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Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS
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Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Dec 29, 2015

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Page 1: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Class Session Ten

REVIEW

OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS

Page 2: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the first class session everybody had five minutes to respond to the pre-session

readings. The readings were:An annotated bibliography on ethics

An annotated bibliography on macroeconomics

Two pages on philosophical assumptions

Gavin Andersson, Looking Back to the Future: Conversations on Unbounded Organization

Blake Mycoskie, Start Something that Matters

Selections from Alexander Oesterwalder, The Business Model Ontology

A Power Point on Zero Unemployment

Page 3: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the second class session we met the now famous box

Page 4: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

The box is also known as

• The germ cell orientation basis.

Page 5: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

The box is a germ, in other words a seed

• Germ because the box is a seed. The history of ethics and of economics will grow from the seed of the box.

• The box grows to become the principal institutions of modern society: businesses, individuals, markets, governments.

Page 6: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

The box began where modern western civilization began

• in ancient Greece and Rome

Page 7: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

• In 1688 the German jurist Samuel Pufendorf working in the Roman Law tradition that governed Europe added a fourth basic principle: 4. Pacta sunt servanda.

Page 8: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Translated into English and phrased to bring out their meaning

for our times

• 1. Freedom of the individual juridical subject.

• 2. There is a duty to refrain from harming others, but no duty to help others.

• 3. Respect property rights.

• 4. Human relationships organized by contracts.

Page 9: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the third class session we traced the rise of the box taking a realist approach to ethics

• Being realist means that much of our material comes from the sciences

• In the third class session it came especially from the sociology of Emile Durkheim

• But first …. two definitions of “ethics”

Page 10: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In a first sense of the word “ethics”

• Ethics Morals

• Ethics comes from the Greek ethos

• Morals comes from the Latin mores

• Both refer to customs, rules, norms, and the character of the person who conforms to the customs, obeys the rules, complies with the norms

Page 11: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In a second sense of the word “ethics”

Ethics Morals

• Ethics is the branch of philosophy that studies the justification of morals

• Ethics asks “Why these morals and not some other morals?”

Page 12: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

How does a sociologist like Durkheim explain the rise of the modern world?

• But what do you mean by “modern world?”

• And if there is a “modern world” then there must have been a pre-modern or non-modern or un-modern or traditional world.

Modern World Traditional World

Page 13: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

What was the traditional world that people changed from when they changed to the modern world? What does Durkheim say about this?

Page 14: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Well,one thing Durkheim says is

that morals are a physical

NECESSITY.

No human group can survive without morals.

Every human group generates the rules it lives by.

Page 15: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

According to Durkheim it all starts with religion

• In his terminology “archaic” societies (roughly equivalent to tribal societies)

• Take the form of extended families or kinship networks

• Held together by “social cement”

• The “social cement” is religion as described in his book THE ELEMENTARY FORMS OF THE RELIGIOUS LIFE (1895)

Page 16: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

A sociological explanation of the rise of the box

• Modern society arose because of the division of labour. (according to Durkheim´s doctoral thesis of1893)

• Why did the division of labour arise?

• Because of the increase in population. Traditional society could not produce enough food to feed so many people.

Page 17: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

The division of labour and the accumulation of capital make it possible to support a larger

population

• That means people make fewer things for themselves and their clan and make more things to sell or else they work for somebody who makes things to sell.

• In other words people move from an archaic society to a market society.

• And to organize a market society, Europe revived and “received” the old Roman “Law of Nations” which had been designed to organize commerce.

Page 18: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.
Page 19: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

THE FREE INDIVIDUAL

PROPERTY CONTRACT

NO DUTY TO HELP

Page 20: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the fourth class session we talked about something that is not a box

• COMMUNITY

• IN THE GERMAN OF FERDINAND TONNIES

• GEMEINSCHAFT

Page 21: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Some typical quotes from Tönnies on “community” (Gemeinschaft)

• “Community rests on harmony and is developed and ennobled by folkways, morals, and religion.”

• “Community is based on family life.”• “The divine will is interpreted by wise and

ruling men.”• “In a Gemeinschaft morality is an

expression of religious beliefs and forces, intertwined with family spirit and folkways.”

Page 22: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Community came first in time and society came later.

• In society (i.e. Gesellschaft

i.e. modernity):

-order is based on “a union

of rational wills” i.e. on contract

-most importantly sales (the market)

-backed up by law (the government)

For Tonnies as for Max Weber the typical institutions of modernity are capitalism and bureaucracy

Page 23: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Then in the same class we considered two founders of

modern ethics.

• Immanuel Kant 1724-1804

• Jeremy Bentham 1748-1832

Page 24: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

According to Immanuel Kant

• All philosophies of ethics before his own were mistaken

• Because they assumed “heteronymy” i.e. the obedience of the human will to some outside power or influence, for example God or the desire to be happy.

• The true principle of ethics is “autonomy” i.e. the free rational being giving itself its own law.

Page 25: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

• “Nature has placed mankind under the governance of two sovereign masters, pain and pleasure. It is for them alone to point out what we ought to do, as well as to determine what we shall do. On the one hand the standard of right and wrong, on the other the chain of causes and effects, are fastened to their throne.”

--Jeremy Bentham 1823

According to Jeremy Bentham

Page 26: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the fifth class session we learned about non-western traditions

• We learned some facts about the history of work and livelihood

• And some of the theory of Unbounded Organization

Page 27: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Copyright Integra Terra (Chile) 27

•child bearing & care

•food preparation & processing

•Medicine – from plants

•homestead/ utensils

•Work animal skins/furs to make clothing

Gender Division of Labour

Women performed many jobs:

Page 28: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Copyright Integra Terra (Chile) 28

•hunting

•Making tools & weapons from sharpened flint stones

•group defence & diplomacy

Gender Division of LabourMen performed different ones:

Page 29: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the sixth class we studied how economics grew out of the box

• WHAT IS ECONOMICS ABOUT?

• HOW DID IT START?

Page 30: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Economics as it started was about the causes of wealth

• Adam Smith draws a contrast between the “savages” who are poor

• …and the “civilized” who have wealth.

• The great cause of wealth is the division of labour. The “civilized” have it but the “savages” do not.

• The division of labour requires sales.

• Sales require markets.

Page 31: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Later Smith adds another cause of the wealth of nations

• It is the accumulation of capital.• When more capital is accumulated through

saving and the accumulation of profits, then

• --there is more money to hire workers and more workers are hired, and

• --there is more money to increase productivity through capital investments in what Smith calls “improvements”

Page 32: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

More recent economists and philosophers agree with Smith that

capitalism needs a “Roman” legal “box”

Page 33: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

The seventh class session looked at “post-modern management”

• And especially at Peter Drucker´s ideas for reviving traditional ethics in a society of organizations

• That is also a knowledge society

• Where managers have to take responsibility for the common good BECAUSE NO ONE ELSE CAN

Page 34: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

A post-modern opinion

• “Management is doing things right. Leadership is doing the right things.”

Page 35: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the same class we did an exercise

• Based on the article CREATING SHARED VALUE in Harvard Business Review

Page 36: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the eighth class session we applied all these ideas…

• …to three contemporary efforts to bring ethics and economics together

• CEMEX CORPORATION bringing affordable housing to the poor

• HINDUSTAN LEVER working to improve higiene and therefore health

• ARAVIND EYE CLINICS (a non-profit foundation)

Page 37: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

In the ninth class we took a In the ninth class we took a farther stepfarther step

• Today in the twenty first century people all over the world are moving toward what we call UNBOUNDED ORGANIZATION

• …thinking simultaneously inside the box and outside the box

• …working simultaneously on two enterprise planes, the plane of one´s own organizaton and the plane of social responsibility to the wider community

Page 38: Class Session Ten REVIEW OF THE FIRST NINE CLASS SESSIONS.

Stand by for class sessions eleven through twenty !!