Difference between revisions of "Ethics"

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*Form for 1st Group Short Answer Exercise -- Report your Answer: [http://goo.gl/forms/E7fKhkBeH2]
 
*Form for 1st Group Short Answer Exercise -- Report your Answer: [http://goo.gl/forms/E7fKhkBeH2]
 
*Answers from 1st Group Short Answer Exercise -- [[Spring 2015 Ethics SA Group Exercise Answers]]
 
*Answers from 1st Group Short Answer Exercise -- [[Spring 2015 Ethics SA Group Exercise Answers]]
*Form for 1st Group Short Answer Exercise -- Report your Ratings of each group: [http://goo.gl/forms/o55N9Vei9d]
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*Form for 1st Group Short Answer Exercise -- Report your Ratings of each group: [http://goo.gl/forms/vtoKWbjuq1]
 
*[[Assignment Rubric]]
 
*[[Assignment Rubric]]
  

Revision as of 06:24, 30 January 2015

Ethics Course Wiki

Documents for Short Answer and Essay Assignments


  • Student Information Form [4]
  • Report your Device ID after registering responseware through the TurningPoint site. [5]

Other Resources

(This is a section students often contribute to by noticing ethical issues and articles about values that they find important.)

  • The Cold Logic of Drunk People [6]
  • Visit the site Your Morals. org and take one or two of the surveys. Write a journal entry about it.
  • Prompt for Eco essay, "When the Other Appears on the Scene"
  • "The following letter is Eco’s reply to a question the cardinal had asked him: “What is the basis of the certainty and necessity for moral action of those who, in order to establish the absolute nature of an ethic, do not intend to appeal to metaphysical principles or transcendental values, or even to universally valid categorical imperatives?”"
  • New Yorker article on "Biology of Violence," [7] suggesting that criminal subcultures are following "legitimate" evolutionary strategies.
  • If Facebook were Yelp [8]
  • Here is a link giving a synopsis of the book Blink by Malcolm Gladwell. It is about how people can make choices within the blink of an eye. This kind of relates to the "elephant" we have been discussing in class.

[9]

  • Additionally, I have posted a link to the book Think by Michael LeGault. It is a counterargument to Gladwell's Blink discussing why serious decisions cannot be made quickly - "the rider" so to speak.

[10]

Previous Course Resources