Current Ethical Issues Paper XMTG / 216 December 19‚ 2010 Different people have different understandings of what constitutes ethical behavior. There are laws that help define what is legal and what is not‚ but the differences between moral ethics are not always clear. These types of moral ethics often lead to ethical dilemmas. According to Trevino & Nelson (2007)‚ “it might surprise many people to learn that there were few laws protecting consumers before the 1960s. At the turn of the
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Ethical Lens Inventory I’ve always thought of myself as a people person and this Ethical Lens Inventory confirms my pervious thinking. My preferred ethical lens view point is reputational lens. This means I use my intuition to determine what character traits best serve the community. Through this ethical lens inventory I learned that my blind spot is unrealistic role expectations. I can see this in my everyday life as I find myself disappointed when people do not perform the duties or task
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Topic sentence: * In my results from the Ethical Lens Inventory; my personal preferred lens is Relationship and Reputation Lens. My blind spot is overconfidence in process or unrealistic role expectations. In the results it states that I occasionally trust the process a great deal‚ because I trust that a consistent process result in a just outcome for all. I believe that my strengths are my behavior‚ tools for analyzing problems and gift. My ethical behavior is fair and living out role responsibilities
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The Ethical Lens Inventory is designed to help you determine which of four ethical lenses – four primary ethical perspectives – help you determine what to do when faced with an ethical dilemma that doesn’t have a clear answer. Your preferred ethical lens depends on your core values – the ideals that propel you to action. Each ethical lens emphasizes underlying core values in a slightly different way. Two of the ethical lenses emphasize using rationality – critical thinking – to determine
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Ethics Awareness Inventory Summary Tammy Corbitt PSYCH/545 May 30‚ 2011 Dr. Terry Portis Ethics Awareness Inventory Summary The Ethics Awareness Inventory is a guide to the personal awareness of my ethical perspective and style. This summary will show how others and I approach ethical decision making. I will explain the importance of understanding my own personal ethical perspective. I will analyze the relationship between personal and professional ethics in the field of psychology
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lifestyle that everyone could maintain and live. What I learned through the Ethical Lens Inventory: Through the Ethical Lens Inventory I learned that my ethics has some weaknesses and strengths. I also have a blind spot. It showed me my classic and core values. It showed me that my definition of ethical behavior is like my personal ethic statement it is creating the greatest good by living out role responsibility. Preferred Ethical Lens: The result of my personal preferred lens is the Results Lens and
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Ethics Awareness InventoryIntroductionEthics can be defined as a philosophical study of moral values based on the concept of right and wrong. An ethical perspective could be considered as a person ’s individual perception of moral values‚ beliefs‚ and rules based on his or her personal view of right and wrong. The Ethics Awareness Inventory is a test devised to help individuals learn or analyze personal characteristics that reflect individual perspectives on ethics-one ’s ethical perspective. Through
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Ethics Awareness Inventory Analysis: Obligation According to the Ethics Awareness Inventory [EAI] (Williams Institute for Ethics and Management [WIEM]‚ 2003)‚ "[My] ethical perspective is most likely to be based on obligation‚ and least likely to be based on equity." In this paper‚ I will apply the results of this inventory to my personal and professional development‚ explaining how my educational experience has shaped my ethical thinking‚ addressing my use of ethics in thinking and decision-making
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Ethics Awareness Inventory Analysis Heather Hieserich GEN/480 March 5th‚ 2012 John Monasterial Interpreting and Analyzing the Results The results for the ethics awareness inventory that I took last week for class revealed that my ethical profile is most related to obligation and least related to equity. Being related mostly to obligation means that my ethical profile is based on a sense of duty to do what is correct or right. Being least related to equity means that my ethical profile is
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that they work for and as well as for the employees that are working for them. By taking the Ethic Awareness Inventory Assessment to see how well I do to realize my own ethical standpoint and compare the result with the inventory analysis. To my surprise‚ I scored high in the obligation and the results profiles. It stated real clearly that ethical decision-making involves three components awareness‚ articulation‚ and application (Ethics
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