Do All Companies Have to be Evil?

Categories: Articles, SciTech
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Published on: January 31, 2008

Here is an interesting article from Scientific American, by Micheal Shermer, about how the foundations of a company which sets the office environments has an impact on the ethical issues. Personal-responsibility and openness is key to creating an environment of trust.

“Humans are by nature tribal and xenophobic, and thus evolution has enabled in all of us the capacity for evil. Fortunately, we are also by nature prosocial and cooperative. By studying how modern companies work, we can gain insights into the evolutionary underpinnings of our morality, including concepts such as reciprocity, altruism and fairness. When we apply these evolutionary findings to economic life, we learn that Enron and the Gordon Gekko “Greed Is Good” ethic are the exception and that Google’s “Don’t Be Evil” motto is the rule. Two conditions must be present to accentuate the latter: first, internal trust reinforced by personal relationships, and, second, external rules supported by social institutions. The contrast between Enron and Google here serves to demonstrate what in corporate environments creates trust or distrust.
“….

More here: [The Link]

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