The Professional Ethics Toolkit (eBook)
John Wiley & Sons (Verlag)
978-1-119-04518-2 (ISBN)
The Professional Ethics Toolkit is an engaging and accessible guide to the study of moral issues in professional life through the analysis of ethical dilemmas faced by people working in medicine, law, social work, business, and other industries where conflicting interests and ideas complicate professional practice and decision-making.
Written by a seasoned ethicist and professional consultant, the volume uses philosophical ideas, theories, and principles to develop and articulate a definitive methodology for ethical decision-making in professional environments. Meyers offers the benefit of his expertise with clear and practical advice at every turn, guiding readers through numerous real-world examples and case studies to illustrate key concepts including role-engendered duties, conflicts of interest, competency, and the principles that underpin and define professionalism itself.
Following the format of The Philosopher's Toolkit, The Professional Ethics Toolkit is an essential companion to the study of professional ethics for use in both the classroom and the working world, encouraging students and general readers alike to think critically and engage intelligently with ethics in their professional lives.
Christopher Meyers is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Director Emeritus of the Kegley Institute of Ethics, California State University, Bakersfield. He is also ethics faculty at Kern Medical Center, the hospital ethicist for Adventist Health of Bakersfield, ethics consultant for multiple other regional health care organizations, and a regular contributor to local and national media. He is the author of three books and nearly fifty scholarly articles.
Christopher Meyers is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Director Emeritus of the Kegley Institute of Ethics, California State University, Bakersfield. He is also ethics faculty at Kern Medical Center, the hospital ethicist for Adventist Health of Bakersfield, ethics consultant for multiple other regional health care organizations, and a regular contributor to local and national media. He is the author of three books and nearly fifty scholarly articles.
Introduction
Opening Thoughts
I was recently enjoying lunch with a couple of high‐ranking police officers when the following exchange took place:
OFFICER ONE:
ME:
OFFICER TWO (laughing out loud):
OFFICER ONE:
OFFICER TWO:
Good chuckles ensued all around, but their clever play on words captured a key problem with the topic of this book – just what do we mean by professional ethics? Consider the following statements, all of which rely on a different meaning of the term:
- “Muhammad Ali became a professional boxer in, after fighting for six years as an amateur.”
- “That painter sure did a professional job, don’t you think?”
- “Prostitution is the world’s oldest profession.”
- “You can count on Jones gardening: we are the most professional in town.”
- “Sam sure is a professional complainer.”
- “Did you hear Gabriela passed her licensing exam and is now a professional engineer?”
You probably recognize each of the different senses and have probably used several yourself. Despite some clear overlap, the meanings attached to the different uses vary so much that no single ethics conversation could effectively apply to all – the specific ethical duties attached to professional boxing, for example, differ widely from those of engineering.
This book focuses on the last meaning, that is, on the formalized sense of professional. It does so for two reasons. First, the other meanings all derive from the last in that they appeal to some version of a higher standard, one worthy of additional pay or respect. Even the fifth usage gets at the idea that Sam is a really good complainer. That is, they are at least loosely tapping into the common understanding that to be a professional is to possess a normative commitment to higher quality.
Second, the very goal of this book is to make explicit that normativity, the moral foundation at the core of professionalism. In short (for now), the thesis of this book is that to be a true professional, unlike other economic activities, is to be dedicated to a client relationship grounded in trust: trust in the professional’s competence and in her commitment to place the well‐being of her client at the forefront of their encounters.
Think of it this way:
You’re in the market for a new car so you go to a local dealership, settle on a model, and, after some haggling, agree on a price. Thrilled with your shiny new toy, you happen to run into your buddy Omar a few days later who, lo and behold, has just bought the same model! In discussing the options you each purchased, Omar says, “I guess you didn’t read the Consumer Reports review.” You agree that you didn’t and he goes on to explain that they concluded this model doesn’t need such add‐ons as rust coating, an extended warranted, or sealcoat paint – all items that you now realize you got suckered into buying by the very persuasive salesman. You also learn, to your great annoyance, that Omar also paid considerably less for his, even taking into account those add‐ons.
Now compare that story to this one:
A month later you go to visit your orthopedic surgeon to discuss the pain in your knee. She explains that it’s almost certainly torn cartilage and orders an MRI to confirm. It comes back positive for a very small tear, one that’s still attached to the original meniscus. Upon discussing your options, she persuades you to undergo a procedure in which she will remove the torn piece and also shave the underside of your kneecap to remove any rough spots. That shaving will cause some real tenderness for at least a week, during which time you’ll need to be on crutches – which her office is only too happy to sell you, along with special compression socks and bandage wraps.
You agree to proceed and all goes as planned. You are on day six of recovery, still on crutches, when you have dinner with your cousin and her new husband, an orthopedic surgeon. Naturally the conversation turns to your injury and you explain your procedure. The more you talk, the more surprised he looks, until he finally cuts in and says, “I truly hate to tell you this, but the standard of care for the type of tear you have is not to operate. Rather, the goal – so long as you can deal with the discomfort – is to leave everything intact, since removing cartilage often leads to later arthritis. Further, while such kneecap shaving can help in extreme cases – that is, when there is significant malformation – from everything you’ve described, your situation doesn’t even come close.”
What would be your respective reactions to these cases? If you are like most, in the first you’d be angry and annoyed – partly at the salesman, but even more at yourself for not doing your homework. You know that the salesman’s goal is to make as much off the sale as possible, just as yours is to get it as cheaply as possible. You even thought you’d done a pretty good job in the haggling; realizing that you haven’t, you kick yourself and vow to do better next time.
In the second, however, wouldn’t you feel deeply betrayed? You thought you could trust the surgeon to know what she was doing and not to be trying to make extra money off you. After all, you were dependent on her to help you with something really important: your health and mobility. What was that license on her wall about if it was not a guarantee that she was a professional?
The surgery case is intentionally extreme, to pull out the key differences between strictly commercial or instrumental dealings and fiduciary ones. In the former the primary motive of both parties is self‐interest; each is trying to gain something off the other. Done well, both sides gain, but one knows to approach them with eyes open; caveat emptor – buyer beware – is the basic rule of the game.
In fiduciary relationships, by contrast, while self‐interest is also present, the foundation of the relationship is a partnership, one intended to help you meet a vital need. In this type of encounter, you are dependent on the surgeon to be an expert and to treat you in a manner that places your well‐being at the forefront. In return, you have committed yourself to treating her with respect, including being honest and forthright in your interactions and compensating her fairly for her work. When that trust is broken, you feel particularly betrayed – by her and by the system that granted her the authority, and the state license, to work as a physician.
As we shall see in subsequent chapters, any number of factors have arisen over the last few decades that challenge this somewhat idealized model of professional ethics. Still, even if it has become clear that clients in professional/client relationships should also do their homework – if for no other reason than that it is unlikely the professional will sufficiently know what is most important to you, what your most vital needs are – it is still the case that, as a general rule, you can in fact trust professionals more than you can trust someone who is merely in it for the commercial transaction.
Being and Acting Professional
Importantly, however, being a professional is not the same as acting professionally. Not all those who meet the formal criteria (see Chapter 1) always act with expertise and in their clients’ best interest. And, of course, many of those whose work does not entail any of those criteria do their work with great integrity and treat their customers fairly and with dignity and respect. On the former point, as I write this there is a disturbing essay (Anonymous, 2015), with accompanying editorial (Laine et al., 2015), in the Annals of Internal Medicine that describes abhorrent medical behavior, clearly beyond the pale of any ethical human encounter, let alone a professional one.
That it was professionals (the story describes sordid actions committed by two senior‐level physicians), that is, people to whom are entrusted that which is most important to individuals – in this case, the patients’ bodies – makes it all the worse. But it also made headlines precisely because they were committed by professionals and were thus by far the exception to the rule.
This book will show why such behavior is the exception. In Part I, I describe how a professional norm rooted in deep ethical standards emerged, largely as a way of distinguishing professionals from pretenders, a move that also came with the great economic...
| Erscheint lt. Verlag | 9.4.2018 |
|---|---|
| Sprache | englisch |
| Themenwelt | Kunst / Musik / Theater |
| Geisteswissenschaften ► Philosophie ► Allgemeines / Lexika | |
| Geisteswissenschaften ► Philosophie ► Ethik | |
| Sozialwissenschaften | |
| Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Unternehmensführung / Management | |
| Schlagworte | Angewandte Ethik • Applied Ethics • Architecture • Architektur • Berufspraxis i. d. Architektur • ethical issues for professionals • ethics • ethics and dentistry • Ethics and law • ethics and medicine • ethics and nursing • Ethics and Social Work • ethics for faculty • ethics for hospital faculty • ethics for professionals • ethics for professions • Ethics Programs • ethics programs for professionals • Ethik • guide to ethics for professions • guide to professional ethics • <p>ethics • Philosophie • Philosophy • practical ethics • Professional Ethics • Professional Practice • The Professional Ethics Toolkit</p> • understanding ethics • understanding professional ethics • what are professional ethics |
| ISBN-10 | 1-119-04518-5 / 1119045185 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1-119-04518-2 / 9781119045182 |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
| Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
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