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1a9aea3 | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 | MODULE NAME: Module 01 – Philosophy, Logic, and Intro to Ethics/ESG LEARNING OBJECTIVES: - Identify and evaluate arguments (premises and conclusions), including detection of formal and informal fallacies - Classify moral arguments according to four traditions: utilitarian (Bentham), rights/duties (Kant), virtue (Aristotle), care (Gilligan) - Understand introductory ESG considerations - Analyze business ethical dilemmas - Create your own moral arguments in favor of a business decision KEY POINTS: • Arguments have premises (reasons) and conclusions (claims). Valid arguments have logical structure; sound arguments are valid AND have true premises. • Formal fallacies: Errors in logical structure (affirming the consequent, denying the antecedent). • Informal fallacies: Errors in reasoning (ad hominem, straw man, false dilemma, appeal to authority, slippery slope). • Utilitarian ethics (Bentham/Mill): Right action = greatest good for greatest number. Focus on consequences and outcomes. • Rights/duties ethics (Kant): Right action = follows universal moral rules and treats people as ends, not means. Focus on principles and duties. • Virtue ethics (Aristotle): Right action = what a virtuous person would do. Focus on character and excellence. • Care ethics (Gilligan): Right action = maintains relationships and responds to needs. Focus on context and connection. • ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance): Framework for evaluating business decisions beyond profit - considers stakeholder impact, sustainability, fairness, and long-term value creation. |