Category: Blog

Compassionate detachment: Seeing a situation clearly without adding or eliminating details is critical in making ethical decisions.

One of my favorite end-of-the-day mindless TV shows is Beat Bobby Flay. Last night, as I watched him take out a skilled chef a-gain, I found myself thinking about the TV editing process. Even though we all know that what we see can’t be done in half-an-hour, we have this sense that the cooking and cleaning […]

Stiffening ethical will: To achieve ethical action, every stakeholder must give something up for the good of the whole.

During the 40 years I’ve been teaching ethics, we moved from a shareholder analysis (where the owners of the companies got all the attention) to a stakeholder analysis (where we focused on the various stakeholders that were impacted by our decisions). However, the stakeholder approach turns out to have a major flaw because we haven’t […]

Policing biases: An ethical dilemma often requires harmonizing conflicting values such as protecting one’s tribe versus inclusion of all.

As we’re all still trying to make sense of the explosion of racism and violence in Charlottesville, Virginia last week, the question asked over dinners and drinks is how—how in this time and place can such public displays of hatred exist? Joshua Greene, in his seminal book Moral Tribes, has one answer: biology. Greene argues that our […]

Structured controversies: We can effectively teach ethics by formulating policy arguments and then drafting resolutions that honor both positions.

I love football. I’ve been known to annoy family and friends in July as the countdown to the season’s opening begins. And so, as the conversation over whether or not athletes should be able to kneel or absent themselves from the national anthem escalated over last weekend and spilled into basketball, baseball, and even golf, […]

Bubble of trust: Ethical behavior is a community standard that must be practiced over and over to win and maintain trust.

Turns out that a person riding a bicycle in China is only responsible for creating a twelve-inch bubble of safety around them. In the US, the bubble of trust is larger, because we expect the rider to make eye contact with others, signal their intentions, and navigate in a way that maximizes safety for riders, […]

Lessons from The Lego Movie: An ordinary Lego figure who acts courageously and ethically teaches we can make a difference.

Over Christmas, my granddaughter wheedled me into watching The Lego Movie—an aminated film released in 2014 that I had somehow missed. When asked why I should watch it, Catie said she liked its message: that an ordinary person could make a real difference in the world. She got my attention. After a delightful romp through […]

The ethics playbook: Here are the five core skills for teaching ethical decision making

As the anger and outrage for the latest school shooting has begun to subside into a search for strategies to reduce the number of deaths caused by people using firearms, the articulate courage of the students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School provides a flicker of inspiration in the shadows of grief. Turns out that […]

Managing implicit bias: We have blind spots and developing strategies to overcome them allows us to live effectively and ethically with other people.

It all started innocently enough with a student inquiry about one of our simulations. The dilemma asked the learner to identify the most ethical option if a long-term, valued employee gets angry and throws a fire extinguisher at another employee while off his meds for being bipolar. The student made a good case for the […]

Avoiding the ethics blues: If we ethically commit to being civil and respecting people, we can build bridges across differences.

Many of us anxiously awaited the Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, 584 U.S. ___ (2018) decision, crossing our fingers that our particular position would be validated. Surely the Supreme Court would see that the principle of freedom of religion was more important than the principle of accommodation for all—or perhaps tilt the balance the other […]

Ethical discernment: The perennial problem of being ethical is learning to exercise self-control.

I’ve spent the past week cruising the upper Rhine in Germany. At one of the stops, we not only had the chance to explore a Museum of Medieval Torture but also visit the dungeon of a local castle with its sampling of the tools used to encourage ethical behavior. In addition to the pillories (wooden […]