Toward a New Understanding of Moral Pluralism
Rogene A. Buchholz and
Sandra B. Rosenthal
Business Ethics Quarterly, 1996, vol. 6, issue 3, 263-275
Abstract:
The current literature in business ethics is tending toward an unacknowledged moral pluralism, with all the problems this position entails. An adequate moral pluralism cannot be achieved by a synthesis of existing theoretical alternatives for moral action. Rather, what is needed is a radical reconstruction of the understanding of the moral situation that undercuts some of the traditional dichotomies, provides a solid philosophical grounding which is inherently pluralistic, and offers a new understanding of what it is to think morally. The philosophical position of American pragmatism, as briefly sketched in this paper, offers one such possible reconstruction.
Date: 1996
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