Ethical- Decision Making University of the Rockies Mabel Drafton Abstract Countertransference is how therapists distort the way they perceive and react to a client (Corey‚ Corey‚ and Callanan‚ 2011). Therapists are expected to identify and deal with their own reactions with consultation‚ personal therapy‚ and supervision that their clients will not be negatively affected by the therapist’s problem. Personal therapy is an effective way for therapists to raise
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Ethical Decision Making Ethics is a set of moral principles that set forth people’s actions when in conflict with having to examine and decide what is right or wrong‚ what is legal or illegal‚ and what is proper or improper to do. Every business action and decision we make during the course of our lives could indicate when a situation has a wrong or right implication. Most people tend to make business ethical decisions based on personal interest‚ economic status‚ professional values‚ and social
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Parameters of Ethical Decision Making Ethical decision making is an essential aspect in understanding and demonstrating the values of an organization. The intense pressures of business may not always allow time for reflection‚ and the high stakes may tempt us to compromise our ideals. Many of us already have well-developed ethical outlooks but by considering various approaches to ethical decision making‚ we are better equipped to make the right choices when the need arises. Joseph Weiss (2009) identifies
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Ethics is the principles one uses to make an outright decision. It also refers to the standards of how humans react in different conditions in which they find themselves as many things such as parents‚ professionals‚ friends and so on. After reading the two articles ¨Thinking Ethically¨ which reviews theoretical approaches to ethical decision making‚ ¨A Framework for Ethical Decision Making¨ which describes a model of ethical decision making and ¨The Case of the Sole Remaining Supplier¨ which talk
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are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness; wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness” - John Stuart Mill. This particular quote refers to the utilitarian approach which states that in all our actions we must always strive to produce the greatest possible balance of good or evil. The utilitarian approach deals with consequences. It tries both to increase the good done and to reduce the harm done. Immanuel Kant was an important component in modern philosophy. He combined
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1 Introduction Utilitarianism is a major position in normative ethics stemming from the late 18th and 19th century philosophers Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill. Contrary to the deontological approach to ethics that perceives morality as a duty or a moral rule that has to be followed‚ utilitarianism is a form of teleological ethics focussing on the consequences of actions meaning that the moral value of an action is solely determined by its outcome. Thus an action is considered right if it tends
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Business Statistics: A Decision-Making Approach 7th Edition Chapter 11 Hypothesis Tests and Estimation for Population Variances Business Statistics: A Decision-Making Approach‚ 7e © 2008 Prentice-Hall‚ Inc. Chap 11-1 Chapter Goals After completing this chapter‚ you should be able to: Formulate and complete hypothesis tests for a single population variance Find critical chi-square distribution values from the chi-square table Formulate and complete hypothesis
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A Systematic Approach to Decision Making A logical and systematic decision-making process helps you address the critical elements that result in a good decision. By taking an organized approach‚ you’re less likely to miss important factors‚ and you can build on the approach to make your decisions better and better. There are six steps to making an effective decision: 1. Create a constructive environment. 2. Generate good alternatives. 3. Explore these alternatives. 4. Choose the best alternative
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Trevino & Nelson Ethical Decision Making (Privacy Pressures TEAM 2) Instruction: Details: 1. Gather the Facts. • 2. Define the Ethical Issues (I) in moral terms (e.g.‚ Is X action morally right‚ given Y?). 3. Identify the affected Parties. Utilitarian View Virtue Ethics 4. Identify the Consequences. State: (a) the consequentialist principle (CP) used to assess the actions of the decision maker (e.g.‚ egoism‚ utilitarianism); (b) the standard implicit in this principle (e.g.‚ action
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7 Ethical Decision Making and Behavior As we practice resolving dilemmas we find ethics to be less a goal than a pathway‚ less a destination than a trip‚ less an inoculation than a process. —Ethicist Rushworth Kidder WHAT’S AHEAD This chapter surveys the components of ethical behavior—moral sensitivity‚ moral judgment‚ moral motivation‚ and moral character—and introduces systematic approaches to ethical problem solving. We’ll take a look at four decision-making formats: Kidder’s ethical checkpoints
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