LOGIN
PRODUCTS
All Products
Online Resources
Journals & Series
Digital Media
Books & Reference Works
E-Collection
About
Alphabetically
By Category
Price Lists
Terms and Conditions
MEMBERSHIPS
Societies & Associations
Conference Registrations
SERVICES
Conference Exhibits
Conference Registrations
Electronic Publishing
Journal Advertising
Mailing Lists
Marketing Services
Membership Services
Production Typesetting
Subscription Fulfillment
ABOUT
About us
Contact
FAQs
Order Info
Privacy
Support
This Title
All Titles
Browse
>
Volume
>
5
>
Issue: 7
>> Go to Current Issue
Business Ethics Journal Review
Volume 5, Issue 7, 2017
Table of Contents
Already a subscriber? -
Login here
Not yet a subscriber? -
Subscribe here
Browse by:
Volume
Year
--- Volume ---
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
--- Year ---
2024
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
Issue: 8
Issue: 7
Issue: 6
Issue: 5
Issue: 4
Issue: 3
Issue: 2
Issue: 1
Overview
Editorial Team
RSS Feeds
E-mail Updates
Indexing / Abstracting
Submission Guidelines
Rights & Permissions
Results per page:
20
50
100
Sort by:
Page Number - ascending
Page Number - descending
Date - recent first
Date - oldest first
Title
Author
<< additional functions
Displaying: 1-1 of 1 documents
1.
Business Ethics Journal Review:
Volume
>
5
>
Issue: 7
David Ohreen
Gaining Perspective on Perspective Taking
abstract
|
view
|
rights & permissions
|
cited by
Cojuharenco and Sguera’s study shows that both perspective taking (empathy) and empathic concern (intuitionism) can reduce the acceptability of lying. This critique outlines a number of conceptual difficulties and limitations with their dualistic model. Specifically, they conflate ethical reasoning with perspective taking and empathic concern with intuitionism. Moreover, by limiting moral thinking to these binary options it restricts the ways in which ethical judgements can be made.
SHARE