1. Summary lecture 1: Morals and Ethics
1.1. Introduction to Business Ethics
1.2. Normative Theories of Ethics
2. Literature summary lecture 1
2.1. 101 – Crane et al. (2019): Chapter 3: Evaluating Business Ethics
2.2. 102 – Awad et al. (2018): The Moral Machine Experiment
2.3. 103 – Bazerman (2020): A New Model for Ethical Leadership
2.4. 104 – TED talk by Michael Sandel (2013): Why we shouldn’t trust markets in our civic life
3. Summary lecture 2: Behaviors and Actions
3.1. Descriptive Theories in Ethics
3.1.1. Ethical Decision-making Process
3.1.2. Individual and Situational Factors
3.2. Cognitive Biases
3.3. Ethics in Action
3.3.1. Ethical Leadership
3.3.2. Business Ethics Tools
4. Literature summary lecture 2
4.1. 201 – Crane et al. (2019): Chapter 4: Making Decisions in Business Ethics
4.2. 202 – Banaji et al. (2003): How (Un)ethical Are You?
4.3. 203 – Ciulla (2020): Ethics and Effectiveness: The Nature of Good Leadership
4.4. 204 – TED talk by Kelly Richmond Pope (2017): How Whistle-Blowers Shape History
5. Summary lecture 3: Strategies and Stakeholders
5.1. Changing Management and Behavior
5.2. Social Entrepreneurship (Mair, 2020)
5.3. Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability
5.4. Stakeholder Thinking
6. Literature summary lecture 3
6.1. 301 Hoffman (2021): Management as a Calling – Chapter 17: Your Role in Your Own Future
6.2. 302 Griskevicius (2012): The Evolutionary Bases for Sustainable Behavior: Implications for
Marketing, Policy, and Social Entrepreneurship
6.3. 303 Mair (2020): Social Entrepreneurship: Research as Disciplined Exploration
6.4. 304 BSR (2019): Five-Step Approach to Stakeholder Engagement
7. Summary lecture 4: Challenges and Solutions
7.1. Broader Context of Business
7.1.1. Anthropocene and Key Sustainability Trends
7.1.2. Frameworks for Sustainability
7.2. Business and Climate Change
7.2.1. Climate Change Science
7.2.2. Climate Change Targets
7.3. Towards a Sustainable Economy
7.3.1. Circular Economy
7.3.2. Sustainable Business Models
8. Literature summary lecture 4
8.1. 401 Kubiszewski et al. (2013): Beyond GDP: Measuring and Achieving Global Genuine
Progress
8.2. 402 Atasu et al. (2021): The Circular Business Model
8.3. 403 IPCC (2021): Climate Change – Summary for Policymakers
8.4. 404 Joyce & Paquin (2016): The Triple Layered Business Model Canvas: A Tool to Design
More Sustainable Business Models
1
,Ethics and the Future of Business
Lecture 1: Morals & Ethics
12 September 2022 | Arno Kourula
Table of Contents
1. Introduction to Business Ethics
2. Normative Theories of Ethics
Ethics, Responsibility and Sustainability at ABS
Mission of ABS: “Open mindedness, independence, critical thinking, balancing our entrepreneurial
attitude with corporate engagement and social responsibility”.
Values of ABS: Excellence; Critical and independent thinking; Social engagement; An entrepreneurial
and creative attitude.
1. Introduction to Business Ethics
Morality, Ethics, and Ethical theory
- Morality: Humans’ ability to distinguish between right and wrong.
- Ethics is the systematic study of morality.
o Systematically analyzing what is right and wrong
o Ethics is cumulative. New information is not the best. Ancient thinking is still
extremely valuable.
- Ethical theories are principles and rules that determine right and wrong in different
situations.
- Normative ethics: The study of how we ought to behave.
o Key questions: Principles and outcomes.
Ethics
There is an on-going discussion about morality with a very long history.
Ethics typically examines right and wrong from the perspective of a human being
(anthropocentric), instead of, for instance, nature.
- Key questions include:
o What kind of moral principles should guide our actions?
o What kind of aims should we have?
- Ethics is not just theorization of morals, but the aim is also to affect practice.
- Ethical theories can give contradictory solutions to the same problem.
Business ethics: The study of business situations, activities, and decisions where issues of right and
wrong are addressed.
2
,Ethics and the Future of Business
Do We Need Ethics if We Have Law?
In society, morality is the foundation of the law.
Law and ethics are partly overlapping. Nonetheless:
1. The law does not cover all ethical issues (e.g., cheating on your partner).
2. Not all legal issues are ethical (e.g., driving on the right side of the road).
3. Law and ethics can involve contradictions (e.g., Apartheid).
- The road from unethical to illegal is short and slippery.
- Companies can operate in locations with lacking legal infrastructure.
- Expectations from stakeholders can be much higher than what law tells businesses to do.
Moral Orientations
There are many moral principles. In general, there is not one best moral principle. A combination of
principles would be preferred.
- Follow the moral guidance of your religion.
- Follow your conscience.
- Aim at your own benefit.
- Do your duty.
- Respect yourself and others.
- Do not violate human rights.
- Support the common good.
- Act with fairness and justice.
- Be a good person.
Moral Machine
The Moral Machine was an experiment to gather human perspective on moral decisions by AI in self-
driving cars. Differences between religions, geographic locations, demographics, etc. were taken
from the experiment.
- There were quite some differences between the cultural clusters (see below).
3
, Ethics and the Future of Business
2. The Normative Ethical Theories
Principles vs. Outcomes
1. Egoism
Usually, egoism is not considered as an ethical theory, although this view is very influential in
economics.
- An action is morally right if the decision-maker freely decides in order to pursue either their
(short-term) desires or their (long-term) interests.
o Authors: Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), Adam Smith (1723-1790), popularized by Ayn
Rand (1905-1982).
- The influence of egoism is related to the perception of ideal markets and Adam Smith’s
”invisible hand”:
o Adam Smith: Egoism is how we should model our economy, as everyone is self-
interested.
Problems with Ethical Egoism
- Ethical egoism is inconsistent as it ”condones blatant immoral wrongs, since 'anything goes’
(e.g., violence against the vulnerable, theft, even murder-as long as the egoist's needs are
served” (Crane et al., 2019)
o Thus, a moral view based on short-term satisfaction of needs is contradictory with
our moral principles.
Enlightened egoism: Focuses on meeting long-term human interests and applies some moral
principles.
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