Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Settings
About Consumerium development wiki
Disclaimers
Consumerium development wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Contributions
Log in
Editing
Ethical purchasing
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
Some people strongly prefer the terminology '''ethical purchasing''' to that of "[[moral purchasing]]". They believe that: "Morality tends to be based on assumptions about universal constants. Morality systems rest on a belief in right or wrong. The concepts lack any semantic foundation, so they most often trace their roots to cosmic assumptions..." However, there are strong arguments against any collusion of the idea of ethics and of purchasing: *there are more objective, embodied, bases for morality which are derived from undisputed (if not undisputable) moral concepts like "[[deforestation]] is bad"; these ought to be exposed, shared, extended, and augment the "cosmic" *to ignore the "cosmic" is a very bad idea - most people believe in some [[ethical tradition]] that determines the universe in some moral fashion, and obviously their participation in [[moral purchasing]] is required, and they're to be very strongly encouraged to rigorously apply their moral beliefs to the market - they already do through such labels as [[kosher]] and [[halal]] and [[vegan]]! we must converge with, not compete with, these overtly moral labels *ethical and economic decisions are both supposed to be conscious and positive, yet, they clearly interfere with each other; to say "ethical purchasing" is to say that one can (thus "must"?) justify a purchasing decision in some ethical code - but the philosopher you argue with is paid by the producer, he is a [[funded troll]], so as soon as you enter this argument, you lose, and he wins, and you are convinced to buy; (this is why [[SA 8000]] cannot possibly work) *[[individual buying criteria]] do, certainly, express a set of moral views of "right and wrong"; even if we think [[institutional buying criteria]] are ethical and explicit, we must allow the individual to be moral and implicit. A great responsibility lies on the purchasing agents and other personnel who are directly responsible for the sourcing. *[[local purchasing]] is also implicit, a moral belief that "where we are and who we are near is good"; asking the local to justify itself as most ethical is to create a [[God's Eye View]] that will necessarily favour the powerful That said, it would be impossible to agree on [[faction]] or [[institution]] [[buying criteria]] without some explicit process. But if we're going to call ''that'' '''ethical''', it will also be [[factionally defined]], and so we lose coherence by asking everyone to justify their choices on an ethical level. For all these reasons, the terminology [[moral purchasing]] has come into use, and that seems to be an optimum for getting the point across. Everyone knows what "moral" is, even if we are all different, we know what is moral for our selves, even if we got that from a Big Book. While everyone does not know what is ethical, and is almost always referred to some authority to find out. This is not what we really want [[Consumerium Services]] to do. Even [[Consumerium Governance Organization]] is just a way of s/electing some [[Lowest Troll]]s.
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Consumerium development wiki are considered to be released under the GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 or later (see
Consumerium:Copyrights
for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource.
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following CAPTCHA:
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)