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Tax Section 5 - What is Ethics?
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Section 5 - EthicsUse The CPA Journal, What is Ethics and NIEHS to complete this section. 1. Accountants in industry are often key to the planning and control processes of their organizations. True False 2. A professional whom is in a good position to discover organizational wrongdoing because of their heavy involvement in their companies' planning and control processes.
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An accountant. 3. Some people, both inside and outside the profession, would view the accountant's decision to blow the whistle as
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Morally justifiable. 4. This causes the greater amount of turmoil, creating an atmosphere of unpleasantness that may lead to retaliation against the whistleblower.
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Wrongdoing reporting. 5. As a member of any of the professional organizations, the accountant in industry is expected to comply with their
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Codes of ethical conduct. 6. MAs have an obligation to the organizations they serve, their profession, the public, and themselves. The IMA, in its Standards of Ethical Conduct for Management Accountants, state that: "Management accountants have a responsibility to refrain from disclosing confidential information... to communicate unfavorable information..., and to disclose all relevant information..." True False 7. The AICPA's Code of Professional Conduct states that members should act with integrity, guided by the precept that when members fulfill their responsibility to best serve
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The public interest. 8. According to the "What is Ethics" article, being ethical is clearly
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A matter of following one's feelings. 9. According to the "What is Ethics" article, ethics is the same as religion. True False 10. Our own pre-Civil war slavery laws and the apartheid laws of present-day South Africa are
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Examples of feeling of right and wrong. 11. Being ethical is not the same as doing "whatever society accepts". In any society, most people accept standards that are, in fact, ethical. An entire society can become ethically corrupt. According to the article, a good example of a morally corrupt society is
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Drug problem in the American continent. 12. According to the article, the following is what ethic is.
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Well based standards of right and wrong that prescribe what humans ought
to do, usually in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society,
fairness or specific virtues. 13. Ethical standards include standards relating to rights, such as the right to life, the right to freedom from injury, and the right to privacy. True False 14. The law often incorporates ethical standards to which most citizens subscribe. Therefore, being ethical is the same as following the law. True False 15. Ethical norms tend to be broader and more informal than laws. Although most societies use laws to enforce widely accepted moral standards and ethical and legal rules use similar concepts, it is important to remember
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That ethics and law are not the same. 16. Strive for honesty in all scientific communications. Honestly, report data, results, methods and procedures, and publication status. Do not fabricate, falsify, or misrepresent date. Do not deceive colleagues, granting agencies, or the public. This is an example of
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Adopted specific code by different professional associations, government
agencies, and universities have. 17. Although codes, policies, and principles are very important and useful, like any set of rules, they do not cover every situation that arises in research, they often conflict, and they require considerable interpretation. True False 18. Another way of defining "Ethics" focuses on the disciplines that study standards of conduct, such as philosophy, theology, law, psychology or sociology. True False 19. This is the most common way of defining "Ethics": Ethics are norms for conduct that distinguish between or acceptable and unacceptable behavior. When most people think of ethics (or morals), they think of
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Rules for distinguishing between right and wrong, such as the Golden
Rule ("Do onto others as you would have them do onto you"). 20. One plausible explanation for so many ethical disputes and issues in our society is that all people recognize some common ethical norms but different individuals interpret, apply, and balance these norms in different ways in light of their own values and life experiences. True False
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