Moral reasoning is as important today as it was in the past. It could be argued that with the growth in society and the increase in the size of structures that moral reasoning is even more important today. Business and civic leaders that have obtained and support moral reasoning are at a higher level of development than others. It is these highly developed people that should be leading organizations to new levels of performance. A paper in the Journal Business Ethics: A European Review helps highlights how moral reasoning impacts intra-firm networks and the values others maintain (Kulkari & Sobodh, 2014).
Human development and moral reasoning move together hand-in-hand. People who are less developed have a harder time thinking beyond what is of benefit to themselves. The authors have used 6 stages or moral reasoning where the stages 1-4 are primarily concerned with fear, self-interest, and following the rules for personal gain. Only in stages 5 and 6 can one claim moral leadership that thinks beyond oneself and into the greater purpose of action.
Law helps us define what societal expectations are and provide guidelines for citizens to follow. Organizations are bound to follow these laws in employment practices, pollution, operations, etc.. to ensure that their practices do not damage society. Most business leaders follow these rules based upon self-interest and the fear of punishment. This is necessary to keep everyone in good order and society moving forward.
Beyond self-interest are higher stages of development where moral-reasoning includes doing the right thing in difficult situations. Moral leaders have freed themselves from the constraints of fear to a place where they seek to exceed the standards of law. They understand a greater purpose of keeping society free from unfair actions and immoral decisions that infringe on others.
For example, at the lower levels of human development a CEO may put in place the minimum legal requirements to curb pollution while seeking to skirt as many rules as possible. In the mid levels of development the same CEO may wish to follow the rules strictly and proclaim their business is "Green" as a marketing tool. A highly developed CEO would seek to ensure their business is not damaging the environment based upon moral values while not ignoring the benefits that come from being a good corporate citizen.
Position doesn't necessarily determine morality of the person. A person could be in a position of authority and still stuck at lower levels of development. For example, a CEO may create predatory practices and justify that position as a benefit to stakeholders, a DA could raise their arrest numbers but violate more rights in an effort to "clean up" a city, or a politician could take a bribe and vote on a new project saying it is the best interest of everyone. Authority and moral development are not tightly associated and often contradict each other.
The journal article highlights the importance of ensuring that those with solid moral reasoning rise to the top of the societal structure. Moral reasoning of the leader impacts the moral value systems of everyone else. Their behavior and decisions prompt others to act in similar manners creating intra-firm transfers of moral expectations. Those expectations become embedded into the culture of the company (or organization) and become a method of approaching future problems.
Moral reasoning is one part of the assessment of leadership qualities. Those with higher levels of moral reasoning are also more developed as people. They create expectations on those around them who are likely to mirror their behavior and perception. Encouraging high quality people with leadership potential to make their way to the top of organizations helps to ensure that the right expectations of moral reasoning and ethical performance are standardized.
Kulkari, S. & Subodh, R. (2014). Intra-firm transfer of best practices in moral reasoning: a conceptual framework. Business Ethics: A European Review, 23 (1).
The blog discusses current affairs and development of national economic and social health through unique idea generation. Consider the blog a type of thought experiment where ideas are generated to be pondered but should never be considered definitive as a final conclusion. It is just a pathway to understanding and one may equally reject as accept ideas as theoretical dribble. New perspectives, new opportunities, for a new generation. “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.”—Thomas Jefferson
Showing posts with label moral reasoning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moral reasoning. Show all posts
Monday, March 23, 2015
Friday, May 17, 2013
Ethics as a Sign of Intelligence
What does
intelligence have to do with ethics and moral reasoning? Ethics can be seen as
a value system that governs the actions of both an individual and a group.
Through the use of such ethical systems a level of commonality and trust is
formed that encourages stronger business associations and efficient economic
interactivity. However, why some are more ethically driven than others depends
in part on their cognitive and social intelligence abilities. Such abilities
start very young in a person’s life and are influenced by the environment. Ethical
development is a concept of nature and nurture as superior to situations where
nature versus nurture takes precedence.
Moral reasoning is closely
associated with the development of intelligence and emotional sensibilities. It is
believed that …”individuals with
extraordinary developed intelligence and creativity are the most valuable gift
that humankind has…” Kholodnaya, 2007). The more capable a person is to
reflect on their behavior and its consequences the more likely they will be
able to choose alternative courses of actions.
These intelligences
are seen early in life based upon a person’s sensitivity, motivation,
and character (Tirri, 2011). In order for such moral reasoning to work in an
optimal manner the environment must reward and encourage such behaviors. Thus, environment
and reasoning are two different sides of the same coin. It is not enough to
reason and understand the solutions to moral problems if the environment is
hostile to the concept of greater responsibility.
It is often this
environment that either strengthens or diminishes such behavior. This is why it
is important for education, colleges, legislation and leadership figures to
encourage ethical behavior from the very beginning. There are differences in
the ability to understand and act upon such issues. When the environment is
hostile to basic ethical values the social structure and expectations
discourage appropriate behaviors making them less common in the population.
Social problems are
not easy to define and can be quite difficult for some to understand. Developed
people have more ability to use social intelligence, find definitions to
problems, planning social strategies, and anticipating social consequences
(Lopez, 2007). This is often based in their cognitive and emotional
advancements from childhood that encourages the ability to analyze the subtle
nature of many of these events and factors.
An ethical model as
proposed by Steinberg (2009) helps to formulate how ethics works both within an
organization and society at large. It is through these ethics that people contribute
to the general functioning and efficiency of society by ensuring that rules
apply the same across different spectrums of social structure.
(1)
recognize that there is an event to which to react;
(2)
define the event as having an ethical dimension;
(3)
decide that the ethical dimension is of sufficient significance to merit an
ethics-guided
response;
(4) take responsibility for generating an
ethical solution to the problem;
(5)
figure out what abstract ethical rule(s) might apply to the problem;
(6)
decide how these abstract ethical rules actually apply to the problem to
suggest
a
concrete solution;
(7)
enact the ethical solution, meanwhile possibly counteracting contextual forces
that
might lead one not to act in an ethical manner;
(8) acting upon the
situation.
Before one can act
they must perceive that there is an event occurring. This can be difficult if
one’s perceptions are focused narrowly and tightly on one’s current happenings
and needs. The more open-minded a person is the more likely they are able to
notice, contemplate, and take actions on such events. A narrow-minded filter
is going to leave one so heavily focused on their own needs that a wider
responsibility doesn't come into one’s conscious.
This blocking of
moral thinking is a result of an arrogance in oneself that does not allow a
person to empathize or understand the impact of their behavior on others. Ethical
disengagement is a result of removing oneself from ethical responsibilities
that are the result of a number of fallacies. These fallacies come from unrealistic
optimism, egocentrism, false omniscience (never learning from one’s mistakes),
false omnipotence, false invulnerability (Sternberg, 2008).
Cultures that
encourage winning at all costs may also encourage their collective loss. It is
important to put this competitive need into the framework of personal and
collective advancement. Ethics helps one see how choices impact people beyond themselves
and create expectations within the environment. When the damage and stakes
become large enough ethical choices should kick in as the most logical (i.e.
moral reasoning). When moral reasoning is ignored events such as Enron, the saving
and loan scandals that led to the Great Depression, and the athletic doping incident become
too commonplace.
Therefore, an ethical
event must also be of significance to encourage a person to respond to it
appropriately. A small or insignificant event is unlikely to create much of an
ethical or moral dilemma. It must be worth someone taking on the effort to find
a solution to the problem by analyzing possibilities. In other words, it must
be big enough to grab your attention. The more complex the problem, the more
avenues of analysis are needed before conclusions can be drawn. It takes a
level of motivation to pull all of this off.
To have a solution doesn't necessary do any good without some action. These abstract solutions are
often narrowed to concrete solutions which are then viewed in terms of the
counteracting contextual forces to determine the risks involved. Once the
risks, solution, and nature of the problem are solidified an act can be
forthcoming that puts the solution into motion. The success of that solution
depends on the ability to move through the communication patterns and cognitive
processes of stakeholders.
Intelligence,
sensibilities, and the environment all work together to encourage ethical
actions. Even though each person has the ability to morally reason it is those
with the highest intellectual abilities that can reflect on the possible
outcomes and impact of their behaviors. Those
who cannot reason beyond themselves, have little motivation beyond their own
needs, and are incapable of considering the consequences of their behavior are
likely to be either indifferent to ethical violations within the workplace or
the perpetrators and promoters of such behaviors.
Kholodnaya, M.
(2007). The psychology of intelligence.
Moscow: IPRAN Press.
Lopez, V. (2007).
La inteligencia social: aportes desde su studio en ninos y adolescents con
atlas capacidades congnitivas. Psykhe, 16
(2).
Sternberg,
R.J. (2008). The WICS approach to leadership: Stories of leadership and the
structures and processes that support them. The Leadership Quarterly, 19(3),
360–371.
Sternberg, R.
(2009).Ethics and giftedness. High
Ability Studies, 20 (2).
Tirri, K. (2009).
Combining excellence and ethics: implications for moral education for the
gifted. Roeper Review, 33 (1).
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Book Review: Critique of Pure Reason
Kant makes a large distinction between priori and a
posteriori knowledge. Priori knowledge comes from our senses while posterior
knowledge is a higher form of theoretical knowledge seen as independent from
our senses. Posterior knowledge is a hierarchical advancement of our basic
experiences of the data we collect from our environment. It is possible to call
this abstract or theoretical knowledge that allows for projections about the
nature of our world.
Knowledge in its priori form is more synthetic in
the sense that it relates directly to our experiences. When the knowledge is
posterior in form it takes on a more analytic approach. For example, we experience
that rain hits the ground and makes a splat. However, through reflection we can
review multiple experiences over time to learn that rain can make plants grow.
We may have seen greener grass a day after the rain but without an analytical
reflection we wouldn’t have been able to make the connection between rain and
green grass.
Each person sees the world in slightly different
ways. All prior experiences come into our existing filters and understandings.
Without these filters and understands the information would not make a whole
lot of sense. It would be as though someone would have a sensory integration
disorder where the information is only information without previous context. It
would be relatively useless to our needs because it is not processed properly.
Therefore, our mind has a perception and this perception makes the world of
difference in how we view information and make meaning from it to create
behavioral responses.
Even though Immanuel Kant was not an outright
empiricist his book helped in defining and developing the scientific method.
Posterior knowledge should be tested to ensure that the data from our
environment fit within these explanations. Where there are outliers to these
theoretical constructs there would be a need to develop a stronger theoretical
model. Hence the process is to develop the model based upon our experiences and
then test those models to see if they adequately explain what is happening in
our environment. When they don’t explain and predict consistently then there
are other factors to consider.
Most importantly Immanuel Kant discussed the concept
of morality as reason. In essence, all morality is based on the deduction of
natural laws and principles. He certainly makes sense in terms of explaining
that moral laws are often associated with societal structure and our concepts
of right versus wrong. For example, it is wrong to steal because when one does
this they destroy economic trust and this lack of trust can cause societal
chaos. If we are not relatively sure that we can keep what we earn why would we
put forward the effort? Perhaps it is better to become
part of the stealing class or not put forward any effort at all? Since no
society can exist without rules of interaction and engagement it would make
more sense to enforce/reinforce the elemental beliefs of a society without
necessarily forcing society to take any predefined vantage point of these root
beliefs. Are there many justifications for not stealing? You only need to pick
one regardless of your reasoning as it all ends at the same conclusion.
The book is heavy in terms of its knowledge and
discussion. The concepts are theoretical by nature but have transformed the way
people think. As you read through this book you will likely need to reread a
few paragraphs as Immanuel Kant likes to have long winded rhetorical
discussions. You can get temporarily lost in his train of thought. It is his
way of connecting the information to create conclusions that others can agree
with. Any student who wants to understand the underpinnings of scientific
thought, psychological principles, or societal morality should pick up a book.
As with all great works they are generally ignored upon their completion but
end up transforming the world later.
All
the preparations of reason, therefore, in what may be called pure philosophy,
are in reality directed to those three problems only [God, the soul, and
freedom].- Immanuel Kant
Kant, I. (2007) Critique
of Pure Reason. Penguin Books: UK (Originally published in 1781)
ISBN978-0-140-44747-7
Pages 686
Price: $14
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