Organizational Ethics and the Good Life

Business & Finance, Business Reference, Business Ethics, Human Resources & Personnel Management, Organizational Behavior
Cover of the book Organizational Ethics and the Good Life by Edwin Hartman, Oxford University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Edwin Hartman ISBN: 9780190282790
Publisher: Oxford University Press Publication: January 4, 1996
Imprint: Oxford University Press Language: English
Author: Edwin Hartman
ISBN: 9780190282790
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication: January 4, 1996
Imprint: Oxford University Press
Language: English

In giving an account of what is ethical, we can begin by describing the community that accommodates the good life; to be ethical, then, is to be a contributor to that sort of community. We live in political communities as well as in communities built around families, neighborhoods, churches, and other associations. But for many of us the community that will afford the good life that is the purpose of morality is the organization that employs us. Aristotle claimed tht the greatest ethical questions are political ones; today we have reason to believe that the greatest ethical questions are organizational ones. In Organizational Ethics and the Good Life, Edwin Hartman contends that, as ethics is about the good community, a great part of business ethics is about the good organization. He argues that a large and complex organization has the characteristic of the "commons" studied by game theorists, and that it is the task of management to preserve the commons in the long-term interests of all its members, principally by creating an appropriate corporate culture. A good corporate culture not only serves the interests of the participants but makes the organization a place in which they can develop interests that are compatible with both autonomy and good corporate citizenship: that is, they can develop a sense of the good life that is appropriate to the moral person. Hartman opposes the standard view that the study of organizational ethics is a matter of considering how certain foundational ethical principles apply in organizational settings; instead, he argues, business ethicists should consider how free and rational people arrive at a consensus on practical ethical principles in a morally good organization that leaves room for moral progress. And what makes an organization morally good? In discussing justice, loyalty, and other features of a morally good organization, Hartman draws largely on the work of Rawls and Hirschman. In describing the good life as one in which well-being and morality overlap, Hartman proposes a new version of an idea as old as Aristotle, who taught that human beings are rational but also irreducibly communal creatures.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In giving an account of what is ethical, we can begin by describing the community that accommodates the good life; to be ethical, then, is to be a contributor to that sort of community. We live in political communities as well as in communities built around families, neighborhoods, churches, and other associations. But for many of us the community that will afford the good life that is the purpose of morality is the organization that employs us. Aristotle claimed tht the greatest ethical questions are political ones; today we have reason to believe that the greatest ethical questions are organizational ones. In Organizational Ethics and the Good Life, Edwin Hartman contends that, as ethics is about the good community, a great part of business ethics is about the good organization. He argues that a large and complex organization has the characteristic of the "commons" studied by game theorists, and that it is the task of management to preserve the commons in the long-term interests of all its members, principally by creating an appropriate corporate culture. A good corporate culture not only serves the interests of the participants but makes the organization a place in which they can develop interests that are compatible with both autonomy and good corporate citizenship: that is, they can develop a sense of the good life that is appropriate to the moral person. Hartman opposes the standard view that the study of organizational ethics is a matter of considering how certain foundational ethical principles apply in organizational settings; instead, he argues, business ethicists should consider how free and rational people arrive at a consensus on practical ethical principles in a morally good organization that leaves room for moral progress. And what makes an organization morally good? In discussing justice, loyalty, and other features of a morally good organization, Hartman draws largely on the work of Rawls and Hirschman. In describing the good life as one in which well-being and morality overlap, Hartman proposes a new version of an idea as old as Aristotle, who taught that human beings are rational but also irreducibly communal creatures.

More books from Oxford University Press

Cover of the book Choral Repertoire by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book Kosovo : What Everyone Needs To Know by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book The Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Archaeology by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book Election Watchdogs by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book After the Projects by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book Low Carbon Energy Transitions by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book The Astaires by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book The Oxford Handbook of Language and Society by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book The Soul of Recovery by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book Brokering Belonging by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book The Oxford Handbook of Women and Competition by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book Everyone Can Write by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book Ethics and Research with Children by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book A Short History of Medical Genetics by Edwin Hartman
Cover of the book Individuation, Process, and Scientific Practices by Edwin Hartman
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy