How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective

The rise of English as a global language has brought with it ethical concepts that may not translate effectively into other cultures. Whether they choose to agree with Western concepts of ethics or not, understanding these concepts is important to anyone conducting their profession in this globalisi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Millett, Stephan
Format: Conference Paper
Published: International Islamic University of Malaysia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20814
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author Millett, Stephan
author_facet Millett, Stephan
author_sort Millett, Stephan
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description The rise of English as a global language has brought with it ethical concepts that may not translate effectively into other cultures. Whether they choose to agree with Western concepts of ethics or not, understanding these concepts is important to anyone conducting their profession in this globalising world. The process of understanding is best undertaken through dialogue, a dialogue entered into with an open mind and a generous spirit. This dialogue needs to be a two-way process between Western and other ways of understanding what is the right way to live our lives. Understanding ethical concepts is necessary, but we need to avoid confusing understanding with agreement. I need to understand others to agree with them but do not need to agree with them to understand them. In this globalising world we should remember that ethics does cross national and cultural boundaries and we should engage in a process of understanding what behaving ethically looks like, sounds like and feels like in different cultures. This talk is intended to contribute to that process.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-208142017-01-30T12:21:20Z How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective Millett, Stephan ethics trust rights dialogue principles globalisation professions The rise of English as a global language has brought with it ethical concepts that may not translate effectively into other cultures. Whether they choose to agree with Western concepts of ethics or not, understanding these concepts is important to anyone conducting their profession in this globalising world. The process of understanding is best undertaken through dialogue, a dialogue entered into with an open mind and a generous spirit. This dialogue needs to be a two-way process between Western and other ways of understanding what is the right way to live our lives. Understanding ethical concepts is necessary, but we need to avoid confusing understanding with agreement. I need to understand others to agree with them but do not need to agree with them to understand them. In this globalising world we should remember that ethics does cross national and cultural boundaries and we should engage in a process of understanding what behaving ethically looks like, sounds like and feels like in different cultures. This talk is intended to contribute to that process. 2011 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20814 International Islamic University of Malaysia fulltext
spellingShingle ethics
trust
rights
dialogue
principles
globalisation
professions
Millett, Stephan
How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective
title How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective
title_full How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective
title_fullStr How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective
title_full_unstemmed How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective
title_short How to talk about ethics from a Western perspective
title_sort how to talk about ethics from a western perspective
topic ethics
trust
rights
dialogue
principles
globalisation
professions
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20814