This is clever and speaks volumes of the intelligence of the author. I think this article should be on the desk of every business ethics teaching in the U.S. Go give it a read!
Nice Work!
James Pilant
This is clever and speaks volumes of the intelligence of the author. I think this article should be on the desk of every business ethics teaching in the U.S. Go give it a read!
Nice Work!
James Pilant
Freeman is a philosopher not originally trained as a businessman. He brings an original point of view to the subject. He started teaching at Wharton some years ago and has taught regularly since then. This is a lecture of about an hour length. This is obviously not for all my readers. Only those devoted to further study in Business Ethics more likely students than regular readers. Nevertheless, hearing a lecture from a highly skilled and experienced teacher is a pleasure and I recommend it.
James Alan Pilant
This is an English web site discussing what has become of Franklin’s London lodgings in the intervening years. It celebrates Franklin, which leads me to believe that the little inconveniences of Franklin’s leadership in revolution and creation of a spy service against Britain have apparently been forgiven or forgotten. The link to the Franklin House is wonderful and I recommend you take a look at it. To my astonishment and delight, they have a piece of music you can listen to, that Franklin composed. So, to all of Franklin’s many accomplishments, I can add composer. I shouldn’t be surprised. What field of human endeavor did he not find interesting?
via London Sideways
I reblog the blog, Ethical Houston, as much as possible. I firmly believe that Christian Business Ethics has a place in the resolution of our business ethical crisis. You should read this blog if you have any interest in the Protestant concept of business ethics. I subscribe to it, you should too.
James Pilant
via Ethical Houston
Sometimes after expressing my anger in an article I feel like relaxing a little bit and sometimes want to amuse myself. This little gem from the Twin Cities, Pioneer Press, concerns one 40 year old man who successfully repelled an attack on his mother’s home by shotgunning attacking clowns and their dog companions(apparent reinforcements to the clown insurgents). That is, if you believe his side of the story. The police version is that he shot up his mother’s home (22 shots) while under the effects of a hallucinogenic drug. After successfully bombarding an apparently inoffensive home with shotgun pellets, he faced a large number of police who surrounded the clown killing vigilante’s defensive position. The man the emerged on the porch shotgun in hand, extra ammunition in a bag around his neck, and failing to respond to police commands fell down and rendered himself unable to continue his valiant struggle against hallucinogenic odds. His saga ends in the local jail. His name has not been released.
(I am deeply, deeply impressed by the police force here. I am astonished under the circumstances that they didn’t fill him full of lead but acted with commendable restraint in a dangerous situation.)
More Killer Clowns! (If he would have killed imaginary mimes I would have been more sympathetic.)
James Pilant
I’m honored that there are people who check my site regularly but I can only post a little the next few days. I’ve got a sinus infection. It’s really slowing me down. I’ll be back with my usual three a day by the middle of the week. jp
I apologize. I only put up one entry yesterday. My wife took me to a movie for my birthday (and I had to do final grades for my thoroughly excellent class). I do not much care for being 54. My mother says to think of the alternative. She is the ONLY ONE who gets to say that without me vowing revenge, so don’t even think about it.
My Alexa traffic rate today is 2,755,714 which means I have a ways to go to break 100,000!
Many people wished me happy birthday and for the first time in my life due to the magic of the internet, I have some wonderful happy birthdays from around the world. My thanks!
James Pilant
I try to recommend no more than one site a day. Today, I make an exception. There is an intriguing web site I found called Ethical Houston. It deals with ethics, often business ethics, in the context of Christianity. I hold that business ethics as taught in the Protestant and Catholic faith are legitimate moral systems for making business decisions. I’m going to keep an eye on this site and see what happens.
James Pilant
via Ethical Houston
I was telling one of my students on Friday how awful it is to write about business ethics. What’s wrong with it? It’s the sheer weight of the wrong doing. You get up in the morning and you scan any news channel and there is business ethical mis-conduct and a lot of it. It’s a daily sometimes hourly, evidence of an ethics catastrophe.
That’s exactly what we have, an ethics catastrophe, a disaster. How did we get here? Obviously there has been business crime in the past. From the Boeing bribery scandal of the mid-60’s to ITT’s offer to finance the Republican National Convention in 1972. But the scale, the continuous bombardment of wrong doing simply wasn’t there. But we have it now, a daily demoralizing drumbeat of ethical lapse.
The business world is trapped in a downward spiral of behavior. First, there is a relativistic view of ethics in which what is right or wrong is a point of view. There is also a similar view that is, that is if an action makes money, it must be good. Further, there is a tendency to think of morals and ethics as only a legal construct – if it’s not illegal, it’s okay to do it. Second, the ability to operate in nations all over the world has dissolved the ties of nationalism, patriotism and brotherhood that commonly tie individuals together in self interest. If you can’t do something legally in one country, you can look around and find a place that will let you do it.
There is no countervailing force. Even after a series of debacles in the financial industry that came a razor’s edge distance from collapsing the world economy, there is no soul searching. In fact, two years later, there is a common perception in the financial industry that there is no need to change anything, not regulations, not personnel, not business structures and definitely, not attitudes.
I, of course, cry out. But I’m pretty far out in the wilderness (way out). But you can rest assured, that the “malefactors of great wealth” are not reading this. (“Malefactors of great wealth” is Franklin Roosevelt’s name for the wall street barons.)
I’m proud that there are others who share my views. I write about them on this blog and on occasion exchange e-mails. It gives me a feeling of participating in a larger movement. I want you to be part of the movement to restore ethics and honor to the business sector.
James Pilant
I know that many of my readers are students. I don’t know of any way you can graduate from college without from time to time doing a presentation. Lee Andrew Hilyer, MLIS, M.Ed. has written a book about making presentations. This article contains two links to brief expositions of his ideas.
I looked at his stuff. It’s good. It’s easy to understand and use. (This is gold, guys! Most teachers do not know how to communicate. This guy is an exception.)
James Pilant
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