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Cognitive Theory and Moral Behavior: The Contribution of F. A. Hayek to Business Ethics
Authors:Evelyn Gick
Institution:(1) Department of Economics, Dartmouth College, 6106 Rockefeller Hall, Hanover, NH, 03755-3514, U.S.A.
Abstract:This paper shows how business ethics as a concept may be approached from a cognitive viewpoint. Following F. A. Hayek's cognitive theory, I argue that moral behavior evolves and changes because of individual perception and action. Individual moral behavior becomes a moral rule when prominently displayed by members of a certain society in a specific situation. A set of moral rules eventually forms the ethical code of a society, of which business ethics codes are only a part. By focusing on the concept of "limited" or "dispersed knowledge" that underlies the cognitive approach, I show that universal ethical norms that should lead to defined outcomes cannot exist. This approach moreover shows the limits of deliberate rule-setting. Attempts to deliberately impose universal ethical rules on societies may turn out to be harmful for societal development and lead to an abuse of governmental power.
Keywords:business ethics codes  cognitive theory  cultural evolution  developing countries  knowledge problem  selection processes  universal ethical rules
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