
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2019
Pages: 63-84
Series: Issues in Business Ethics
ISBN (Hardback): 9783319897967
Full citation:
, "Moral imagination and the search for ethical decision-making in management", in: Systems thinking and moral imagination, Berlin, Springer, 2019


Moral imagination and the search for ethical decision-making in management
pp. 63-84
in: David Bevan, Regina W. Wolfe (eds), Systems thinking and moral imagination, Berlin, Springer, 2019Abstract
This article is the precursor to Werhane's full development of her theory of moral imagination. In this piece she espouses and develops the view that as managers we often get stuck or routinized in mental models or mindsets that we have adopted almost uncritically. That is to say, such managers may operate in a way that they are oblivious to important consequential information, or they fail to question their judgment or think to ask, "why are we doing this?" as detailed in Dennis Gioia's (1992) confessional article in which he acknowledges not recognizing ethical issues while in the role of Recall Coordinator at Ford Motor Company. Using Gioia as well as other examples, Werhane argues that each of us can often be preoccupied with a single way of looking at our experiences, as through the lens of an ingrained and routinized mental model, and thus we either totally miss or even misinterpret important data. By the use of moral imagination, she argues, managers are able to work their way out of such ethical mires.Original publication: Werhane, Patricia H. "Moral Imagination and the Search for Ethical Decision-Making in Management." Ruffin Foundation Special Issue: Business Ethics Quarterly (1998) 8: 75–98. ©1998 Reprinted with permission.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2019
Pages: 63-84
Series: Issues in Business Ethics
ISBN (Hardback): 9783319897967
Full citation:
, "Moral imagination and the search for ethical decision-making in management", in: Systems thinking and moral imagination, Berlin, Springer, 2019