Ma and sun on insider trading ethics.Milton Snoeyenbos &Kenneth Smith -2000 -Journal of Business Ethics 28 (4):361 - 363.detailsMa and Sun have recently argued that some forms of insider trading are ethically acceptable. We argue that the authors fail to prove three key premises of their argument, which is therefore unsound.
III. On the concept of attitude.Milton H. Snoeyenbos -1976 -Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 19 (1-4):481-486.detailsEvaluation is, as J. R. Maze has recently suggested, central to the concept of attitude. But it is argued that Maze's noncognitivist analysis of evaluation yields an inadequate account of our ordinary concept of attitude. A criteriological account of evaluation is sketched which allows for an objective dimension to evaluation and hence to attitudes. In the case of attitudes, it is argued that some criteria will be chosen at least in part for their consequences, and hence will not be chosen (...) solely on the basis of interest, preference or affect. (shrink)
A Critique of Ehrenfeld’s Views on Humanism and the Environment.Milton H. Snoeyenbos -1981 -Environmental Ethics 3 (3):231-235.detailsDavid Ehrenfeld argues that humanism emphasizes reason at the expense of emotion, and that its narrow focus on the use of reason to serve human interests leads to a dichotomy between man and nature in which ecological factors are subordinated to the satisfaction of human wants. In response, I argue that: (1) humanists stress employment of reflective reason and reason’s interrelations with other aspectsofthe human personality, (2) humanism’s typical commitment to naturalism locates man as part of nature and does not (...) entail an exclusive focus on human interests, and (3) humanism’s commitment to the legitimate sphere of human interests does not entail indifference to nonhuman nature, for a healthy environment is necessary for the long-term satisfaction of human interests. (shrink)
(1 other version)Business ethics.Milton Snoeyenbos,Robert F. Almeder &James M. Humber (eds.) -1992 - Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.detailsFully updated and revised, this contemporary classic discusses the moral dilemmas of corporate America: conflicts of interest, corporate takeovers, payoffs, trade secrets, drug testing, insider trading, product safety, business and the environment, privacy, whistleblowing, and more. Each section contains a case study for discussion and corporate policy statements.