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Christopher Michaelson on Moral Distress at Fordham EIB seminar | This Thursday (Sept 11) 9:30 am ET (Zoom available)
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Christopher Michaelson on Moral Distress at Fordham EIB seminar | This Thursday (Sept 11) 9:30 am ET (Zoom available)
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Miguel Alzola
Posted 09-08-2025 20:38
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Dear colleagues,
Just a reminder that this Thursday, September 11, at 9:30 am ET, Christopher Michaelson (University of St. Thomas) is coming to the Fordham Ethics in Business seminar to present his paper "Moral Distress in Bioethics and Business Ethics: Knowledge, Action, and Desire in Moral Conditions and Communities."
The seminar will be in person in our Lincoln Campus (Room 212, Lincoln Center Campus, 140 W 62nd St., New York).
Zoom will be available for virtual attendees (please kindly
RSVP
here).
Below is a short bio and abstract.
See you there!
FORDHAM ETHICS IN BUSINESS SEMINAR SERIES
Christopher Wong Michaelson (University of St. Thomas)
"Moral Distress in Bioethics and Business Ethics: Knowledge, Action, and Desire in Moral Conditions and Communities"
Thursday, September 11, 2025, 9:30-11:00 a.m.
Room 212, Lincoln Center Campus, 140 W 62nd St. New York, NY
Zoom available for virtual attendees
Please kindly
RSVP here
Abstract:
"Moral distress" was introduced in nursing ethics to describe the experience of having the moral conviction about the right thing to do while having limited agency to enact it. It exists at the intersection of moral philosophy, moral psychology, and moral communities that influence our desires to act. Although moral distress has significantly impacted bioethics scholarship, it has had almost no presence in business ethics scholarship. We argue that moral distress is useful for understanding important problems of business ethics. We claim it may be missing from business ethics discourse not because it is not present but rather because it is ever-present, an existential condition brought on by the tension between profit maximization and other moral purposes. We consider how the moral communities of medicine and business can be morally supportive or distressing and set forth a taxonomy of moral conditions involving the relationship between knowledge, action, and desire.
Bio: Christopher Wong Michaelson, PhD, is the Barbara and David A. Koch ("coach") Endowed Chair of Business Ethics, University of St. Thomas, and Affiliate Faculty, Center for Bioethics, University of Minnesota.
______________________________
Miguel Alzola Ph. D.
Associate Professor of Ethics
Fordham University
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