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For more information and details, contact us at:
608.825-8844
fax 815.550.2463
al.guyant@verizon.net
Guyant & Associates LLC
1176 Virdon Drive
Sun Prairie, WI 53590
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Applied
Ethics in Real Life
Guides
To Our Best Professional Behavior
Every
society, nation, and neighborhood gang has taboos. Some things are right and some are wrong, good
or bad. But what or
who decides such things?
Ethics
do, say some people. Those
ultimate values that we -- knowingly or not -- use to judge right from
wrong, including vague issues in our best-level or professional behavior.
From
theory to practical application
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The
workshop moves quickly from the eternal question of ethics' origins
(from some God or human imagination) to the concrete realities
expected in professional behavior today.
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Examine
the principles of right and wrong that are accepted by an individual
or a social group. For
example, the Puritan ethic or self-created ethics.
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Discuss
"science of morality" and how ethical behavior leads to good,
or does it really?
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Understand
how the study of Ethics philosophy's three major traditional areas of
investigation, alongside metaphysics and logic, all of which have
immense application in professional behavior, even if most of
don't realize it everyday.
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See
how rules of duty drawn from this science (of principles and rules
concerting duty) are being woven into laws and professional cannons
of ethics.
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Decide
for yourself if these are true or false for your behavior in respect
to a single class of human actions (professional, political, social,
etc.).
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Debate
leads to discovery about what most people believe and how that affects
you and persons you may supervise.
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The
course will examine if ethics really are just principles that tell us how
to behave our best and what is not acceptable at a high level of
expectation.
Challenge
yourself on whether members of your organization really know the
ethical standards to which they will be held in case of an infraction. Discuss how your organization can better communicate ethics,
because they will have such major consequences.
You
will be e surprised at the many unexpected results from the
"Ethics Exercise," which compels most past participants to
revamp their written definitions and training.
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