college
|
Papers On Ethics
Page 18 of 66
|
|
Case Scenario: Ethical/Legal Issue In Therapy
[ send me this paper ]
3 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses the legal and ethical implications of breaching confidentiality when one spouse discloses he is HIV positive but has not told the other spouse. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TLClegethther.rtf
Case Study Analysis: Pharmacists and the Pill
[ send me this paper ]
This 10 page paper uses a case study submitted by a student to evaluate the dilemma of pharmacists refusing to fill prescriptions for birth control. Ethics theory is relayed and applied. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: SA612Rx.rtf
Case Study In Ethics: The Death Penalty
[ send me this paper ]
5 pages in length. The ethical debate over the death penalty is one of the most hotly contested political and social topics of all time. When one considers such concepts as altruism, Utilitarianism, Kant's Categorical Imperative and positive/negative duties, it becomes quite clear that the ethical implications of capital punishment can certainly go either way. Leonard Pitts, Jr. attempts to place a modicum of understanding upon the oftentimes indefinable nature of ethics in "Fitting End to Death Penalty," providing an insightful glance from both sides of the issue. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: TLCEthDP.rtf
Case Study – Phillip Morris Ethical Analysis
[ send me this paper ]
A 9 page paper based on a case study provided by the student. The headings include: principal facts of the case, ethical issues, primary stakeholders, possible alternatives, evaluation of each alternative according to utilitarian, justice/fairness and right/duty perspectives, constraints, implementation of selected alternative. Case has to do with Phillip Morris expanding its cigarette market to Third World and East European countries. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: PGphmrs.rtf
Case Study: Ethical/Value Dilemmas And Conflicts
[ send me this paper ]
10 pages in length. An individual wants to work within the social work field – either paid or voluntary – however, as he works in partnership to find employment, another professional suggests to the social worker that he is not ready to return to work. Several ethical/value dilemmas and conflicts are present here, not the least of which include the level of competence the returning social worker is deemed to have (or not have). Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: TLCCaseEth.rtf
Censorship: Necessary and Impossible
[ send me this paper ]
A 6 page paper which examines how some form of censorship is necessary to protect people, but also how censorship is impossible at the same time. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: RAcnim.rtf
Character Education in the Public Schools
[ send me this paper ]
A 13 page paper discussing the “dangerous” ground of including moral education in the public schools. Among those schools that have been most successful in achieving impressive academic gains has emerged a paradox: academic excellence does not emerge in an atmosphere void of personal responsibility and dedication to the work at hand. Nor does it thrive in the environment in which there is no cooperative effort or attention to helping peers. It seems that we had to abandon values in order to realize their relative worth. As public schools are called to accountability for results as never before, there is also much more attention to character education. Bibliography lists 14 sources.
Filename: KSeduChar.rtf
Charles Taylor & The Ethics Of Authenticity
[ send me this paper ]
An 8 page paper that provides an overview of Taylor's work. This paper supports Taylor's reflections of the process of the individual within society, especially as he reflects on the issues for an individual within our technologically and bureacratically advanced society. No additional sources cited.
Filename: Taylorc.wps
Charles Taylor's "The Ethics Of Authenticity": Modernity
[ send me this paper ]
7 pages in length. Charles Taylor condones the notion of progress – it is just the residual effect that modernity creates that has him rather perturbed. In his book entitled "The Ethics Of Authenticity," Taylor weighs the quest of modernity to the fundamental aspects of being humane by questioning the very actions by which people have come to live their lives. The writer discusses how Taylor employs three malaises that effectively pose his concerns of a society gone awry from the influence of modernity: the comprehensive and far-reaching loss of meaning, the postulation that values have taken a back seat to personal conquest and the doubtful existence of a healthy self-government due to the presence of special-interest politics, with particular attention focuses on the first two. No additional sources cited.
Filename: TLCtylor.wps