The (EIA) Ethical Awareness Inventory analysis utilizes four subjects to analyze some of the characteristics of different ethical perspectives. The four ethical subjects represent “CORE” which includes: Character‚ Obligation‚ Results‚ and Equity. The first subject character‚ known as the virtue theory‚ is based on personal virtue. The second subject is obligation‚ which is known as deontology and‚ is based on a sense of duty to do what is right. The third subject is a result‚ which is known as utilitarianism
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Ethical Dilemmas 1) You are a prosecutor in a jurisdiction that does not use the grand jury system. An elderly man has administered a lethal dose of sleeping tablets to his wife ‚who was suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. He calmly turned himself in to the police department‚ and the case is on the front page of the paper. It is entirely up to you whether to charge him with murder. What would you do? What criteria did you use to arrive at your decision? 2) You are a probation officer and
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A beam of sunlight blinded me momentarily as I stepped out the door. I slowly and resentfully walked down the stairs and once at the bottom turned around to admire the building that had seen me grow. It wasn’t t the nicest building in town but it was certainly home and today I had to let go. I was only eight but I understood that this was the end of life as I knew it and the beginning of a completely new adventure. A part of me felt excited for tomorrow and the wonders it could bring‚ but most of
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Ethical principles Beauchamp and Childress (2013)‚ a decision or situation is ethically correct if it meet’s the four principles and are respected and balanced it is a tool for ethical analysis of the situation. Autonomy: This principle is that people make their own decisions relating to care for this to happen if the individual has capacity to make decisions‚ individuals need to be informed the about options‚ including the pros and cons. Non-maleficence: This relates to the requirement not to harm
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5 Steps of Ethical Analysis 1. identifying the facts 2. defining the conflict or dilemma and identifying the values involved 3. identifying the stakeholders 4. identifying options that can be taken 5. identifying potential consequences of actions 1. As technology becomes wider spread the misuse of it has become inevitable. Some technology users feel that if they have access to data‚ regardless if it is legal or illegal‚ they will use it without considering the consequences their actions have
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An Ethical Analysis of Assisted Euthanasia Alicia Anderson Nataliya Cuna Tatyana Kovalevsky-Ziemelis Dwight Lyles Francis Njoku Grand Canyon University NRS 437V November 5‚ 2014 An Ethical Analysis of Assisted Euthanasia Voluntary and assisted euthanasia is not a new phenomenon. End of life care for long term‚ short term‚ and terminal illnesses has always occurred. However‚ with advances in medicine‚ patients’ lives may be lengthened. For many individuals‚ end of life care is paired with pain
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Why are individuals so important to the NASA project teams? People are the most important thing NASA has got as asset‚ they are things that make a program so successful‚ these people are form the social capital of the organization. Indeed‚ the most important builders of these social capital networks in organizations are the experiences people have working together overtime. In an organization like NASA‚ where most work is project work‚ being part of a series of project teams with overlapping but
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Learning at NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory Summary National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) was established by Congress on October 1‚ 1958‚ in order for the United States to keep up with the technological advancements achieved from former Soviet Union’s successful launch of the Sputnik (1957). The Apollo Era-Mission had risen from the support of John F. Kennedy’s goal‚ which was “landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to Earth.” Prioritization at NASA evolved
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about 0.5% of the $3.4 trillion United States federal budget. Once again‚ NASA. science is focused on better understanding of the Universe. As Carl Sagan said‚ too much money is being wasted on unnecessary pursuits‚ compared to the little amount required by NASA. If the government no longer funded NASA‚ space would most likely become privatized‚ meaning that corporations would begin to commercialize space. If we don’t fund NASA any longer‚ companies will begin to exploit yet another thing that should
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A major player from the Challenger Disaster is Allan McDonald. He was the director of the solid rocket booster project and the Morton-Thiokol representative at Cape Kennedy. Out of the eight different Impediments to Responsible Action‚ McDonald most represented “fear.” This is shown during the Cape Kennedy conference when “[McDonald] refused to sign the formal recommendation to launch…” but failed to warn everyone that the rocket’s O-rings would not function at one hundred-percent due to the low
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