SOC341/2031
Engineering Ethics
May 03, 2024
Md. Anower Perves,
Lecturer, Dept. of CSE, SEU
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    6. Lecture
    Facing Moral Dilemma
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    Lecture Outline
    ➔ Facing Moral Dilemma
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    Moral Dilemma
              ❏     Moral dilemmas often test our character and our
                    commitment to the greatest good for the greatest number
                    of people.
              ❏     Some moral dilemmas are simply complicated decisions
                    which must be thoroughly evaluated before choosing a
                    course of action.
              ❏     Other choices are genuine moral dilemmas which
                    challenge our ability to makes fair and just choices.
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    Moral Dilemma
                ❏   Some people have hypothetical minds that like to debate
                    what is right and wrong.
                ❏   Sometimes, however, what is right and wrong is not so
                    clear, as is the case in a moral dilemma.
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    Long Term, Short Term Consequences
              ❏   Moral dilemmas can also be evaluated on the basis of their
                  short-term and long-term consequences.
              ❏   If short-term consequences are overshadowed by
                  long-term benefits, then moral dilemma can find its ethical
                  solution by pursuing an outcome which obtains the
                  greatest long-term benefit for the greatest number of
                  people.
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    Moral Dilemma
               Should you always tell the truth?
               ❏    A murderer at the door is looking for your friend who is
                    hiding in your house.
               ❏    Your co-worker is cheating on her time-sheet.
               ❏    You witness a parking-lot accident.
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    Moral Dilemma
                    Should you take this job?
                         You are offered a job that will require you to do things that
                    you find morally questionable.
                          ★    If you don’t take it, someone else will.
                          ★    Maybe you can work for good from the inside.
                          ★    With the money you can take care of your family and
                               even give back to charities
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    Moral Dilemma Scenarios
                     What would you do?
                          ★   There is a train that, is about to run over your own
                              son, who has been tied to its track.
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     Moral Dilemma Scenarios
                      What would you do?
                           ★   There is a train that, is about to run over your own
                               son, who has been tied to its track.
                           ★   It just so happens that you have only enough time to
                               pull a lever which will send the train down an
                               alternate track saving your son.
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     Moral Dilemma Scenarios
                      What would you do?
                           ★   There is a train that, is about to run over your own
                               son, who has been tied to its track.
                           ★   It just so happens that you have only enough time to
                               pull a lever which will send the train down an
                               alternate track saving your son.
                           ★   However, you see that, tied to the other track, is your
                               best friend, who recently saved your life and you have
                               yet to repay him for doing so.
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     Moral Dilemma Scenarios
                      Right or Wrong?
                           ★    You have the responsibility of filling a position in a
                                firm. Your friend Paul has applied and is qualified, but
                                someone else seems even more qualified. You wants
                                to give the job to Paul, but you feels guilty, believing
                                that you ought to be impartial.
                           ★    You gives the job to Paul. Was he right?
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     Moral Dilemma
           How to Respond to an Ethical Dilemma?
                ★    Responding to an ethical dilemma requires that you are able to, in a
                     sense, step back from the situation and properly look at the
                     situation as a whole.
                ★    You need to understand who is affected by the dilemma aside from
                     yourself, what potential decisions could be made and what the
                     outcomes of those decisions might be for all those involved.
                ★    By gaining a wider perspective of the problem as a whole, you will
                     be more informed and able to make a decision that is perhaps
                     justifiable based on your assessment of the circumstances.
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     Moral Dilemma
               How to handle Moral Dilemma?
                     ★   Discuss the issues with a trusted friend or colleague.
                         Understand that listening to an additional opinion can provide
                         more insight. It can also help you focus on issues that you may
                         have overlooked.
                     ★   Spend time thinking about the appropriate decision to make.
                         Avoid thinking about your decision in terms of “right” or “wrong,”
                         as this can make it easier to be trapped in your own thoughts.
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     6.Lecture
     Moral Dilemma/Heinz Dilemma
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     Lecture Outline
     ➔ Moral Dilemma
     ➔ Heinz Dilemma
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     Moral Dilemma
                     A situation in which, whatever choice is made, the agent
                     commits a moral wrong.
                     1.   Something morally right   Bad outcome
                     2.   Something morally wrong        Good outcome
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     Moral Dilemma
                     Lawrence Kohlberg (1927‑1987) was a well‑known theorist in the
                     field of moral development. He posed a series of moral dilemmas
                     (e.g., Heinz Dilemma) to his subjects and then asked questions
                     to probe their reasons for recommending a specific course of
                     action. From a large set of responses, he developed a model of
                     moral development, with six stages, analogous to the affective
                     development stages of Erikson and the cognitive development
                     stages of Piaget, extended by Gowan.
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     Moral Dilemma
                 Scenario 1:
                       A woman was near death from a unique kind of cancer.
                 There is a drug that might save her. The drug costs $4,000 per
                 dosage, although it only costs the scientists $100 to make it. The
                 sick woman's husband, Heinz, went to everyone he knew to
                 borrow the money and tried every legal means, but he could only
                 get together about $2,000. He asked the doctor/scientist who
                 discovered the drug for a discount or that he let him pay later.
                 But the doctor/scientist refused.
                 ** Should Heinz break into the laboratory to steal the drug for his
                 wife?
                                   (Why or why not?)
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     Moral Dilemma
                     Scenario 2:
                           Heinz broke into the laboratory and stole the drug. The next
                     day, the newspapers reported the break‑in and theft. Brown, a
                     police officer and a friend of Heinz, remembered seeing Heinz
                     near the laboratory last evening, behaving suspiciously. Later
                     that night, he had seen Heinz running away from the laboratory.
                          ** Should Brown report what he saw? Why or why not?
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     Moral Dilemma
                     Scenario 3:
                           Officer Brown reported what he saw. Heinz was arrested and
                     brought to court. Heinz was found guilty and could be sentenced
                     to as much as two years in prison.
                     ** Should the judge sentence Heinz to prison? Why or why not?
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     Levels
              Level 1: PRE-CONVENTIONAL
              Level 2: CONVENTIONAL
              Level 3: POST-CONVENTIONAL
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     Kohlberg’s Stages
                         Level 1: Pre-conventional
                         Reasoners judge the morality of an action by its direct
                         consequences
                              Stage One: Obedience and Punishment
                              Stage Two: Individualism, Instrumentalism, and Exchange
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     Heinz Dilemma
                     Stage One (obedience): Heinz should not steal the medicine, because
                     otherwise he will be put in prison.
                     Obedience orientation: Individuals focus on the direct consequences
                     that their actions will have for themselves.
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     Heinz Dilemma
                     Stage Two (self-interest): Heinz should steal the medicine, because
                     he will be much happier if he saves his wife, even if he will have to
                     serve a prison sentence.
                     Self-interest orientation: what's in it for me position. Right behavior
                     is defined by what is in one's own best interest.
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     Kohlberg’s Stages
                         Level 2: Conventional
                         People who reason in a conventional way judge the morality of
                         actions by comparing these actions to social rules and expectations.
                              Stage Three: Interpersonal Concordance ("Good boy/girl")
                              Stage Four: Law and Order
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     Heinz Dilemma
                     Stage Three (conformity): Heinz should steal the medicine, because
                     his wife expects it.
                     Conformity orientation: Individuals seek approval from other people.
                     They judge the morality of actions by evaluating the consequences of
                     these actions for a person's relationships.
                     Stage Four (law and order mentality): In stage four, individuals think
                     it is important to obey the law and conventions of society
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     Kohlberg’s Stages
                         Level 3: Post-conventional
                         Most people do not reach this level of moral reasoning
                              Stage Five: Human Rights
                              Stage Six: Universal Ethical Principles (Principled Conscience)