The Verdict

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October 29, 2006

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nh

'Fraud, like cheating, is a cultural, rather than a generic phenomenon; it's driven by a societal value system which places enormous merit upon coming in first place and a shaming of coming anywhere else'

The point i would make in response to this is that there is no such thing as a 'societal value system' that works for every sector of society. I am pretty certain that the value system in operation in a cut throat business environment is radically different from the value system in operation in a drug dependency unit.

The entire point of the criticisms levelled at the corporate world and the current scandals cannot be written off as a malaise that affects every aspect of society. It is true that we have evolved to lie and cheat, but the extent to which we do this is determined to a great degree by the environment we find ourselves in. Im guessing that what these studies reinforce is that there is a greater motivation to cheat in a business environment than others. i dont realy see how this conclusion is challenged by reasserting the fact that cheating is an intregal part of human culture.

Daniel M. Harrison

"I am pretty certain that the value system in operation in a cut throat business environment is radically different from the value system in operation in a drug dependency unit."

I'm not so sure, Neil, especially when it comes to achievement and more specifically recognition. Sure, the day-to-day minutae is different, but the emphasis on succeeding is huge.

Even in such a philanthropic activity such as teaching, the goal of recognition is often confused with that of imparting knowledge - hence the problems with lecture style teaching at the big Universities.

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