Book Reviews
Moral Clarity IV - Self-Interest
Robert Wechsler
This is the fourth in a series of blog posts
inspired by reading Susan Neiman's book Moral
Clarity:
A
Guide for Grown-Up Idealists (Princeton, 2008).
Moral Clarity III - Ethics Environments
Robert Wechsler
This is the third in a series of blog posts inspired by reading Susan Neiman's book Moral
Clarity:
A
Guide for Grown-Up Idealists (Princeton, 2008). One of her topics is how an
individual’s organizational environment can greatly affect his or her conduct. Her
goal is not to excuse misconduct, but to explain it and to look at ways of avoiding it. She focuses on two
well-known experiments.
Moral Clarity II - Intentions
Robert Wechsler
This is the second in a series of blog posts inspired by reading Susan
Neiman’s book Moral
Clarity:
A
Guide for Grown-Up Idealists (Princeton, 2008).
Moral Clarity I - Reason and Ideals
Robert Wechsler
I recently read Susan Neiman’s book Moral
Clarity:
A
Guide for Grown-Up Idealists (Princeton, 2008) and found a lot
there
of value to government ethics, even though government ethics doesn’t
generally involve the
big questions of moral philosophy (see my
blog
post on this).
The Legitimacy of Power and the Sense of Entitlement
Robert Wechsler
It is a truism of government ethics that a sense of entitlement is an
important cause of unethical conduct. People who feel entitled to the
power they wield feel they have the right to deviate from ethical norms
in ways others do not (see my blog post on this
topic). Now there is research that supports this view.
Report on Loopholes and End Runs Around Campaign Finance Laws from Center for Governmental Studies
Robert Wechsler
End runs around ethics and campaign finance laws are one of my favorite
topics to write about. A sizeable percentage of the creative energies of
government officials and their attorneys seems to go into coming up
with ways of getting around these laws. And then arguing that such laws are
of little value since you can't plug loopholes as fast as they can invent
them.
How Views on Government Can Affect Views on Local Government Ethics
Robert Wechsler
Reading Garry Wills' A
Necessary
Evil: A History of American Distrust of Government (1999)
made
me think about how anti- and pro-government feelings jive with views on
government ethics.
Ethical Decision-Making
Robert Wechsler
A chapter in Jonah Lehrer's new book, How
We Decide, sheds some interesting light on ethical
decision-making. The book shares the latest discoveries neuroscientists
have made using hightech views of the brain at work, especially when it
is making various sorts of decisions.
Albert Hirschman on Conflicts Between the Private and the Public
Robert Wechsler
I recently read a fascinating classic study by Albert O. Hirschman (Institute of Advanced Study)
called Shifting Involvements: Private Interest
and Public Action (1982). This book focuses on the various
tensions between private consumption and public action. It only touches
on government ethics issues, but what Hirschman says is worth sharing.
For example:
There's a Lot We Can Learn from Adolf Eichmann -- Really
Robert Wechsler
Adolf Eichmann is the iconic extreme of the government bureaucrat. Not that any of us will hopefully ever be given orders like the ones he was given, but his simply following orders makes anyone question his or her own simply following orders.
There’s a lot more about government ethics that can be learned from Adolf Eichmann, I found from reading Hannah Arendt’s book Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (1963).