Acts & Law Cases
True or False
Misc
Fallacies
Fallacies
100

Ethical companies with global supply chains will adhere to their code of ethics as well as these in both the US and host country.

laws

100

Globalization is evidence that business is culturally neutral.

False. Cultures often adapt to business rather than the other way around.
100

list 2 things that influence ethics

time

geography

religion

culture


100

when a person says that there are just 2 choices when there are actually more

either/or

100

occurs when you try to convince people that something is true because it is widely held to be true.

Bandwagon

200

The outcome of this 1919 court case was that businesses had to operate in the interests of their shareholders as opposed to their employees and managers, which meant prioritizing profit and return on  investment.

Dodge v. Ford Motor Co.

200

All ethical standards are relative and should be treated as such.

False. Certain core ethics exist throughout cultures and time, although they may manifest in different ways.

200

list 1 of the 2 purposes of businesses

responsibility

profit

200

occurs when people use the ideas of non-experts to support their arguments

appeal to doubtful authority

200

to present a weak arguement that can easily be refuted so that your argument looks better by contrast

straw man

300

The outcome of this 1968 court case was that boards of directors and  management were given more latitude in determining how to balance the interests of stakeholders.

Shlensky v. Wrigley

300

The United Nations Global Compact is a set of standards that is binding worldwide.

False. It is a voluntary set of standards; it is not legally binding on countries or corporations.

300

list 1 of the 2 groups that have helped to change ethics over time

government (laws & regulations)

consumers (trends & activism)

300

because two events occur closely in time, one event must cause the other

post hoc

300

when 2 things are portrayed as alike when actually they are not

weak analogy

400

The outcome of this 2014 case was that for-profit corporations are not required to pursue profit at  the expense of everything else.

Burwell v. Hobby Lobby

400

Religion continues to be a forceful influence on ethical standards.

True.

400
consumerism leads to this economic principle

diminishing marginal utility

400

occurs when someone attacks the character or motives of a person instead of focusing on the issues

ad hominem

400

when a person raises an irrelevant side issue to divert attention from the real issue

red herring

500

In response to the 2008 financial crisis, this act increased regulations and management vigilance in the form of ethics training,  compliance reporting, whistleblower programs, and audits.

Dodd–Frank Wall  Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

500

Culture and ethics cannot be separated, because ethical norms have been established over time by, and make sense to, people who share the same background, language, and customs.

True

500

Its mission of these voluntary standards is to mobilize companies and stakeholders to create a world in which businesses align their strategies  and operations with a set of core principles covering human rights, labor, the environment,  and anti-corruption practices.

United Nations (UN) Global Compact

500

when a conclusion does not follow from the premises

non-sequitur

500

when someone reaches a conclusion that is based on too little evidence

hasty generalization

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