Category: Information Technology (Page 13 of 54)

Trip vs. Business Plannings Choice

Credit: forbes.com

An entrepreneur’s journey to success or failure is often directly related to their planning processes. Part of ensuring a successful future is careful and concise planning. Consider a previous trip, and recall the planning process you went through to make it successful. Discuss the destination and purpose, who you traveled with, the method of travel, cost of meals, lodging, amount of gas, and the length of the trip. Think about any roadblocks or detours you encountered.

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Utilitarianism

Credit: 9changes.com

Discuss and define utilitarianism.  Analyze how a utilitarian would view the issue within your community.  Discuss and define deontological ethics, social justice ethics, OR virtue ethics  in relation to utilitarianism.  Analyze how a person holding an ethical view would view the issue within your community. Discuss and define your ethical viewpoint. Using your ethical viewpoint, analyze how you feel about the issue .

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Informed Consent: Max Perrin Case Study

Credit: medspace.com

Max Perrin, a 55-year-old male, was brought to the ER by the local rescue squad following a suicide attempt by means of consuming rat poison. The ER physician, Dr. Christopher LeMarke, recognized him immediately, as did the ER nurses. He had been a regular in the facility, having visited for his primary medical care and for two previous suicide attempts within the past eighteen months. During the previous visits his history had been explored completely. He was divorced, alienated from his adult children, and chronically depressed, but was not considered sufficiently impaired that he could be declared incompetent.

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The Inquisition and You

Credit: sovereignman.com

Contemporaries use the word ‘inquisition’ as something to be avoided: the hot seat, the third degree, a challenging trial. Inquisition from the time of the Middle Ages into the Renaissance and beyond was of a different kind and a much harsher degree. Over 700 years, inquiries into personal orthodox beliefs by a variety of authorities led tens of thousands of people to be investigated before tribunals and punished, at times by death for beliefs that deviated from the accepted orthodox understanding at the time. Inquisitions grew from the soil of moral certainty and intolerance of heterodox (non-orthodox) views.

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