HOW TO USE THE EXCEPTIONS TEST
© 2009 J. Brooke Hamilton III, Ph.D.
Recognition of the respect owed to all persons gives a basis for three approaches to deciding right and wrong, the Rights Test, the Exceptions Test, and the Choices Test.
You may wish to begin with the discussion of Rights
on the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics site. Then return here to
see how the Exceptions Test is operationalized and study the two examples
linked at the bottom of the page.
B. HOW TO USE THE EXCEPTIONS TEST
1. INTRODUCE THE TEST
Ask: “What if everyone did it?”
An
“exception” is claiming it is ethical for us to do an action but not
ethical for others to do it in the same situation. This is not the
same as claiming that it must be ethical for us because “everyone else
is doing it.” It is asking what things would be like if everyone else
really were doing the action in question.
2. WHY IS THIS A VALID WAY TO DECIDE RIGHT AND WRONG?
We
are all equal as ethical actors, so whatever is ethical for me must be
ethical for others in the same circumstances. This is true for
individuals and companies. So why should we be able to get away with
something if others can’t?
3. APPLY THE TEST
STEP 1: Specify what action we are considering.
Describe the action in a way that captures the ethically relevant features.
Adjust the generality or specificity of the action to highlight what is questionable:
• Is the action part of a general category such as “not telling the truth” or “breaking a promise”?
•
Or does the action have specific characteristics that are relevant,
such as “not telling the truth to save a life” or “breaking a promise
because something more important is at risk” which are more specific
descriptions.
• Avoid value-loaded descriptors that already
contain the ethical judgment (“We are lying to the customer”) because
this closes off further discussion.
STEP 2: Ask, “What if everyone did it?” If the action were adopted by others in similar situations, would it:
a. Become impossible for anyone to do the action
because everyone tried to do it? If everyone lied, no one would believe
anyone else, so it would be impossible for anyone to lie successfully
(if lying is “deceiving others by not telling the truth”). If everyone
broke promises than it would be impossible for anyone to do so because
no promise would be accepted. If everyone filed false tax returns then
the government would stop voluntary tax filings and collect taxes
directly so it would be impossible for anyone to file a false return.
Since everyone is equal, it is not ethical for us to do something
that not everyone can do. We would be making an exception for
ourselves.
b. Create a business climate unacceptable to us
because everyone was doing it? If I do not want to operate in a
business climate in which I cannot trust people to tell truth or keep
their promises, then I should tell the truth and keep my promises. Not
to do so would be to make an exception for myself that I don’t deserve
since everyone is equal.
How do we decide what is
“unacceptable”? Consider what is important to me that would be
sacrificed if we had to work in that kind of business climate. Is that
the kind of world we want to live in? If we would not want to work in
a world in which the action was common or if our firm and/or society
would not want us to create a world in which the action were common,
then it is not ethical for us to act in a way we find unacceptable for
others to act.
STEP 3: Draw a conclusion for Step 2:
What if everyone did it? Either condition a. or b. would make the
action unethical: “We should (or should not) do this action since we
would (or would not) be claiming an exception for ourselves: we can (or
can’t) all do it and/or the common adoption of the action would create
a world we and our company would find acceptable (or unacceptable).”
STEP 4: Ask, “What if they did it to us?”
If the action were directed at us, would we think it was ethical? We
are not asking if we would like it but whether we would think it was
ethical. This step of reversing the action is a way of applying the
Golden Rule: “Do unto others.”
STEP 5: Draw a conclusion for Step 3:
“What if they did it to us?” If it would not be ethical for others to
do the action to us, then it is unethical for us to do the action
because we would be claiming an exception for ourselves.
D. SUMMARIZE THE CONCLUSIONS for “What if everyone did it?” and for “What if they did it to us?”
If the action would be impossible for everyone to do, if it would be unacceptable to us or the company if everyone did it, or if it would be unethical for someone to do it to us, then the action would not be ethical for us to do since that would be claiming and exception for ourselves—that we should be able to do what it is unethical for others to do. Failing any one of the three conditions shows the action to be unethical.
4. STRENGTHS OF THE EXCEPTIONS TEST
• Reminds us not to give ourselves advantages in regard to what is ethical – that we are all equal in what is right or wrong.
•
Addresses the free rider problem – we can’t justify being the only one
allowed to market this way even when there is no great harm if only a
few of us do it unless we can explain why we deserve to be an exception.
5. WEAKNESSES OF THE EXCEPTIONS TEST
• Description of the action can miss the ethical issue.
• People who are vicious or fanatics may agree to a world that others would find unacceptable.
SEE CASE EXAMPLES:
For links to descriptions of ethical theories, go to Ethical Decision Making at the Markkula Ethics Center site. For a discussion of the Rights approach at that site, go to Rights .
For a page of quick links to move between ethical theories and steps to operationalize these theories, return to EthicsTestNavigationLinks
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