To the Editor:
If,
as Robert Prentice says ("An Ethics Lesson for Business Schools,"
Op-Ed, Aug. 20), business professors tend to "view the law as an
impediment" and "impart to their students an impression that the law
exists simply to be manipulated or evaded," we will undoubtedly continue
to see a stream of ethical lapses and abuses in corporate America.
Indeed,
it is not easy to teach ethical values to college students, but ethical
training will be more effective if those who provide the instruction genuinely
believe in what they teach.
M. R.
Rumson, N.J., Aug. 20, 2002
The writer is an associate professor of psychology, St. John's University.
To the Editor:
Re
"An Ethics Lesson for Business Schools," by Robert Prentice (Op-Ed,
Aug. 20):
As
a chief executive for more than 40 years, I watched our best and brightest come
out of business schools and enter industry, government and Wall Street. I have
come to the conclusion that most should have taken another class: "Stop
Gaming the System."
Responsible
capitalism needs no more lawyers and legal training. It needs people who play
by the rules.
J. S.
Port Washington, N.Y., Aug. 21, 2002
To the Editor:
As
a late-1980's graduate of Harvard Business School, I agree with Robert Prentice
(Op-Ed, Aug. 20) that good ethics cannot be taught at business school but
rather are acquired (or not) at a young age from parental and community
influences.
When
I was at Harvard, ethics courses were optional, and I observed that the
students who enrolled in the classes were those who needed them least. And when
ethical issues were raised in other case discussions, it was evident that
students' points of view were fairly well set.
Having
worked for years in the heavily regulated pharmaceutical industry, I can vouch
for the need to have a healthy understanding and respect for the law, frustrating
as it can be at times.
R.A.S.
New Providence, N.J.
Aug. 20, 2002
To the Editor:
Re
"An Ethics Lesson for Business Schools," by Robert Prentice (Op-Ed,
Aug. 20): As a consultant in business ethics, I have told executives, "I
can't make your employees ethical, but I can give them good reasons why they
ought to be."
Here's
a major difference between business ethics and business law. It is human nature
to try to bend the rules and search for loopholes. But when it comes to the
question of why business people should obey the law, they usually get one
answer: obey or go to jail.
This
is a powerful message, but there are better answers, like considerations of
justice and the need for character, integrity and honor in our daily lives.
R. J. R.
West Haven, Conn., Aug. 21, 2002
The writer is an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of New
Haven.
To the Editor:
Robert
Prentice (Op-Ed, Aug. 20) says fewer business people would go to jail if more
M.B.A. students learned business law. Here is all the business law M.B.A.
students need to know: Thou shalt not steal.
B. X. B.
Chicago, Aug. 20, 2002
The writer is an M.B.A. candidate at the University of Chicago.
To the Editor:
Robert
Prentice says it is difficult to teach ethical values to hardened M.B.A.
candidates (Op-Ed, Aug. 20). If so, perhaps admissions committees should revise
their criteria to favor candidates who possess a genuine commitment to
altruism, and who are mindful of the negative consequences of unfettered
capitalism.
Accepting more
applicants who view business as an instrument of social change, and not just a
vehicle to personal wealth, could shape the future business world and the world
at large in a profoundly positive way.
B. Z.
Bryn Mawr, Pa., Aug. 20,
2002