doing the right thing in a corrupt system benefits that corrupt system — Tex
If someone is forced to participate in a corrupt system, is that person obligated to do the right thing? — Tex
The motivation to do the right thing must come from his own conscience. — NOS4A2
As others have pointed out, a lot is situational and relative. Without specifics, it's hard to say. — James Riley
Philosophy can provide you with many contradictory schools and approaches. — Tom Storm
is up to the individual to determine based on his own philosophical principles. — Tex
Often people will settle on a position on morality after reviewing, to the best of their ability, a range of established positions. — Tom Storm
In a system where you can leave it behind and go somewhere else, doing the right thing while in that system benefits that corrupt system.However, I also had the thought that doing the right thing in a corrupt system benefits that corrupt system. And that's where I found myself in a quandary. — Tex
My initial and gut feeling is that yes, doing the right thing is the right thing to do. Not only for your integrity but also your conscience. — Tex
Say that you're working in a construction company where the official policy is to report all damaged tools, all accidents and near-accidents. If the company is corrupt, you following the official policy will be bad for you as you will be held responsible and will have to pay for the damage and the accidents.doing the right thing in a corrupt system benefits that corrupt system
— Tex
How so? — James Riley
If the company is corrupt, you following the official policy will be bad for you as you will be held responsible and will have to pay for the damage and the accidents. — baker
also feel that doing the right thing shouldn't be a situational decision which makes me learn towards my initial opinion of doing the right thing no matter what. — Tex
According to the official policy, the damage would be for them to pay for and they would have to ensure safety at work. Now they can blame you and wash their hands. — baker
I think the OP meant "benefit the corrupt system" in the sense that the corrupt system benefits by not doing what they have otherwise legally obligated themselves to do, by finding ways not to pay what they would otherwise have to pay for, by perpetuating itself.My question was about the system benefiting. Doing the right thing only benefits the corrupt system by making it less corrupt. That would benefit the system, but not the corrupt system. — James Riley
I'm having the impression the OP is implying that the corrupt system is being kept alive by wellmeaning, naive "good citizens" who are honest, humble, and obedient. — baker
I say no. Because I wouldn't want anyone to feel guilty. Life is hard enough already. You just do what you have to do. — TaySan
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