Monday, August 31, 2009

Course Details

Rowan University, Fall 2009
Philosophy 09322, Section 01
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 4:45 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Robinson Hall, Room 101-B

Instructor: Sean Landis
Email: landis@rowan.edu
Phone: 609-980-8367
Course Website: http://rowanbizethics09.blogspot.com

Required Text
Contemporary Issues in Business Ethics, 5th edition, edited by Joseph DesJardins & John McCall
(buy used from Amazon or from Half.com)

About the Course
This course is designed to introduce students to thinking critically about the ethics of economics and modern business practices. Throughout the semester, we are going to explore a handful of issues in business ethics, such as: Is capitalism an ethical economic system? Should corporations be socially responsible? Should governments regulate business practices?

In examining these topics, it is my hope that we can also develop the skills of doing philosophy—understanding and evaluating others’ attempts to answer puzzling moral questions. Ultimately, though, our main goal is to learn decision-making tools we can use to provide our own answers to these ethical dilemmas. Hopefully, we will discover that careful, systematic, and critical thought about moral issues can be fruitful.

I Heart Mad Men


Grades
A = 934-1000 total points
A- = 900-933 total points
B+ = 867-899 total points
B = 834-866 total points
B- = 800-833 total points
C+ = 767-799 total points
C = 734-766 total points
C- = 700-733 total points
D+ = 667-699 total points
D = 634-666 total points
D- = 600-633 total points
F = below 600 total points

Quiz 100 points
Midterm 200 points
Final 350 points
Consensus Leading 150 points
Paper 150 points
Attendance/Participation 50 points

Quiz: There will be one quiz, taken during the 4th week of class. The quiz will last 20 to 25 minutes, and be held at the beginning of the period on the scheduled day.

Exams: There will be a midterm and a final exam. The midterm tests everything covered during the first half of the course, and will last the full period (75 minutes) on the scheduled day. The final exam is cumulative—that is, it tests everything covered throughout the whole course. The final will also last 75 minutes, and will take place on the last day of class.

Consensus Leading: In the second half of the semester, we will be holding consensus sessions for each issue we discuss. These are discussion and voting sessions designed to determine whether we agree or disagree with the main points of the reading assignment for that issue. Groups of about 4 students will lead one consensus session by first giving a brief (5-10 minute) presentation and evaluation of the main arguments of the reading, and then running the consensus vote process itself.

Paper: There will be one paper (about 600-1000 words long) due toward the end of the semester. The assignment will be announced shortly after the midterm exam.

Attendance/Participation: Most of this will be based on your attendance. If you’re there every class, you’ll get full credit for your attendance grade. Also, there will be a lot of informal group work throughout the semester. Group work can impact your attendance grade.

Extra Credit: I like giving extra credit! I’ll be giving some official extra credit assignments throughout the semester. I’ll also be offering some extra credit points more informally during class time. Remind me about this if I slack off on dishing out extra credit points.

Classroom Policies
Academic Integrity: Cheating and plagiarism (using someone else’s words or ideas in a paper or assignment without giving credit to the source) will not be tolerated in the class. Students found guilty of either will definitely fail the exam or assignment—and possibly the entire class. FYI: I’m pretty good at catching plagiarists. I recommend not trying it!

Excused Absenses: Make-up exams, quizzes, in-class projects, and oral reports will only be rescheduled for any excused absences (excused absences include religious observance, official college business, and illness or injury – with a doctor’s note). An unexcused absence on the day of any assignment or test will result in a zero on that assignment or test.

Ask Me About My Bunny

Course Schedule

September 2: Intro to Class
Wednesday Introduction to Class (no reading)

September 7—9: Doing Philosophy
Monday LABOR DAY (no class)
Wednesday Doing Philosophy | James Rachels (handout)

September 14—16: Ethics
Monday Doing Philosophy: Understanding & Evaluating Arguments | (no new reading)
Wednesday Are moral claims facts or opinions? | (pages 1-6)

September 21—23: Ethics/Quiz
Monday Are moral claims facts or opinions? | (no new reading)
Wednesday QUIZ #1; Sample Consensus Session

September 28—30: Capitalism vs. Communism
Monday Capitalism | Adam Smith (handout)
Wednesday Communism | Karl Marx (handout)

October 5—7: Free Market
Monday Free Market | Milton Friedman (pages 6-22)
Wednesday Free Market | The Utilitarian Argument (pages 32-43)

October 12—14: Free Market / Corporate Responsibility
Monday Free Market | The Rights Arguments (pages 55-63)
Wednesday Corporate Responsibility | (pages 64-76)

October 19—21: Corporate Responsibility
Monday Corporate Responsibility | Lynn Stout (pages 84-96)
Wednesday Corporate Responsibility | Friedman, Mackey, & Rodgers (Reason handout)

October 26—28: Midterm
Monday catch up & review for Midterm | (no new reading)
Wednesday MIDTERM

November 2—4: “The Corporation”
Monday “The Corporation” (in-class viewing of the movie) (no new reading)
Wednesday “The Corporation” continued; class discussion (no new reading)

November 9—11: Enron
Monday Enron: Regulation | John Coffee (pages 256-263); Consensus Session #1
Wednesday Enron: Auditing Ethics | Ronald & Brenda Duska (pages 269-278); Consensus Session #2

November 16—18: Wal-mart
Monday Wal-mart | Jason Furman (Slate handout); Consensus Session #3
Wednesday Wal-mart | Barbara Ehrenreich (Slate handout); Consensus Session #4


November 23—25: Advertising Ethics
Monday Advertising Ethics | Thomas Carson (pages 337-348); Consensus Session #5
Wednesday Advertising Ethics | Robert Arrington (pages 348-356); Consensus Session #6

November 26—29: THANKSGIVING BREAK (no class) (woo?)
carpe diem, lazy bones

November 30—December 2: CEO Compensation / Current Financial Crisis
Monday CEO Compensation | Ray Fisman (Slate handout); Consensus Session #7
Wednesday Current Financial Crisis | (handout); Consensus Session #8

December 7—9: Current Financial Crisis / Review
Monday Current Financial Crisis | (handout); Consensus Session #9
Wednesday PAPER due; review for Final Exam

December 14: Final Exam
Monday FINAL EXAM

Martha Stewart's Cat