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Why the Responsible Practice of Business Ethics Calls for a Due Regard for History

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Abstract

Typically people make ethical judgments with reference to unchanging principles, standards, rights, and values. This essay argues that such an ahistorical approach to ethics should be supplemented by a due regard for history. Invoking precedents by authors such as Jonsen and Toulmin, McIntyre, Niebuhr, Weber, De Tocqueville, Machiavelli and others, this essay explores several important ways in which a due regard for history can and should shape the practice of business ethics. Thus a due regard for history helps us both to cultivate fitting appreciation of cultural mores and to understand how current problems and issues have developed as they have; it helps us to gauge current responsibilities with respect legacies of problems inherited from the past; it helps us to develop a lively sense of what is possible in the present, given current contingencies and past experiences; and it moves us to rethink the practice of ethical auditing: not just as a backward-looking effort to gauge compliance but as a forward-looking way of learning from actual experiences and developing fitting responses.

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Correspondence to Frederick Bird.

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Bird, F. Why the Responsible Practice of Business Ethics Calls for a Due Regard for History. J Bus Ethics 89 (Suppl 2), 203–220 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-010-0367-7

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