Unconscious bias
Our brains are evolved to help us survive.
That means they take a lot of shortcuts to help us get through the day. These shortcuts, or heuristics, are vital. But they come at a cost. Learn what unconscious bias is and how you become aware of your own unconscious bias.
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From capitalism to communism, explained
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Want men to stop hitting women? Stop talking about “real men”
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Ethics Explainer: Trust
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Ask an ethicist: How much should politics influence my dating decisions?
BY The Ethics Centre
The Ethics Centre is a not-for-profit organisation developing innovative programs, services and experiences, designed to bring ethics to the centre of professional and personal life.
How to have moral courage and moral imagination
Every time we make a decision, we change the world just a little bit.
This is why moral imagination plays a crucial role in good ethical decision making. It helps us appreciate other people’s perspective. And sometimes when we must make those decisions, they can be difficult, this is where moral courage comes into play.
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Australia’s paid parental leave reform is only one step in addressing gender-based disadvantage
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Ethics Explainer: Power
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So your boss installed CCTV cameras
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Little Bad Thing
BY The Ethics Centre
The Ethics Centre is a not-for-profit organisation developing innovative programs, services and experiences, designed to bring ethics to the centre of professional and personal life.
Moral intuition and ethical judgement
By checking in to our intuitions and using them to inform our judgements, we can come up with decisions that make sense, but also feel right.
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Send in the clowns: The ethics of comedy
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TEC announced as 2018 finalist in Optus My Business Awards
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Adoption without parental consent: kidnapping or putting children first?
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Love and the machine
BY The Ethics Centre
The Ethics Centre is a not-for-profit organisation developing innovative programs, services and experiences, designed to bring ethics to the centre of professional and personal life.
What is the difference between ethics, morality and the law?
What is the difference between ethics, morality and the law?
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BY The Ethics Centre 1 NOV 2023
The world around us is a smorgasbord of beliefs, claims, rules and norms about how we should live and behave.
It’s important to tease this jumble of ethical pressures apart so we can put them in their proper place. Otherwise, it can be hard to know what to do when some of these requirements contradict others. Let’s talk about three different categories of demands on how we should live: ethics, morality and law.
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Is modesty an outdated virtue?
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This is what comes after climate grief
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Barbie and what it means to be human
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Ask an ethicist: How do I get through Christmas without arguing with my family about politics?
BY The Ethics Centre
The Ethics Centre is a not-for-profit organisation developing innovative programs, services and experiences, designed to bring ethics to the centre of professional and personal life.
Virtue ethics
What makes something right or wrong?
One of the oldest ways of answering this question comes from the Ancient Greeks. They defined good actions as ones that reveal us to be of excellent character.
What matters is whether our choices display virtues like courage, loyalty, or wisdom. Importantly, virtue ethics also holds that our actions shape our character. The more times we choose to be honest, the more likely we are to be honest in future situations – and when the stakes are high.
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Ethics Explainer: Naturalistic Fallacy
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To deal with this crisis, we need to talk about ethics, not economics
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What makes a business honest and trustworthy?
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Ethics Explainer: Ethics
BY The Ethics Centre
The Ethics Centre is a not-for-profit organisation developing innovative programs, services and experiences, designed to bring ethics to the centre of professional and personal life.
Deontology
What makes something right or wrong?
One answer comes from the work of German philosopher Immanuel Kant, who is considered the founder of an ethical theory called deontology. Deontology comes from the Greek word deon, meaning duty. It holds, quite simply, that actions are good or bad based on whether they fulfil universal moral duties.
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Big thinker
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Big Thinker: Shulamith Firestone
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Online grief and the digital dead
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9 LGBTQIA+ big thinkers you should know about
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Ethics Explainer: Virtue Ethics
BY The Ethics Centre
The Ethics Centre is a not-for-profit organisation developing innovative programs, services and experiences, designed to bring ethics to the centre of professional and personal life.
Consequentialism
For lots of people, what makes a decision right or wrong depends on the outcome of that decision.
Does it increase or decrease the amount of happiness in the world? This kind of thinking is typical of consequentialism: an ethical school of thought that says what makes an action good or bad is, you guessed it, the consequences.
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Big Thinker: Confucius
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How to have a conversation about politics without losing friends
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The new normal: The ethical equivalence of cisgender and transgender identities
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Moral intuition and ethical judgement
BY The Ethics Centre
The Ethics Centre is a not-for-profit organisation developing innovative programs, services and experiences, designed to bring ethics to the centre of professional and personal life.
Purpose, values, principles: An ethics framework
An ethics framework is a statement of an organisation’s purpose, values and principles.
It makes clear what they believe in and what standards they’ll uphold. It’s a roadmap to good decision making and, if it’s lived throughout the organisation. It’s also a guide to making an organisation the best version of itself.
Trying to make a decision without knowing your purpose, values and principles, is like being at sea without a rudder. They’ll be pushed around by the winds of our desires, mood, unconscious mind, group dynamics and social norms. The choices they make won’t really be their own.
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Exercising your moral muscle
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Enough with the ancients: it’s time to listen to young people
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It takes a village to raise resilience
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