I wonder if the researchers took into account that a truly ethical person 
would not participate in the kind of rubbish that presents predictable 
limited outcomes as fact.  There may, indeed, be a correlation between 
creativity and ethics, but I suspect it is more inclusive and requires 
examination without the limits designed to define results. I keep going 
back to the model of spiral dynamics, one that allows and understands that 
we all move up and down and between memes during our lives given the 
circumstances of our experience.  Someone who does not have enough money 
for food may cheat in this experiment more than someone who has never 
known financial stress or hunger.  Here is a pretty good explanation of the 
original Graves material, although I've seen better, its the best I could 
find online this 
morning. http://www.edumar.cl/documentos/SD_version_for_constellation5.pdf 

On Monday, December 24, 2012 5:58:21 PM UTC-5, archytas wrote:
>
> A free paper with the ideas is at 
> http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/11-064.pdf 
> I was interested because I find professional ethics and religious 
> morality collapse under circumstances of self-interest and become 
> rationalisation.  WE need creative solutions - but there is a dark 
> side to creativity. 
>
> On 24 Dec, 22:03, archytas <[email protected]> wrote: 
> >  "The (Honest) Truth About Dishonesty: How We Lie to Everyone — 
> > Especially Ourselves" by Dan Ariely asks a seemingly simple question — 
> > “is dishonesty largely restricted to a few bad apples, or is it a more 
> > widespread problem?” — and goes on to reveal the surprising, 
> > illuminating, often unsettling truths that underpin the uncomfortable 
> > answer. Like cruelty, dishonesty turns out to be a remarkably 
> > prevalent phenomenon better explained by circumstances and cognitive 
> > processes than by concepts like character. 
> > 
> > Work like this is challenging traditional economics - the genre is 
> > 'behavioural economics'.  My own take on this book and a lot of work 
> > from brain science and history is that we are at a tipping point in 
> > respect of the possibility of a human science.  I'd like to see a 
> > broader literature take up this challenge beyond current drivel on 
> > black and white hats. 
> > 
> > So what are you guys reading? 
>

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