54 research outputs found

    Schacht on Marx's concept of alienation

    No full text

    Wants, Prudence and Morality.

    Full text link
    Ph.D.PhilosophyUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/157179/1/7214814.pd

    Google, Human Rights, and Moral Compromise

    No full text
    censorship, China, Google, human rights, moral compromise,

    Marx, Engels, and the relativity of morals

    No full text

    Innovation, rule breaking and the ethics of entrepreneurship

    No full text
    This article examines a feature of the ethics of entrepreneurship that is infrequently directly discussed, viz., rule breaking. Entrepreneurs are widely said to engage in rule breaking. Many examples of this appear in popular and academic literature. But how may this be integrated into an account of the ethics of entrepreneurship? One response would be that when entrepreneurs break legal and moral rules then what they do is wrong and ought to be condemned. There is a great deal to be said for this rule model of entrepreneurial ethics. However, this view is also mistaken. Instead, this article defends a virtue-based account of the ethics of entrepreneurship in which certain instances of rule breaking, even if morally wrong, are nevertheless ethically acceptable and part of the creative destruction that entrepreneurs bring not only to the economy but also to morality.Innovation Rule breaking Ethics Entrepreneurship

    The Limits and Prospects of Business Ethics

    No full text
    • …
    corecore