Lecture 1 & 2: Occupation
Lecture 1 & 2: Occupation
Lecture 1 & 2: Occupation
Occupation refers to the regular activity performed by a person to earn his bread
and butter. Many think that occupation and profession are synonyms, but the fact
is they are different.
Example: Shopkeepers, a government servant, clerks, accountants, etc.
Profession is (occupation) an activity that requires specialized training, knowledge,
qualification and skills. It implies membership of a professional body, and
certificate of practice. The individuals who undertake a profession of rendering
personalized services are called professionals, who are guided by a certain code of
conduct, set up by the respective body.
Example: Doctors, Engineers, Lawyers, Chartered Accountant etc.
After the above discussion, it can be said that the occupation is a broader term, and
it includes profession. While occupation also includes those jobs that are ordinary
and hence they don’t get high recognition from the society, Professionals are
mainly known by their jobs, and that is why they receive a high level of respect and
recognition from the society.
Summary:
A profession needs extensive training and specialized knowledge. On the
other hand, an occupation does not need any extensive training.
A profession is paid for his particular skills, and his deep knowledge. Persons
engaged in an occupation are not paid for their knowledge, but only for what
they produce.
A profession is guided through certain ethical codes, and regulated by certain
statute (Qanoon).
If we distinguish between an occupation, which is simply a way to make a living,
and a profession, the question is how a transition from a ‘‘mere’’ (mehz) occupation
to a profession (or an occupation that has professional status) is accomplished. The
answer is to be found in a series of characteristics that are marks of professional
status. Although probably no profession has all of these characteristics to the
highest degree possible, the more characteristics an occupation has, the more
secure it is in its professional status.
Sociological Analysis:
3. Control Of Service:
Professions usually have a monopoly on, or at least considerable control
over, the provision of professional services in their area. A profession often
attempts to persuade the community that there should be a licensing system
for those who want to enter the profession. Those who practice without a
license are subject to legal penalties. Although it can be argued that
monopoly is necessary to protect the public from unqualified practitioners,
it also increases the power of professionals in the marketplace.
4. Autonomy:
Professionals often have an unusual degree of autonomy in the workplace.
This is especially true of professionals in private practice, but even
professionals who work in large organizations may exercise a large degree of
individual judgment and creativity in carrying out their professional
responsibilities. For example physicians must determine the most
appropriate type of medical treatment for their patients, and lawyers must
decide the most successful type of defense of their clients. This is one of the
most satisfying aspects of professional work. The justification for this unusual
degree of autonomy is that only the professional has sufficient knowledge to
determine the appropriate professional services in a given situation.
5. Claim To Ethical Regulations:
Professionals claim to be regulated by ethical standards. The degree of
control that professions possess over the services that are vital to the well-
being of the rest of the community provides an obvious temptation for
abuse, so most professions attempt to limit these abuses by regulating
themselves for the public benefit.
1. Distinctive Aim:
Every social practice has one or more aims or goods that are especially
associated with it or ‘‘internal’’ to it. For example, medicine aims at the
health of patients. One of the aims of law is justice.
4. Ethical Evolution:
The distinctive aim of a social practice provides a moral criteria for evaluating
the behavior of those who participate in the social practice and for resolving
moral issues that might arise in the practice.
This definition highlights several features that Davis believes are important in the
concept of professionalism that he believes many people, including many
Professionals, hold:
1. A Number Of People:
A profession cannot be composed of only one person. It is always composed
of a number of individuals.
2. Public Element:
A profession involves a public element. One must openly ‘‘profess’’ to be a
physician or attorney, much as the dictionary accounts of the term
‘‘profession’’ suggest.
3. Earning:
A profession is a way people earn a living and is usually something that
occupies them during their working hours. A profession is still an occupation
(a way of earning a living) even if the occupation enjoys professional status.
4. Voluntary Nature:
A profession is something that people enter into voluntarily and that they
can leave voluntarily.
5. Moral Idea:
Much like advocates of the social practice approach, Davis believes that a
profession must serve some morally praiseworthy goal, although this goal
may not be unique to a given profession. Physicians cure the sick and comfort
the dying. Lawyers’ help people obtain justice within the law.
6. Morally Permissible Way:
Professionals must pursue a morally praiseworthy goal by morally
permissible means. For example, medicine cannot pursue the goal of health
by cruel experimentation or by deception or coercion.
Lecture 3 & 4
What is Ethics?
Ethics are the rules we use to determine the right and wrong things to do in our
lives.
Two Key Branches of Ethics:
Descriptive ethics involves describing, characterizing and studying morality –
“What is”
Normative ethics involves supplying and justifying moral systems – “What should
be”
Deontological ethics focuses on how actions follow certain moral rules. So, the
action is judged rather than the consequences of the action. In this ethical system
morality is determined by duty or laws. One example would be Kantian ethics, in
which the only actions that are moral are those performed out of one's duty to
follow the moral law, as opposed to acts performed out of desire. A simpler
example of deontological ethics would be Christianity, in which moral acts are
those that obey the Ten Commandments.
Virtue ethics is person based rather than action based. It looks at the virtue or
moral character of the person carrying out an action, rather than at ethical duties
and rules, or the consequences of particular actions.
Virtue ethics not only deals with the rightness or wrongness of individual actions,
it provides guidance as to the sort of characteristics and behaviors a good person
will seek to achieve.