Dr. J's Biz-Ethics in an Expresso cup
Ecological Economics
A relatively recent discipline that calculates the value of an ecosystem in terms of what it would cost to provide the benefits and services it now furnishes us. For instance, determining the economic value of natural wetlands in providing flood control
Strict product liability
AKA liability without fault. Seller/manufacturer can be liable if product's defective condition makes it unreasonably dangerous, even without showing that it was negligent
Weasel Words
Ambiguous, evasive words that shy away from making a direct claim. "Helps to promote weight loss."
Harm principle
Another liberty-limiting principle. It is the doctrine that the law may justifiably restrict the freedom of the individual in the interest of preventing harm to others
Trade secrets
Any formula, pattern, device, or compilation of information which is used in one's business and which give one an opportunity to obtain an advantage over competitors who do not know or use it. Example: formula for Coca-Cola
Employment at will
Arrangement in which either the employer or the employee may terminate an employment relationship at any time without advance notice or reason
Negligence
Basic elements plaintiff must establish: duty (to exercise due care, act like a reasonable prudent person), breach of duty, causation, damages. Contributory negligence is where a plaintiff's own negligence is a complete bar to any recovery. Comparative negligence is where % of plaintiff's own negligence reduces any of their recovery pro rata
Civic activities off-the-job
Companies that put pressure on their employees to participate in civic activities off the job may infringe on employees' right of privacy. Also, a company pressuring employees to do so may collide with accelerating job demands, making employees spend time away from their families - contributing to burnout and resentment
Legal paternalism
Doctrine that the law may justifiably restrict the freedom of the individual for his or her own good. A liberty-limiting principle. Especially important for protection of minors. Libertarian generally opposed to paternalism for non-minors.
Modified-gullible-consumer standard
FTC's regulatory standard that protects consumers from advertisements that would mislead a significant percentage of people, regardless of whether those people acted reasonable or not
Dependent Effect
Galbraith's idea that advertisers shape the wants and perceived needs of consumers
Free rider problem
Getting a benefit from other companies making efforts to reduce pollution while not taking the same measures to reduce pollution themselves
Ecosystem
Includes the total ecological community of both living and nonliving things
Caveat emptor
Literally means "buyer beware." Consumers bear complete responsibility for accepting the consequences of their product choices. Consumers are held to the ideal of being knowledgeable, shrewd, and skeptical about the products they purchase.
Abuse of official position
May involve using subordinates for non-organization-related work, using corporate funds for vacation travel, and billing a company for unnecessary travel
Right-to-livable environment
Moral theorist William T. Blackstone claims that the right to a livable environment is a fundamental human right, not just a desirable state of affairs
Naturalistic or Eco-centric ethics
Nature has value in and of itself, apart from whatever interest human beings take toward it
Children's advertising
Problem: very young kids don't know the difference between fantasy and reality, so they lack experience and capacity for judgement; ads basically use the kids - manipulate them - to nag parents to buy the products/ services
Privacy
Protects the wish to control intimate or personal information about ourselves and not permit it to be freely available to everyone. Privacy rights must be respected if we are to function as complete, self-governing agents
Moral status of non-human animals
Since non-human animals can experience pain and pleasure, they - like us - have an interest in receiving minimal pain. This shared interest in pain-avoidance between human and non-human animals is behind Peter Singer's argument that we should have equal human considerations of interests across species, avoiding "speciesism" - the view that impacts of human actions on other animals are morally insignificant
Puffery
Super exaggerated or fanciful claims about a product that nobody would believe. "Breakfast of champions," "world's best coffee"
MacPherson vs. Buick Case
The 1916 ruling abandoned the old privity-of-contract doctrine (requiring a direct contractual relationship). Upshot is that one was no longer limited to suing just the retailer for defective products, but could now sue the manufacturer (deep pocket) for product liability claims based on defective products
Living Wage
The amount of income a full-time employee needs to earn to afford the necessities of life, support a family, and live above the poverty line
Insider Trading
The buying or selling of stocks (or other financial securities) on the basis of material non-public information and is likely to affect the price of the stock Rationales for banning: unfairness, breach of fiduciary duty of executives, hurts public confidence in stock market ("rigged game"). Counter argument: promotes efficiency of market by accelerating flow of info to investors/ shareholders (Manne)
Spillover/ externality
The disparity (difference) between private industrial costs and public (external) social costs
Tragedy of the commons
The reverse of Adam Smith's "invisible hand." TOC happens when each person's pursuit of their own self interest ends up making everybody worse off. Example: overfishing
Hawthorne effect
The workplace phenomenon that managers just giving some attention to and recognition of workers can enhance their productivity and motivation
Conflict of Interest
These tend to occur when employees' private interests are substantial enough to potentially interfere with their job duties
Whistle-blowing
When an employee informs the public about illegal immoral conduct occurring in his or her organization. (Sherron Watkins at Enron). Standard view i that must have an appropriate moral motive (not seeking revenge), must first exhaust internal channels before going public, must have compelling evidence of wrongdoing, should first analyze the dangers, and have a reasonable likelihood of success
Job Satisfaction
When employees at all occupational levels were asked to rank what is important to them, the order that the rank themed in the so-called Herzberg survey was: Interesting work; sufficient help, support, and information to accomplish the job; enough authority to carry out the work; good pay; opportunity to develop special skills; job security; chance to see the results of their work
Anthropocentric ethic
Wilderness areas, animal species, and the natural world in general are all valuable only because people care about them. Wm. Baxter: "Penguins are important because people enjoy seeing them walk around rocks."
Subliminal advertising
ads that communicate messages below the level of conscious awareness. Hidden visual messages, or sub-auditory messages picked up by your subconscious
Future generations
the philosopher Annette Baier claims it is important to acknowledge our obligations to consider the good of the continuing human community