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Utilitarian
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Utilitarianism is one of the most widely studied ethical theories in academic philosophy, and it appears across disciplines including moral philosophy, political science, business ethics, law, and applied ethics courses. The theory holds that the moral worth of an action is determined by its consequences, particularly its capacity to maximize overall well-being or minimize harm across society. Its straightforward consequentialist logic makes it a natural framework for analyzing real-world decisions, policy debates, and institutional behavior, which explains why instructors assign it so frequently in both introductory and advanced coursework.

The papers gathered here approach utilitarianism from several directions. Many take a comparative angle, placing utilitarian principles alongside Kantian duty-based ethics or virtue ethics to evaluate their relative strengths and weaknesses. Others apply the theory to specific cases and dilemmas, including capital punishment, workplace drug testing, advance medical directives, and racial inequality in business contexts. Some papers focus on a particular strand of the theory, such as hedonistic act utilitarianism, while others treat it as one analytical tool within a broader ethical framework for examining institutional or social issues.

A strong essay on utilitarianism needs a clearly bounded thesis — arguing how the theory applies to a specific action, policy, or case rather than summarizing the theory in general terms. Evidence drawn from concrete scenarios carries more weight than abstract claims, and engaging with tensions or trade-offs within utilitarian reasoning strengthens the analysis considerably. The most common pitfall is treating all forms of utilitarianism as identical; distinguishing between act and rule variants, or between hedonistic and preference-based versions, demonstrates the analytical precision that instructors reward.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Thomas Carlyle's views on limits of personal liberty in Past and Present
¶ … personal freedom and also the limits of that freedom have been key in Western civilization for centuries. The problems raised were addressed by various writes and ethical theorists, including the political theorists…
Essay Doctorate
Ethical Behaviors of Mattel in the Toy
The ability to manage ethically has many financial benefits. Mattel's case shows how greater ethics and transparency including the development of a more effective CSR program could have led to greater success in managing their supply chain. Instead the marginalizing of performance on these attributes leads to the company barely getting by form an ethics standpoint.
Paper Undergraduate
Unit 1 concepts and overview
Ethics has always been a rather complex word -- or concept, rather -- to understand as, in the past, I have thought that ethics were different depending on the individual; that is, if a person thought that ethics had to…
Essay Doctorate
Multinational Companies and Ethical Theories: Human Rights
This paper examines the human rights obligations of multinational companies in light of human rights issues in the global supply chain. The article seeks to identify the most useful ethical theory in understanding the role of a multinational company with respect to human rights issues in the global supply chain. In addition to examining other theories, the discussion demonstrates the usefulness of the utilitarian ethical theory in this process.
Paper Undergraduate
Utilitarian Analysis of Shooting Down Hijacked Planes
Utilitarian approach to the issue requires that the various courses of action available and the consequences for each action be studied in detail and the benefits or disadvantages tabled such that the course of action…
Paper Undergraduate
Republican Ethics the Republican Party
The Republican Party of the United States of America is a very interesting entity. On the one hand, it ostensibly stands for small government and reduced intervention into people's lives, yet at the same time it…
Paper Undergraduate
Brand equity positioning strategies in marketing
The history of brand has quickly evolved from a relatively simple approach taken by companies to differentiate their products and services by name or graphical representation alone to highly targeted, effective, emotive approaches to communicating value. Brands have evolved from fairly generic approaches to communicating the functional value of a product or service to evoking emotions customers attain when using them. An example of this is the progression of Proctor & Gamble (P&G) to communicate the utilitarian values of soap in the previous centuries of their branding to the psychographic benefits to parents of providing clean clothes for their children. P&G continues to excel on this progression from the utilitarian or functional value their products deliver to the psychographic and emotive nature of them. Today the branding and positioning from P&G and other consumer packaged goods (CPG) manufacturers concentrate on the contributory value of their products to the roles of consumers using them. In other words, using P&G soap and cleansers are marketed to imply a mother is more capable and caring for their family by using these products. The progression of the Coca-Cola brand is also a case in point. This company is masterful at the evolution of brands, progressing across over 150 nations with their branding strategies, creating a highly positive, energy-charge persona of their customer. All of these factors are orchestrated to create a highly effective strategy of reinforcing the core messaging and differentiated value of Coca-Cola.
Paper Undergraduate
Ethical controversy and contemporary debates
The question of whether or not it is right for a company to put spyware on all of its employee's workstation computers in order to detect private usage and so increase productivity -- or at the very least stem the loss…
Essay Doctorate
Utilitarian ethics and organizational decision-making in supplier relations
This paper is about applying business ethics on a specific issue. Utilitarian ethics are the basis of normative theories of ethics that guide business actions. According to the classical utilitarian theories, the action that promotes and ensures greatest good for greatest possible number of people can be termed as the ‘ethical action' (Driver, 2009) that a firm may follow while conducting business operations.
Essay Doctorate
Comparing eating disorders and obesity surgery outcomes across two perspectives
Contrasting Approaches Towards Dealing With Corpulence: A Comparison Between Eating and Weight Disorders and Obesity Surgery: Stories of Altered Lives