Morgan Cheeseman

Archive for 2010|Yearly archive page

The Potter Box

In Potter Box on September 21, 2010 at 7:33 pm

Ralph B. Potter Jr. was a professor of social ethics at Harvard from 1965 to 2003 (Harvard.edu). He created a model for critically thinking through ethical dilemmas. It is best fit for dilemmas that are clearly defined and understood.

The concepts are displayed in a four square box and flow in a counterclockwise motion, beginning with “Situation.”

Situation –> Values –> Principles –> Loyalties

Situation
How would you define the situation?
What do you know?
What don’t you know that you wish you did?
How would other people describe the situation and why?

Values
List all of the values at play in this situation.

Principles
-Write out how principles would handle the dilemma. For instance:

-Aristotle would say extremes are unethical, so when is this okay (or not okay)?
-Kant would ask the categorical imperative and tell you not to think about the consequences.

(Categorical Imperative:
Would the world work if everyone handled it this way?
Would you want to live in a world that did run that way?)

-Rawls asks you to imagine being in everyone’s role and finding the best solution for each.
-Mill WOULD have you look at consequences and ask what is best for the most people?

Loyalties
List all of the parties who have a stake in your decision. Determine whose loyalties are most important.

After you have went through each quadrant, you can then make a values-based decision.

The Ginn Model

In Ginn Model on September 21, 2010 at 7:09 pm

John Ginn, professor of ethics at the University of Kansas, crafted an ethics model to assist us when confronted by an ethical dilemma. The Ginn Model is similar to the Potter Box but is more in-depth when examining the issue at hand and the possible courses of action.

The Ginn Model consists of seven steps.
1] Define your “should I” question. Do not make it “should I…or not.” It must be clear in order for the model to work.

2] List reasons for the “should I” action and reasons against.

3] List all values that come into play in this dilemma.

4] Write out principles and ethics codes that come into play. What do those things tell you to do in this situation?

5] List all loyalties in the dilemma.

6] Write out all possible courses of action for this particular dilemma.

7] Choose a decision.

Where to Begin

In About on September 21, 2010 at 6:31 pm

Good day, readers!

As a journalism student at the University of Kansas, I found it to be difficult to find information about some of the concepts we were studying.

On this page I want to share two ethics models that are very comprehensive and exhaustive.

I hope it helps you with whatever you are working on!

-Morgan Cheeseman