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BA 300 Practice mini final Questions And Answers

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BA 300 Practice mini final Questions And Answers c. Nozick's Rights Theory --> (Business is contractual, there is freedom from force and fraud for both parties [no one is obligated to pay money for mortgages] even if behind the scenes the company is acting on insider information.) Goldma...

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  • November 12, 2024
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  • BA 300
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BA 300 Practice mini final Questions And
Answers

c. Nozick's Rights Theory




--> (Business is contractual, there is freedom from force and fraud for both parties [no one is

obligated to pay money for mortgages] even if behind the scenes the company is acting on

insider information.) Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein publicly justified the firm

selling bundles of troubled mortgages to its clients at the same time it bet the firm's own money

that the value of those mortgages would fall by saying that Goldman's *clients knew what they

were buying*. Goldman, he said, was *simply offering its clients a service*. Mr. Blankfein's

response reflects an attitude that is most consistent with:




a. Virtue Ethics

b. Sound principles of organizational behavior.

c. Nozick's Rights Theory

d. Rawl's Theory of Justice

e. The Ethics of Care




Virtue Ethics

, BA 300 Practice mini final Questions And
Answers

--> (Virtue Ethics at its core is a belief that you should act to be the most self-righteous you can

be, and to always do what is right in the big picture. Meritocracy, the basis of judging people

based on ability/achievement is fundamental to this philosophy.) On March 14, 2012,

Greg Smith, a former Vice President of investment giant Goldman Sachs, published an essay in

the New York Times explaining why he was resigning from the firm. He had joined Goldman 12

years before right out of college, but he said he was leaving because he had come to believe that

Goldman had developed a culture of putting quick profits for the firm ahead of the interests of

the firm's clients. Smith wrote: *"My proudest moments in life . . . have all come through hard

work*, with no shortcuts. Goldman Sachs today has become *too much about shortcuts* and

*not enough about achievement*. It just doesn't feel right to me anymore." Mr. Smith's decision

was driven by:




a. Utilitarianism

b. The illusion of superiority

c. Virtue Ethics

d. Integrative Social Contracts Theory

e. A low desire for moral appropriation of self

, BA 300 Practice mini final Questions And
Answers
e. Nozick's Rights Theory




--> (Nozick's Theory is largely a libertarian viewpoint about taking ownership of yourself and

being free of outside influences. A nanny state is akin to the idea of the helicopter parent, where

you are constantly watched and influenced to make choices you may not otherwise make on your

own.) A July 17, 2009 article in the Wall Street Journal entitled "Drinks with a Jolt Draw

New Scrutiny" discusses limits that states are considering imposing on the marketing of

caffeinated alcoholic beverages such as Joose that are especially popular with college students.

One beer distributor complained that regulators were unfairly targeting such drinks. "*I really

believe in personal responsibility*, and I think it's ridiculous that the attorneys general have

turned it into a *nanny state*." The ethical theory that best reflects the beer distributor's reaction

to the proposed new regulations is:




a. The Ethic of Care

b. Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development

c. Integrative Social Contracts Theory

d. Rawl's Theory of Justice

e. Nozick's Rights Theory

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