Ethics
Dirt, Dirt, Dirt
Career
Grab bag
100

             begins when elements within a moral system conflict.

What is ethics

100
Careers like surgeons or professional athletes are assumed to be of higher status and are the kinds of careers that are "chosen" and worth pursuing. This makes them an example of what?

What are dignity affirming careers. 

100
What are the two main paradoxes that Gen Z experience when thinking about their careers? 

What are "the golden ticket vs no guarantees" and "it's all up to me vs social networks." 

100

                    lies at the mean between two extremes of excess and deficiency. 

What is virtue. (For example, "courage" lies at the mean between foolhardiness and cowardice.) 

200

The self-concept organized around traits or mental schemata of what a moral person is likely to feel, think, and do. 


What is moral identity. 

200

                     is associated with garbage, death, effluence etc. or work that is performed under noxious/dangerous conditions

What is physical taint. 

200

Define careers.

What are an expansive discourse through which work acquires coherence and meaning in individuals’ lives and across lifespans. 

200

This ethical decision-making framework suggests that you should consult your conscious and feelings as part of determining the "rightness" of an action. 

What is Bok's ethical framework. 

300

Identify the three types of loyalties 

What are loyalties arising from shared humanity, loyalties arising from professional practice, and loyalties arising from employment. 

300

Dean works as a fitness influencer and loves his work. He often says that people who put scrutiny on influencer work are just doing it because they are envious of influencers. "People are just petty haters." This is an example of what dirt management strategy? 

What is condemning the condemners. 

300

                    attributes  individuals’ choices about career to personal tastes and preferences without regard to systemic constraints and/or inequity regimes that direct or shape such choices. 

What is choice rhetoric. 

300

Your best friend works as a lawyer for a big oil company. You're completely baffled by how they are comfortable defending the company against (yet another lawsuit) on negative environmental impacts. However, your friend says that their job isn't to defend a guilty party but to protect the constitutional rights of the company. This is an example of what dirt maintenance strategy? 

What is reframing. 

400

You find out that your brother has been stealing money from your parents. Your family isn't hurting for money but you know that it isn't a good thing. When deciding what to do, you chose to say nothing to your parents or your brother because you believe it will do the least harm to your family relationships. What ethical framework did you use to guide your decision-making?

What is utilitarianism. 

400

What are the five strategies that people use to overcome dirt? 

What are reliance on strong cultures, reframing, neutralizing, recalibrating, and refocusing. 
400

What are the four foundational values that motivate our drive for work? 

What are meaningful work, leisure, money, and security. 

400

                   is our tendency to overestimate the virtuousness of our future selves.

What is ethical mirage. 

500

What are the 9 duties that we owe to each other?

What are fidelity, reparation, gratitude, justice, beneficence, self-improvement, not injuring others, veracity, and nurturing. 

500

Define dirty work and identify the forms of taint associated it.

What is work that is perceived to be disgusting or degrading and is associated with physical, social, or moral taint.  

500

Describe the one story we have as a society about careers

What is that careers are characterized by (1) equal opportunities and objective success, (2) white collar work, (3) entail "real jobs", and (4) require a professional "brand." 

500

What are the four orientations towards money?

What are worry, status, achievement, and security.