Results 241 to 250 of about 471,599 (290)
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Vision: The Journal of Business Perspective, 2011
In the light of recent corporate scams such as Satyam, the author undertook the present research work to address the following questions: Does moral incompetence reside in only a few corporate species? Are ordinary individuals, working in the corporate world, also potential candidates, equally capable of giving birth to tainted corporate performance ...
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In the light of recent corporate scams such as Satyam, the author undertook the present research work to address the following questions: Does moral incompetence reside in only a few corporate species? Are ordinary individuals, working in the corporate world, also potential candidates, equally capable of giving birth to tainted corporate performance ...
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Moral Competence, Moral Blame, and Protest
The Journal of Ethics, 2011I argue that wrongdoers may be open to moral blame even if they lacked the capacity to respond to the moral considerations that counted against their behavior. My initial argument turns on the suggestion that even an agent who cannot respond to specific moral considerations may still guide her behavior by her judgments about reasons.
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Religiosity, Moral Attitudes and Moral Competence
Archive for the Psychology of Religion, 2003The present research investigates the relation between the religiosity dimensions which Wulff (1991; 1997) described (Exclusion vs. Inclusion of Transcendence and Literal vs. Symbolic) and both moral attitudes and moral competence. The Post-Critical Belief scale (Duriez et al., 2000) was used as a measure of Wulff's religiosity dimensions, and the ...
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The Moral-Conventional Distinction in Mature Moral Competence
Journal of Cognition and Culture, 2010Abstract Developmental psychologists have long argued that the capacity to distinguish moral and conventional transgressions develops across cultures and emerges early in life. Children reliably treat moral transgressions as more wrong, more punishable, independent of structures of authority, and universally applicable.
Bryce Huebner, James Lee, Marc Hauser
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moral heuristics or moral competence? reflections on sunstein
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2005by focusing on mistaken judgments, sunstein provides a theory of performance errors without a theory of moral competence. additionally, sunstein's objections to thought experiments like the footbridge and trolley problems are unsound. exotic and unfamiliar stimuli are used in theory construction throughout the cognitive sciences, and these problems ...
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Moral Competence and Democratic Personality
2017Cognitive-developmental theory has been credited with a notable contribution to the study of the development of the democratic personality. In a review of "political socialization and models of moral development," D. A. Friedman asserts that "the Kohlberg model of man, that is, the last stages toward which his system is directed, is a model which is ...
Georg Lind +2 more
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2014
I start with the premise that any social robot must have moral competence. I offer a framework for what moral competence is and sketch the prospects for it to be developed in artificial agents. After considering three proposals for requirements of “moral agency” I propose instead to examine moral competence as a broader set of ...
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I start with the premise that any social robot must have moral competence. I offer a framework for what moral competence is and sketch the prospects for it to be developed in artificial agents. After considering three proposals for requirements of “moral agency” I propose instead to examine moral competence as a broader set of ...
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2018
Introduction: Competence requires morality Most clients think of good lawyers as people who are skilled and therefore effective in achieving outcomes. These ideas reflect the common notion that technical ‘competency’ is an important quality which lawyers ought to have.
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Introduction: Competence requires morality Most clients think of good lawyers as people who are skilled and therefore effective in achieving outcomes. These ideas reflect the common notion that technical ‘competency’ is an important quality which lawyers ought to have.
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Does Capitalism Compete with Morality?
1992When Cantillon’s Essay was published in 1755 it was becoming accepted that moral issues were outside the scope of economic theory. Cantillon acknowledged that there might be a conflict of interest between entrepreneurs and society, writing, ‘It may perhaps be urged that Undertakers seek to snatch all they can in their calling and get the better of ...
John Wigley, Carol Lipman
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