We often make small ethical compromises for "good" reasons: We lie to a customer because our boss asked us to. We exaggerate our accomplishments on our résumé to get an interview. Temptation blindsides us. And we ...

Buy Now From Amazon

We often make small ethical compromises for "good" reasons: We lie to a customer because our boss asked us to. We exaggerate our accomplishments on our résumé to get an interview. Temptation blindsides us. And we make snap decisions we regret.

Minor ethical lapses can seem harmless, but they instill in us a hard-to-break habit of distorted thinking. Rationalizations drown out our inner voice, and we make up the rules as we go. We lose control of our decisions, fall victim to the temptations and pressures of our situations, taint our characters, and sour business and personal relationships.

In Ethics for the Real World, Ronald Howard and Clinton Korver explain how to master the art of ethical decision making by:
Identifying potential compromises in your own life
Applying distinctions to clarify your ethical thinking
Committing in advance to ethical principles
Generating creative alternatives to resolve dilemmas

Packed with real-life examples, this book gives you practical advice to respond skillfully to life's inevitable ethical challenges. Not only can you make right decisions, you can acquire new habits that will realize the best in yourself and transform your relationships.


Similar Products

Organizational Ethics: A Practical ApproachOrganizational Power Politics: Tactics in Organizational Leadership, 2nd EditionThe Politically Intelligent Leader: Dealing with the Dilemmas of a High-Stakes Educational EnvironmentThe Practical Decision Maker: A Handbook for Decision Making and Problem Solving in OrganizationsThe Politically Intelligent Leader: Dealing with the Dilemmas of a High-Stakes Educational EnvironmentThe Good Struggle: Responsible Leadership in an Unforgiving WorldX-teams: How to Build Teams That Lead, Innovate and SucceedSilent No More: Victim 1's Fight for Justice Against Jerry Sandusky