Bounded Ethicality: Exploring the Limits of Ethical Behavior

Thursday, April 04, 2024
Webcast or Webinar, Online
9:00 AM - 10:00AM (opens at 8:30 AM) EST
1Credits
Behavioral

Registration is Closed

Online registration for this course is now closed. Please contact the Member Service Center at (800) 342-3197 if you wish to inquire about registering.

Members
$55.00 Regular Price
Non-Members
$70.00 Regular Price
Course Type: Webcast
Course Code: 24/CX40182
Level: Basic
Vendor: CPA Crossings, LLC
Field of Study: Behavioral Ethics

Overview:

Bounded ethicality explores the edges of ethical decision-making and the invisible borders that exist in our ethical judgment. In an entertaining and enlightening session, we will unveil surprising judgment errors we make when we face ethical dilemmas and search for the reasons behind them. We will explore areas of ethical decision-making where people consistently predict they will do the right thing but rarely do so. We will find out why people repeat stubborn errors of ethical judgment, and review steps that behavioral researchers have identified that can help us stop making these errors once and for all. We will identify ways to recognize our own errors and steps we can take to improve our ethical thinking.This event may be a rebroadcast of a live event and the instructor will be available to answer your questions during the event.

Objectives:

After attending this presentation, you will be able to...

  • Identify attribution error
  • Identify 3 common ethical judgment errors
  • Identify 3 methods to reduce errors in ethical decision-making

Major Topics:

The major topics covered in this course include:

  • Internal transparency
  • Implicit association
  • Concrete versus abstract processing
  • Temporal bias
  • Ethical fading

Major Topics:

The major topics covered in this course include:

  • Internal transparency
  • Implicit association
  • Concrete versus abstract processing
  • Temporal bias
  • Ethical fading

Designed For:

CPAs and other decision makers interested in developing a deeper understanding of their own ethical reasoning processes.

Prerequisites:

None