Ethics across the professions : a reader for professional ethics

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Ethics across the professions : a reader for professional ethics

Clancy Martin, Wayne Vaught, Robert C. Solomon

Oxford University Press, 2010

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

What does it mean to be an ethical professional? A professional career can be so demanding that it permeates every aspect of a person's life and personality. In light of this fact, it is especially important for students who are planning to enter a chosen profession to understand its moral status, moral virtues, and possible moral pitfalls, so that they will be equipped to deal with the inevitable moral quandaries that they will encounter as professionals. The most up-to-date professional ethics reader available, Ethics Across the Professions analyzes the complex ethical issues that arise in such fields as engineering, finance, healthcare, journalism, and law. Featuring a wide array of both classic and contemporary sources, it ranges from works by Aristotle and Kant to selections by Michael Bayles, Sissela Bok, Paul Ekman, and Thomas Nagel. Organized topically, the anthology covers what it means to be a professional, outlines several ethical models, and addresses key issues including deception in professional life, privacy, loyalty, social welfare, conflicts of interest, and self-regulation. The book includes detailed chapter introductions, several practical case studies at the end of each chapter, and provocative discussion questions on issues like -whistle-blowing, - the Iraq War, educating illegal immigrant children, and advertisements for pharmaceutical companies. Edited by three renowned ethicists, Ethics Across the Professions is especially suited for introductory professional ethics courses taught in philosophy departments as well as in nursing schools, business schools, and other professional programs.

Table of Contents

  • CHAPTER 1: WHAT IS IT TO BE A PROFESSIONAL? THE PROFESSIONS, LEADERSHIP, AND WORK
  • Henry Mintzberg, "The Professional Organization"
  • Michael D. Bayles, "The Professions"
  • Michael Davis, "Professional Responsibility: Just Following the Rules"
  • C.S. Lewis, "The Inner Ring"
  • Joanne Ciulla, "What is Good Leadership?"
  • Richard A. Wasserstrom, "Lawyers as Professionals: Some Moral Issues"
  • Samuel Gorovitz, "Good Doctors"
  • CASE 1.1: Professionalism and Nursing
  • CASE 1.2: Nick Denton, "Less Heat, More Light"
  • CASE 1.3: Michael C. Loui, "Ethics and the Development of Professional Identities of Engineering Students"
  • CHAPTER 2: HOW TO BE ETHICAL
  • Aristotle, "On the Good Life"
  • Plato, "The Ring of Gyges"
  • Norman E. Bowie, "Business Codes of Ethics: Window Dressing or Legitimate Alternative to Government Regulation?"
  • Thomas Hobbes, "Of the Natural Condition of Mankind as Concerning Their Felicity and Misery" and "Of the First and Second Natural Laws and of Contracts"
  • Immanual Kant from Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals, trans. T.K. Abbott
  • Nigel G. E. Harris, "Professional Codes and Kantian Duties"
  • John Stuart Mill, from Utilitarianism
  • Robert C. Solomon, "The Basic Business Virtues: Honesty, Fairness, Trust and Toughness"
  • CASE 2.1: James Rachels, "The Prisoner's Dilemma"
  • CASE 2.2: Bernard Williams, "George, Jim and Utilitarianism"
  • CHAPTER 3: PROFESSIONAL DUTIES, CLIENT'S RIGHTS
  • Michael D. Bayles, "The Professional-Client Relationship"
  • Joel J. Kupperman, "Autonomy and the Very Limited Role of Advocacy in the Classroom"
  • John Wesley Hall, Jr., "Professional Responsibility for Lawyers"
  • John K. Davis, "Conscientious Refusal and a Doctor's Right to Quit"
  • Monroe H. Freedman, "Access to the Legal System: The Professional Obligation to Chase Ambulances"
  • Julie Cantor and Ken Baum, "The Limits of Conscientious Objection--May Pharmacists Refuse to Fill Prescriptions for Emergency Contraception?"
  • Alan Meisel and Mark Kuczewski, "Legal and Ethical Myths About Informed Consent"
  • Judge Spotswood W. Robinson III, "Opinion in Canterbury v Spence"
  • Thomas L. Carson, "The Ethics of Sales"
  • CASE 3.1: Edwin J. Perkins, "The Booming Twenties"
  • CASE 3.2: Megan Rickel, "An Apple a Day"
  • CASE 3.3: Allison Stevens, "Target at the Center of Battle over Plan B"
  • CHAPTER 4: TRUTH, LIES, AND DECEPTION
  • Robert C. Solomon, "Is it Ever Right to Lie?"
  • Joseph S. Ellin, "Special Professional Morality and the Duty of Veracity"
  • Paul Ekman and Mark G. Frank, "Lies That Fail"
  • Sissela Bok, "Lying and Lies to the Sick and Dying"
  • Joseph Collins, "Should Doctors Tell the Truth"
  • Ronald H. Stein, "Lying and Deception for Clients and Counselors"
  • Benjamin Freedman, "Offering Truth"
  • Sue de Wine, "Giving Feedback: The Truthful Consultant"
  • Burton Leiser, "Truth in the Marketplace"
  • CASE 4.1: Stephen Hess, "Lying (for Journalists)"
  • CASE 4.2: Mary R. Anderlik, Rebecca D. Pentz, and Kenneth R. Hess, "Revisiting the Truth-Telling Debate: A Study of Disclosure Practices at a Major Cancer Center"
  • CASE 4.3: Robert C. Solomon, "Flying or Lying in Business Class?"
  • CASE 4.4: Robert C. Solomon, "Willful Ignorance? Or Deception?"
  • CHAPTER 5: PRIVACY, CONFIDENTIALITY, SECRECY, AND TRUST
  • Mary Beth Armstrong, "Confidentiality: A Comparison Across the Professions of Medicine, Engineering, and Accounting"
  • Robert C. Solomon and Fernando Flores, Building Trust"
  • Terry Pinkard, "Invasions of Privacy in Social Science Research"
  • Sissela Bok, "The Limits of Confidentiality"
  • Alan Donagan, "Justifying Legal Practice in the Adversary System: A Look at Confidentiality"
  • Wayne Vaught, "Parents, Lies, and Videotape: Covert Surveillance in Pediatric Care"
  • Sissela Bok, "Defining Secrecy--Some Crucial Distinctions"
  • Deborah C. Johnson, "Hacker Ethics"
  • Newshour, "The Princess and the Press"
  • CASE 5.1: O. Mytton, "Should Doctors Talk to Relatives Without a Competent Patient's Consent?"
  • CASE 5.2: R. Jeffrey Smith, "Delay PAC Is Indicted for Illegal Documents: Corporate Gifts Aid GOP in Texas Races"
  • CASE 5.3: Dwight Garner, "You're a Voyeur, I'm a Voyeur"
  • CASE 5.4: Philip H. Albert, "Trade Secrets: It's Not Who You Know"
  • CHAPTER 6: INTEGRITY AND LOYALTY: WHISTLE-BLOWING AND SELF-REGULATION
  • Sissela Bok, "Whistleblowing and Professional Responsibility"
  • Michael Davis, "Some Paradoxes of Whistleblowing"
  • Ronald Duska, "Whistleblowing and Employee Loyalty"
  • Lynne McFall, "Integrity"
  • Cheshire Calhoun, "Standing for Something"
  • Amy Gutmann, "Can Virtue be Taught to Lawyers?"
  • Thomas Nagel, "Ruthlessness in Public Life"
  • Josiah Royce, "Company Loyalty"
  • Bernard Williams, "Politics and Moral Character"
  • CASE 6.1: Charles F. Squire, "Is it Ethical to Criticize other Dentists' Work?"
  • CASE 6.2: Megan Rickel, "Blowing the Whistle in Iraq"
  • CASE 6.3: Myron Glazer, "Ten Whistleblowers and How They Fared"
  • CASE 6.4: Mimi Swartz and Sherron Watkins, "Winners and Losers"
  • CASE 6.5: Megan Rickel, "Chatty Doctors"
  • CHAPTER 7: PROFESSIONALISM, JUSTICE, AND SOCIAL WELFARE
  • Bowen H. McCoy, "The Parable of Sadhu"
  • John Rawls, "Justice as Fairness"
  • Peter Singer, "Rich and Poor"
  • Peter Singer, "What Should a Billionaire Give - And What Should You?"
  • Joyce Bermel, "Should Physicians Prepare for War?
  • Dalai Lama, "The Ethic of Compassion"
  • Amartya Sen, "The Economics of Poverty"
  • Rachel Smolkin, "Off the Sidelines"
  • New England Journal of Medicine, "A National Health Program for the United States: A Physician's Proposal"
  • Kenneth J. Arrow, "Social Responsibility and Economic Efficiency"
  • CASE 7.1: Arianna Huffington, "Pigs on Parade"
  • CASE 7.2: Suzanne Gamboa, "Groups Debate Costs of Educating Illegal Immigrant Children"
  • CASE 7.3: William H. Shaw and Vincent Barry, "The Fordasaurus"
  • CHAPTER 8: RECIPROCITY, CONFLICTS OF INTEREST, AND GOVERNMENT REGULATION
  • Adam Bellow, "Nepotism in American Business"
  • Richard T. DeGeorge, "Ethical Issues for Accountants"
  • Jason E. Klein and Alan R. Fleischman, "The Private Practicing Physician-Investigator: Ethical Implications of Clinical Research in the Office Setting"
  • Karen Sanders, "Conflicts of Interest in Journalism"
  • Warren E. Burger, "Too Many Lawyers, Too Many Suits"
  • Rebecca Dresser, "Plan B: Politics and Values at the FDA, Again"
  • David Orentlicher and Lois Snyder, "Can Assisted Suicide be Regulated?
  • Lisa Belkin, "Prime Time Pushers"
  • CASE 8.1: Scott J. Turner, "Drug Company Gifts: Marketing Technique Poses Ethical Questions for Some"
  • CASE 8.2: Maria Merritt, "Moral Conflict in Clinical Trials"
  • CASE 8.3: Albert Camus, "Quarantine Ethics"
  • CASE 8.4: George J. Annas, "Culture of Life: Politics at the Bedside Table--The Case of Terry Schiavo"

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Details

  • NCID
    BB02059901
  • ISBN
    • 9780195326680
  • LCCN
    2009032245
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    New York
  • Pages/Volumes
    xii, 443 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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