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I have a project in philosophy class to find an interesting ethical problem in the news of the past six months. I am looking for something unusual (other than the outsourcing to China and the lead paint or should Michael Vick be fired because of dog fighting or retained because he is good for ratings). It should also be something that is actionable (i.e. nothing about is the war in Iraq ethical or things like that that the average graduate will never have to face).
I would greatly appreciate if you could point me to a few articles that represent the ethical issues you are suggesting.
Thanks.

2007-09-11 10:05:37 · 7 answers · asked by Christophe G 4 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

7 answers

would go with something on freedoms of speech and information controls that’s stuff fascinates us and it seams our civil liberties have been getting the shafted in this department the last few years

2007-09-11 10:19:46 · answer #1 · answered by grey_worms 7 · 0 1

If you are looking for ethical problems in industry try looking at things like:

You are in charge of a water treatment plant and one of your employees neglected to replace a water filter after servicing. This allows partially treated water into the main supply for a small town. Do you rectify the fault and stay quiet in the hope that nobody is affected by this or do you notify the town authorities of the problem and face possible law suits?

You are responsible for effluent control in a manufacturing plant. You discover a faulty sensor which is allowing higher than the allowable levels of waste to enter the local environment. To fix it will mean closing down part of the plant for two days. Do you fix immediately or wait until somebody reports you?

Just a couple of scenarios to think about, both probably more common than we think.

2007-09-11 10:47:15 · answer #2 · answered by John R 3 · 0 0

There are dozens of things that i can think of, but one of the biggest things that come to mind is the our political situation. And no it's not about Bush; one thing i would like to point out is that he's a puppet, nothing more, nothing less. No what I'm taking about is the UN (united nations) and how, just like our congress, get nothing done. Like there is starving in many third world countries and we instate programs like food for oil. Or during many ethnic cleanings they sit back and discuss what should be done while thousands if not hundreds of thousands die. But one of the most interesting this about this is that this isn't the first time a "UN" was formed. Back around Socrates and Plato's time Sparta was the Russia of the time and to fight off any sort of invasion by Sparta all the little countries formed a UN to fight them off. The rest you can either look up yourself, or you can contact me. I leave you with this, history is repeating it self, every day.

2007-09-11 14:11:15 · answer #3 · answered by superdude89898989 1 · 0 0

i like Capitalism too, and don't think of that's inevitably immoral. however the difficulty of predatory lending is in simple terms the top of the iceberg. people interior the U. S. have stepped forward a feeling of entitlement. I hate this in our subculture, and could like to alter it. solid economic lending practices say that the borrower must be waiting to pay back the non-public loan. The duty for determining this lies with no longer purely the lender, however the borrower as properly. So the two events are mindlessly digging their very own graves, and then assume to be bailed out, and that they probable would be. The experience of immorality among firms is terrible. making a income, on the rate of the buyer is so rampant. this is inspired in companies, it turns into area of the state of ideas. Enron is yet another occasion. I wish I had some innovations of a thank you to alter it, different than balloting for officers who do no longer prefer huge enterprise on the fee of the common solid. solid question.

2016-11-14 23:29:02 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Banking-the bankruptcy law got changed in such a way that it makes it harder to shed credit card debt. The primary targets of high interest credit cards are college juniors and seniors. It also raises questions that cross between ethics and epistemology. Is it ethical to offer high interest loans to the naive?
Now, typically, the position that it is unethical to offer these kinds of cards to the college students and not allow for relief is a left/liberal position.
If you want to take a right position you could analyze a similar topic in
Higher Education
Specifically, is it ethical to allow students to run up thousands of dollars in debt to obtain a liberal arts degree?

You could also compare and contrast these two.

Search this string to find out information about credit cards:
bankruptcy credit cards
I searched Google News.

I'd interview my fellow students, faculty and administrators on the student loan topic.

-----------------------
I don't understand why I got a thumbs down here. Am I wrong that it is more on the Left to champion the consumer in these types of situations, and more on the Right to put emphasis on less government and personal responsibility. At least, in theory? I mean, isn't this what left and right siders say?

Also, am I incorrect in my facts? Was the bankruptcy law changed, or being lobbied for change by the banking industry? And don't many students run up thousands of dollars in debt?

And aren't these things actionable? For example, our questioner could immediately stop borrowing money of all kinds and persuade his or her fellow students to do the same?

Where's my mistake? My email is available at my profile. Let me know how I've erred. Please!

2007-09-11 10:44:05 · answer #5 · answered by intension 2 · 0 1

you can analyze George Bush, whether or not he know the notion of ethics or that he simply following the Machiavellian idea that "the mean justify the end?"

2007-09-11 11:37:58 · answer #6 · answered by Lari 2 · 0 0

Medical insurance.

2007-09-11 10:45:30 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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