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Module 2

This document discusses moral dilemmas on three levels: individual, organizational, and structural. It defines moral dilemmas as situations where one must choose between competing moral principles or values. At the organizational level, common ethical issues include unethical leadership, toxic cultures, discrimination, unrealistic goals, and misuse of technology. At the individual level, moral dilemmas can arise from factors like peer pressure, finances, and social status. Finally, structural moral dilemmas involve determining appropriate systems of accountability and relationships at a higher level.

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Bon Eliaj Bacal
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
227 views

Module 2

This document discusses moral dilemmas on three levels: individual, organizational, and structural. It defines moral dilemmas as situations where one must choose between competing moral principles or values. At the organizational level, common ethical issues include unethical leadership, toxic cultures, discrimination, unrealistic goals, and misuse of technology. At the individual level, moral dilemmas can arise from factors like peer pressure, finances, and social status. Finally, structural moral dilemmas involve determining appropriate systems of accountability and relationships at a higher level.

Uploaded by

Bon Eliaj Bacal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Ethics- BatStateU

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Ethics- BatStateU

MODULE 2
WHAT ARE MORAL DILEMMAS

Introduction
This module is focused on moral dilemmas specifically on its definition, situations cases
where moral dilemmas are present, and it's three (3) levels namely: individual, organizational, and
structural. In the three levels of moral dilemma, common ethical issues in the organization will be
highlighted, several factors that an individual is facing such as peer pressure, personal financial
position, and economic and social status which cause dilemma to an individual and the concepts
to consider in the individual moral dilemma.

Learning Objectives
After studying this module, you should be able to:

1. Define moral dilemmas and set out situations.


2. Explain the three levels of moral dilemmas.
3. Discuss several factors affecting the organization, structure and individual.

Learning Content
2.0 DEFINITION OF MORAL DILEMMAS

Various authors presented their respective definition of moral dilemma or ethical dilemma
and these are the following:

In the definition of Kvalnes (2019), a moral dilemma is a situation in which a decision-


maker must give preference to one moral principle over another. Dilemmas occur when,
confronted with a challenging situation (e.g. equal treatment for some versus job protection for
others), two or more of that kind of values disagree with the understanding of the decision-maker,
or when one assesses the moral option of another. A person experienced with a dilemma must
decide whether the moral duty will be given priority; "whatever action is taken will offend an
important moral value."

In addition, Kvalnes explained that (2019) a moral dilemma may arise as a result of a prior
personal mistake. It's called a self-inflicted dilemma. In a strict sense, a moral dilemma is a
situation in which moral values are of equal importance. In a broader sense, there may be moral
dilemmas in which a person has strong moral reasons for acting which are described to be as
remarkable, nonetheless, not equally strong moral reasons for acting in another way.
(https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.18-3-030-15191-1_2.pdf)

According to Kurie & Albin (2007), a moral dilemma is a situation in which people assume
that they should morally do one thing and that they should morally do another thing, and

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occasionally a third thing or even a fourth thing, but they're not doing any of these mutually
contradictory choices together.

The ethical dilemma or a moral dilemma as expounded by Figar & Dordevic, (2016) is a
situation whereby a person has to make a decision. Among competing alternatives, which is the
right (ethical) alternative and which is the best? (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/
_Managing_an_Ethical_Dilemma)

The above definitions characterized moral dilemma or ethical dilemma as:

(1) Making an option to one moral value over the other;

(2) A situation where moral values are equally significant;

(3) A scenario where a person has a strong moral reason in action, but not equally strong moral
reason in acting in another way;

(4) A state where a person should morally do one, two, or more and have difficulty in deciding
any of those conflicting choices.

Every human being, experience struggling to make a decision especially if there is an


urgency to make a choice. Weighing what is good and moral. Thinking which is the best between
and among choices, and perhaps at stake or in a hot sit when choosing. The choice may be
favorable to some, however, not favorable to others. It gets individual stress of judging as to
whether the decision is good or not in travailing circumstances. A moral dilemma or ethical
dilemma applies to our personal life, in a job, in a profession, education, and some others. In any
decision, an individual must analyze every aspect, scrutinize the pros and cons, and after several
evaluations then finally decide. That is the most challenging part, nonetheless, makes an individual
more mature in handling obstinate situations.

The sample photos below exemplify a moral dilemma. The first picture on the left side shows
which arrow an individual will go, right or wrong. The second pic on the right side reveals four
different arrows: respect, ethics, integrity, and honesty, these are all positive terms and regarded
as values. In deciding, consider the aforementioned virtues. The third photo below the left side
seems to be ambiguous and the last photo on the right side below with three choices for a decision,
right, wrong and it depends which also mean uncertainty.
Ethics- BatStateU

Retrieved from: https://www.apa.org/pubs/highlights/peeps/issue-110,


https://www.shutterstock.com/search/moral+dilemma, https://www.slaphappylarry.com/moral-dilemmas-
childrens-stories/, https://medium.com/thrive-global/moral-dilemma-stories-a-great-way-to-educate-
entertain-and-inspire-all-at-the-same-time-56ef4615b6ce

2.1 THREE LEVELS OF MORAL DILEMMAS

1. ORGANIZATIONAL ETHICAL OR MORAL DILEMMA

As discussed by Lamberto et. al(2013), an organizational ethical dilemma refers to a situation that
causes an organization to respond negatively or positively to an ethical issue that affects staff, shareholders,
and society, as well as corporate ethics and customers. It includes also the leaders' ethical actions in
preserving financial reporting integrity.

Based on the article of Michigan State University online.com (2020) and Small Business Chron.com
(2019), there are common ethical issues in the organization such as

(1) Unethical leadership/bad leadership behavior. A leader of the organization must act with candor,
be an example to his subordinates, with upright moral values. He or she doesn’t engage in abuse of
leadership authority, accepting inappropriate gifts and other related unethical leadership.

(2) Toxic workplace culture. A leader of the organization must focus on the development of work
culture. He makes sure that his subordinates have work-life balance, motivated and happy working
in the organization, If not then the performance and productivity of the employees will be affected.

(3) Discrimination and harassment/ Peril of employee favoritism. A leader must treat fairly his or her
subordinates and avoid any form of discrimination and harassment.

(4) Unrealistic and conflicting goals. A leader must have realistic and very clear goals so that his or
her subordinates understand what the organization is going through, hence, they can work together
thoroughly until they reach the goals of the organization.

(5) Use of the organization’s technology, social media use, technology, and privacy concerns. It is
ethical that the technology of the organization must only use for the organization’s transactions
Social media use while in the office must be avoided as much as possible so that important dealings
with the clients must be prioritized.

(6) Business travel ethics. There are times that a leader and an employee are in official business and in
doing that, they have per diem every meal and must use the fund of the organization appropriately.

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(https://www.michiganstateuniversityonline.com/resources/leadership/common-ethical-issues-in-
the-workplace/ updated July 15, 2020, https://smallbusiness.chron.com/common-types-ethical-
issues-within-organizations-15238.html, updated February 4, 2019)

2. INDIVIDUAL MORAL DILEMMA


As mentioned by Smith (2018), individual ethical or moral dilemma pertains to a situation
where individuals confront with a number of factors such as peer pressure, personal financial
position, an economic and social status which may influence all individual ethical standards.
(https://yourbusiness.azcentral.com/three-levels-ethical-standards-business-organization-
15897.html)

Socialization is part of every individual's life. It is just a query as to whether an individual


remains aware of doing what is good and what is right. There are times that due to peer pressure,
an individual engages in a certain scenario in which may change their behavior and attitude. For
instance, before that young people, A is a responsible and obedient child to his parents. When he
met young people B and young people C, young people A tremendously transform as a human
being, his character shifted to an irresponsible, hard-headed, and a trouble-maker. The reason is
that his friend young people B and young people C taught him to take illegal drugs. Others,
however, are affected by the financial standing position, the social and economic status of others
that even he is not capable, forcing him or her that he or she is at the same level as them, portrays
that he or she belongs to the group, and called to be as social climbers. A human being should bear
in mind that living in this world is not easy. He must be strong enough to stand still independently
and not be influenced by undesirable pressures. It is alright to enjoy life as long as a person knows
his boundaries and limitations and others will not be affected by what he or she does specifically
the unwanted acts. Human beings must not be confused nor ambiguous and put himself or herself
in a dilemma where he doesn't know what to do and decide to what is good and what is right.
3. STRUCTURAL MORAL DILEMMA

The structural moral dilemma is that selecting a proper system of responsibilities and
relationships, which is a continuing universal challenge.

There are five concepts in the structural moral dilemma to consider namely:
(1) Differentiation vs. Integration
The conflict between the distribution of jobs and the organization of numerous
activities generates a classic dilemma. The more complicated a task structure, the more
difficult it is to sustain a centered, tightly coupled organization. When complexity grows,
the company needs more complicated and expensive management techniques. Laws,
regulations, and directives need to be balanced by lateral approaches.
(2) Gap vs Overlap

When the main tasks are not explicitly defined, the critical job will slip through gaps.
In a similar manner, functions and activities can overlap, causing conflict, wasting time,
and unintended duplication of responsibilities.
(3) Lack of Clarity vs. Lack of Creativity
Ethics- BatStateU

When employees are not clear about what they are expected to do, they often adapt
their tasks to personal interests instead of system-wide goals that often lead to problems.
Yet when people 's duties are over defined, they comply with their positions and procedures
in a bureaucratic manner. They specifically follow job requirements as to how much the
service or product fails.

(4) Excessive Autonomy vs. Excessive Interdependence

When individuals or groups are too independent, they are always isolated. On the
other hand, if the units and responsibilities are too closely connected, people are
absentminded from work and waste time or excessive coordination.
(http://www.humancapitalreview.org/content/default.asp?Article_ID=528)
Based on the discussion above, to avoid structural moral dilemma then
followingcharacteristics must be maintained:
(1) Must have well-distributed jobs and the laws, policies, rules, and regulations must be
balanced through lateral approaches.
(2) Must have an implicitly defined job description, roles, and duties to evade from gaps
and overlaps.
(3) Must have a clear-cut expectation of the tasks in a wide range of goals
(4) Must have a well-balanced interdependence and co0rdination.

Learning Activity

ACTIVITY 1
1. As a student, did you encounter some dilemmas in your school? What did you do?. Cite
examples of the dilemmas encountered.
ACTIVITY 2

Research a case study in any of the three levels of moral dilemmas: organizational, individual and
structural . Find out on how the moral dilemma was solved and if you are on that situation, will
you do the same? Explain.

Learning Assessment

QUESTIONS TO PONDER:

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Ethics- BatStateU

1. What is your definition of moral dilemma? In your opinion,


2. Differentiate the three levels of moral dilemma and cite an example to each level.
3. Which is difficult to face among three levels of moral dilemma. Why?

Essay Rubrics

Level of Achievement

Criteria Excellent Good Fair Poor Score


Focus and There is one s pecific, There is one clear, well- There is one topic, but The topic and main
Details well-focused topi c. focused topic. Main ideas main ideas ideas are not clear.
Main ideas are clear are clear but are not are not especially clear.
and are well s upported supported by detai led
by detailed and accurate informat on or facts.
informations.
Organization The introduction is The introducti on states The introduction s tates There is no clear
inviting, states the the main topic and the main introduction, structure, or
main topic, and provides provides an overview of topic. A conclusion is conclusion.
an overview of the the paper. A conclusion is included, but
argument. Information included, but does not is not especially
is relevant and strengthen the relevant/supportive.
presented in logical argument/position.
order. The conclusion is
strong.
Voice The author’s purpose of The author’s purpose of The author’s purpose of The author’s purpose of
writing is very clear, writing is somewhat clear, writing is somewhat clear, writing is unclear.
and there is strong and there is some and there is
evidence of attention to evdence of attention to evidence of
audience. The author’s audience. The author’s attention to audience. The
knowledge of and/or knowledge of and/or author’s knowledge of the
experience with the experience with the topic topic seems limited.
topic is evident. is evident.
Word Choice The author uses vivid The author uses vivid The author uses words The writer uses a
words and phrases . words and that l imi ted vocabul ary.
The choice and phrases . The choice and communicate Jargon or clichés are not
placement of words placement of words is clearl y, but the used properly and detract
seems accurate, natural , inaccurate at times and/or writing lacks from the meaning.
and appropriate. seems overdone or variety and seems
inappropriate for the i nappropriate to the
subject matter. subject matter.
Sentence Al l sentences are well- Most sentences are well Mos t sentences are well Sentences sound
Structure, constructed and have constructed and have constructed, but they have awkward, are distracti
Grammar, varied structure and varied structure and length. a similar structure and/or ngly
Mechanics, length. The author The author makes a few length. The author makes repetitive, or are difficu t
&Spelling makes very few errors in grammar, several errors to understand. The
errors in grammar, mechanics, and/or spelling, in grammar, mechanics, author
mechanics, and/or but these mistakes do not and/or spelling that makes numerous errors
spelling. interfere with understandi interfere with in grammar, mechanics ,
ng. understanding. and/or spelling that
interfere with understand
ng.
Scoring 4 3 2 1

Learning References
Ethics- BatStateU

REFERENCES

Kvalnes, Oyvind (2019). Moral Reasoning at Work: Rethinking Ethics in Organizations.


Palagrave, Pivot,Cham. 7th edition. Online ISBN: 978-3-030-15191-1. Print ISBN: 978-3-030-
15190-4

Lurie, Yotam & Albin, Robert (2007). Moral Dilemmas in Business Ethics: From Decision
Procedures to Edifying Perspectives. Journal of Business Ethics

Lamberton, B., Mihelak, P.H., & Smith, C. S. (2005). The tone at the top and ethical conduct
connection. Strategic Finance, 86(9) 37-39

McFearin, Stephanie (2013). An Organizational Ethical Dilemma

Smith, Alasdair (2018). Three Levels of Ethical Standards in a Business Organization, updated
April 5, 2018

Internet sites:

https://www.apa.org/pubs/highlights/peeps/issue-110

http://www.humancapitalreview.org/content/default.asp?Article_ID=528

https://www.link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.18-3-030-15191-1_2.pdf

https://medium.com/thrive-global/moral-dilemma-stories-a-great-way-to-educate-entertain-and-
inspire-all-at-the-same-time-56ef4615b6ce

https://www.michiganstateuniversityonline.com/resources/leadership/common-ethical-issues-in-
the-workplace/

https://smallbusiness.chron.com/common-types-ethical-issues-within-organizations-15238.html

https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.18-3-030-15191-1_2.pdf

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/5148931_Moral_Dilemmas_in_Business_Ethics_From
_Decision_Procedures_to_Edifying_Perspectives

https://www.shutterstock.com/search/moral+dilemma

https://www.slaphappylarry.com/moral-dilemmas-childrens-stories/

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