Do No Evil: Ethics with Applications to Economic Theory and Business

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iUniverse, Jul 14, 2003 - Business & Economics - 494 pages
"An effective integration of ethics, morality and business practices including extensive discussions of social justice, animal rights and the environment the author elucidates the many layers of the managerial and corporate environment, deftly analyzing the fiduciary, social and moral relationships between the players in a corporation. A fresh, convincing ethical examination."
-Kirkus Discoveries

Being good is not good enough to be moral. In Do No Evil, Michael Berumen debunks the notions that moral judgments are subjective preferences and that there are no universal standards of morality. He analyzes leading normative theories and gives biographical highlights on several important philosophers. Berumen then sets forth his own theory: the only basis for universal morality is the avoidance of death and suffering, in contrast to conventional conceptions of promoting good, which he shows cannot form a basis for universal rules of conduct.

Berumen then examines the concepts of property, exchange, competition, and inequality, and shows why capitalism occupies the default position of morality, and why socialism is problematic. With that said, he also explains why property rights are not unlimited, and how morality serves to constrain capitalist acts.

The last part of the book deals with business-related topics. Berumen demonstrates that a business is property and not primarily an instrument for delivering social justice, and he covers such areas as governance, fiduciary responsibility, marketing, globalism, the environment, duties to animals, and moral courage.

 

Contents

CHAPTER 2
22
The Consequence of Duty
57
CHAPTER 4
91
The Moral Imperatives
109
CHAPTER 7
166
CHAPTER 8
181
CHAPTER 9
191
Part II
207
CHAPTER 22
320
A Right to Work?
338
CHAPTER 25
365
Persuading Others
371
CHAPTER 27
384
CHAPTER 28
393
CHAPTER 29
401
CHAPTER 30
412

and Profit
243
CHAPTER 15
264
264
288
CHAPTER 19
294
CHAPTER 20
307
CHAPTER 32
419
CHAPTER 33
434
220
454
Index
464
Copyright

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Popular passages

Page 8 - People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.
Page 36 - Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them.'2 Now, this appears to be a paradoxical and strange position to adopt.
Page 39 - For these words of Good, Evill, and Contemptible, are ever used with relation to the person that useth them: There being nothing simply and absolutely so; nor any common Rule of Good and Evill, to be taken from the nature of the objects themselves...

About the author (2003)

After a bout of youthful delinquency in the 1960s, Mr. Berumen joined the Army, where he served as a cryptographer, and he went on to earn a degree in philosophy and mathematics, and graduated summa cum laude from East Bay University. Later he attended Stanford's Graduate School of Business. He joined an insurance company in the seventies, and retired as a senior executive 26 years later, after which he became CEO of a California security business. In 1993, he testified before Congress as an expert in health insurance. Berumen's principal interests are in philosophy, physics, and the foundations of mathematics. Berumen has authored articles on various topics, in addition to his book, Do No Evil: Ethics with Applications to Economic Theory and Business. He has also served on various non-profit and for-profit boards. Berumen is the editor of the Bertrand Russell Society's periodical, The Bulletin and serves on the Society's board of directors. He and his wife, Carol are semi-retired and living in Colorado.

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