PrepTest 48, Section 2, Question 16
Most business ethics courses and textbooks confine themselves to considering specific cases and principles. For example, students are often given lists of ethical rules for in-class discussion and role-playing. This approach fails to provide a framework for understanding specific principles and should thus be changed to include abstract ethical theory.
Most business ethics courses and textbooks confine themselves to considering specific cases and principles. For example, students are often given lists of ethical rules for in-class discussion and role-playing. This approach fails to provide a framework for understanding specific principles and should thus be changed to include abstract ethical theory.
Most business ethics courses and textbooks confine themselves to considering specific cases and principles. For example, students are often given lists of ethical rules for in-class discussion and role-playing. This approach fails to provide a framework for understanding specific principles and should thus be changed to include abstract ethical theory.
Most business ethics courses and textbooks confine themselves to considering specific cases and principles. For example, students are often given lists of ethical rules for in-class discussion and role-playing. This approach fails to provide a framework for understanding specific principles and should thus be changed to include abstract ethical theory.
Which one of the following, if valid, most helps to justify the reasoning above?
A moralizing approach that fails to recognize the diversity of the ethical rules in use is unacceptable.
Courses that concentrate mainly on role-playing are undesirable because students must adopt alien personae.
People have no obligation to always behave ethically unless they are acquainted with abstract ethical theory.
Abstract ethical theory is the most appropriate of any context for understanding specific principles.
An ethics course should acquaint students with a wide range of specific principles and appropriate applications.
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