Moral Dilemmas Ethics PDF
Moral Dilemmas Ethics PDF
Moral Dilemmas Ethics PDF
AND ETHICAL
DILEMMAS
IE 52A
3
Case: Designing Aluminum Cans
• The first aluminum can was designed in 1958 by Kaiser
Aluminum, in the attempt to improve on heavier and more
expensive tin cans. Features:
strong enough to keep pressurized liquid inside
thin enough to be cost-effective
fit conveniently in consumer’s hand
• The first aluminum cans, like the tin cans before them, were
opened with a separate opener, which required additional
manufacturing costs to make them readily available to
consumers. This caused inconvenience to consumers.
• Ermal Fraze suggested a built-in lever to open the can.
• Discarded pull tabs caused pollution, foot injuries, and harm
to fish and infants who ingested them.
• In 1976, Daniel Cudzik designed a stay-attached opener.
• Ethical dilemmas – situations in which moral reasons come
into conflict, or in which the applications of moral values are
unclear and it is not immediately obvious what should be
done
• Moral choices – decisions involving moral values
Ethical Dilemmas
• Public safety and welfare
• Data integrity and representation
o Fabrication -inventing data or results
o Falsification - manipulation of data or results
o Plagiarism - appropriation of another’s results without proper credit
• Trade secrets and industrial espionage
o Trade secret – proprietary company intellectual property that has not been
patented
o Industrial espionage – occurs when trade secrets are publicized without
consent
• Gift giving and bribery
o Bribery - something, such as money or a favor, offered or given to someone
in a position of trust in order to induce him to act dishonestly. It is
something offered or serving to influence or persuade.
Ethical Dilemmas
• Principle of informed consent
- Refers to the right of each individual potentially affected by a
project to participate to an appropriate degree in decision-making
concerning that project
• Conflict of Interest
- Refers to the potential to distort good judgment while serving
more than one employer or client
2. Conceptual clarity
Be clear about concepts.
5. Well-reasoned
Make a reasonable decision
Case:
• A chemical engineer working in the environmental division
of a computer manufacturing firm learns that her company
might be discharging unlawful amounts of lead and arsenic
into the city sewer. The city processes the sludge into a
fertilizer used by local farmers. To ensure the safety of both
the discharge and the fertilizer, the city imposes restrictive
laws on the discharge of lead and arsenic. Preliminary
investigations convince the engineer that the company
should implement stronger pollution controls, but her
supervisor tells her the cost of doing so is prohibitive and
that technically the company is in compliance with the law.
She is also scheduled to appear before town officials to
testify in the matter. What should she do?
Types of Issues in Ethical
Problem Solving
• Moral issues
- which moral principle is applicable to the situation
- resolved by agreement as to which moral principles are pertinent and
how they should be applied
• Conceptual issues
- the meaning or applicability of an idea
- resolved by agreeing on the meaning and applicability of terms and
concepts.
• Factual issues
- involve what is actually known about a case—i.e., what the facts are
- resolved through research to establish the truth
SAMPLE CASE:
• In 1980, Paradyne, a computer company, bid to supply the
Social Security Administration (SSA) with new computer
systems. The request for proposals clearly specifi ed that
only existing systems would be considered. Paradyne did not
have any such system running and had never tested the
operating system on the product they actually proposed to
sell to the SSA. The employment of a former SSA worker by
Paradyne to help lobby SSA for the contract is also clear.
Paradyne asserted that it had done nothing wrong and was
simply engaging in common business practices.
Identifying the issues:
Moral Issues
• Is lying an acceptable business practice?
• Is it alright to be deceptive if doing so allows your company to get
a contract?
Conceptual Issues
• Is bidding to provide an off-the-shelf product when the actual
product is only in the planning stages considered lying or is it an
acceptable business practice?
• Is placing a Paradyne label over the real manufacturer’s label
deceptive?
• Does lobbying your former employer on behalf of your current
employer constitute a conflict of interest?
Factual Issues
Seatwork:
1. An inspector discovers faulty construction equipment and applies a
violation tag, preventing its continued use. The inspector’s supervisor, a
construction manager, views the case as a minor infraction of safety
regulations and orders the tag removed so the project will not be delayed.
What should she do?
2. A software engineer discovers that a colleague has been downloading
restricted files that contain trade secrets about a new product that the
colleague is not personally involved with. He knows the colleague is
planning to sell the secrets or perhaps leave the company and use them in
starting up his own company. Company policy requires him to inform his
supervisor, but the colleague is a close friend. Should he first talk with the
friend about what he is doing, or should he immediately inform his
supervisor?
3. During an investigation of a bridge collapse, Engineer A investigates
another similar bridge, and finds it to be only marginally safe. He contacts
the governmental agency responsible for the bridge and informs them of
his concern for the safety of the structure. He is told that the agency is
aware of this situation and has planned to provide in next year’s budget for
its repair. Until then, the bridge must remain open to traffic. Without this
bridge, emergency vehicles such as police and fire apparatus would have to
use an alternate route that would increase their response time by
approximately twenty minutes. Engineer A is thanked for his concern and
asked to say nothing about the condition of the bridge. The agency is
confident that the bridge will be safe.
Techniques in Ethical Problem
Solving
1. LINE-DRAWING
• performed by drawing a line along which various
examples and hypothetical situations are placed
In 1994–95, it was discovered and widely reported that the latest version of the Intel
Pentium chip had flaws. At first, Intel sought to hide this information, but later
came around to a policy of offering consumers chips in which the flaw had been
corrected.
Hint: For positive paradigm, use the statement that “products should perform as
advertised.” The negative paradigm will be “Knowingly sell products that are
defective and that will negatively affect customers’ applications.”
2. FLOW CHARTING
• helpful for analyzing a variety of cases, especially those in which there is a
sequence of events to be considered or a series of consequences that
flows from each decision
• gives a visual picture of a situation and allows you to readily see the
consequences that flow from each decision
CASE: A disaster that happened at Union
Carbide’s plant in Bhopal, India, where
MIC, a toxic substance, was mixed with
water, creating toxic fumes.
emphasizing decisions
made when considering
deactivating the flare tower
for maintenance.
3. RESOLUTION-OF-CONFLICT PROBLEMS
1. During a sales visit, a sales representative offers you a coffee mug with his
company’s name and logo on it. The value of the mug is five dollars. Can you
accept this item? Does the answer to this question change if this item is a
$350 crystal bowl with the name of the company engraved on it? How about
if there is no engraving on it?
2. Your meeting with a sales representative is running into the lunch hour. She
invites you to go out for lunch. You go to a fast-food restaurant and pay for
your own lunch. Is this practice acceptable? Does the answer to this
question change if you go to an expensive French restaurant? If she pays for
lunch?
3. A sales representative from whom you often purchase asks if you would like
to play tennis with him this weekend at one of the local municipal courts.
Should you go? Is the answer to this question different if the match is at an
exclusive local club to which he belongs? What if he pays the club’s guest
fee for you?