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El. knyga: Responsible Decision Making

Edited by (Corvinus University of Budapest, Turkey)
  • Formatas: 214 pages
  • Serija: Praxiology
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Jul-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351493215
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 214 pages
  • Serija: Praxiology
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Jul-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351493215
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"What should I do ," "How should I deal with this ," "How should I behave ," "How should I act?" we ask ourselves daily. But, this is only the first part of the sentence, while the full sentence is "What should I do ... to achieve such and such?", for example to complete an assigned task, to do well before my boss or a client, to be pleased with myself, to carry out my plans, to make money in the stock market, to pass an exam, to complete an application, etc. These and similar questions that people ask, consciously or not, openly or not, are decisions.

What skills must we master, especially when there is a need to make not only elementary decisions, but also decisions that affect the existence, health, and even lives of people? First, Laszlo Zsolnai writes that we should acquire the skill of gaining knowledge. Only then will we stand a chance of reacting to things that are improbable today, but could become a fact tomorrow. Also essential is the skill of designing, i.e., preparing actions conceptually in order to make decisions before irreversible changes occur. Finally, it is essential to master the skill of multidimensional judgment within the space defined by effectiveness, efficiency, and ethics.

This is Zsolnai's attempt to build a model of making ethical decisions both effectively and efficiently. Therefore, the model is much broader than purely an analytical framework would be. It must tell us how to act rather than limit us to reflection on actions already performed; it must combine decision and praxiological analysis of human conduct. The proposed model enlarges the scope of the debate and suggests new avenues of both rational and responsible decision making. This is an original statement of the crossover of policy and morality.
Editorial 9(6)
Wojciech W. Gasparski
Foreword 15(4)
George Brenkert
Preface 19(4)
Acknowledgements 23(2)
Notes on Terminology 25(2)
List of Figures
27(2)
List of Tables
29(2)
Introduction: Responsibility and Choice
31(12)
The Idea of Moral Responsibility
43(14)
Complex Choice Situations
43(2)
Differing Types of Responsibility
45(2)
Hans Jonas' Idea of ''Caring for Beings''
47(5)
The Moral Experience of Women
52(2)
Summary
54(3)
Criticizing Rational Choice
57(20)
The Rational Choice Model
58(2)
Bounded Rationality
60(1)
Myopic and Deficient Choices
61(1)
Violations of the Axioms
62(3)
Rational Fools
65(1)
The Strategic Role of Emotions
66(2)
Social Norms
68(1)
The Communitarian Challenge
69(3)
Duty, Self-Interest, and Love
72(1)
Summary
73(4)
Norms, Goals, and Stakeholders
77(10)
Choice as Problem Solving
77(1)
Ethical Norms
78(1)
Who are the Stakeholders?
79(3)
Co-Evolving Goals and Alternatives
82(2)
Summary
84(3)
Responsibility and the Diversity of Choices
87(12)
Rationality and Respect
87(2)
Deontology
89(2)
Choices People Can Make
91(4)
Summary
95(4)
The Psychology of Choice
99(8)
Prospect Theory
99(3)
The ''Matching Law''
102(2)
Incommensurability
104(1)
Summary
105(2)
Modeling Responsible Decision Making
107(18)
What is a Responsible Decision?
108(1)
Deontological Payoffs
109(2)
Goal-Achievement Values
111(2)
Payoffs for the Stakeholders
113(3)
Evaluation from Multiple Perspectives
116(1)
The Maximin Rule
117(2)
A Geometric Representation
119(2)
The Procedural Model
121(1)
Summary
122(3)
Real World Cases
125(16)
Donna's Case
125(6)
The Ford Pinto Case
131(4)
The World Bank Environmental Policy
135(4)
Summary
139(2)
Applications in Economics and Public Policy
141(24)
Responsibility and Social Justice
141(4)
The Paradox of a Paretian Liberal
145(3)
Responsible Agency in Prisoner's Dilemma Situations
148(4)
Multidimensional Cost-Benefit Analysis
152(2)
Ethical and Social Performance of Business
154(3)
Nature, Society, and Future Generations
157(5)
Summary
162(3)
Epilogue: The Responsible Person
165(4)
Appendix:
169(32)
I. Implementing Environmental Principles
169(25)
II. Alternative Globalization Strategies
194(7)
References 201(8)
Index 209(4)
About the Author 213
Laszlo Zsolnai is professor and director of the Business Ethics Center at the Corvinus University of Budapest, and chairman of the Business Ethics Inter-faculty Group of the Community of European Management Schools (CEMS). He has written many books including Spirituality as a Public Good, Business Within Limits: Deep Ecology and Buddhist Economics, and Spirituality, Ethics and Management.