重新思考天主教商业教育如何教导商业目的

L. Johnson, M. Naughton, William Stanley Bojan, Jr.
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引用次数: 3

摘要

天主教大学的商业教育应该让全校的学生和教师认真审视商业在社会中的作用。遵循一流商学院的最佳实践,天主教商学院的商业课程主要侧重于股东和利益相关者方法——股东方法是主流观点。创造性地参与天主教社会传统(特别是“人的社区”),可以比股东或利益相关者的方法更丰富地了解我们当代社会的商业目的。我们认为,以多种方式追求各种公司目标的自由裁量权,远比企业管理者和那些教育他们的人经常认识到的要大得多。本文探讨了在法律和道德上的自由裁量权下,天主教社会传统如何成为教学企业目的的丰富资源,并揭示了如何利用宗教传统与冗长的哲学话语,在课程中形成丰富的对话,以指导公司的道德方向。我们对比了两种商业哲学:个人协会(股东和利益相关者方法)和个人社区(以使命为中心的方法),以及他们各自对公司目标的看法。虽然商业学者往往不会因为“实用”的愿望而质疑他们潜在的人类学前提,但以文科为基础的商业教育必须参与其话语的首要原则。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rethinking How Business Purpose is Taught in Catholic Business Education
Business education at a Catholic university should engage students and faculty across the university in critically examining the purpose of business in society. Following the best practices of leading business schools, the Catholic business curriculum has mostly focused on the shareholder and stakeholder approaches - with the shareholder approach being the predominant view. Creatively engaging the Catholic Social Tradition (especially the “community of persons”) can bring a richer appreciation of the purpose of business in our contemporary society than either the shareholder or stakeholder approaches. We argue that far more discretion to pursue various corporate purposes in manifold ways exists than is frequently appreciated by business managers and those who educate them. This article examines how, given this legal and moral discretion, the Catholic Social Tradition is a rich resource for teaching corporate purpose, and reveals how tapping into a religious tradition with a long philosophical discourse can shape a rich dialogue in the curriculum as to a company’s moral direction. We contrast two philosophies of business: an Association of Individuals (the shareholder and stakeholder approaches) and a Community of Persons (mission-centric approach), and their respective views of corporate purpose. While business scholars tend not to question their underlying anthropological presuppositions because of the desire to be “practical,” a business education grounded in the liberal arts must engage the first principles of its discourse.
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