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  1. 15 de abr. de 2002 · 1. Examples. 2. The Concept of Moral Dilemmas. 3. Problems. 4. Dilemmas and Consistency. 5. Responses to the Arguments. 6. Moral Residue and Dilemmas. 7. Types of Moral Dilemmas. 8. Multiple Moralities. 9. Conclusion. Bibliography. Cited Works. Other Worthwhile Readings. Academic Tools. Other Internet Resources. Related Entries. 1. Examples.

    • Deontic Logic

      1. Informal Preliminaries and Background. Deontic logic has...

  2. 18 de jun. de 2019 · Ethical dilemma are all decisions that influence directly or indirectly in the lives of others. Ethical dilemma is when we are faced with two options of conduct: The first option will make us...

  3. Two different frameworks of professional decision-making can be useful when professionals are confronted with these challenging circumstances: 1) a rational decision-making framework ( Goodwin et al. 1998; Oliveira 2007 ), and 2) a psychological framework ( DuBois et al. 2015a; Mumford et al. 2008 ).

  4. Business ethical dilemmas can be understood as reflecting a contradiction between a socially detrimental process and a self-interested profitable consequence. This representation allows us to distinguish two forms of behavior differing by whether priority is put on consequences or on processes.

  5. Expanding on this approach, we present a multinomial model that allows researchers to quantify sensitivity to consequences (C), sensitivity to moral norms (N), and general preference for inaction versus action irrespective of consequences and norms (I) in responses to moral dilemmas.

  6. The three parameters in this processing tree capture the likelihoods that the response to a given dilemma is driven by consequences (C), moral norms. (N), and a general preference for inaction versus action irre-spective of consequences and norms (I), hence termed the CNI model of moral decision-making.

  7. Gawronski, Armstrong, Conway, Friesdorf and Hütter (2017, GACFH) presented a model of choices in utilitarian moral dilemmas, those in which following a moral principle or norm (the deontological response) leads to worse consequences than violating the principle (the utilitarian response).