hundreds of years and should be removed from society entirely‚ like the cancer it is. Especially in the medical field. One extremely horrific example of racism in medicine is the Syphilis study at Tuskegee Institute. The
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following questions. Scenario: WIRETIME‚ Inc.‚ Advertisement Has WIRETIME‚ Inc.‚ committed any torts? If so‚ explain. It seems WIRETIME‚ Inc. (a relatively new competitor) committed intentional tort advertising negative information in a well-known industry magazine in regard to BUGusa‚ Inc.’s devices being low quality and stating the devices works for one month only. An intentional tort occurs when a party intentionally caused another party to suffer injury or damage (Larson‚ 2005). In
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Week Two Student Guide This week you are introduced to the concept of torts and the risk management process. This may help you identify how an organization can minimize the tort liability risk for a company. The readings analyze intentional torts and negligence with the intentional torts against persons‚ as well as examples of cases that address this issue. You study unintentional tort (negligence)‚ and you discuss the seminal case of Palsgraf v. The Long Island Railroad Company. The readings
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Medical Errors Medical errors are responsible for injury in as many as 1 out of every 25 hospital patients; an estimated 48‚000-98‚000 patients die from medical errors each year. This means that more people die from medical errors than from motor vehicle accidents‚ breast cancer‚ or AIDS. Errors in health care have been estimated to cost more than $5 million per year in a large teaching hospital‚ and preventable health care-related cost the economy from $17 to $29 billion each year. What are
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LA110 Torts and Litigation I Week 4 Homework Assignment Part 2 Assignment: Answer all questions in paragraph format. Chapter 9 page 143: Review Questions 1 - 15 1. A vicarious liability is one person or a third party‚ may be found liable for the act of another or shares liability with the actor. 2. Imputed negligence is places upon one person responsibility for the negligence of another. 3. A respondent superior is a master liable in certain circumstances for the wrongful acts of his
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Entrepreneurship Law Final Exam 1. Who owns the CadWatt Solar cell technology? What rights‚ if any can SSC claim on it? SSC owned the technology‚ because the invention related to the SSC’s business and he had used some of SSC’s resources (namely‚ his SSC computer and SSC training sessions) when developing it. 2. What can Pierre do to make his departure from SSC amicable? Should he have left sooner? What ongoing obligations does he have to SSC? Pierre should consider returning
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