Principles Of Human Development Based On Morality And Freedom
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Transcript of Principles Of Human Development Based On Morality And Freedom
Principles of Human Development Based on Morality and Freedom
Allen Carn
Program: PhD in Applied Management and Decision Sciences
Specialization: Leadership and Organizational Change
August 27, 2010
Abstract
Breadth
In this portion of the Knowledge Area Module (KAM) 2, it was determined that Kohlberg’s
theories of moral development and Maslow’s hierarchy of needs can be applied to certain
concepts from Weber, King, Friedman, and a letter from I.R.. Specifically, the concepts include
Weber’s idea of a calling, while King’s belief in agape and the three dimensions of a full life
captures the progression aspect of Kohlberg and Maslow’s theories. Furthermore, this portion of
the KAM includes Friedman’s suggestions on how economic freedom and individual
responsibility provide an environment for human and individual development. Finally, the letter
to Bradford from I.R. provided five points on how self-reflection, continual improvement,
avoiding negative behaviors, and leadership provided the best opportunity for the group at
Plymouth Plantation to survive. All of concepts noted fit in to different portions of Kohlberg and
Maslow’s theories.
Abstract
Depth
The focus of the depth was to review moral development as it related to the individual, the
organization, and then leadership. Using a collaboration of inputs gathered from various authors
found in the breadth and the depth, two prevalent themes became abundantly clear. The first, in
what King would define as secular relativism, authors often proposed an adaptive moral
relativism system that required strict adherence with little or no concern for the individual. The
value of the research articles often left the reader traversing in the ambiguity of relativism that
found a way excuse some Machiavellian concepts. The second theme had a strict foundation that
provided a consistency of purpose while individualistic change was encouraged and expected.
This second theme based on utilitarian need and religious principles; virtue, enlightenment, and
individual development were prized societal expectations. As the individual developed, the moral
frame widens while the ethical blind spots decreased. Consequently, as the individual developed
so did humanity.
Abstract
Application
In the application portion of this KAM, the process of assembling an initial set of social
expectations begins. Theoretical information from the breadth and depth provided a path of
rediscovery to instruct undergraduate students and leaders on how certain societal expectations
provide the best opportunity for individual and leadership development. It was determined that
the social expectations lead to moral development included: the Ten Commandments; the topics
within I.R.’s letter; agape; the three dimensions of complete life; individual responsibility;
economic freedom; and a concept of virtue provide the best opportunity for development.
Furthermore, within each section, topics and training scenarios were installed to assist the student
or leader to understand the importance of moral development principles.
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Table of Contents
Breadth .............................................................................................................................................1
Introduction ......................................................................................................................................1
A Foundation of Individual Development .................................................................................1
The Impediments of Development .............................................................................................3
Decaying social expectations. ..............................................................................................3
Ignorance and hate. ..............................................................................................................5
Systems of hate. ...................................................................................................................7
The Engine of Individual Development ...............................................................................9
I.R.’s Letter of Development ...................................................................................................12
Daily self-reflection. ..........................................................................................................12
Patience & forgiveness. ......................................................................................................14
Avoid a dependence on charity. .........................................................................................15
Avoid apathy and complacency. ........................................................................................16
Sound leadership and its selection. ....................................................................................18
King’s Belief in Agape as a Key to Development ...................................................................21
King’s Development Process – the three dimensions of a complete life .................................23
Length dimension. ..............................................................................................................24
Breadth dimension. ............................................................................................................25
Height dimension. ..............................................................................................................26
Friedman’s Theories that Promote Individual Development ...................................................28
Individual responsibility. ...................................................................................................29
Economic freedom. ............................................................................................................32
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Conclusion .....................................................................................................................................36
Depth ............................................................................................................................................38
Leadership in Human Development ..............................................................................................38
Annotated Bibliography ...........................................................................................................38
Literature Review Essay ..........................................................................................................60
Theory ................................................................................................................................62
Organizational ....................................................................................................................72
Leadership ..........................................................................................................................81
Conclusion .....................................................................................................................................92
Application .....................................................................................................................................95
Rediscovering a Path to Human Development ..............................................................................95
Context ...........................................................................................................................................95
Social Setting ...........................................................................................................................95
Audience ..................................................................................................................................96
Objectives ................................................................................................................................97
Research Process ......................................................................................................................99
Analysis ..................................................................................................................................101
Presentation: Rediscovering a Path to Human Development ......................................................102
Presentation ............................................................................................................................102
Waypoints ..............................................................................................................................103
First waypoint. .................................................................................................................103
Second waypoint. .............................................................................................................104
Third waypoint. ................................................................................................................104
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Fourth waypoint. ..............................................................................................................105
Fifth waypoint. .................................................................................................................105
Sixth waypoint. ................................................................................................................106
Summary and Concluding Remarks ............................................................................................107
Observations ..........................................................................................................................107
Lesson Learned ......................................................................................................................108
Conclusion .............................................................................................................................109
References ....................................................................................................................................110
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Breadth
SBSF 8210 Theories of Human Development
Introduction
The development of the breadth starts with Kohlberg and Maslow’s belief that human
development occurs only through individual development. The individual has always been the
basic building block of humanity; consequently, as individuals develop, humanity as a whole
benefits. However, Weber, King, and Friedman were specific in identifying four impediments to
individual development that carry over and impede human development to the point where
humanity as a whole regresses. These impediments were decaying social expectations, ignorance,
hate, and systems of hate. If an individual decided to work through the impediments, then several
concepts highlighted in the breadth provided a path of individual development. The concepts
found in the breadth included the concept of a calling, ideas noted in a letter written to Bradford,
agape, the three dimensions of a full life, individual responsibility, and economic freedom.
Kohlberg’s theory of moral development and Maslow’s hierarchy of needs provided the
analytical theory to compare and contrast the concepts previously noted. The breadth ends with a
brief conclusion that encapsulates the findings found throughout this portion of the KAM.
A Foundation of Individual Development
In the United States, Judeo-Christian beliefs provided a foundation for individual
development. This environment of potentially positive interaction based on Judeo-Christian
religious beliefs was what Weber wrote about in his book The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of
Capitalism (1958). However, the deterioration of those same Judeo-Christian beliefs concerned
Weber; consequently, he named capitalism as the main culprit causing the erosion of morality
leading to a regression in individual development. Unbeknownst to Weber, Marxist societal
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concepts have hastened the natural erosion process as defined by Weber. This purposeful intent
to undermine the morality, values, and ethics of a free society has individuals focusing on their
most basic needs while being forced to ignore their potential to develop. According to King, it is
those same unapologetic Marxists who have forced individuals “to go back and rediscover some
mighty precious values [they] left behind” (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998, p. 7). As
validated by Kohlberg and Maslow, all four supporting theorists, who include I.R., Weber, King,
and Friedman, have promoted individual development and believed in political freedom. While
I.R., Weber, and Friedman understood political and economic freedom were intertwined and
necessary for individual development (Friedman, 1980). King (as cited by Carson & Holloran,
1988) preferred limited economic freedom; however, he still understood that economic freedom
was a necessity and that socialism robbed the individual of the traits that made him or her human.
To King, Marxism and its variants turned an inspired individual into a hopeless subhuman. This
dismal reality forced the individual to the lowest levels of Kohlberg and Maslow’s stages of
human development and hierarchy of needs.
The breadth portion of this paper will validate some key concepts of Weber, an author
known only as I.R., King, and Friedman. In doing so the reader will understand why a calling is
the engine for individual human development. They will understand why self-improvement is
critical in allowing an individual to survive and adapt to a hostile environment. Furthermore, they
will understand the meaning of agape and the three dimensions of a complete life. Finally, in
creating an environment for individual development, the reader will understand the need for
individual responsibility and the free market. The free market is societal in nature, but it is
profoundly dependent on individual development. Combined, these authors described important
concepts that make up the societal expectations of a free society; thereby, allowing for true
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human development while keeping the impediments to development at bay. The next portion of
the breadth will note four impediments to individual development that King, Kohlberg, Maslow,
Weber, and Friedman wove into the theories and concepts.
The Impediments of Development
In reviewing the impediments of individual development, the reader must go back and
find out why so many individuals have become enamored with a system that restricts individual
development to the point that it can only lead the individual to Marxism’s version of slavery and
the elimination of individual development. The list of impediments has societal ingredients that
must be included in this topic of discussion. The impediments noted by all of the authors in this
KAM address the erosion of societal expectations, which becomes the breeding ground for
ignorance; this in turn allows hatred and systems of hate to promote class warfare. Consequently,
segments of the public have sponsored or promoted some of the impediments that were societal
in nature. This brief list was an attempt in explaining some of the issues the individual must
overcome in order to develop in a positive manner. Individuals in a constant pursuit of
development were society’s only preventive maintenance measure against societal and moral
decay.
Decaying social expectations. As Weber (1958) suggested, abundance and selfishness
were the first steps that encouraged individuals down the path of self-enslavement because they
ended up discarding the social expectations of morality, virtue, ethics, and continual
improvement that has allowed individual and human development to occur in the past. This self-
inflicted societal decay was due to members of society viewing some of the previously noted
social expectations as being antiquated, too demanding, or too restrictive in a free market setting.
Maslow (1971) with Weber believed that an unappreciated abundance created a relaxed
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atmosphere where the individual forgets the reasoning behind societal fundamentals. In the
context of what were the fears of Weber (1958) and the predatory nature of capitalism, the
erosion of religious morality begins when a profit or bonus excuses an individual or corporation
from doing what has been morally right. This predatory or materialistic nature limits the
individual development to his or her most selfish of needs. As noted in Maslow’s Hierarchy of
Needs (1943), these same individuals would struggle with esteem, loving, and belonging because
they never get past the selfish needs of physiological and safety.
Weber (1958) lamented about the deteriorating social expectations in the nineteenth and
early twentieth century. However, Weber’s perspective was more on the church and its system of
social expectations. Though potentially useful to individual development, some individuals
viewed morality, virtue, ethics, and the discipline in continual improvement as being too
restrictive to their development and freedom, which brought about certain hostility towards the
church (Weber). Again, some of this hostility was not necessarily directed at the moral and
ethical system, but at those individuals who inserted themselves as the moral and ethical arbiters
of the church; thereby, making themselves the local dictators. In their religious zeal, they ended
up restricting individual development and freedom. Regardless, the power of economic and
political freedom had turned upon itself and in doing so; individuals began to doubt the moral
foundation that had provided them so much opportunity. In King’s (as cited by Carson &
Holloran, 1998) worldview, we as a people without thinking decided to discard morality, ethics,
and virtue (p. 16). Consequently, this has lead to instances and periods of tragic exploitation.
Whether the erosion that negatively affected individual development occurred as a revolt
against the Judeo-Christian system of social expectations, the church itself, individuals within the
church, or due to the less than ethical opportunist, it happened. King, Weber, Kohlberg, and
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Maslow asserted that the degradation of societal expectations, which includes morality, virtue,
ethics, and the discipline in continual improvement, leads to a reduction in individual and human
development. Ultimately, this requires subsequent generations of individuals to rediscover, some
if not all of the lessons learned the hard way as they meander through the lower levels of
Kohlberg’s and Maslow’s development hierarchies in search of stable societal expectations.
Ignorance and hate. According to Maslow (1971), the erosion of positive social
expectations leads the individual to commit one of the most costly mistakes in regards to human
development, that mistake was ignorance. Maslow actually equated ignorance with evil. For
example, King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) noted that when 250 million individuals
fail to understand the source of their individual development and freedom, democracy and the
human potential for good suffers. As this relates to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs (1943), this
means individuals stagnate at the lower levels of development and struggle to survive. Friedman
(2002) knew ignorance was where the enemy from within resided that has been destroying
freedom and the environment for individual development. If we as individuals, accept the
responsibility found in Kohlberg and Maslow’s higher stages of development, then we must
reject ignorance in all of its forms, this includes apathy and complacency as noted in I.R.’s
warning to Bradford (1966).
If not, individuals will lose their freedom to develop (Friedman & Friedman, 1980).
Simply, refusing to accept self-improvement as an individual responsibility equates to a loss of
freedom, which in turn imposes more restrictions on the individual development of future
generations. Ignorance prevents the incorrectly assumed to go unchecked, the wrongs of the
world to go uncorrected; consequently, individual development strays down dark paths that end
up hindering human development (Maslow, 1971). This dire path was supported by Friedman’s
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(2002, p. 7) assertion that there was a tendency to control the free market using democratic
socialism, which in turn only leads to totalitarianism.
Furthermore, ignorance, according to Maslow (1971), is one of the primary factors
leading to hatred and systems of hate. King (1988) mentioned that the last two centuries have
seen humankind being plagued with hatred and the theology of Marxism. When these two
plagues upon humanity gain strength, freedom and human development have always suffered
(King, 1986). This in turn makes hate and Marxism pitfalls of individual development. In using
the examples provided by King (1981, 1986, 1988, 1998) and Maslow (1971), a compilation of
thoughts help define hate as the complete absence of compassion with a focused negative
activity; it goes beyond indifference because of its purposeful intent. For Maslow (1971), as
previously stated, hate and evil were the manifestations of ignorance; while Kohlberg (1981)
viewed hate as the absence of “respect for persons and of justice” (p. 193). As stated by King (as
cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998), hate is more than just a single act; it is a series of acts leading
to a compulsive reaction.
More times than not, the reaction to a perceived wrong becomes a hate-filled response to
exact a certain amount of revenge. When “hate begets hate” (King, as cited by Carson &
Holloran, 1998, p. 51) the individual has lost sight of their future and individual development is
on hold. King would go on and explain that the horrific quality that hate brings out is that right
becomes wrong and what was wrong is now right. Ultimately, to break the chain reaction of hate
requires a morally and ethically strong person that believes in the value of the greater good.
Maslow would label that individual as a self-actualizing person focused on Kohlberg’s morally
right conclusions. Consequently, both Kohlberg and Maslow emphasized, hate in its various
manifestations would either suppress or cause the regression of human development.
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Systems of hate. As King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) preached and wrote
about, hate becomes the perfect environment for class warfare and systems of hate such as
Marxism since class warfare begets class warfare. This is not surprising since the individuals
propagating class warfare view humans as nothing more than animals. Animals do not have
moral or ethical codes worthy for those who classify themselves as intellectually superior;
consequently, societal expectations have always been a minor inconvenience to those who tread
upon the freedoms of others (King, 1981, 1988). Marx (Marx & Engels, 1959; Marx, 1970), who
often ridiculed traditional moral ethos, would approve of suppressing human development for the
greater good of the controlling central agency. Kohlberg (1981) would disagree, this Marxist
relativism or any philosophies based relativism, distort right and wrong as to prevent any
absolutes, this opens the door for an individual to excuse egregious acts. When moral relativism
serves as a foundation of a socio-economic system, the excusal of egregious acts becomes
systematic and its offspring will always be hate-based systems (King, as cited by Carson &
Holloran, 1998). Friedman (2002) would go as far as to say that equalized output and social
justice are examples of hate-based systems because they elevate one individual over another and
in some instances take from one to give to another. In these instances, individual and human
development suffers since the emphasis is on a specific group and not society as a whole.
Despite this, King (1981) decried that those individuals trapped in the cycle of hate fall
prey to the false hopes propagated by those who promote equalized outcomes and social justice.
King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) predicted the possibility that negative consequences
befall any who seek vengeful retribution, too often the only thing they end up promoting was
more hate. According to Friedman (2002), social vengeance ultimately opens the door to
Marxism and its variants that include Fascism, Socialism, and Communism, all of which
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equalized the output of every individual. As King noted (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998, p.
29), life’s problems have never been solved when an individual cannot tell right from wrong as
happens in “ethical relativism” which serves as the foundation of Fascism, Socialism,
Communism, and Marxism. Anyone who is in search of individual development should reject it
since it only offers the illusion of political freedom and individual development, but not the
means to attain and maintain them (King, 1981 & 1986; Friedman, 2002). Even in the best of
situations, Marxism only allows an individual to develop in a manner that strengthens the central
planning system; why else would a central planning unit invest resources on individuals (Marx &
Engels, 1959). The Marxist-like systems of hate have always ran contrary to the basic essence of
individual development, which is human nature and humankind’s desire to improve their
economic and political status while having some control over their life’s direction (Friedman,
2002).
As systems of hate build, the moral development of the individual will always focus on
revenge, retribution, and reparation, which dooms the individual to Kohlberg’s (1981) lowest
stages. Consequently, the needs of the individual will only advance as far as the desire that
carries the individual concerning a specific cause based on revenge, retribution, or reparation
(Maslow, 1943). As previously stated, the spin cycle of hate ensnares individual and human
development, since hate begets hate, more equalized output begets more equalization, while
more social justice begets more perceived social inequity, which ultimately leads to class
warfare, and in turn leads to Marx’s never ending class struggle (Marx & Engels, 1959).
These impediments of freedom and individual development require constant diligence of
all individuals. King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) tried to dissuade individuals from
choosing the path of hate and ignorance, because he knew they were actually making a decision
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that would prevent them from developing to their fullest potential. In turn, they would put
themselves in a poor position to succeed while being seduced by illusions of grandeur offered by
systems of hate. King would go further and state that the act of embracing hate would condemn
future generations to levels of greater inequity and hate. Maslow (1971) stressed that in order to
stop these impediments from being successful requires as many individuals as possible striving
to achieve the highest levels of human development. That means everyone must be inspired to
achieve the highest possible need (Maslow, 1943) or stage of moral development (Kohlberg,
1981), for all humanity is dependent upon it. The concepts and theories found in the next sections
will offset the impediments of development. In doing so, some of the impediments noted may
take on a different persona than previously noted.
The Engine of Individual Development
Oppression and subjugation has been the dominate condition for most of humanity, as a
few decide the future of the many. Before the most recent age of enlightenment, freedom was an
ancient relic of Greece or early Rome. According to Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980),
most of the people of that era understood political freedom and economic freedom were
synonymous and one could not exist without the other. However, that did not persuade some
from thinking otherwise. Bradford (1908; Bradford & Winslow, 1966) would criticize those who
thought they knew better or had some divine right to push aside freedom and assert brutal control
over the rest of humanity. As a result, human and individual development crept backwards into
the dark ages. Fortunately, the concept of freedom secured a foothold initially in Great Britain.
Freedom would eventually take root in the New World leading Charles Adams to coin an
expression describing this as the American Experiment. Eventually, the American Experiment
would become the subject of Weber’s work as he wrote the Protestant Ethic and developed the
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concept of a calling. A calling was just one of many steps an individual takes to rediscover the
path of moral development and freedom.
As Weber (1958) compiled his research on the Protestants, he discovered a concept so
powerful that once discovered by the individual, they should pursue it with all their might as if it
unlocked the door to all of life’s problems. If pursued, to a certain degree, a calling would answer
so many of life’s questions because it is the engine of individual development. In Weber’s
opinion, the individual should maximize their time in a utilitarian pursuit of a calling for it could
provide mental, spiritual, and physical nourishment. Furthermore, Weber described a calling in
many ways: a life’s passion, performing a current vocation in the best possible manner, a
professional higher plane of awareness, or a selfless commitment to duty in which life’s rewards
could be either spiritual or monetary. Maslow (1971) equated the pursuit of a calling as being
values, which drive the individual to seek out the peak experiences that make up self-
actualization. In any case, Weber (1958) asserted that once an individual has found their calling
and chooses not to pursue it; it was sinful if the individual wasted the gifts provided to him or
her. King (1988) suggested that once discovered the individual should pursue a calling as if it
was his or her destiny; as if, the preordained individual had some divine right that elevated him
or her to pursue something historically significant. Even more so, King mentioned that no matter
whatever an individual’s calling might be, be it big or small, pursue it in a manner that makes
him or her the best at it no matter what it was. Whether it was being a street cleaner, janitor,
teacher, lawyer, businessperson, or whatever, just be the best at it.
According to King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998), freedom is the most important
ingredient for an individual to decide on what their calling is because it is their inalienable right.
Freedom allows the individual the opportunity to pursue anything that society allows. According
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to Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980), the United States government does not have rights;
consequently, selecting an individual’s vocation is not one of them. To do so would require the
individual to surrender something that this nation’s founders never intended. Friedman (2002)
would go on to say that many Marxists and elitists’ believe a strong central planning unit should
decide for each individual what their future holds for them in regards to many things and an
individual’s vocation is definitely one of them. How else can any central planning system run
efficiently if it does not have pre-selected or groomed individuals to fill less than desirable
vacancies?
In regards to an individual being afraid of pursuing a calling, Maslow (1971) asserted that
some individuals go through life seeking normalcy and averageness limiting their future
development to Kohlberg and Maslow’s lower levels. These individuals have a tendency to
despise others who over-achieve or appear successful. Some of these individuals have become
fearful of their own potential. Friedman (2002) would add that the rest of us who want to be
more and achieve higher levels of development, normalcy and averageness were unacceptable.
Failure or a search for the potentially unattainable is an acceptable risk.
Friedman (1980, p. 128) wrote when the founding fathers talked of equality and liberty,
they meant the equality of opportunity. The only consistent roadblock to the equality of
opportunity in searching for a calling has been government or some type of ruling class
(Friedman, 2002). King (1986) would have agreed while adding a warning about systems of hate.
When a government over-regulates economic freedom, it means less opportunity for all and less
opportunity for an individual to develop and find his or her calling (Friedman, 2002).
Furthermore, it impedes a large portion of our population in developing as they see fit in order to
achieve higher levels of development. King (1986) attested, to impede the burning desire for one
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individual to find their true vocation was to do so to the detriment of society’s future. The best
advances in society came from those individuals who were inspired, by whatever reasons, to be
more as they pursued their calling. Weber (1958) agreed while suggesting that the inverse of that
statement was true as well, not to pursue a calling was unhealthy, for society as well as the
individual. An unhealthy society was one that restricts individual and human development.
I.R.’s Letter of Development
In speaking of individual development in a small group setting, William Bradford
received a unique and profoundly astute letter from George Morton’s friend who signed the letter
only as I.R. The letter must have been extremely influential since it survived the voyage, the lean
years of the early settlement, and the years following the success of the Plymouth Plantation. The
title of the letter in Bradford and Winslow’s (1966) journal was simple; it was a Letter of Advice
to the Planters of New-England. The title was an understated label for something that was highly
profound. Its suggestions offered sound advice to Bradford and his followers on how they should
conduct themselves, how they should interact amongst each other, and how they should act as
leaders, to name a few. In short, it was a letter of advice on individual and human development.
The letter incorporated five distinct points that focused on the topics of individual and leadership
development.
Daily self-reflection. The first point the letter made suggested that the individuals of
Plymouth were to reflect daily upon their actions and repent when necessary (Bradford &
Winslow, 1966, p. B2). The repentance I.R. spoke of was referencing God; however, if an
individual looks past the religious context and just at the intent of the suggestion, the individual
should look upon this as an inward reflection upon their actions throughout the day. Despite the
erosion of social expectations of today (Friedman, 2002), according to Maslow (1971),
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individuals should have a general understanding on how they would want to be treated by other
individuals in society. If any individual would reflect upon their actions throughout the day in the
context of how they would want to be treated, they would find good deeds and some that have an
opportunity for improvement. King (1986), Kohlberg (1943), and Maslow (1971) all made
references to the Golden Rule, the Good Samaritan, or the Ethic of Reciprocity, which draws
parallels to this point. I.R. must have known that the planters and adventurers would face trying
times that would push them to the limits of their group’s social expectations and they may have
days were they did not live up to those expectations.
King (1981) supported this assumption as he wrote and spoke about the Good Samaritan.
However, he knew that no one could live up to the standard set forth in his belief of the Good
Samaritan all of the time. King just wanted individuals to go from “passive commitment to active
participation” in being a Good Samaritan (p. 18). Active participation required the attempt and
the commitment to do what was right. King (1986) went further to suggest that active
participation in self-reflection required the attempt to improve oneself. Conversely, King defined
negative or passive commitment as “tokenism” (p. 51); moreover, it never does anything to
encourage positive active participation. An individual’s inward reflection would allow them to
see the opportunities for improvement in earning and giving respect. Furthermore, King (1986)
suggested that a daily reflection upon one’s deeds would reveal the true potential in the human
spirit and thereby unlocking the potential for continual individual and human development. In the
extreme situations facing the planters and adventures, individual and societal improvement was
necessary for survival. Kohlberg (1981) viewed this as a method that takes the individual from
self-interest orientation to interpersonal concordance orientation. For Maslow (1943), this point
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takes the individual from the loving and belonging stage to the esteem stage because it not only
aided in developing friendships, it promoted respect of and by others.
Patience & forgiveness. The second point made in the letter was patience and
forgiveness. Daily self-reflection, practicing patience, and bestowing forgiveness were similar
since they required introspection. However, patience and forgiveness comes into play if the
individual offends or continually irritates another. Patience and forgiveness required the
individual to be diligent in practicing their faith while promoting unity within the group when
those situations occurred (Bradford & Winslow, 1966). In a small group, facing potentially
deadly situations that the planters and adventures of Plymouth found themselves in almost daily,
not giving or taking offense was critical in dealing with stressful situations. Maslow (1971)
warned, if they did, the group cooperation would have dissolved into bitter infighting, individual
development regresses where the individual focuses on the most basic needs and motivation. The
members of the group become more concerned with retribution or reparation while focusing on
lower level needs.
King (1981) had an expression for this, “the old eye-for-an-eye philosophy would leave
everyone blind” (p. 42). King could have coached the people of Plymouth by reminding them
they could not “overcome evil with evil” (p. 42) they had to “overcome evil with good” (p. 42).
When the people of Plymouth first set foot in the New World, a small Indian scout party fired
arrows at them (Bradford & Winslow, 1966). If the adventurers had attacked aggressively in the
next encounters, they would have lost a valuable Indian ally that provided aid and guidance.
Another example occurred when some of the Indian tribes noticed the foreigners rummaging
through their food stores and burial grounds. Had the Indians acted negatively, they would have
lost a trading partner and a valuable ally that provided protection from the other hostile tribes.
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For a modern day example of eye for an eye tactics, a person would not need to look further than
politics and gang activity that ravage a majority of cities (Friedman & Friedman, 1980).
Individuals involved in both politics and gang activity fail to heed King’s (1981) warning and
look to establish territorial control through any means possible as the ends justify the means. In
the end, the losers will always be the ones caught in the middle while the titles of aggressor and
victim become interchangeable. Kohlberg (1981) stressed that no individual can develop in a
positive manner while trying to survive in that type of environment. Guiding the people of
Plymouth from this dismal potential reality was I.R.’s intention (Bradford & Winslow, 1966).
This point was more of a preventive measure in order to keep the individual focused on
improvement and the positive. If the individual were making any improvement in regards to self-
reflection, patience and forgiveness would deter the individual from becoming petty and
regressing downward in Kohlberg and Maslow’s hierarchies.
Avoid a dependence on charity. The previous sections, self-reflection and patience,
helped the individual to avoid a hasty and hateful response that would destroy group unity. The
letter’s third point focuses on dependence and the wasted efforts of those seeking retribution or
reparations (Bradford & Winslow, 1966, p. B2). This point goes on to explain that any persons
seeking charity for petty or fabricated transgressions were “gross and hypocrites” (p. B3). As
important, those who take and give offense easily have proven to be unreliable and influence the
development of others negatively. Finally, this section was specific in its intent; the goal was to
make everyone in a society productive, especially when the group’s survival is in question.
Maslow (1971) concurred, not only have the questionable victims wasted their resources in
complaining and halting their development, they have wasted the resources and the potential
development of others trying to resolve their need. Another negative according to Maslow was
16
that continual complaining breaks down group unity; it even drains the energy of those not
involved in the transgression, thus limiting their development.
King (1981) was weary of those expecting charitable handouts of others; it reduced their
dignity and individualism to the point where darkness surrounds them. As a society declines, its
combined dire need will increase, resources will become limited making I.R. suggestions more
poignant as those trapped in the darkness as previously described by King will waste time and
resources following false hopes peddled by charlatans. Humanity cannot develop if it wastes time
with its hands out instead of having its hands being productive and useful. Only the light of
knowledge, love, and firm belief in the individual can get them past their apathy, fears,
ignorance, hate, or failures. In doing so, King suggested that leaders develop a stern approach in
teaching others to handle the type of adversity previously described. Maslow and Kohlberg’s
beliefs paralleled King’s approach. If individuals constantly complain about their physiological
needs (Maslow, 1943) while being stuck in a self-interested orientation (Kohlberg, 1981), they
will never develop. The individual stuck in this rut has to make an all out effort to develop to
their fullest potential (Maslow, 1971), for their own sake as well as the group’s.
Avoid apathy and complacency. This section highlights the deadly potential of apathy
and complacency, which was the fourth point in the letter. Even though I.R. was more concerned
with planters and adventurers’ becoming lethargic after any initial gain before the Plymouth
settlement was actually self-sustaining (Bradford & Winslow, 1966), the warning transcended
time as Friedman, King, Kohlberg, and Maslow issued their own warnings. I.R. labeled apathy
and complacency as a “deadly plague” (p. B4) and it should be avoided at all cost for the general
welfare of the individual and the group.
17
However, the deadly plague applies to well-established individuals and societies, since
apathy suggests stagnated or regressed human development. The source that feeds apathy and
complacency according to Kohlberg (1981) was ignorance. Furthermore, ignorance, apathy, and
complacency formed a cycle of self-destruction. Maslow (1971) suggested to break the cycle
required the light of knowledge, which was the ultimate driving force that anyone searching for
positive individual and human development can take from this point.
Unfortunately, King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) and Friedman (2002)
complained that most public schools fail to teach economic freedom survival techniques to get
individuals to set goals that included higher levels of development. By failing to address the
needs of the students in order to survive in a free society, Maslow (1943) pointed out that not
having the information and thereby economic means to secure physiological and safety related
needs, the individual would have a difficult time to consistently achieve love, esteem, and even
self-actualization needs. By ignoring these techniques, public school systems have denied
historical knowledge, a concept of self-reliance, competitive spirit, and the understanding that
economic freedom is a part of political freedom to many Americans (King, 1986 & 1998).
Friedman (2002) warned that a failure to educate individuals in a society allows them to become
complacent and apathetic with the moral relativist issues of forced diversity, social justice, and
equalized outcome. So much so, that the individuals no longer believe in themselves, have will
power, or have the mental tools to succeed (Friedman).
Kohlberg (1981) added that the combination of degrading moral boundaries and the
ignorance fostered by a failed education system condemns the majority of individuals to
Kohlberg’s obedience and punishment orientation. Without knowledge and the understanding of
right and wrong, the individual fails to understand the dire-nature of their situation, the
18
incremental changes that restrict individual development goes unnoticed. Like the frog
swimming in the proverbial pot of hot water, it never realizes the slow but steady increase in
temperature. Like the frog, the individual never realizes the deadly nature of the situation until it
is too late. This was why complacency and apathy were not only a deadly plague to the survival
of the people of Plymouth Plantation, but they have always been a plague to individual
development. Maslow (1971) emphasized that complacency and apathy allowed the majority to
believe in delusional concepts of normalcy and averageness; as a result, they find it morally
justifiable to hinder the individual achievement of the over achievers. Lastly, complacency and
apathy feed the Jonah Complex in which they become afraid of their own potential;
consequently, they stop developing and seek to hinder the development of others.
Sound leadership and its selection. The final point in I.R.’s letter referred to leadership
in the context of human development (Bradford & Winslow, 1966). It has phrases and notions
such as, letting “wisdom and godliness” (p. B5) aid in the selection of leaders that promote the
common good. In order to promote the common good, leaders should know the moral application
of duty, honor, and obedience in the administration of all laws and ordinances. Finally, leaders
should promote the common good even if it means going against the “foolish multitude” (p. B5)
enamored with the trivialities of life that lead to complacency and apathy.
There were two critical items concerning this point. The first critical item was the masses
needing to select a leader who had unquestionable integrity and honor with a proven track of
obeying the agreed upon laws and social expectations (Bradford & Winslow, 1966). In doing so,
selected leaders should promote the common good of all people and the only way to accomplish
that feat was through the promotion of economic and political freedom (Friedman, 2002). As
soon as a leader promoted one class, race, gender, or any other societal division, they have failed
19
to honor the general common good of all individuals. This travesty of leadership ends up
selectively hindering the human development of targeted individuals via economic and political
regulations; furthermore, the benefactors become developmentally hindered as systems of
dependency force individuals to become complacent and apathetic. Punitive regulation punishes
instead of inspiring individuals to reach their potential.
The second critical item stems from the personality traits of the leader. The leader must
prove that he or she is more than capable in administering the laws and ordinances on all people,
including themselves. As soon as a leader creates a set of laws or social expectations that are no
longer in line with a society’s, the leader is no longer of the people for the people (Bradford &
Winslow, 1966). Friedman (2002) stated that they have separated themselves as a class through
the misuse of the power of the people. This mimics the irony of socialism as it supposedly strives
to achieve a classless society; yet, as soon as the revolutionary party creates a strong central
planning unit it has already established a ruling class. According to Friedman, this meant that
human development would begin to slow to a crawl, stagnate, and then regress under totalitarian
rule. As King (1986) cautioned, we have reached a critical point in maintaining and reclaiming
lost freedom. This encouraged King to make a call to arms for all individuals that believed they
could be leaders that were prudent, judicious, humane, and have a highly developed
understanding of integrity. We do not need leaders caught up in the rapture of power while
promoting the deadly sins of pride, envy, gluttony, lust, anger, greed, and sloth. The emphasis
here, holistic human development can only be achieved in a society that promotes both economic
and political freedom and our society has been in desperate need of leaders who understood that
simple premise.
20
In total, what this point referred to in Kohlberg’s theory of development (1981), an
individual or leader can generate ideas on several different levels of development. An individual
or leader should aspire to make decisions or generate ideas consistently at the highest levels of
development. In addition, leaders who can operate at the highest levels of Maslow’s (1943) needs
can provide the grounded guidance that a society made up of individuals striving for individual
development requires. Society should avoid elevating individuals who cannot perform
consistently at these higher levels (Friedman, 2002). This need becomes more evident as a
society calls upon a selected leader to stop the public or any portion of it from self-destruction
(King, 1986).
I.R. wrote this letter of advice to a group of planters and adventurers who were going to
set sail for the New World with an understanding that they would have to endure and overcome
numerous obstacles (Bradford & Winslow, 1966). Even though their situation required them to
improvise, adapt, and overcome numerous impediments, they never lost sight of the
fundamentals and insights of individual development concepts captured in this letter of advice
(Bradford & Winslow). Similar to planters and adventures of Plymouth, Kohlberg (1981) and
Maslow (1971) declared, when a group of individuals aspiring to develop on an individual basis
prospers, the group prospers and the potential of this group would be unlimited.
As planters and adventurers of Plymouth prospered, they rediscovered some basic
principles of human development. According to King, the first was freedom; the next was a
common understanding of the moral foundation (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998, p. 10).
The final point of I.R.’s letter highlighted the importance of principled leadership. I.R. was
explicit in that a leader has to understand that he or she is a servant of the people and not the
other way around. King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) confirmed I.R.’s assertion by
21
writing, those that lead must serve those that follow. As evidence of the eventual success at
Plymouth, when the Pilgrims unleashed their potential as I.R. suggested, only then did they
achieve sustainable success and individual development.
King’s Belief in Agape as a Key to Development
The process in which an individual overcomes personal and systematic hate was a general
theme found in many of King’s speeches, sermons, and books. His belief was in love; in
addition, love was the only way to stop hate and the socio-economic systems that perpetuate hate
(King, 1981, p. 120). King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) even noted love as being a cure
for the most self-absorbed individual or country because it forces the individual to realize that the
world does not exist to fulfill their needs alone. According to King (1981), love in its various
forms has been the foundation of a group of individuals wanting to get along so they can prosper
and proliferate together. From love, humanity develops moral expectations so individuals can
interact without slaughtering one another. Only then do individuals have a chance to develop,
since inspired individuals working together realize most of Maslow’s (1943) basic needs more
efficiently. These basic needs include food, safety, housing, and a method of cooperation. This in
turn satisfies the requirements of Kohlberg’s (1981) first two levels of moral development while
providing fertile ground for individuals to develop the third level of moral development, which
includes “social contract” and “universal ethical principle” orientations (pp. 19-20).
When King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) spoke of love, he did not mean it to
indicate the love found in an affectionate relationship or the lust of a one-night stand. He meant it
in a neighborly way, as in one fellow human being or entity helping another, in the same manner
as the ancient Greeks would define agape. Furthermore, agape becomes integral part of his three
dimensions of a complete life, this interaction will be explained in the following paragraphs.
22
Together, agape and the three dimensions of a complete life provide excellent examples of social
expectations that can inspire individual development and beat back the hate that can envelop the
individual causing him or her to regress.
Agape was one of a few different definitions that the Greeks used to define love (King, as
cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998). Agape was a “disinterested love” (King, 1986, p. 19) and the
level of interaction between individuals was somewhere between friendship and the general
concern for an unknown person. For Maslow (1971) and King (1986), a heightened sense of
humanity or agape was a part of the invisible hand that bound people together if only for the
reason that they were in need. It is to care for someone when there is no benefit to the person
giving aid; it does not look at an individual in need and then discriminate between skin color,
their wealth, and social status. King described agape as a neighborly love that expects any
individual to treat complete strangers with the same respect and dignity as they would any
neighbor that they liked. As in bible story about the Good Samaritan, this enhanced King’s
concept of agape. For Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow (1971), agape was an example of the Golden
Rule or the Ethic of Reciprocity.
For agape to function properly, an individual needs to develop inner love for them self,
King (1981) expected the individual not to become resentful and angry because of the difficulties
of life. This will end up causing the individual to wrap him or herself up in a cloak of hate
sealing the individual off from their inner love or the rest of the world. Thus, they begin to
digress down the hierarchical development processes of Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow (1971).
This developmental retreat requires family, friends, and neighbors to promote an attitude that
never quits. To quit means the individual has now become dependent and has lost the inner love
for them self that allows them to believe that they are unique and wonderful.
23
In our society, there were those who have been coaxing individuals to quit before they
even try (King, 1981). Ultimately, they become bitter and view economic freedom as evil. An
individual must resist the temptation to become angry or hate when life becomes difficult, they
must approach life with resiliency, dignity, discipline, and love (King, 1986). The absolute worst
thing an individual can do is fall prey in hating someone, because the individual surrenders their
power and control to the object of their hate. King’s last statement included the systems of hate
such as Marxism and its variants. Consistent with the theories of Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow
(1971), agape provides the energy for further individual development while serving as the
firewall to prevent hate and developmental regression.
King’s Development Process – the three dimensions of a complete life
To expand upon the concept of agape, King (1988) created an individual development
process that he explained as the three dimensions of a complete life. The three dimensions
incorporate the concept of agape and provide a further enhancement of societal expectations.
According to King, the three dimensions that each individual should aspire to attain include the
length, breadth, and height of an individual. The basis for the three dimensions comes from the
bible and specifically the scriptures of John. King deduced that according to John a full and
wonderful life needed to be “complete on all sides” (p. 40). If an individual strives to attain a
complete life, there will be no questions about his or her character, for it will be on display every
day. A complete life in many regards equates to Kohlberg’s (1981) stage six, “universal ethical
principle orientation” (p. 19), and Maslow’s (1943) “self-actualization need” (p. 382). If
individuals in a society have a similar set of expectations, then the potential for human
development becomes infinite, only limited by the imagination of the individuals.
24
Length dimension. The first dimension of a complete life was what King labeled as the
“length of life” (1988, p. 40). King considered this the selfish dimension of human development
where the sole focus of the individual was on their own life in order to satisfy their lower level
needs as defined by Maslow (1943). However, the length was a necessary stepping-stone in
human development. Maslow’s thoughts ran congruent with this concept since a majority of
these needs he classified as “physiological” (p. 372) or as “safety needs” (p. 376). Without it, the
individual could not develop self-confidence, an appreciation for the natural gifts provided them,
or simply to be able to live comfortably in one’s own skin.
All previously noted needs serve as the foundation for the “love” (Maslow, 1943, p. 380)
and “esteem needs” (p. 381). Too often, individuals blessed with unimaginable ability cannot see
the wonderful uniqueness of their life, misguided by self-doubt, they second-guess themselves
and everyone else; in turn, allow ignorance to creep into their souls and contaminate their daily
activities (Maslow, 1971). When they can find the ill will in everything, they will have a difficult
time developing past the most basic of needs. This becomes the ultimate negative reality of an
individual; they eventually become land locked in hate never to embrace the ever-changing world
around them, their desire is to control it and morph it to their worldview (King, 1981).
There are those with great self-confidence and abilities, yet they never develop beyond
the length dimension, so enamored with materialistic potential of their economic freedom, they
choose to bring development to a halt (King, as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998). The deadly
plagues of apathy and complacency set in as I.R. (Bradford & Winslow, 1966) had warned about.
In the end, the length is a necessary step in human development; it offers the potential of self-
actualization by satisfying some of the most basic needs while fostering a love of the inner self.
Like any gift, it is what the individual does with it next that matters the most.
25
Breadth dimension. The next dimension was the “breath of life” (King, 1988, p. 40). It
takes the individual from their self-centered reality and expands it to include the concept of agape
and the noticeable worry for others. An individual being extremely successful at the length
dimension does not make them great it only accentuates their shallowness. To expand the process
of individual and human development, the individual must understand the “the depths of human
need” (pp. 44-45). This dimension builds on the premise that every sentient being was
interconnected and that if something happens to one it has happened to us all. As mentioned in
the section on agape, a well-developed breadth has the potential to empower the individual to be
more and do more to promote positive social change. In offering unconditional aid to fellow
individuals, the breadth dimension offers some of the greatest rewards available in regards to
human development and interaction.
This dimension captures Maslow’s (1943) human motivational needs of love and esteem.
In addition, this dimension parallels Kohlberg’s developmental path that takes the individual
from “interpersonal accord and conformity” (p. 18), through “authority and social-order” (p. 19)
to “social contract orientation” (p. 19). The breadth dimension expands the moral development
process of the individual.
However, the drawback to this dimension comes into play when individuals perform
deeds of sacrifice in order to promote themselves in the community. In doing so, the individual
does not develop past the length dimension, for the act of agape was done to promote them self
or as a tax write off, not to give unconditional aid. This type of aid described was what King
(1986) labeled as tokenism. This is a prop of a false leader or individual and was what I.R.
warned about in his letter to Bradford (1966). Tokenism has been on display for sometime in
American politics, when self-interest and promotion lead to dishonesty, corruption, and cronyism
26
the result has been societal decay (King, 1986). Tokenism denotes the failure of individual in
progressing out of the length dimension. When token leaders get away with token acts, individual
and human development suffers.
Fortunately, King’s (1986) belief in agape and selfless acts that make up the breadth
dimension propagate in our society every day, but good deeds usually do not make the headlines
in the evening news as an example for others. Even when people do accomplish good deeds that
make the news, a doubt exists that the deed was one as an act of self-promotion as King noted in
his sermon about the “drum major instinct” (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998, p. 166). For
the individual, to understand the difference between doing a good deed for the sake of doing it or
doing a good deed as an act of self-promotion falls under Kohlberg’s (1981) idea of a “principled
conscience” (p.20). King addressed this level of self-understanding and consciousness in the
height dimension.
Height dimension. The final dimension of a complete life was called the height and “the
height of life is the upward reach for God” (King, 1988, p. 40). King (1988) believed that an
individual’s life was meaningless without spiritual redemption. He would also describe the
height of life as the dedication to pursue something greater than humanity (King, 1986). For the
spiritual person this meant that an individual should go search out the path to spiritual salvation
(King, 1988). At times, this may take the individual down the path less travelled. For the essence
of spirituality, or the absence there of, is found in everything that the individuals sees, touches,
hears, or has faith in. It is faith that takes the individual beyond our current realm of
comprehension to a higher plane of existence (King, 1986). King (1988) saw faith as the true
opportunity in developing a height dimension.
27
In a non-spiritual sense, the individual develops the inward and outward balance in their
life to attain a higher plane of existence. According to Maslow (1971), as the length and breadth
develops outward persona, the height dimension actually refers to the inner growth necessary to
counter balance the other two dimensions. Consequently, maintaining this inner balance requires
greater effort in order for the individual to continue to develop. In doing so, the non-spiritual
person develops a level of spirituality that is unique unto them self. They begin to process life
with selfless creativity and spontaneity not allowing pettiness to creep in to their thoughts
(Maslow, 1943). They function at a higher level of morality that takes them past the Ten
Commandments and any human-made legal realm to a realm where he or she understands that
human life in all of its forms is sacred (Kohlberg, 1981). The individual is predominantly
operating in the “self-actualization realm of needs” (Maslow, 1943, p. 381) while achieving the
“orientation of the universal ethical principle” (Kohlberg, 1981, p. 20). The non-religious person
is the counter balance to a society that is religious in nature.
Whether a person was religious or an atheist, the ultimate aim for the individual at higher
levels of development was to avoid the desire to fix everything in everyone’s lives. King (1988)
and Friedman (2002) would equate an individual trying to fix everything in another individual’s
life as a central controlling agency (King, 1988). This forces the individual to surrender the
capability to remain free and ultimately dooms the individual to the lower stages of development
and the secularist religions of Marxism and its variants. As with materialism, the secular
religions epitomize the absence of love and agape thereby stopping the development process.
Moreover, Weber (1958) warned about the fanatical tendencies that occur when there is an over
dependence on a central religion as well. When surrendering freedom and power to any central
controlling entity, the individual should use extreme caution (Friedman, 2002).
28
That is why it is essential to "keep love at the center of our lives” (King, 1986, p. 13),
love serves as a defensive barrier against hate. Furthermore, the only way to change humanity is
to serve as an example in seeking positive individual development on a continual basis.
According to King, an individual who truly loves and practices the breadth and height
dimensions, they help by not taking away, but by inspiring others to find that inner glow that
resides within them so they can develop as they see fit. An individual should use caution when
providing materialistic needs to an individual because it robs the individual of their inner self-
love, dignity, and makes them dependent. If the individual works to develop the length, breadth,
and height effectively, the individual will maintain equal proportions of the three dimensions or
the inner and outward balance. A highly developed individual never imposes their beliefs upon
another. In doing so, they have lost the height they worked so hard to attain. They should only
encourage another individual as an aspiring mentor, with the hope that the mentor in training
discovers their own path to enlightenment. The main difference between the breadth and height,
in the breadth the individual serves as an example to relatives, neighbors, and individual
strangers. In the height dimension, the individual serves as an example to a whole society.
Friedman’s Theories that Promote Individual Development
Everything previously mentioned, the concept of a calling, I.R.’s letter to Bradford,
agape, and the three dimensions of a complete life have alluded to two of Friedman’s
fundamental necessities of individual development and building of a better society for future
generations. It was Friedman’s (2002) belief that individual responsibility and a free market
approach have historically provided the best results while providing equal opportunity for
everyone. They are the topics of discussion in this and the next section.
29
Individual responsibility. In explaining the positive of individual responsibility, it
requires the individual to understand the negative first. The worst possible outcome for
individual development occurs when an intrusive entity coerces a responsible person “into
irresponsibility by his responsible love for his family” (King, 1986, p. 191). The act of coercion,
according to King, meant the individual has less economic or political freedom. For Friedman
(2002), this intrusive entity in most cases is government or the legal system, while the method of
coercion is either legislation from a congressional body or a ruling from the bench. According to
Maslow (1971), political or economic coercion forces individuals at higher stages of
development to focus on their most basic of needs while being oriented to the obedience and
punishment stage. When a government endorses and promotes irresponsibility, the individual
does not develop. They regress and become dependent (Freidman, 2002). When a government
forces productive hands into counterproductive activities it does so at the detriment of society,
this becomes the ultimate social injustice (King, 1986). Consequently, people practicing
individual responsibility while participating in a free market environment become the only means
to throw off the shackles of systematic dependency.
A morally developed person understands that individual responsibility was the same thing
as self-leadership. Self-leadership falls within the realm of Kohlberg’s (1981) fifth stage which
was the “social contract orientation” (p. 19) since the individual understands their role and social
expectations within the community and acts accordingly to maintain it. Maslow (1971) noted, as
self-leaders seek to attain their esteem needs, they display self-confidence and offer inspiration to
others. Kohlberg (1981) promoted the idea that a self-leader does not flinch when addressing
ethical problems that can occur on a daily basis. In doing so, it forces the aspiring self-leader, in
the context of moral development, to focus on what they should do to best exercise their freedom
30
to improve their own and the lives of others (Friedman, 2002). In essence, if the individual wants
to practice individual responsibility and self-leadership then the individual needs to embark on a
course that takes him or her to find a calling as they exercise their economic and political
freedom (Weber, 1958).
Self-leadership and individual responsibility is all about an individual having the political
and economic freedom to plot a course of personal development while ensuring that he or she is
not encroaching upon the freedom of others (Friedman & Friedman, 1980). In other words, an
individual’s level of development is dependent on the amount of economic and political freedom
he or she enjoys while being responsible in not restricting those same freedoms for others. These
“freedom[s are] a tenable objective only for responsible individuals” (Friedman, 2002, p. 33).
Freedom requires action and the ownership of that action.
If self-leadership were about plotting a course of personal development, which has a great
potential for human development, then as I.R. (Bradford, 1908) wrote in the letter of advice that
taking ownership of one’s actions was the historical reflection of opportunities missed and
problems understood in order to avoid future reoccurrences. All of this allows to the individual to
glean information from the past to improve the future. I.R.’s belief corresponded with the beliefs
of all of the authors found in the breadth. For example, King (1986) added that the ownership of
action meant an individual has earned the results of those actions for better or for worse.
Friedman (2002) stated that personal and human development has always occurred when
individuals make their own decisions and assume responsibility of the consequences. While
Maslow (1971) declared that good and bad repercussions of action become the building blocks of
development. Finally, this ownership of action was in-line with the theories of human
development of both Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow (1971).
31
Historically, individual responsibility only occurs when political and economic freedom
has prevailed (Friedman, 2002). Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980) warned that the
precursor to socialism comes when a person is led to believe that he or she never does anything
wrong. In so doing, blinding them to their own need to improve and setting him or her up for hate
and class warfare (Friedman, 2002). To learn from failure can be heart wrenching at times.
However, failure in a totalitarian state is brutal (Friedman). In understanding the importance of
freedom and the consequence of personal action, King (1986) suggested that the individual
should risk everything in order to maintain and promote it. This included the ultimate example in
self-leadership, the sacrificing of one’s own life to maintain the freedom of others. King’s life
serves as an example because it incorporates everything that is necessary for an individual
striving for self-leadership, positive social change, and the ability to choose while suffering the
consequences of those actions in order to serve as an inspiration for others.
According to King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998), when he spoke about the drum
major instinct, he mentioned that it is natural for the individual to seek a position of power,
respect, and money. A healthy society should encourage all of its citizens to maximize all of their
potential. However, a responsible person understands that an individual has to earn power,
respect, and money. If those items were undeserved, they will do irreparable harm to the
development of the individual. Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980) added, to give to those
that do not deserve destroys responsibility and endangers freedom. In order to earn power,
respect, and money, it requires the individual to achieve positive societal results and have
genuine respect for the system and their fellow citizens (Friedman, 2002). Kohlberg (1981) and
Maslow (1971) believed that a complete understanding of the concept of individual
responsibility, which includes the earning of rewards, was a prerequisite to the highest stages of
32
development. In summation, an individual that understands all action, both positive & negative,
requires ownership. This ownership allows the individual to grow by gaining a better
understanding of where they have been and where they need to go.
Economic freedom. It was a firm belief of Friedman (2002) that if a society was going to
prosper and develop, it needed morally responsible individuals working and developing in a free
environment unhindered by coercion. The only socio-economic system that provided both
economic and political freedom in a manner that allowed the individual to maximize their talents
and develop to their fullest potential has been a free market system (Friedman & Friedman,
1980). Furthermore, in a free market system the individual has Maslow’s (1943) lower level need
incentives built in to allow the individual to maximize their own unlimited potential as they see
fit (Friedman, 2002). This allowed the individual to traverse the first two needs quickly.
Friedman believed that the efficiency in productivity benefited everyone for the abundance
allowed the majority the opportunity to focus beyond the basic needs and strive to accomplish
greater levels of development. Since the previous was true, then it has always been through
limited government that an individual can attain the most possible freedom to accomplish higher
levels of development.
For those that might use Weber’s (1958) concern about the free market as an argument
against it, they need reminded that his concern was about individuals trying to develop and
prosper in an immoral world without ethics and virtues. Friedman (2002) warned that if a free
market, as with any freedom, exists without laws, ethics, morality, and virtue, those things that
make up social expectations, then chaos would reign and little to no individual development
would occur. However, if a socio-economic system develops with a strong central planning unit,
then the bureaucratic burden of laws, taxes, and regulations will have the same effect as chaos,
33
little to no individual development (Friedman). As a result, to counter Weber’s concern from
Friedman’s perspective was a free and morally developed individual exercising his or her
economic freedom.
The unfortunate reality for the individual who hands over their personal responsibility to
a central planning concept is that a central planning unit cannot be all things to everyone;
consequently, if an individual surrenders their power of personal responsibility then the
individual will be forced to accept the limited or pre-ordained responses that emanate downward
to the individual (Friedman, 2002). This idea led Friedman to issue a strong warning when he
wrote about a society putting social justice, political correctness, and equalized outputs ahead of
freedom, the citizens will no longer be free while being mired in class warfare. To accentuate this
point even further, King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) used Lord Acton’s dictum as
warning for humanity, King preached about the consequences of an unscrupulous leader taking
control of an intrusive central planning system, individual development will cease to be an option
for the masses. Maslow (1971) surmised that if total anarchy or total control dominated the
individual’s existence, then it forced the individual to be more concerned about surviving and
anxious about fulfilling lower level needs; consequently, individual development suffers.
Despite the lessons of history as laid out by Friedman (2002), many individuals question
the free market’s potential because of those who peddle ignorance and hate have lead them
astray. To compound the disinformation, Weber (1958) warned that the multitude of societal
conveniences that comes with successful human and societal development allow apathy and
complacency to set in. As a result, Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980) believed that
disinformation, apathy, and complacency allow individuals to believe that because they exist,
they are entitled to a certain amount of equality of outcome. In other words, some individuals
34
believe it is their right to have their lower level needs provided for by the state and it is a social
injustice for them to earn what so many already have (Friedman, 2002). As noted previously,
providing unearned resources to individuals using the equality of outcome concept does nothing
but destroy individual development potential. However, developed societies continue to ignore
Friedman’s (2002) warning at their own risk.
Since class warfare begets class warfare, Friedman (2002) expressed concern about
welfare programs that were originally created from compassion, have become either punitive in
nature to productive members or created a system of dependency that robs a potentially
productive individual of incentive and creativity to develop. Those trapped in the welfare system
have been required to sell their dignity and potential to develop little by little for a pittance at a
time (King, 1986). As stated by Friedman (2002), any centralized socio-economic system does
not help those who have little; it only punishes people who want to do more with their life while
posing as aid to those with little or nothing. Friedman continued by suggesting welfare or
government aid needs to have societal agreement; furthermore, the delivery of any aid has to be
done in a manner that helps an individual out of a temporary predicament not as a long-term
subsidy without any specific goals that leads to self-sufficiency. Maslow (1971) and King (1986)
echoed this concern as well.
According to Friedman (2002), the government’s involvement in day-to-day activities of
individuals has had a negative effect on the free-market. It was alarming to Friedman that free
people have knowingly allowed the government to infringe upon their economic freedom and
their potential to develop. In addition, re-distribution of wealth means minority groups end up
fighting amongst each other for dwindling resources, which only generates more envy, class
warfare, and an unproductive dysfunctional society that guides its citizen down the road to
35
becoming indentured servants (Friedman & Friedman, 1980). King (1986) and Maslow’s (1971)
thoughts had a similar outcome, as hate begets hate, class warfare begets class warfare; the
biggest loser will be individual freedom and development. In order for free markets and
economic freedom to occur, government must be limited. In turn, an increase in economic
freedom with limited government promotes true political freedom necessary for the individual to
develop as they see fit (Friedman, 2002).
Another point made by Friedman (2002) concerned the government having two primary
roles, protect individual freedom from enemies abroad and to protect freedom by ensuring fair
play amongst all of its citizens. King (1981) elaborated by noting that if government worked to
ensure fair play, government works in a positive manner to stop anarchy and domination from
occurring in a free market. To make this work properly, Friedman (2002) advocated that a
functioning republic required an educated citizenry operating with well-understood social and
moral expectations. Weber (1958) added clarification in noting a free society does not want laws
and regulations to cover every possible human interaction hence the need for moral development.
According to King (1981), the alternative to well-understood social and moral expectations was
the “social evils” (p. 134) of Marxism, where social evils equates to Maslow’s (1971) concept of
ignorance. As a result, ignorance causes humanity to make conscious decisions that leads them
down a path to “psychological fatalism” (King, p. 134). King would go on to say that fatalism
was the ultimate goal of the weak willed and weak minded that believe in the variants of
Marxism. Friedman (2002) offered one last warning as it related to the government’s role, an
over-reaching government that failed to maintain fair play was no better than the central planning
entities behind socialist and communist states. As a result, social evils, ignorance, an over
reaching government, Marxism, and fatalism causes individuals to de-evolve (King, 1981). To
36
counter the dire future of fatalism, a society that endorses individual responsibility and economic
freedom wrapped in positive social expectations provides the best chance for true individual
development.
Conclusion
In closing the breadth portion of this paper, the concepts presented have provided a
historically successful path to true individual development where the balance of choice resides
with the individual. The first and most important point, until the nineteenth century, freedom has
always included both political and economic freedom (Friedman, 2002). This freedom directly
relates to the individual being able to maximize their development as they so chose. Based on
various morals, values, and ethics, societal expectations of a free society, this combination
provides the moral foundation to allow a group of individuals to cooperate and work together in
the most efficient manner to satisfy their most basic needs (Bradford & Winslow, 1966). Societal
expectations as expressed in this paper included a person having the freedom to search for a
calling (Weber, 1958). A calling was determined to be the engine of individual development. In
reference to I.R.’s letter of advice, those five simple points force the individual to look inward to
their own path of salvation and development (Bradford & Winslow, 1966). The basis of all
individual development starts with a well-defined understanding of one’s self (Bradford &
Winslow). Weber’s concept of a calling and I.R.’s five points were comparable to Maslow’s
(1943) lower needs and Kohlberg’s (1981) first three stages of development.
King’s (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) concept of agape, based on neighborly
love, was comparable to the conformity, loving, and belonging stage of both Kohlberg (1981)
and Maslow (1943). King (1988) also presented a potential development process that
incorporates agape and takes the individual from the lowest levels of development to the highest.
37
King (1988) described this individual development process as the three dimensions of a complete
life and it was similar in nature to both Kohlberg’s and Maslow’s human development processes.
Throughout the process of individual development, there were two critical ingredients
necessary to allow the individual to develop as they saw fit. As defined by Friedman (2002), the
concepts of individual responsibility and a free market allow the individual to maximize their
potential to reach the highest development stages. When individual responsibility and the free
market concepts include Kohlberg’s (1981) theories on moral development, social expectations
develop and the cycle described has proven to be historically successful as defined by Friedman
(2002). Even though the concept of a free market is societal, it was necessary to include it since
the highest levels of development require the individual to work within a societal construct
(Kohlberg, 1981).
Marxism was another societal concept included, because it and its variants were the
alternative to a free market. As discussed, if Marxist concepts were implemented, bureaucratic
mandates would force the individual into the obedience and punishment orientation (Kohlberg,
1981). As resources become less available to the masses, the individual will regress to Maslow’s
(1943) lower needs as they strive to survive. In the depth portion of this KAM, the evaluation of
current literature will be using moral self-leadership as defined by the societal expectations noted
in the breadth. In addition, the idea behind the depth is to provide an enlightened response to
theories and concepts discussed in the breadth.
38
Depth
AMDS 8222 Leadership in Human Development
Annotated Bibliography
Chisholm, R. (2007). The ferocious morality of Niccolo Machiavelli. Instituto de Estudos
Avançados da Universidade de São Paulo. Retrieved September 14, 2009 from
http://www.iea.usp.br/english/articles/chisholmmachiavelli.pdf
Chisholm examined the blunt political power philosophies of Machiavelli to find
constructs of morality. A critical topic analyzed by Chisholm was Machiavelli’s concept of virtù
which had very little to do with the modern concept of virtue since it was based on the simple
“Greek idea of arete” that required a leader to search out the “excellence of a thing” (¶ 7). This
search of excellence was how Machiavelli evaluated various leaders found in his work called The
Prince. Chisholm used virtù to ascertain the greatest qualities of a leader, those were a self-less
dedication to the state and great leaders must exhibit immense ambition that somehow redefines
the state or leads to a great conquest.
The author took a unique look at Machiavelli’s work and through the chaos found what
Chisholm called the “effectual morality” (¶ 29) of leadership. The author provided an expanded
view of Machiavelli’s theories on leadership, which required the reader to re-evaluate what
Machiavelli had to offer in regards to societal expectations. Evidently, the leader has two sets of
moral codes, the one for the public to adhere to and admire, and another set, which allowed the
leader to use every means at his or her disposal to attain power and shape it to his or her will.
Chisholm’s perspective helped explain why King viewed Machiavelli’s political philosophy as a
philosophy idolized by socialistic beliefs built on hate.
39
The value of this piece was that it offered the antithetical perspective to King’s (1986)
beliefs concerning leadership and morality. However, various authors in the breadth would view
the expectation that a leader, as well as the people, should be dedicated to the state as a positive
(Chisholm, 2007). As the state develops, so does the individual. Another positive leadership
development trait noted by Chisholm was a Machiavellian belief that a braggadocios behavior
built on an exaggerated reputation was vulgar. Negatives taken include the expectation that a
leader was to have enough ambition to re-shape a society after they attain power in order to fulfill
their pursuit of excellence or as Machiavelli would define as virtù. The concept of virtù was in
line with Weber’s concept of a calling (Chisholm); however, the difference between the two was
substantial since Machiavelli’s pursuit of excellence came at the expense of other individuals’
development potential. Secular beliefs of Marxism and its variants have always elevated the
needs of the central authority over the demands of the people. Ultimately, Machiavelli promoted
controlled narcissism. As Maslow (1971) would attest that this limited the leader’s moral
development since the result of any action justified the means. In addition, as King noted total
power corrupts (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998), this would hinder the development of
those who followed such a leader.
Courpasson, D. & Dany, F. (2003). Indifference or obedience? Business firms as democratic
hybrids. Organization Studies. Organization Studies, 24; 1231-1260. doi:
10.1177/01708406030248001.
The authors acknowledged there is a void between the rule of law and the rules that a
society needs to serve its numerous interests. To fill the void, the authors analyzed case studies to
determine the most effective organizational and sociological approaches. They surmised that a
need exists to connect obedience to a centrally controlling entity. Since this controlling authority
40
had the power and knowledge, the authors questioned if it was possible that we as individuals
would “witness the rebirth of a kind of ambivalent” dictator (p. 1257). Other notable topics
included the concept that authority was a social process and that a political or business entity can
manipulate an individual’s indifference to achieve goals with little resistance.
Even though obedience was a part of the process in Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow’s
(1943) development paths, obedience was not the final stage of development. King (1986) would
find it disturbing that the authors seemed excited about promoting obedience within the political
and business related realms in a free society as a good thing. Courpasson and Dany (2003)
suggested that if employees were subservient and self-defecating as dutiful slaves waiting on
orders from upper management, it would lead to higher pay, bonuses, job satisfaction, the
expectation of possible promotion, and mutually benefiting from the company’s success were the
typical reasons why individuals should prescribe to this line of thinking. Individual development
would be severely restricted since the expectation is for the individual to perform duties in the
early stages of development. Most individuals in a free society would not classify themselves as
indentured servants to the community. The authors’ indifference towards the subjects of a
community suggested they might agree with Machiavelli’s description of the populace as being
vulgar (Chisholm, 2007).
Courpasson and Dany’s (2003) contribution to human development, morality, and
leadership appears to generate negative consequences. First, the authors implied that they were
ways to coerce subordinates into achieving the goals of the ambivalent dictator. Instead of
leading by inspiring, the authors suggested using indifference as a tool to achieve less than
desirable objectives. In addition, the authors seemed ecstatic at the thought of authoritarian rule
and centralized power with in politics and business. Friedman (2002) would agree with the
41
authors when they described this reemergence as a rebirth, which was a correct description since
totalitarianism was nothing new to the existence of humankind and its development. Finally,
King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) would find it alarming to read a movement of
academic thought that takes students from the concept of we or us being interrelated, as in all of
us need to work together, to the singular where one individual needs coerced to do the bidding of
another. In doing so, a business was supposed to incorporate multiple levels of bureaucracy to
create a pseudo “moral movement” (p. 1257) to set up a system that endorses an ambivalent
dictator.
Drolet, M. (2008). A morality tale, or tyranny in Ireland. European Journal of Political Theory,
7; 241-253. doi: 101177/1474885107086452.
The author used the observations of Beaumont, Tocqueville, and the historical analysis of
Thierry to explain the failed launch of democracy in Ireland, which in turn led to the Irish Famine
of 1845 to 1849. The admitted precursor to the failure of democracy and famine was the brutal
economic and political policies of England that left Ireland poorly prepared to stand on its own.
In doing a root cause analysis of the failure, Drolet discovered that government should have
created a centralized plan that incorporated employment opportunities, birth control throughout
the population, and a welfare program to assist the poor. According to Drolet, his three-point
plan would have led to a robust middle class in Ireland and prevented the famine.
There was a fundamental flaw in the analysis of Drolet and it had to do with his concept
of a democracy. In this evaluation, Drolet used the French colony of Algeria and the failure of
Ireland as examples of why democracy fails. Friedman (2002) would find it hard to imagine that
democracy had a very strong foothold in a centrally controlled colony and aristocracy. At most,
democracy was a token effort in both instances. The implemented democracy in both examples
42
serves more of a demonstration on why democratic centralism fails than the failure of democracy
since Algeria and Ireland had an established centralized planning entity. As noted by King
(1986), democratic centralism or socialism is an example of the tokenism that enslaves the soul.
Friedman (2002), on the other hand, thought of democratic centralism or socialism as the folly of
the intellectual class that restricts economic freedom and individual development.
Drolet’s (2008) input to human development and leadership was that it provided another
example of Friedman (Freidman & Friedman, 1980) being correct in asserting that limited
economic freedom due to a centrally planned system generates untold harm to the masses and
their development. Consequently, it makes strong central planning systems immoral in regards to
individual development. In using Friedman’s (2002) description of democracy, Algeria and
Ireland were not examples of a democratic movement in the purest of sense. Furthermore, the
artificial growth of a middle class with a limit on prosperity should never indicate the growth of
democracy (political freedom) and economic freedom. Lastly, Friedman would assert population
growth during times of misery is not a problem that bureaucracy needs to solve; it is a symptom
of a much larger problem. Namely, leaders and policy makers should actively search out barriers
to progress of the people and eliminate them.
Feldman, R. M. & Feldman, S. P. (2006). What links the chain: An essay on organizational
remembering as practice. Organization, 13; 861-886. doi: 10.1177/1350508406068500
The authors reviewed the systematic social expectations found within any organization as
it relates to problems associated with gathering of knowledge. Examples of some of the problems
included, losing objectivity or succumbing to groupthink causing a biased output. The authors
suggested that organizational remembering as one measure to avoid the traps found in the soft
issues while being used in both academic and non-academic environments. According to
43
Feldman and Feldman, within each organization, there exists a set community level social
expectations. It is the level of active participation by leaders that often sets the stage of how well
subordinates adhere to power structures, morality, political gamesmanship, and the level of
discipline which was the essence of organizational remembering. As a result, this makes
organizational remembering a leadership standardization process.
Feldman and Feldman captured a more holistic approach to organizational remembering.
The authors cut a path of exploration through the various organizational conflicts by using
successful past practices or lessons learned to offset disagreements in policy deployment that
may influence moral development. The goal of this process was to document the struggle of
growth in a systematic and unbiased manner in order to allow current participants and their
descendants in the organization to avoid the pitfalls and internal conflicts, while promoting an
environment of continual improvement. Furthermore, outdated past practices may need re-
evaluated in order to fit a current organizational need.
While embarking on a never-ending quest for human development, organizational
remembering can avoid I.R.’s deadly plague concepts of apathy and complacency. According to
Feldman and Feldman, organizational remembering has ties to organizational training and
especially the history of why or why not the organization chose a particular path. In doing so, the
decisions made may require a change in the soft issues. The organization retrains its leaders and
members to the new standard. In doing so, it re-establishes the importance of the organizational
social expectations. Leaders failing to understand organizational social expectations open the
door to organizational meandering, apathy, and complacency allowing the organization to
become less efficient and effective in achieving its goals and avoiding organizational problems.
Kohlberg (1981) also found moral meandering hinders both individual and organizational
44
development. Consequently, the most important part of this process requires leaders to correct
other leaders not adhering to established social expectations.
Holt, R. (2006). Principals and practice: Rhetoric and the moral character of managers. Human
Relations, 59; 1659-1680. doi: 10.1177/0018726706072867.
The author compared the moral managerial constructs of MacIntyre and Friedman to
support Aristotle’s belief in a morally equitable world that was searching out the betterment of
fellow citizens by using rhetoric. Holt defined the process of phronesis in terms of a manager
using rhetorical arguments to get their subordinates to do the bidding of the company in order to
maintain or improve the interests of all stakeholders. Holt believed that a manager should use
distracting information or rhetoric as defined by Aristotle to mask their true intent and ulterior
motives because the result ultimately justifies the method of delivery. Ironically, Holt suggested
managers would do well to develop firm organizational social expectations in their subordinates,
which seems superficial and contradictory in relation to the overall concept of phronesis.
Holt did well to expand the concept of moral development to include all types of leaders,
not just business leaders. Furthermore, she emphasized leadership morality and the need to
develop others. However, when Holt decided to quote Friedman and his belief concerning a
business leader’s primary responsibility, she omitted a key point found at the end of the quote. It
was Friedman’s belief that a business leader was to legally and ethically increase profits “without
deception or fraud” (2002. p. 133). According to Friedman, social good of the business was the
responsibility of the owner(s) or shareholders, not the business leader. Unfortunately, Holt’s
(2006) over all point tried to use Friedman’s belief while excluding the deception and fraud part
of the quote since Holt believed in incorporating ethical relativism in the thought processes of
managers.
45
Holt did incorporate some leadership, human development, and social expectations;
consequently, their contribution was significant. Like Holt, King (1986) believed that a leader’s
active participation was necessary in a society. However, Holt’s concept of phronesis and the use
of rhetoric with its heavy dependence on ethical relativism would run contrary to the beliefs of all
of the authors of the breadth. Even though Holt wanted to use rhetoric as a tool to develop a
morally neutral belief, she believed it was a useful tool to develop firm organizational social
expectations with a multinational perspective based on ethical relativism. Ethical relativism, as
viewed by King (1988), was the foundation that led to Marxism. However, a critical function of
Holt’s piece, ethical relativism, when combined with Moberg’s blind obedience has lead
humanity to do the most despicable acts of barbarism. Maslow (1971) simply stated that human
and individual development becomes a luxury when an individual was just trying to survive
while focusing on lower level needs.
Kenneally, I. (2009). Chantal Delsol: Christian moral realism and universalism, Properly
Understood. Perspectives on Political Science, 38; 149-156. EBSCOhost database. ISSN:
10457097.
The author described many of Delsol’s modernistic theories on political science,
enlightenment, leadership, and morality. They relate to Delsol’s belief that a recent trend of a
unified world systematically destroying the individuality and uniqueness of everyone. During this
process, strong universal central control hijacks individual and societal development. The main
tools of destruction emanate from a unified law and obedient leaders. In addition, this quest of a
unified law has been a veiled attempt to replace the social moral Christian ethos. Historically,
according to Kenneally, power brokers make agreements based on political convenience and
hate; this distorts the unified law process. As it relates to the individual, regulations emanating
46
from the heavily brokered unified law become ineffective, confusing, difficult to administer,
punitive, and costly in deployment. This meant individual development of those targeted has
been severely demoralized. To counter this growing concern, the Kenneally and Delsol
recommended that the success of humankind as a species resided within every human’s natural
desire to be free and unique. Positive individual development built on sound social moral ethos
was humanity’s best chance to survive.
To comment on Kenneally’s analysis of Delsol requires connectivity to the theories and
concepts noted in the breadth. First, King (1986) often wrote and spoke of how each of us were
interrelated; all of us need each other to be productive and actively participating in order to
survive and develop as a species. Furthermore, King, Friedman, and now Delsol often spoke of a
renaissance, for King (1986) it was rediscovering lost values, for Friedman (2002) it was about
restoring economic freedom to revive our lost potential, and for Delsol it was about spiritual
renewal. The great deterrent for all three were systems of hate that robbed the individual of their
specificity, uniqueness, inner agape, and development potential, to name a few. As with all three,
there was a strong central planning unit or belief system generating the hate. These systems of
hate destroy the gifts of humanity.
According to Kenneally (2009), Chantal Delsol wrote about a portion of modernity’s
betrayal occurs as it passes off what it calls a diversity of thought, when it has less to do with
diversity and more to do with political correctness of ethical relativism and propping up secular
religions. Instead, many modern intellectual elites have resurrected the old idea of the few
dictating to the many such as Courpasson, Dany, and Drolet. Freidman (2002) and Kenneally’s
(2009) beliefs provide the source of the question, how can a society advance when its largest
resource, its people, have been led down a path to serfdom and restrictive development policies?
47
Instead of resurrecting a destructive path that leads to totalitarianism, Kenneally suggested that
individuals should embrace their inheritance of freedom and individual development as a means
to ensure humanities’ survival. Much of the world’s present success according to Kenneally’s
interpretation of Delsol was a set of societal expectations built upon some very simple Christian
concepts. The most fundamental of these Christian concepts were the Ten Commandments.
While building upon the commandments, leaders at all levels must embrace the uniqueness and
diverse drive of individual development in order to achieve true societal development.
Major, R. (2007). A New Argument for morality: Machiavelli and the ancients. Political
Research Quarterly, 60; 171-179. doi: 10.1177/1065912907301705.
Major’s intent found in this analysis was to expose the efforts of ancient authors that
Machiavelli condensed into one book called The Prince and then to establish ties to modern
morality. As proof of the ancient author’s influence, Major focused in on chapter three and noted
several quotes from Sallust, Aristotle, Plutarch, and Xenophon. What Major theorized about
Machiavelli was nothing different than Sun Tsu did with the Art of War, both compiled the
lessons learned from their predecessors and personal experience into one complete book. Both
reference materials have proven to be very efficient in regards to their subject matter for those
that heed the teachings. For Machiavelli and the ancient authors, the commonality with modern
morality was in utility, security, and self-preservation. The concepts of Machiavelli are as
applicable today as they were during his lifetime.
The critique of Major’s work begins with the leading line in the opening paragraph. It
explained Machiavelli’s “bold and liberating attack” (p. 171) aristocratic and theocratic power
structures that made up most of the central planning systems of his day. However, Major’s basic
premise was that Machiavelli built his theories on the works of ancient authors, then the bold and
48
liberating attack was nothing more than re-stating previous theories on power. The liberating
portion of Machiavelli’s work was nothing more than expanding upon or re-stating the obvious
survival techniques of those wanting to either expand or maintain political power. The irony of
Major’s work was that Christian moral ethos that was one of the targets of the liberating attack
provided the best examples on how to wield political power in the most efficient ruthless
manner.
The value of what the author presented reaffirms King’s belief that if the end justifies the
means it requires a system of hate such as aristocracy, theocracy, communism, or totalitarianism
to provide an environment for it to thrive. Machiavellian style political power brokers thrive in a
system that provides little class movement and individual development. During that time, if an
individual had aspirations for more, the only way to attain it was to create opportunity in some
distant land or wrest power from an existing source, hence the need to assert the Machiavelli’s
value system (Chisholm, 2007). This combative atmosphere often led to people to believe in
ethical relativism by justifying actions with results, which was what King (1986) warned others
to avoid. Friedman (2002) would warn, this combative atmosphere does nothing for human
development and has become more prevalent in modern societies as they adopt more and more of
Marx’s theories.
Moberg, D. (2006). Ethics blind spots in organizations: How systematic errors in person
perception undermine moral agency. Organization Studies, 27; 413-428. doi:
10.1177/0170840606062429.
According to Moberg, all individuals perceived others by assessing their morality and
competency. In addition, this could lead to four possible perceived categories or agencies in
which individuals evaluate others. Those were “virtuous and able, unethical but able, virtuous but
49
inept, and unethical and inept” (p. 415). For the observer of an event, the moral and competent
make-up sets the frame on their perception of an event or situation. After the frame was set, a
blind spot was a defect in an individual’s perception. The individual can improve their moral
agency by searching out role models who exemplify traits that they lack; in addition, by
improving their moral agency it allowed them to reduce their blind spots and develop.
There were two issues with Moberg’s analysis. The first issue was that Moberg used
examples that focused blame on the individual and not the leader. This conflicted with
Friedman’s (2002) belief that leaders were always responsible for the actions of their
subordinates. That was why, as Kenneally (2009) believed, a leader should aspire to be a moral
role model because a strong leader inspires subordinates to overcome deficiencies. However, if
the leader has been unethical, this moral and ethical deficiency sets a socially negative group
frame. The second key issue focused on why managers have been more apt to handle competency
deficiencies in subordinates better than moral deficiencies. According to Feldman and Feldman
(2006), competency issues were more objective, less time consuming to address, and the
probability of fixing the problem was greater. While moral deficiencies were more difficult to
spot and solutions tend to be complicated. When spotted, a manager’s typical response was to
address them indirectly via performance related issues.
The value of Moberg’s analysis was that it appeared to enforce the concept that leaders
and managers should get a free pass when it comes to their moral deficiencies. This became more
apparent when Moberg used the debacle of WorldCom as an example. Moberg (2006) even
highlighted the financial improprieties of the CFO and CEO, yet choose to write about the
negative effects of whistle blowing have on the business when it fails to handle moral and ethical
issues. According to Feldman and Feldman (2006), when leaders get into trouble their moral
50
frame has de-evolved because they no longer view decisions as right or wrong, they view it in
terms of risk versus reward. A last key note, Moberg implied that every individual believed in
himself or herself as being virtuous, ethical, and moral. This was contradictory with Marx (Marx
& Engels, 1959) and those that believed in various secular religions that do not care about
morality because it has traditional religious and free market connotations. Morality to them was
determined upon a successful resolution to a problem (King, as cited by Carson & Holloran,
1998).
Patriotta, G. & Starkey, K. (2008). From utilitarian morality to moral imagination: Reimagining
the business school. Journal of Management Inquiry, 17; 319-327. doi:
10.1177/1056492608324449.
Patriotta and Starkey wanted business schools to redefine their current business
paradigms to be more modern, flexible, and fluid using moral imagination as a basis for change.
Currently, business schools have been stuck in the time honored concepts that promote
efficiency, cost reduction, and profit. According to the Patriotta and Starkey, this business school
doctrine needs updated to fit the modern need to use businesses to promote social change and be
arbiters of moral imagination as it relates to their workforce. Instead of profit, Patriotta and
Starkey suggested business schools needed to adopt liberal arts and humanitarian moral frames
that run the risk of bankruptcy in order to save the world.
Patriotta and Starkey’s belief that businesses play the role of implementing social change
was in direct conflict with Friedman’s (2002) belief that a business should emulate what was
socially acceptable. However, Patriotta and Starkey (2008) appeared to be endorsing a brand of
environmental activism where corporate officers push a green policy at the expense of all
stakeholders since any environmental goal achieved would vindicate any indiscretions. If a
51
business owner or a majority of stockholders chooses to save the world while using the profits
and assets of a business to do so, they have every right to do so. If a corporate officer chooses to
accomplish the same goal without the approval of the board then that was another matter
completely and was something Friedman wrote about as being wrong. Business was the last
place to be experimenting with social engineering. Finally, King’s (1988) description of ethical
relativism appears to describe Patriotta and Starkey’s (2008) concept of moral imagination in
which King loathed ethical relativism.
The value of Patriotta and Starkey’s work was that it provided an example of ethical
relativism in action as it appeared to promote deception in the guise of a moral framework. Both
Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow (1971) believed in a standardized set of moral codes, which stands
in direct contrast with the concept of moral imagination. Moral imagination would be the
equivalent of building a foundation on the murky muck of quick sand. Furthermore, Maslow
(1971) believed that development was only capable when a vast majority of individuals in a
society understood and practiced a common set of moral principles. This differs greatly from
Patriotta and Starkey’s (2008) individual based system of moral imagination where each
individual could act on a belief that a majority of the members in society would find objection. In
this instance, anything was okay as long as it promoted the greater global good.
Patton, D. (2007). The Supreme Court and morality policy adoption in the American states: The
impact of constitutional context. Political Research Quarterly, 60; 468-488. doi:
10.1177/1065912907303844.
Patton used a quantitative approach to create a theory and assess the level of Supreme
Court involvement in state morality policy that has occurred in recent years. More specifically,
Patton’s research determined the extent of influence the Supreme Court has in regards to policy-
52
making environment in the state legislatures. With foundational morality continually under
assault by various activists, issues of morality continue to surface according to Patton. Using
judicial review as a vehicle of involvement, the Supreme Court has interjected itself in moral
adoption policies. Patton has determined that the Supreme Court has directly affected numerous
moral policies and policy creation processes. To the point where business and political leaders
have shown the propensity to make long-term decisions not on socially accepted moral ethos, but
on the philosophical make up of the Supreme Court.
In the study, the author paraphrased a thought from several other studies that morality
policies were “not driven by socio-economic variables” (Patton, 2007, p. 469). This statement
would be more relevant if the Supreme Court was not agenda driven and started reaching beyond
the scope of the constitution. Supreme Court justices Breyer, Ginsburg, and Sotomayor prefer to
use international law and rulings to interpret the Constitution (Levy, 2009); in doing so, they
would inject socially engineered morality based on socio-economic policies of other foreign
countries in to national and state issues. The justice’s preference actually counters the statement
concerning socio-economic variables made by Patton. Patton’s mistake was that he viewed
morality and socio-economics as two different things when according to both Maslow (1971) and
Kohlberg (1981) morality serves as the foundation to socio-economics.
The amount of influence the Supreme Court has wielded as noted by Patton (2007) was
contradictory to Kohlberg’s (1981) belief that a minuscule number of individuals should not get
to decide what was morally right for an entire society. The value of this study was that Patton
(2007) provided evidence that a branch of government that should only be interested in the
constitutionality of laws, regulations, and judicial decisions of other U.S. courts, according to
Friedman (2002), has been creating social expectations. Unfortunately, this has forced members
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of various legislative branches, the people’s representatives, to hand over a portion of their power
(Patton, 2007). Ironically, King (1986) who used the court system extensively to ensure equality
of opportunity would find issue with the level or type of coercion. King (as cited by Carson &
Holloran, 1998) would detest the level of intervention as described by Patton since it provides the
potential to incorporate systems of hate into society without any say from the citizenry.
Rutgers, M. & Schreurs, P. (2006). The morality of value- and purpose-rationality: The Kantian
roots of Weber's foundational distinction. Administration & Society, 38; 403-421. doi:
10.1177/0095399706290632.
Rutgers and Schreurs conducted theoretical research on the many questions found in
Weber’s work on value-rationality and purpose-rationality. After an extensive review of
Weber’s work and Kantian theory, they surmised that purpose-rational orientation was action in
response to some external stimulus and the response to the stimulus was strategic or tactical with
a concern about the outcome or any repercussions. Value-rational orientation was action in
response to a stimulus that caused a basic emotional or metaphysical reaction. The climax to all
of the analysis was as many questions as there were answers, leaving the authors to suggest that
future research should focus on moral ethos and its impact on society and not the reasons behind
the creation of moral systems.
Rutgers and Schreurs were thorough in trying to come to some clear and concise
definition between the two rationalities; however, finding an ending to one of the two
rationalities does not always lead to the beginning of the other. It was extremely rare for one of
the two rationalities to be the sole source of inspiration for any action. Most of the time, they
overlap to one degree or another as an individual carries out an action in response to some
stimuli. Overlapping rationalities was similar to an individual existing in different stages of
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development as noted by Kohlberg (1981). Rutgers and Schreurs noted that the lower stages of
development have tendency to be more purpose-rational, as the individual develops past the
orientation or need issues, future issues become less emotional and more value-rational. The
authors were trying to bring light to a concept clouded in fog and eventually spun themselves to
the conclusion that told the reader to look elsewhere. In the final analysis of this critique, the
authors should have heeded their own advice.
The value of Rutgers and Schreurs (2006) research was that it brought to light some neo-
Kantian theories concerning autonomy and heteronomy. Taken at their extremes, they were equal
to barbarism and dutiful slave. However, Weber, I.R., King, and Friedman believed that
responsible autonomic response to social expectations was a prerequisite of freedom. This belief
was in line with Rutgers and Schreurs idea that a combination or overlapping of autonomy and
heteronomy was essential for the individual to develop and respond to social expectations.
Meanwhile, social engineering of a Marxist-like state tries to ingrain obedience based on a belief
of heteronomy as noted by King (1986). In doing so, they corrupt the natural purpose- and value-
rationalities of the individual causing them to suppress natural responses while encouraging
irrationality to others (Friedman, 2002). The increased irrational responses to some stimuli
increased the likelihood that the individual will see things that were once beautiful as ugly and
some of the uglier things as being beautiful (King, as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998).
Taft, S. & White, J. (2007). Ethics education: Using inductive reasoning to develop individual,
group, organizational, and global perspectives. Journal of Management Education, 31;
614-646. doi: 10.1177/1052562907307641.
Taft and White attempted to fill a perceived void in business ethics education. It was their
belief that current ethical pedagogies have been too muted or not comprehensive enough to
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address a multitude of ethical issues. The authors created a structure of inductive ethics education
that takes the student on a path of self-discovery to an understanding of where their belief system
fits in the grander scheme of international business and ethics in general. In doing so, the student
will advance through a moral development process similar to Kohlberg, Maslow, and King’s.
Taft and White broke their process down using four levels of ethical analysis, they were
“individual, group, organizational, and international perspectives” (p. 614). Along the path of
discovery, the individual will learn the history that makes up ethics, the expectations of societal
morality, and how those expectations have an impact on the local contextual interpretation,
which leads to the actions carried out by the individual.
The critique to Taft and White’s article actually comes as a word of caution. Since the
authors appeared to have developed a system similar to Kohlberg, Maslow, and King’s, the
concept that the authors utilized appeared to be sound and should provide an excellent
opportunity for students to enhance their knowledge of ethics and ethical dilemmas. However,
the risk starts to occur when the inductive method used becomes coaching. Taft and White’s
process of coaching begins by breaking a student’s individual principles down by reviewing his
or her own aspects and influences. Then the student provides potential responses to hypothetical
situations to help refine their set of moral principles. It is at this point McGonigal (2005)
cautioned educators to be careful during the journey of self-discovery and understanding; this
could easily turn into a forced transformational learning event. For example, transformational
learning can easily become indoctrination into whatever the belief system the instructor wanted
to edify. In this case, individual development does not occur in a free environment, it becomes a
disturbing path of indoctrination.
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One of the theories Taft and White offered was the concept of normative ethics, which
was ethics having a common root. According to the authors, the root source for most normative
ethics comes from various religious teachings that incorporate their version of the Ten
Commandments or the Golden Rule. This important fact, brought up by Kenneally’s (2009)
examination of Delsol’s work and King’s (1981; 1986; 1988) interpretation of moral
development found in his books and speeches provided the need to examine it further in the
application portion of this paper. Another value was that the authors captured the new concept of
regimented diversity. According to Taft and White (2007), this occurs as diverse thoughts
develop into a process requiring individuals within an established society to adopt minority belief
systems. Kohlberg’s (1981) belief differed greatly because he theorized that forced diversity
distorts the common understanding in normative ethics despite the similarities; in turn, societal
understanding becomes disparate. In this instance, individual and leadership development slows
as the energy of thought becomes wasted chasing after politically correct caprices.
Thoms, J. C. (2008). Ethical integrity in leadership and organizational moral culture. Leadership,
4; 419-442. doi: 10.1177/1742715008095189.
Thoms analyzed the effects of leadership on the organizational moral culture of several
organizations that included Salomon Brothers, Enron, WorldCom, HIH Insurance, New South
Wales Police Services, Johnson and Johnson, Pitney Bowes, and MCI Inc. In using evaluation
criteria such as: does the organization have a holistic moral enforcement belief system; open
communication; treat all stakeholders with dignity and respect; customer focus; and a clearly
defined code of conduct. After completing a comparative analysis on the case studies, Thoms
deduced that leadership has a strong influence on the moral health of an organization and
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individuals. In addition to doing what is right, a good leader must actively seek moral
development in a continuous manner in order to stave off complacency and apathy.
One of the key points that Thoms made was that choosing between right and wrong only
becomes difficult when leaders and individuals willingly abandon their core beliefs.
Consequently, they make an easy choice purposefully difficult as to offer themselves the illusion
of ethical cover. According to Thoms, the difficult choice has always been a leader having to
choose between two ethically right choices. These right-versus-right ethical dilemmas include
“truth versus loyalty; individual versus community; short term versus long term; and justice
versus mercy” (p. 424). Thoms suggested that the leader seek out options and alternatives while
avoiding the trap of a right-versus-right ethical conflict.
The value of Thoms’s research was that it stood in stark contrast with Moberg’s (2006)
desire to excuse inappropriate executive behavior at WorldCom and MCI Inc. In addition,
Thoms’s research countered Patriotta and Starkey’s (2008) belief in moral imagination as nothing
more than smoke and mirrors code of conduct. The ultimate reality that Thoms discovered was
that doing what was right all the time was difficult. However, if an individual tries to develop
continually while trying to make the decisions that benefit the greatest number of people as
suggested by the Golden Rule, the Good Samaritan, the Ethic of Reciprocity, or the Natural Law,
then more times than not the leader will make the best choice for all stakeholders in the
organization.
Weaver, G. (2006). Virtue in organizations: Moral identity as a foundation for moral agency.
Organization Studies, 27; 341-368. doi: 10.1177/0170840606062426.
Weaver (2006) developed the concept of virtue using the theories of Aristotle and
MacIntyre as basis of self-improvement and organizational improvement. The overall goal in the
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development of virtue was the journey of continual improvement. To Weaver, the sum of acts
was more important than a specific type of virtuous act. Furthermore, the actions of today
determine the level of virtue an individual attains tomorrow. The sum of virtuous acts can inspire
others in close proximity to be virtuous. Weaver’s belief in leading by example provided the
opportunity for the virtuous leader to inspire others throughout an organization. In addition to
leading by example, the virtuous individual can offer aid in the form of knowledge or
opportunities for improvement. Conversely, a leader lacking virtue can deflate an organization,
which halts the virtuous development of others.
The emphasis of Weaver’s article was on the individual, where the individual can develop
their virtue by expanding their “moral identity” (p. 346). A moral identity can be a source of
inspiration for others to develop virtue, even if they are not in a leadership role. However, it was
important for an individual to develop a process of self-evaluation, as noted by I.R. (Bradford,
1966). If not, Weaver (2006) was concerned that they risked developing a narcissistic mentality
that takes away from the virtue developed because the individual has lost perspective on the
world around them. The same was true about organizations; self-delusion can be a recipe for
failure. One thing to note, as organizations and institutions develop, the ability to develop virtue
will determine whether the saint or sinner becomes the dominant moral identity in leaders,
employees, and students to name a few.
The focus of Weaver’s concepts in developing a virtuous society falls in line with I.R.’s
letter to Bradford and King’s belief in a person needing to develop three dimensions of a
complete life. In addition, moral identity or virtue development as noted by Weaver parallels
Kohlberg’s (1981) moral development process. For Kohlberg, as the individual developed they
become cognizant of their moral behavior. At first through the perceptions of others, but as they
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develop they understand and seek methods to improve their self-perceived moral identity. As
they do so, they work to achieve higher levels development as defined by Kohlberg. As the
individual develops in to a virtuous leader, the individual encourages positive human
development throughout humanity (Weaver).
Zupan, D. (2007). The logic of community, ignorance, and the presumption of moral equality: A
soldier’s story. Journal of Military Ethics, 6(1); 41-49. doi:
10.1080/15027570601183386.
Zupan provided a detailed analysis on the concept of Moral Equality of Combatants
(MEC) as it relates to normally accepted social moral norms. In MEC, combatants on both sides
were morally equal and subsequently innocent because they do not have enough information to
determine if a war was just or unjust. To add extra emphasis to the concept of MEC, it would be
negligent to leave out the fact that Zupan was an active duty Colonel in the United States Army
at the time of its publishing. In the essay and through his own admission, Zupan weaved a
morally tortured path to justify his and others continued involvement in a war they were starting
to think as unjust. As Zupan alluded to, unit integrity and the chain of command begins to
breakdown when its leaders and soldiers begin doubting themselves and their involvement in
combat actions. Ultimately, as leaders and soldiers began worrying about the morality of their
actions they put the lives of their fellow soldiers in jeopardy. This thought parallels Kohlberg’s
(1981) belief that when the structure of moral development breaks down, individual development
regresses.
The critique of this essay was that it served as Zupan’s (2007) deposition of his innocence
in being involved in a war that some political leaders and people in the media were claiming as
unjust. In speaking about the people who voted for President Bush in 2004, Zupan wondered if a
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citizenry that routinely fails to show up to vote or continually elects incompetent leaders would
condemn him and his fellow soldiers for legally following the orders of elected representatives.
Zupan went into elaborate detail to equate his actions and the actions of his subordinates as the
equivalent to the police as they are following the orders of elected officials and their constituents.
He even goes a step further to suggest that Bush administration was a corrupt police chief
sending his police officers out to commit an unjust act by feeding them bogus information.
Zupan provided an example of modern leaders just as his essay was an example of ethical
relativism.
What Zupan offered was very important because it served as a piece of evidence
demonstrating the detrimental effects of leadership on those carrying out the duties of their
superiors regardless of whether the activity was civilian or military. Whether an individual was
for or against the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, Zupan’s quest for innocence reaffirmed the level
of influence that leadership and especially political leadership has on the emotional morality of
those military personnel serving their orders. Friedman, King, Courpasson, Dany, Feldman,
Weaver, and Thoms reaffirmed this idea numerous times in this KAM. As Zupan (2007) noted,
the ultimate shame in the politicization of war and morality was that the victims become the
soldiers in the field as unit harmony breaks down. This reality plays out in the civilian world as
well, according to Weaver (2006) and Thoms (2008), when leaders politicize morality;
individuals striving to develop themselves often become casualties of the moral malaise.
Literature Review Essay
The general theme that was the driving force behind the breadth was moral development
in individuals, leaders, and even organizations since a leader’s moral development greatly
influences the moral ethos of the organization (Weaver, 2006; Thoms, 2008). This literature
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review essay as well as the application portion of this KAM will incorporate this assumption.
The literature review accomplishes the following by using the breadth’s moral development
constructs as a litmus test to validate or repudiate themes found in depth; as important, it
compares and contrasts the different theories found in the depth. An additional item of note, in
the final analysis of all research found in this essay, just because an author or authors suggested
to make a change, it does not automatically mean that the change was positive. A point made in
the breadth emphasized the general theme of that statement; individual moral development
required an eighteenth century version of freedom, which was both political and economic. If
research harms that intent, the literature review captured its effect on individual moral
development.
The organization of the literature review includes sections on theory, organization, and
leadership. The initial section reviews modern theoretical aspects of morality as it relates to
individual development. Topics include Christian moral realism, morality value rationality, and
purpose rationality. This section ends with the practical side of theory on how to introduce moral
imagination in business schools, a holistic approach to ethics education, and a case study on the
affects of judicial review on morality and ethics. The next section of the literature assesses and
reviews the organizational aspects of morality and its effects on individual development. It
touches on the topics of organizational remembering, virtue, ethical blind spots, and business
firms being democratic hybrids. This establishes a path to the last section; it reviews the effects
of moral and amoral leadership on individual development. In this final section there are two
different articles dealing with leadership and morality as defined by Machiavelli. Then this
section reviews the concept of rhetoric and morality of managers. It finishes with two articles on
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the effects moral leadership as it relates to the history of Ireland and the ongoing war in the
Middle East.
Theory
The predominant theory found in the breadth identified freedom as the prerequisite to
individual moral development; however, this would require the individual to act responsibly in
adhering to the socially acceptable norms. Thoms (2008) wrote that when leaders of a society or
organization stray away from its moral foundation, this has always had a negative effect on moral
development of individuals. One of the reasons why a society begins to stray according to
Kenneally (2009) was something he defined as modern universalism or what King (1988)
described as ethical relativism. Kenneally believed that modern universalism destroys
individuality and does everything possible to make moral development improbable. In essence,
moral universalism has become the secular religion that Feuer wrote about in the preface of Marx
and Engels book on the Basic writings on politics and philosophy (1959). Ultimately, according
to Kenneally (2009), modern universalism and ethical relativism force the individual to stray
away from their moral foundation.
According to Friedman (2002), as the secular religions that make up ethical relativism
and modern universalism gained strength, individuals lost freedom. Kenneally (2009) believed
that without freedom to make personal moral choices, modern universalism has left little room
for the majority of people to develop individual responsibility. As a result, leadership becomes
less of a choice and more of technocracy pushing its ideology via preordained choices on the
masses. Kenneally continued by stating modern universalism destroys hope and faith, which
were the cornerstones of most religions. In the process, the normative ethics proposed by Taft
and White (2007) began to erode. It was at this point that those who believed in the secular
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religion of modern universalism have worked to create systems of hate to take advantage of the
decline in morality. In doing so, the acolytes of modern universalism pit one set of individuals
against another in an effort to promote class warfare since the extreme absence of hope and faith
has always been hate, pointless turmoil, and an era of history devoid of meaning other than the
many serving the few. Friedman (2002) believed that at this point ethical relativism forces human
development to serve those in power at the expense of the many.
For Delsol (as cited by Kenneally, 2009), enlightenment is the only way to combat
expanding ignorance generated by moral universalism and the ever-growing restrictions on
economic freedom. Kenneally continued by stating that the path to enlightenment meant that the
individual needed to appreciate the differences in cultures and other individuals with an
understanding that none of us has the whole truth. This plurality of cultural worlds required an
individual to understand other cultures while not surrendering their cultural and moral identity.
By understanding other cultures, the path of enlightenment has kept the flame of knowledge lit,
which has become the only way individuals fend off the darkness of moral universalism.
Fortunately, most nations and cultures should never need to expend any effort in creating some
scientific breakthrough in regards to human development. King (1986) suggested that the process
of human development required individuals to rediscover their birthright of freedom,
responsibility, and the social expectations that built a society where the individual and humanity
as a whole could prosper. When combining Kenneally, King, and Friedman’s interpretation of
individual responsibility it became apparent that they were describing a form of self-leadership.
Kenneally’s (2009) interpretation of Delsol’s work provided a modern theoretical
perspective on where politics, leadership, and morality were going. Furthermore, the article
agreed with much of the subject matter relating to freedom and morality that were a concern to
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Friedman (2002), King (1988), and Thoms (2008). As Kenneally stated, the moral framework for
those societies founded on Judeo-Christian beliefs was the Ten Commandments. However, in the
absence of morality, society is nothing but a technocracy, which Delsol spoke of in her books.
Without morals, King (1986) was concerned that human existence would de-evolve making the
individual a glorified pack animal, manipulated and controlled, by those in power. Friedman
(2002) and Hayek (2007) had similar beliefs to King, that human development would stop and
the role of the common individual would be at best an indentured servant, at worst a slave to the
state. Kenneally reiterated this point when he stated that it was unfortunate for all of humanity, as
moral universalism progresses, the flame of freedom and individual development would continue
to recede. Weaver (2006) and Thoms (2008) made similar claims in their research: as moral
development retreated, lawlessness and the need for more bureaucracy, or technocracy, has
increased in a never-ending cycle of lawlessness and more laws.
In breaking down Weber’s theories concerning morality, Rutgers and Schreurs (2006)
tried unsuccessfully to explain what Weber actually meant by the moral concepts of value-
rationality and purpose-rationality. However, they did note that there were similarities between
value-rationality, autonomous volition, and intrinsic values. In addition, they also noted there
were similarities between purpose-rationality, heteronymous volition, and extrinsic vales.
According to the authors, it was extremely rare for one type of rationality, purpose- or value-, to
be the primary basis of all action without the other. However, Rutgers and Schreurs noted five
differences between the value-rationality and purpose-rationality: (a) value-rationality was based
more on “emotions or beliefs”, (b) value-rationality flowed continuously while generating
“affectual and traditional” action. Whereas the concept of purpose-rationality was more rigid and
in rare instances, it could be absent of affectual and traditional action. (c) This difference
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primarily had to do with what the authors called the “orientation of behavior” which meant that
there was a purposeful intent in caring out an action that has a certain level of premeditation. (d)
Individuality and the uniqueness of the action played a role in value-rationality while
institutionalized responses were purpose-rationality. These were often competing and conflicting
as the individual acts on certain stimulus. (e) The final difference lies in the “meaning of the
action” in which value-rationality had to do with the “nature of the action” while purpose-
rationality was all about results (pp. 406-407).
Using the descriptions of value-rationality and purpose-rationality provided by Rutgers
and Schreurs (2006) with King’s (1986) thoughts on ethical relativism would provide the
following patterns. For those pushing Marxist-like secular religions, the goal is to manipulate
value-rationality while creating chaos via class warfare in order to increase the level of imposed
institutionalized purpose-rationality. Institutionalized purpose-rationality would lead to the
technocracy that Kenneally (2009) noted in his interpretation of Delsol’s work and the obedience
Courpasson and Dany (2003) sought in their research. On the other hand, Friedman (2002) and
King (1986) wanted to limit government’s influence on purpose-rationality while creating an
environment that encouraged value-rationality as long as it fits within the confines of social
expectations that were purpose-rational in nature, which was what Weaver (2006) sought in his
work on virtue. In other words, as a means of positive individual development, some want to put
limits on the amount of institutionalized influence of purpose-rationality while encouraging
socially accepted ethically and morally sound value-rationality. See for example Weaver’s
reflections on establishing a moral identity based on virtue, Taft and White’s (2007) thoughts on
inductive reasoning, or Thoms’ (2008) rationale on ethical integrity. All of the examples limited
the amount of coercion on the individual development process while allowing the individual to
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pursue his or her calling, since Weber (1958) implied that a calling was the engine of individual
development. In doing so, it ensured there was a minimum level of purpose-rationality emanating
from the mutually agreed upon social expectations found in a developed society to prevent
anarchy.
As a means of opening the door to institutionalized purpose-rationality, Patriotta and
Starkey (2008) tried taking the reader from utilitarian morality, which was the foundation to the
works of Kenneally (2009) and Thoms (2008), to a notion of what Patriotta and Starkey called
moral imagination. This concept of moral imagination was based on Dewey’s (as cited by
Fesmire, 2003) description of imagination and Holt’s (2006) faith in rhetoric. Patriotta and
Starkey defined moral imagination as the ability to perceive the needs of others with empathetic
creativity in order to cultivate new concepts that would challenge moral and ethical paradigms in
business schools and learning institutions. Initially, Patriotta and Starkey’s concept seemed
congruent with some of the individual development and societal change schemes of Feldman and
Feldman (2006) and King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998). Since the authors endorsed a
thought that required an individual to have a foundation and that same foundation would need to
change from time to time as the individual develops a greater awareness. However, unlike moral
imagination or organizational remembering, King (1986) and Thoms (2008) understood change
needs to occur, when it does it has to be a well thought-out process because impulsive change
often leads to dire consequences.
According to King (1986), the foundation of morality has to be strong and the ability to
adapt is a sign of strength, not weakness. This stands in stark difference to the impulsive good
intentions that formed the foundation of moral imagination. Furthermore, the fundamental flaw
of impulsive good intentions, as described by Patriotta and Starkey (2008), is that they are
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individually subjective making a common understanding of morality difficult, if not impossible.
Subjective understanding is the antithesis to Thom’s (2008) notion of moral structure. Instead of
a common understanding of morality as suggested by Thoms, Patriotta and Starkey’s concept of
moral imagination would hinge on the empathetic transference of moral understanding by a
group of individuals with differing backgrounds and levels of understanding. In Thoms’ research,
to assume moral understanding as Patriotta and Starkey suggested often led to
miscommunication, manipulation, and corruption.
Patriotta and Starkey (2008) wanted to start with business schools as a method to deliver
moral imagination to the rest of the modern world. During the initial phases of this process,
business schools would begin to emulate other academic schools of thought. The irony found in
this piece was Patriotta and Starkey wanted to change one school of thought to be more like the
other schools of thought which in turn explains why Freidman (2002) thought many universities
suffered from groupthink and socialism. As with ethical relativism (King, 1988) and moral
universalism (Kenneally, 2009), this universal moral imagination discourages independent
development and thought.
King (1986), a leader of the civil rights movement, knew there were limits to social
change. His belief in social change was in the principle of having all people of this great nation to
enjoy the same freedoms. It had nothing to with changing the foundation as Patriotta and Starkey
(2008) suggested. Actually, the utilitarian moral foundation to King is solid; he, Weaver (2006),
and Thoms (2008) want it equally applied to everyone. The current application of social justice
has become social injustice based on decades of implementing politically correct social
engineering theory similar to Patriotta and Starkey’s moral imagination. For Friedman (2002),
morality based on politically correctness has been a recipe for moral collapse and a society
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struggling with continual upheaval. This is what Thoms (2008) and Weaver (2006) warned about
it in their own articles and research. Patriotta and Starkey appeared to have used the constructs of
ethical relativism to create the theory of moral imagination. Unfortunately for those that would
listen, their theories will force individuals to embrace systems of hate while preventing them
from changing in a positive manner in order to rediscover lost social expectations and their
individual development potential.
To continue with individual development, ethics, and educational theory, Taft and White
(2007) wrote a piece on a holistic approach that used inductive reasoning to develop ethics in the
workplace as a form of individual development. Their theory was a multifaceted approach that
started with the individual, expanded it to include small groups, and finally the organization. The
ultimate aim of the authors was to create a system that took the individual to “highest level of
fully ethical managerial decision making” (p. 615). To start the process, all students would be
required to review their core moral and ethical beliefs in a manner that allows them to apply their
beliefs to hypothetical situations. From there, the teacher works to enhance this inward focus on
ethics by allowing students to expand their ethical frame to include their local community. For
instance, during small group ethics education, the student would expand their knowledge with
small group dynamic issues such as dealing with varying religious beliefs. As a part of this
process, they would begin to understand how their ethic orientation meshes with others, which
may or may not be similar. As their level of understanding grew, this eventually leads to the
organizational level ethics training where abstract and complex critical thinking would become
necessary as the student addresses organizational ethical issues that were dynamic and
multifaceted. Throughout the process, the teacher would be required to provide the student with
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opportunities to enhance their moral foundation with multiple religious perspectives,
philosophical fundamentals, modern cultural aspects, and historical contexts to name a few.
Taft and White (2007) wanted students to develop their ethical understanding sufficiently
to handle the nuances found in a multitude of international issues. However, Weaver (2006)
issued a warning about individuals losing their moral identity. In this instance, students could
lose their moral identity when inundated with a multitude of moral philosophies while being
forced to provide solutions to larger and complex issues found in international ethics before they
truly understand their own moral foundation. Furthermore, McGonigal (2005) warned that a
student who has opened him or herself up philosophically risks the potentially negative
consequences found in transformational education where they acquire disparate social
expectations. This effect occurs as instructors force their own or another nation’s moral ethos on
the individual. In turn, the instructor could warp the self-discovery development process into
indoctrination since the architect of choice is the instructor. Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow (1971)
issued a general warning; if an individual lost their moral foundation in similar situations, it
would eventually cost them their freedom.
Another interesting aspect of the article had to do with an individual’s responsibility to
act when faced with an ethical dilemma. Taft and White (2007) believed that failing to act when
faced with a dilemma suggested that the individual suffered from an underdeveloped morality,
which explained why some individuals would exhibit ethical cowardice. Thoms (2008) had a
similar opinion of individuals failing to act while adding that a leader’s inaction actually
condoned the subordinate’s negative activity. In addition, if the ethical dilemma was an accident,
then inaction prevented the offending individual the knowledge to correct their action or learn
not to repeat it. This fell in line with King’s (1981) belief that all individuals should actively
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participate in the world around them in order to stop some of the injustices that occur on a daily
basis. Furthermore, Weaver (2006) added, if individuals actively participate in stopping the
injustices of the world, at a minimum the individuals would become responsible and self-
directed. In doing so, they would develop into responsible leaders and be examples for future
generations. Responsible leadership includes all aspects of society, which consists of business,
community, and politics.
Patton’s (2007) quantitative research focused on the Supreme Court’s influence on moral
policy development. His results deduced that the Supreme Court has significantly influenced
moral policy development and deployment in politics and society. With its power of judicial
review, the Supreme Court could assess the constitutionality of all state and local laws. The
Supreme Court’s predisposition, gender or party affiliation, at the time of judgment usually
determines the level of interference in the selection and decision processes. Recent trends have
the Supreme Court delving into the arena political correctness in regards to traditionally hot
button issues of abortion, gay marriage, and the posting of Ten Commandments.
Since a politically correct driven morality was nothing more than another form of King’s
(1988) ethical relativism, the effect of recent Supreme Court decisions has had a negative impact
on individual development. For example, Patton (2007) was alarmed to find out that the reach of
the Supreme Court extended into state policy development. When these instances have occurred,
the court has moved from the pragmatic role of validating the constitutionality of legislation to
injecting itself into the center of moral policy creation and adoption via judicial review at the
state level. This has made legislators hesitant to tackle issues concerning moral clarity while
generating societal moral confusion. As espoused by Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow (1971), when
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a few determine what should be right for the many, moral confusion and isolation often becomes
the result, which hinders the development process.
The problem with the Supreme Court injecting itself into moral policy creation and
adoption becomes even more egregious when justices like Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer,
and Sonia Sotomayor want to use international laws and rulings as a source to initiate judicial
review as well as in interpreting the Constitution (Levy, 2009). Policy makers not only have to
worry about the constitutionality of a piece of legislation, they also have to be concerned about
the court’s sources used to interpret any legislation. Kenneally (2009) warned about this brand of
judicial activism that has made moral policy legislation difficult while confusing the populace on
acceptable moral conduct. As noted by Patton (2007), this becomes especially true when the
Supreme Court takes on morality issues that lie on the fringes of Constitution to push an agenda
that re-establishes morality at the local level. Consequently, foundational morality and
individual’s uniqueness is continually under assault. As Thoms (2008) warned, when
foundational morality goes into in a state of flux, individual development slows and stagnates.
There was one erroneous statement made by Patton that ties back to judicial activism and
liberal policies. Patton wrote, “The adoption of moral policies [by the Supreme Court] is not
driven by socio-economic variables such as state wealth or urbanization” (2007, p. 469). If
justices like Ginsburg, Breyer, or Sotomayor admittedly look to international law and foreign
court rulings that have Marxist or Socialistic designs, then the justices have introduced socio-
economic factors into case selection as well as judgment. As Weaver (2006) noted, to omit the
understanding of the source and the process encourages inconsistency in the deployment of laws
making ethical relativism more mainstream.
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As the landscape of morality changes, leaders have to look inward to answer the
questions of morality. This brings everyone back to understanding the social expectations that
require the individual to seek out a calling (Chisholm, 2007; Weber, 1958), continually improve
to develop a complete life (Feldman & Feldman, 2006; Thoms, 2008; Weaver, 2006; King, as
cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998). As they improve, they need to actively participate in the
affairs of the community (King, 1986; Weaver, 2006; Taft & White, 2007), practice neighborly
love, understand the importance of individual responsibility (Taft & White, 2007; Friedman &
Friedman, 1980), and understand why economic freedom is necessary (Kenneally, 2009;
Friedman, 2002). According to King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998), these were the same
social expectations that served as the inspiration to help write the United States Constitution. A
constitution that has promoted individual development and freedom through limited government;
in turn, creating one of the most advanced societies throughout humanity.
Organizational
This next section uses the organization as the vehicle for individual development; in
many instances, the authors delivered a top-down approach wrought with potential problems.
The problem with a top-down approach starts with Kohlberg’s (1981) philosophical question,
who is more ethically capable to determine what is morally correct? In Feldman and Feldman’s
(2006) essay on organizational remembering, it provided an example of how the authors intended
to use the business setting to shape the morality, culture, and traditions of leaders and their
subordinates. In theory, organizational remembering has numerous positives since it strives for
the same type of continual improvement that advanced societies promote. However, Feldman and
Feldman’s theory on organizational remembering requires a select group of individuals to
synthesize a wide variety of ideas and belief systems into a collective meaning in order to
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establish a framework of ethics, morals, a code of conduct, and values. From that point,
organizational members begin the process of interpreting the framework of the organization’s
social expectations and start practicing them on a daily basis. As soon as the individual begins
practicing the organization’s social expectations, in theory the development of the individual
commences. However, the approach noted had the potential to be an indoctrination process since
the power for individuals to develop resided within the control of a few in the upper hierarchy of
the organization.
Once the organization has developed a framework of social expectations, they were
assumed to be “normatively defined and fairly stable, but were also heterogeneous, flexible, and
interconnected” (Feldman & Feldman, 2006, p. 881). This was where the confusion began as
organizational remembering takes on politically correct facade and tried to be everything to
everyone. The act of remembering as stated was supposed to be defined and stable. However, to
be flexible, Feldman and Feldman suggested that the framework needed reviewed on a continual
basis to include recent issues from any negotiations, policy interpretation issues, political issues,
and the input from those that some in society have deemed as being marginalized. In every
instance noted by the authors, the few decided what was morally acceptable for the many. It
appears that the level of flexibility prescribed requires organizations to contort to the politically
correct impulse of the day. Since political correctness and moral relativism appear to be
synonymous, management is required to sacrifice individual development and organizational
efficiency to appease other external entities both business and non-business related.
Initially, the concept of remembering has a practical application since it avoids having an
organization and individuals re-learn lessons learned the hard way, which presents itself as a
huge cost avoidance opportunity for the organization. More specifically, individuals could
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develop faster on a firm understanding of organizational morality and business lessons learned.
Nevertheless, as an individual digs deeper into the authors’ theory, two issues with this concept
make it impractical. First, the organization is being setup to adhere to political correctness.
Feldman and Feldman (2006) made it perfectly clear; the focus was not on the individual or even
the organization it was on societal obedience. Second, as Thoms (2008), Weaver, (2006),
Kohlberg (1981) and Maslow (1971) have warned about, if the concept of what is right and
wrong continually changes, then the level of confusion only increases not decreases. This would
mean the organization has to reprimand individuals for the confusion that the leaders and the
supposed socially superior created; as a result, this would deflate moral. A loss in productivity
would follow a loss in moral, since those that failed to adhere to the new politically correct
standard, as Feldman and Feldman suggested, need additional training. Kohlberg (1981) believed
that similar situations as described inhibit leadership and human development, leadership
becomes so absorbed with the continual changes it has little opportunity to improve. Individual
development would be on hold until management decides to make up their collective mind.
Maslow (1971) believed that if individual development slows to the point of stagnation,
organizational morality and moral would turn negative. Whether an individual realizes it or not,
development only has two primary states. The individual is either developing or regressing, while
anything in between is a moment in time.
In the grand scheme of social expectations, virtue has to be included. In his article on
virtue in organizations, Weaver (2006) wrote, to justify a good life or organization because of
virtuous acts missed the point; the measure of a good life was how well the individual pursued
virtue. As King (1988) emphasized, the means do not justify the end; it was the method, the level
of commitment, and the continual pursuit of self-improvement that justified the end. The
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emphasis on the path to development was something Taft and White (2007) extolled in their
process of ethics education. In the pursuit of ethical leadership, Thoms (2008) emphasized
continual improvement as well. Unlike the end justifying the means, eventually being virtuous
was never the goal; the goal was always the life-long pursuit of virtue that made an individual
truly virtuous.
In addition to the individual learning about virtue, Weaver (2006) also believed that
virtuous behavior needs practiced and objectively evaluated on a daily basis. Once a moral
identity was established, a virtuous path of self-discovery becomes possible and has many the
same beliefs as the individual striving to pursue moral development. However, Weaver reissued
a warning uttered by Aristotle, this development could only occur when society has agreed upon
a set of social expectations that promotes both economic and political freedom.
In the most realistic terms, it was Weaver’s (2006) belief, a perfect life-long pursuit of
virtue is nearly impossible to attain. For most people, life’s failures become opportunities for
improvement for those who want to learn from life’s lessons and continue the pursuit for virtue.
As with I.R. (Bradford, 1966), failure was never a reason to stop, it was an opportunity to re-
examine the decisions that lead to failure and make the necessary adjustments. Setbacks and
failures occur throughout humanity on a daily basis; consequently, the true worth of a virtuous
individual lies in the ability to recover by improvising, adapting, and overcoming any adversity
that may be in his or her path.
From a leadership development standpoint, Weaver (2006) suggested to those who tried
to be virtuous with some measurable success could be examples to others; this thought was
reiterated by Thoms (2008). Weaver (2006) also believed that through interaction with others in
small groups, the virtuous through their actions could lead by example, facilitate, and mentor
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those wanting to develop a virtuous path. The problem for those seeking to become virtuous is
becoming an aggressive zealot while trying to impose his or her beliefs on others. The virtuous
path has always been about establishing a moral identity then following a path of self-discovery
and improvement. It was never about an individual following the mandates and edicts of those
who think they somehow know better than others seeking knowledge.
Two different authors who captured the pursuit of virtue were Chisholm and King.
Chisholm’s (2007) description of a Machiavellian version of virtue required an individual to seek
narcissistic excellence by achieving personal goals. While King’s (1988) belief in virtue had a
narrower focus as it encourages the individual to seek excellence in developing a complete life.
More importantly, developing virtue could assist the individual in achieving the breadth
dimension as they assist others. This was where the two searches for excellence took different
paths. Chisholm’s (2007) was a concept built in developing the length or egocentric aspect of life
only. While Weaver’s concept mimicked the three dimensions of a complete life and would take
the individual to the height of life. The antithesis of the virtue, as described by King (1988) and
Weaver (2006), has been narcissism. For example, one of the goals of virtue was to develop a
certain amount of self-love as King mentioned; without self-love, it was “impossible to love
others” (p. 41). However, if self-love turned into self-absorption, self-absorption would cause the
individual to care little for others in need and the individual would become void of all love
except for oneself. This was the fallacy of Machiavellian virtue and Chisholm’s endorsement of
it.
According to Weaver (2007), to prevent self-absorbing behavior, an individual needs to
appraise their own actions and actively edit any undesirable behaviors. If an individual chooses
not to morally self-evaluate or self-censure, it is a form of cowardice because the individual
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chooses to ignore or refuse to see the imperfections in their character. King (1986) would add
emphasis by suggesting that those who follow an individual that fails to understand what he or
she sees in the mirror; hardship and pain become potential outcomes. Thom’s (2008) pointed out
that organizations plagued with a narcissistic leader(s), success will only last as long as the
character flaws do not inhibit sound judgment in regards to the organization. This ultimately
takes the person back to Weaver’s (2006) original concern of this section. If the individual has
taken a virtuous path based on societal expectations, they may end up disagreeing with the
organization. If they take the path that follows the virtues as determined by the organization, then
they may end up breaking laws. The correct path as suggested by Weaver requires organizations
and individuals to pursue virtue as pre-determined by society, then work together to make any
corrections on an as needed basis.
To expand upon the weaknesses within leadership and organizations, Moberg (2006)
wrote an article on the ethical blind spots that occur in leadership and throughout the
organization. More specifically, ethical blind spots that occur during the creation of a leader’s
moral foundation generate systematic errors that could distort the leader’s organizational moral
composition. Moberg went on to explain a frame as personal interpretive perspective and a blind
spot occurs when bias, personal experience, or traditional codes restrict a leader’s or an
individual’s frame. As a result, the leader or individual could omit significant information during
the decision making process. Moberg continued on to describe one potential source of blind spots
that has occurs as an individual develops professionally, they could ignore their moral
foundation. This was a point reiterated by Thoms (2008). In other words, an individual could
become so self-absorbed in the pursuit of their business and personal goals that he or she ignores
various social expectations because the end justified the means.
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Rightly, Moberg (2006) also mentioned that most business related reward systems create
blind spots because they are strictly competency based, which has the potential to induce less
than ethical behavior. Despite the overlapping systems that promote performance-based behavior
throughout organizations, Moberg suggested that leaders evaluate subordinates more on their
moral competence, than their professional competence. A failure to do so could encourage more
moral or ethical transgressions highlighting the struggle between job proficiency and morality-
based competencies. Again, the points made in this paragraph where reiterated by Thoms (2008).
As Moberg (2006) continued, he noted that the failure of the WorldCom, Enron, and
Arthur Anderson had more to do with the failure of leadership in not recognizing the unethical
behavior of their subordinates, than it had to do with the leadership structure promoting and
encouraging these acts. It was at this point Moberg and Thoms’ views on leadership began to
disagree. For example, Moberg (2006) wrote about whistleblowers in the workplace and
provided reasons why managers ignored their claims of criminal impropriety. According to
Moberg, whistle-blowers did not phrase their messages of impropriety using the correct context.
Using Moberg’s logic, a person should not waste their time making claims to leaders about right
and wrong. Hypothetically, if an individual claims sexual harassment in the work place, in order
to get a business leader to act requires him or her to tell the leader that if they did nothing the
business risks losing tens of thousands of dollars in legal proceedings. Thoms (2008) view was
simple, regardless of the impact to the business; the leader must be compelled to act for benefit
of all stakeholders. To do otherwise would promote an environment of corruption as noted in a
majority of Moberg’s examples that Thoms’ used in his research.
As confirmed by King (1986), a morally responsible leader would act regardless whether
the context of the claim is business issue or not. Weaver’s (2006) belief paralleled King’s, if an
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individual or leader wants to develop, they should respond to moral or ethical situations without
using risk or cost scenarios. Moberg (2006) even acknowledged this because he admitted that
subordinates did evaluate leaders on their morality, because subordinates have to know what they
can potentially get away with on a daily basis. As suggested by Thoms (2008), this meant a
leader has to react or bear the consequences of their inappropriate response because their
subordinates would make decisions based on that response. Consequently, leaders needed to
react proactively with a sound societal moral basis or the ethical wellbeing of the organization
and subordinates are in jeopardy.
In consideration of leadership and human development, Moberg’s (2006) initial premise
found in this article appeared to be sound; the article broke down with some of its supporting
logic and examples. Furthermore, Moberg’s article suggested morality and virtue development in
individuals derived from the organization via the leader, not society. Kohlberg (1981), Weaver
(2006), and Thoms (2008) believed that morality and virtue derived from society and
organizational problems occur because of systematic issues in leadership. According to Weaver,
when leaders do not pass along the directive of the organization or fail to see issues in
subordinates due to blind spots, the problem is with the leader not the individual. This would
become especially true if the origin of virtue, as Moberg suggested, is the organization.
In reference to subordinates acting on their own moral foundation or the purpose-
rationality of the institution, Courpasson and Dany (2003) tried to analyze the extent to which has
played a more dominant role. As the authors noted, if people acted solely on the purpose-
rationality of the institution then there would be a strong case in which they were acting out
either indifferently or obediently. However, a vast social dynamic exists in various organizations
as individuals operate in the gray zones of institutional code of conducts; this is where the moral
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foundation of the individual comes into play. Courpasson and Dany suggested using rhetoric to
reduce the institutional gray zones, which would increase the purpose-rationality of the
institution. In doing so, the intent of the authors is to increase the submissive qualities of
obedience and indifference in individuals. Moberg (2006) suggested that reducing the size of the
gray zone or blind spot provides the best opportunity for leaders to help individuals to develop
since the individual and their leader could work together to determine good and bad behavior.
Unfortunately, working together according Courpasson and Dany (2003) meant the leader using a
series of questions and platitudes that form rhetoric to shape the individual to believe in their
version of morality. If the leader fails to address ethical blind spots, Courpasson and Dany
believed that the leader would ignore unethical behavior and endorse the gray zone actions of his
or her subordinates through inaction.
Courpasson and Dany (2003) went further and proposed using rhetoric on a much larger
scale. It was their conviction that the use of rhetoric to increase the submissive qualities of
indifference and obedience should not be limited to the number of employees working at the
institution or organization. In order for rhetoric to be truly effective, a coerced society needs to
believe that being submissive is good for the collective. In doing so, Courpasson and Dany were
passionate in their belief that a society would “witness the rebirth of an ambivalent authoritarian
personality” (p. 1257). Especially since the natural state of humanity was being obedient to
authoritarian rule. Furthermore, Courpasson and Dany (2003) seemed excited at being able to
quote this next passage from the book, the authoritarian personality. The authoritarian was
“enlightened and superstitious, proud to be an individualist and in constant fear of not being like
all the others, jealous of his independence and inclined to submit blindly to power and authority”
(Adorno et al, 1982, p. xi). That tortured passage read as if Kets de Vries (2001) wrote it in his
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study on the anarchist within: Clinical reflections on Russian character and leadership style in
which he described the Russian psyche while under Communist rule in much the same fashion. A
Russian leader was a tortured and abusive bi-polar individual that was capable of lashing out at
subordinates, while submissive in accepting the abuses of his or her leaders.
The theories of Friedman (2002), King (1986), Thoms (2008), and Weaver (2006) stand
in utter contrast with Courpasson and Dany’s (2003) entire article. Using rhetoric to increase
submissive qualities was endorsing a step backwards in individual and human development.
Especially when Courpasson and Dany suggested that blind obedience was required from all
individuals to prop up the organization. Friedman (2002) and Hayek (2007) believed that blind
obedience lead to groupthink, totalitarianism, and enslavement for all individuals not in power.
Furthermore, obedience erroneously assumed that top leadership was always moral and ethical.
Blind obedience was the reason why the Allies hanged Germans at Nuremburg in 1946 (Zupan,
2007). Zupan (2007) and Drolet’s (2008) research actually provided examples of why ambivalent
authoritarian rule in the guise of democratic socialism did not work.
Leadership
In research conducted by Courpasson and Dany, Feldman and Feldman, Moberg, and
Weaver, they spoke of how organizations play a role in altering the moral makeup of individuals
to attain some level of development. In this final section of the literature review, the analysis
focuses on leadership’s ability to influence individual moral development. It begins with Thoms
and his perspective on ethical leadership. Thoms’ theories will be compared and contrasted with
Chisholm and Major’s analysis of the brutally effective Machiavellian methods to attain and
wield political power that continue to serve as a reference guide for aspiring unscrupulous
leaders. In addition, the comparison also includes Holt’s perspective on the moral character of
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leaders. The section ends with two examples on the effects of amoral leadership; Drolet and
Zupan’s research provides the examples.
Thoms’s research was alarmingly unique. Alarming in the sense that many authors
discussed previously tried to downplay the importance of a leader’s influence on a person’s
moral development. It was unique since it was dissimilar with the theories of Chisholm, Major,
and Holt. In Thoms’s (2008) analysis of several organizations, he determined that a leader did
have a tremendous influence on the moral composition of an organization and more specifically
the individuals that makeup that organization. Thoms even suggested that a leader should not
have an ethical gray zone because hesitation or second-guessing would erroneously promote
negative moral conduct. Consequently, a leader must have a well-established and concise value
system. If a leader demonstrates a willingness to abandon personal and organizational moral
codes, the leader needs training or removed from his or her position. In every instance, the leader
should assume responsibility of a situation and lead by example.
If a leader’s subordinates fail, the leader has failed and needs to learn from the event. In
some instances, a leader fails because he or she did not provide their subordinates with the tools
to succeed. In other instances, the leader put individuals in situations where success is nearly
impossible to attain. A failure in leadership could also draw from a leader’s complacent and
apathetic attitude concerning moral individual development. A leader must seek the continual
improvement in the moral development health of individuals throughout the organization.
Without continual improvement in individuals, complacency and apathy have always promoted
unacceptable ethics and moral conduct. As noted in Thoms’s (2008) research, complacency and
apathy were one of the root causes that destroyed a strong corporate value system. As the value
system disintegrated, so went the organization in to ruin.
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Failure was not an option as Chisholm noted in his research that defended Machiavellian
morality. According to Chisholm (2007), Machiavelli’s moral concepts become useful tools in
governments with strong central planning units because they are where the power and the
remnants of freedom reside. The first concept Chisholm discussed was the Machiavellian version
of virtue, which differed from what King (1988), Thoms (2008), and Weaver (2006) had in mind.
According to Chisholm, Machiavelli believed in the ancient Greek concept of “arête”, which
Machiavelli labeled as “virtù” (2007, ¶ 7). Agathocles of Syracuse first prescribed to this notion
of virtue and it had little to do with the nurturing and morally sound version of virtue as defined
by Weaver or Thoms. In the Machiavellian world, virtù was similar to Weber’s (1958) definition
of a calling since it was the pursuit of excellence. However, the pursuit of excellence at any cost,
as suggested by Chisholm, often had disastrous consequences as Thoms noted in his research on
ethical leadership. Furthermore, excellence at any cost suggests that it is okay for a leader to have
an amoral value system as Thoms alluded to in his research. To offset this absence or amoral
value system, Chisholm noted in his research that it required an exceptionally strong narcissistic
leader to bend people to his or her strength of character. In this instance, the individual would
become an appendage to the leader with very little freedom to develop on an individual basis. If
the self-absorbed leader allows freedom, it would require the relinquishing of Machiavellian
power and in turn open the door to failure.
Another Machiavellian moral leadership concept, as noted by Chisholm (2007), requires
the leader to serve the state or institution with dedication and loyalty. Chisholm accentuated this
point when he wrote about the reward for a Machiavellian leader is the wielding of power, not
the money and personal riches that may come with it. For Machiavelli, a leader that displays self-
less dedication to the people of his state, he or she would gain enough support to defeat any rival
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trying to use the masses to overthrow him or her. This assumption provides another example of
why the situations noted by Drolet (2008) and Zupan (2007) failed since serving the people in
both cases was never the leaders’ primary concern. Ironically, this Machiavellian moral concept
is very similar to Thoms (2008) belief that leaders serve their subordinates. However, the
difference between Chisholm and Thoms’s views on leaders serving was who stood to benefit.
Chisholm’s ultimately was a self-serving concept; meanwhile, Thoms’s concept could range
from altruism to the mutual benefit of all stakeholders. Ultimately, there were no losers in what
Thoms offered. Maslow (1971) had a similar belief to Thoms as it relates to leaders and
individual moral development. Maslow gave credence to the belief that a leader that has self-less
dedication to the society that he or she leads should want to promote individual development of
all types. Regrettably, Chisholm believed that in the Machiavellian world, individual
development had to have limits since a strong leader could not let potential adversaries develop.
In agreeing with Chisholm (2007), Major (2007), who wrote a new argument for
morality: Machiavelli and the ancients, believed that Machiavelli’s work on the Prince was
actually a compilation of some of the greatest thoughts of the ancients as it related to the
acquisition and use of power. It was a point confirmed by Chisholm’s description of arête. The
actual value of this paper by Major was not the influence that ancients had on Machiavelli, but
rather the Machiavellian maxims and their ancient wisdom. These moral maxims formed the
basis of Chisholm and Major’s evidence. Since the last two maxims provide examples of the
ends justifying the means, King (1986) and Thoms (2008) are clear on how that concept
negatively affects morality, leadership, and individual development since both of those maxims
require individuals to be at their worst in order to survive a perceived threat. The focus of these
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maxims is not just potential internal enemies; it is also a way of dealing with external enemies
and their desire to acquire power and position in the world.
As Major (2007) identified the three Machiavellian maxims, the linage of the first maxim
was tied back to the ancients and was considered a natural condition that stated all people want to
improve their current situation. Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980) wrote about an
individual’s desire to improve their current situation or the future prospects of their children has
been one of the driving forces behind humankind’s desire to succeed throughout history. It was
the driving theme behind Taft and White’s (2007) thoughts on ethics education and inductive
reasoning. Furthermore, the natural desire for an individual to improve their current condition
provides the potential energy necessary to keep the continual individual moral development
process as Thoms (2008) wrote about ongoing. One last comparison, Major’s point actually
provides further evidence as to why Courpasson and Dany’s (2003) beliefs about an individual’s
natural state being obedient is erroneous.
The next maxim and the second natural condition requires the leader to develop a method
to maximize the first natural condition. Major (2007) wrote that individuals wanting to improve
their station would assist the Machiavellian leader. However, the leader would also be required to
harm these individuals as they may hinder further attainment of power. For example, Major
suggested that leaders building a power base might want to promote “easygoing market place,
relatively low taxes, and occasional acts of humanity and munificence” (p. 175). In other words,
the effectual leader must offer the appearance of political and economic freedom to allow
individual development. This illusion of freedom would be something quickly recalled on a
moment’s notice. Recalling freedom is the inevitable response of a Machiavellian leader, since
their mission in life will always be protecting and enhancing their powerbase. When recalled, it
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harms those that invested heavily in the false pretense of economic and political freedom. If so,
as Maslow (1971) warned, morality and individual development ceases to exist, as development
has become an obstruction to the power structure. The second maxim is the antithesis to ethical
leadership (Thoms, 2008), virtue (Weaver, 2006), and a society built on agape (King, 1998). It
only offers tokenism, in which King, Thoms, and Weaver found abhorrent.
This lead to Machiavelli’s last maxim that Major (2007) noted, it requires an effectual
leader to punish anyone that has a natural overabundance of desire or ability to acquire money,
power, and information. A leader must not allow adversaries to develop; the leader must control
individual development, whether it is one person or group of people. According to Major, if
individuals become too rich or powerful, then they could breed discontent or be a source that
endorses discontent. At this point, individual development becomes a matter of state security.
This exemplified the amoral virtue as expressed by Chisholm (2007) while eliminating virtue
(Weaver, 2006) and ethical leadership (Thoms, 2008). In essence, the control and destruction of
any individual development becomes a necessary function of the state. King (1986) rightfully
showed his disdain for Machiavellian theories because the end does not justify the means.
In the pursuit of power, as noted by Chisholm (2007) and Major (2007), Machiavelli
suggested using numerous rhetorical tricks to soften the bluntness of an authoritarian power grab.
The same was true about Holt’s (2006) suggestion that a leader should use rhetoric in the same
manner as noted by Courpasson and Dany (2003). The manner in which Holt used rhetoric
suggested she molded it with a belief in ethical relativism since it required a leader to pose
numerous questions in order to understand the nuances of an event or issue. These questions
form an amoral and dubious piece of reasoning in order to get subordinates to do something that
they would normally find morally objectionable.
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Holt’s premise had a major flaw in it; King (1981) described it as ethical relativism, since
ethical relativism “accepts no stable moral absolutes” (p. 98). In addition, as one of the original
leaders of ethical relativism suggested, Lenin, lying and deceit were justified by victory.
According to Thoms (2008), right and wrong were trivial issues when waging class warfare,
especially since the first victim of it was the moral truth. The second victim was individual
development. When a leader combines ethical relativism and rhetorical reasoning (Holt, 2006)
with Courpasson and Dany’s (2003) blind obedience, the door opens to allow a leader’s sadistic
and subservient followers the potential to inflict inhumane harm upon others (Hayek, 2007).
King (1986) had cautioned that this would allow an individual to justify their atrocities by saying
they were just doing their job or following orders.
Holt lifted a quote out of context by implying that Friedman endorsed a concept where a
manager should not be concerned with their or their subordinates virtue and moral development.
In doing so, Holt left out the part where a manger should never engage in “deception or fraud”
(Friedman, 2002, p. 133). To further counter Holt’s point, Friedman (Friedman & Friedman,
1980) understood the importance of stable social expectations, since they served as the basis of
positive individual development. Stable moral codes or social expectations were what Weaver
(2006) and Thoms (2008) determined as a necessary foundation when developing individuals and
organizations. As King (1986) noted, a stable platform in deciding what is right and wrong
prevents an individual from committing horrible acts. If not, as hate begets hate, victims and the
offenders quickly become interchangeable. According to Thoms (2008), leaders must encourage
positive moral development, not deter it with ethical relativism and tokenistic rhetoric as
prescribed by Holt.
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As evidence that individual development suffers when inept leaders curtail political and
social freedom, Drolet (2008) wrote a flawed article on political theory entitled, a morality tale,
or tyranny in Ireland. Drolet’s own text highlighted some of the flaws found within the article.
However, these flaws still provide a necessary piece of evidence pertaining to individual
development and the impact of morally bankrupt leaders that restrict freedom. From a theoretical
standpoint, the article tried to pass off Ireland and the French colony of Algeria as failed attempts
in democracy. Drolet countered his own inaccurate statement when he admitted that Algeria and
Ireland were centrally planned countries; France still controlled Algeria, while Ireland had a
ruling class.
For Friedman (2002), Algeria and Ireland provided examples of where political and
economic freedoms were restricted. Drolet (2008) expounded upon Friedman’s point when he
went on to suggest that the aristocracy that ruled Ireland was highly despised. As for North
Africa, France tried to “reform the rural economy” and tried to grow an “indigenous middle
class” (p. 242). Drolet even labeled this as a “classic account of modern tyranny” (p. 242). Yet,
he took a literary leap of faith to call it “as a great study of the failure of democracy” (Drolet,
2008, p. 242). Limited political and economic freedom under a centralized authority serves as a
poor example of democracy.
It should not be any wonder why both countries failed as democracies since Algeria and
Ireland were not close to being an independent democracy. However, both serve as an excellent
example of why the use of tokenism by political leaders, as defined by King (1986) and Thoms
(2008), fails to promote individual development. Furthermore, Drolet (2008) displayed contempt
for those that have an independent spirit by proxy when he used the observations of Beaumont.
Drolet described independent thought in terms of being “haughty, wild, without restraint, savage,
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inordinate pride, and unbounded confidence” (p. 244). This description seems to capture a
portion of characteristics that Courpasson, Dany, and Kets deVries extolled in their articles about
submissive leaders. In response to the authors that wrote about obedience and moral imagination,
which were traits of ethical relativism, it is okay to have characteristics similar to those described
by Drolet only as long as the individual is submissive and ultimately knows who is in charge and
act accordingly.
Despite this, Drolet (2008) advocates one other fallacy in his article concerning the
middle class. In extrapolating points made about restrictive land reform policies that hindered
economic growth that in turn delayed the establishment of a middle class. Drolet defined a
successful democracy as a robust middle class. The concept requires a central planning unit to
stop individual development at a point where robust middle class could grow in numbers.
According to Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980), an artificially robust middle class
establishes the bar for individual development low enough to provide token success. In addition,
an artificial middle class unintentionally or intentionally creates a barrier as to prevent class
movement to the upper class so the desirable middle class could grow in numbers. Friedman
believed that the growth of a middle class was never a good indicator of democracy and
economic freedom, especially when progressive tax systems and other restrictions on economic
freedom prevented anyone reaching higher levels of prosperity and individual development. It
was Friedman’s belief that class movement, from high to low, low to high had historically been a
better indicator of economic health.
According to Weaver (2006) and Thoms (2008), good leaders allow individuals to learn
from their mistakes and reap the rewards of their success. This is necessary in order for the
individual to fully develop and understand their true potential. Individuals do not learn or
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develop when a leader or government ignores their subordinates (Thoms, 2008) and then
artificially props them up (King, 1986). For an individual to maximize their potential, it requires
economic and political freedom (Friedman, 2002). The inverse of this is true as well. Any system
that encourages leaders to issue punitive taxes, promote class warfare, or purposely restrict
freedom, individual development slows, if not stops. It was this point that Drolet (2008) appeared
to have missed throughout his article.
Zupan (2007) wrote about what he described as a philosophical plea for innocence in
regards to any war crimes that he and his fellow soldiers, throughout the armed services,
allegedly committed while he served as a Colonel in the United States Army as the Al-Qaeda
insurgency in Iraq was at or near its zenith. The war stateside had turned into what Chisholm
(2007) would define as a Machiavellian style power play for those seeking to undermine the
Bush Administration. The political turmoil characterized the war as unjust and plagued by
alleged war crimes that left many in military’s leadership ranks questioning their involvement
(Zupan, 2007). For example, the alleged massacre at Haditha was in the news and Rep. John
Murtha of Pennsylvania had proclaimed the U.S. Marines guilty of being war criminals before
the Naval Criminal Investigative Service filed charges (Miklaszewski and Viqueira, 2006). From
a moral leadership and individual development standpoint, Chisholm’s article on Machiavelli
suggested that Machiavelli would have despised the actions of politicians who voted to send
troops to war and betray their service as the politicians became active in providing propaganda to
enemies of the state.
This was the backdrop to the article and the events it captured left leaders like Zupan
(2007) questioning their involvement. A major piece of Zupan and his subordinate’s defense in
any action carried out was the Moral Equality of Combatants (MEC) principle. Simply stating
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that combatants that were not in a position of power could not be held accountable for their
actions since they were in a position of not knowing if they were in a just or unjust war.
Typically, combat personnel in positions of knowing were staff officers serving on the “Joint
Staff” (p. 42). Zupan expanded the MEC to emphasize his defense due to ignorance when
wielding deadly force. His example in explaining this defense was a corrupt command level
police officer sending in a plain-clothes unit to arrest a group of criminals. However, within the
group was an undercover policeperson close to discovering the corrupt police chief. Knowing the
situation was going to erupt in gunfire, the police chief hoped to eliminate the undercover
policeperson in a friendly fire incident. The plain close officers and the undercover policeperson
would be innocent of any wrongdoing since they were ignorant of the others presence at the time
of action.
This philosophical plea of ignorance (Zupan, 2007) demonstrated the impact of self-
serving highly politicized leadership on the command structure, morality, and in turn individual
development. In the face of such despicable leadership emanating from politicians, those that
serve become defeated and suffer fractured unity integrity during periods of deployment
(Chisholm, 2007). According to Zupan, this only made the deployment that much more
dangerous because they had to worry about the enemy, the troops that they served with, and the
unknown of how they were going to be perceived by their respective communities when they
returned home. The amplification in stress level only increased the chances of units making
mistakes and in turn increased the chances of civilian and unit casualties. Furthermore, an
individual involved in those situations could not develop in an environment of oppressing
negativity, death, and the potential loss of moral support of those they have sworn to defend
(Maslow, 1971). The best that individual soldiers could hope to do was to survive as best they
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could and focus on Maslow’s (1943) lower level needs. For those that had an avenue, they could
write about their innocence using MEC to claim ignorance when political leadership has
designated them as expendable pawns in their quest for political power using an approach that
even Machiavelli, as noted by Chisholm (2007) and Major (2007) , would detest.
Conclusion
In this literature review, 15 articles were critically reviewed that dealt with the topic of
moral development as it relates to the individual, leadership, and the organization. During this
review, the path of discovery involved Weaver’s (2006) belief that virtue and the power of
enlightenment are necessary to push back the darkness of ignorance and ethical relativism.
Inversely, institutionalized purpose-rationality (Rutgers & Schreurs, 2006), a wishful return of an
ambivalent dictator (Courpasson & Dany, 2003), using rhetoric to supplant virtue (Holt, 2006),
and blind obedience (Moberg, 2006) would lead individuals to ethical relativism, secularism, and
technocracy. Ethical relativism assumed several descriptions; Chisholm (2007) described it as
effectual morality, Patriotta and Starkey’s (2008) explained it as moral imagination, Courpasson
and Dany (2003) introduced indifference or obedience, for Holt (2006) it was rhetoric, and the
Supreme Court’s search for a universal law captured its intent (Patton, 2007).
I also determined that ethical relativism requires a central planning unit to establish a
practice of organizational remembering (Feldman & Feldman, 2006) to supplant the historical
religious morality used to fill the void between laws and freedom. As the noted authors searched
for various renditions of ethical relativism, Drolet (2008) inadvertently offered evidence that
central systems were immoral and Zupan’s (2007) plea for innocence provided further damning
evidence that leaders who practice ethical relativism were to be despised by all. Even
Machiavelli, as noted by Chisholm (2007), had an issue with ethical relativism when it started to
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destroy the state from within. These negative assertions about ethical relativism emanated from
the theories and beliefs of Kenneally (2009), Thoms (2008), and Weaver (2006).
Freedom and development on the individual level were key concerns of Kenneally, Taft,
White, Thoms, and Weaver. To start with, true individual development stems from a well-known
and consistent set of social expectations (Taft & White, 2007; Kenneally, 2009; Weaver, 2006;
Thoms, 2008) that applies to all levels of power and occupation. Social expectations would need
to evolve because ethical blind spots (Moberg, 2006) do exist; however, it was evident in several
pieces that inept leadership (Zupan, 2007), moral imagination (Patriotta & Starkey, 2008),
increased bureaucracy (Drolet, 2008), and organizational remembering (Feldman & Feldman,
2006) are the antithesis of a consistent set of social expectations and hindered individual
development.
Along with social expectations and freedom, individual development requires active
societal participation of the individual (Weaver, 2006). As Thoms (2008) proposed, leaders and
individuals must strive for continual individual development that included active participation if
a society hoped to advance. Feldman and Feldman (2006), Holt (2006), Kenneally (2009), Taft
and White (2007), Thoms, and Weaver all believed in the power of active participation.
Furthermore, Holt, Kenneally, Thoms, and Weaver considered it mandatory for leaders to lead by
example while mentoring the individual development of their subordinates. Kenneally believed
that humanity needed to promote and encourage selfless leadership, because the alternative was
Machiavellian style politics currently employed throughout government.
Unfortunately, a government that believes that the end justifies the means would be
required to hinder individual development. According to Major (2007), this becomes all too true
as all power must be consolidated within the control of the Machiavellian leader. However, in the
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initial stages of gathering power, the Machiavellian leader allows individual development to
occur in order to develop a robust support base. When deemed appropriate by the Machiavellian
leader as in an effort to support his or her political ambitions, the leader is required to exploit his
or her own support base. As a result, individual development ceases to exist because the
Machiavellian leader destroys the freedom necessary to develop in order defeat external enemies
or prevent internal enemies from developing.
In order to enhance the theories found in the breadth, the application portion of this KAM
will incorporate the following items found in the breadth and depth to create a path that
rediscovers moral development. The path begins by focusing on the selfish desires and then
moves on to integrate morals, ethics, and virtues that transcend time (Kenneally, 2009). Most of
the morals, ethics, and virtues to be included in the application will have similar constructs as the
Golden Rule, the Good Samaritan, the Ethic of Reciprocity, or the Ten Commandments (King,
1986; Kenneally, 2009; Taft & White, 2007). Simply, the design of the application mimics
Thoms (2008) belief that ethics, morals, and virtues requires continual exercise in order to find
balance between Rutgers and Schreurs’s (2006) value-rationality and purpose-rationality. The
emphasis as suggested by King (as cited by Carson & Holloran, 1998) and Weaver (2006) will be
on the process and not the end as Marx (Marx and Engels, 1959) believed. A corrupt process will
always have less than desirable results; in regards to moral development, a corrupt process
hinders individual development.
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Application
AMDS 8232: Professional Practice in Leadership & Human Development
Rediscovering a Path to Human Development
In an effort to explain the accompanying presentation entitled “Rediscovering a Path to
Human Development,” this essay will define the social setting, audience, and objectives; the
research process, analysis, and presentation; and use waypoints to highlight findings, note
observations, and identify a lesson learned. In essence, the presentation provides a theoretical
path to human development that generates the potential for positive social change. As a result,
the primary goal in creating the “Rediscovering a Path to Human Development” presentation is
to remind or even enlighten students that a proven path to human development does exist and it
includes the concept of moral individual development. The effort to remind the student is an
attempt to remedy the moral decay generated by two dominant social economic systems.
Context
Social Setting
The presentation is a general studies class designed for a social setting that is comprised
of 10 to 15 undergraduate students. This setting imitates Taft and White’s (2007) methodology in
presenting their research on inductive reasoning to business students. In doing so, it incorporates
transformational educational aspects that require the student to self-reflect and share their belief
systems. Information and discussion themes noted in the bullet points for each of the topics are to
inform as well as elicit discussion of a personal nature. Since discussion is highly encouraged,
the classroom setting cannot be large. With a large class, the positives of open discussion become
a burden slowing progress and allowing students to disengage mentally. Since the overall size of
the class will be relatively small, it can easily incorporate an online classroom format similar to
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those at Walden. Online classrooms offer the student anonymity to be more open than the student
would in a classroom setting. The negative to an online classroom is that it excludes non-verbal
communication cues that can add emphasis as students define their moral frame to others.
Audience
The target audience consists of traditional undergraduate students taking general or core
competency classes. The literature review and analysis in the depth provides the rational to
involve this larger group of students. Many of the non-business research articles focused on
business schools as the vehicle to promote positive social change. It appeared that many of the
authors were trying to fix societal problems by offering human development solutions that
targeted a specific school of thought and a relatively small portion of students in regards to the
total student population. The intent of this class was the inverse; target numerous students with
the simplistic notion of moral individual development.
There are two specific reasons for targeting traditional undergraduates. First, a majority of
traditional undergraduates are typically at the beginning of their college education process. It
seems prudent that a foundational single session class promoting continuing education and a
general code of conduct would increase the chances of students returning for post-graduate
education. In addition, the positive learning environment is achievable by promoting morality
similar to the ethic of reciprocity that complements concepts that most universities try to advance
in their orientation classes. The second reason for setting a standard early in the continuing
education process is that it provides the greatest potential for social change. High school students
may not be mature enough to provide a depth of reasoning while graduates near the end of their
undergraduate work or beginning their post-graduate work may have enhanced moral frames that
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will make social change difficult. Undergraduate students offer the most potential to justify the
resources needed in a small classroom setting.
Objectives
The presentation on human development has four objectives. The first objective is to
define a successful human development process. King (1986) defined success as a system that
provides the most development potential for a majority of individuals in a society. Furthermore,
Friedman (2002), King (1986), Kohlberg (1981), and Maslow (1971), were very clear that the
most successful human development process was one based on moral individual development
that operated in an environment that encourages freedom. Friedman (2002) extended this thought
even further to define freedom as both economic and political since one cannot provide optimal
potential without the other. Bradford (1966) provided an example of this combined potential
during Plymouth Plantation’s troubled beginning and subsequent need to inject economic
freedom in their planned production system. Together, freedom and moral development have
historically offered the most potential for human development.
The second objective is repeatability, defined as the capacity to start or reinvigorate a
dying human development system. Repeatability was something Bradford demonstrated in his
notes on Plymouth Plantation. Friedman (2002) and Weber (1958) provided another example
with their descriptions of the late eighteenth century. While King’s (1986) belief in the founding
of America suggested moral individual development is repeatable. In each example, the authors
noted that human development has flourished if the key points identified in the presentation,
“Rediscovering a Path to Human Development,” exist. They include both types of freedom; a
system of mutual understanding that leads to mutual appreciation and respect; and the
individual’s desire for continual improvement. Thoms (2008) and Weaver (2006) reiterated these
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same key points in their research on moral development. If the key points exist, an environment
of success makes repeatability the easiest objective to obtain. However, if the key points do not
exist, the human development process based on moral individual development will have a
difficult time getting started.
The third objective is to define a human development system that promotes positive
social change. Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1980) declared that a free society often becomes
the most generous and desirable because it exists at the mutual benefit of other individuals. In
doing so, the potential for positive social change from an informed and free society was
exponentially more efficient than any offered by a centrally planned command and control
structure. In simple terms, an energized and informed mass made up of millions of individuals
have outperformed any centrally planned agency burdened with bureaucratic red tape. Friedman
went further and stated that a centrally controlled or planned organization has to control the rate
of change in order to manipulate human development for its purposes. On an individual level, the
process of moral individual development in a free society has encouraged and promoted positive
social change as a necessary function of the development process. Evidence of this can be found
in the upper levels of Maslow’s (1943) hierarchy of needs, the fifth and sixth stages of
Kohlberg’s (1981) human development process, and King’s (1988) height and breadth
dimensions.
The last objective is sustainability and it is the most difficult of the objectives.
Sustainability asks the question: Can a human development system survive multiple generations?
Sustainability was an issue brought up by Weber (1958) and Marx (Marx & Engels, 1959) when
both authors spoke of moral decay from different points of view. Weber’s concern was about the
natural moral decay that occurred in a capitalistic system, while Marx found morality abhorrent
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and suggested destroying it. The presentation attempted to solve this issue by identifying several
codes of conduct named by various authors in the breadth and depth that established a moral
foundation of mutual cooperation. In addition, Friedman (2002) often warned that a socially
responsible individual needed to protect both economic and political freedom to ensure that
future generations could have the same freedom and resources to develop a moral foundation in
manner that was efficient and beneficial to the individual. What is often lost in a free society is
the cost of freedom (Friedman & Friedman, 1980). Hence, the need for strong education systems
that emphasize the historical lessons learned that provide context in the protection of freedom
(Friedman, 2002; Taft & White, 2007; Thoms, 2008; Weaver, 2006). If not, future generations
will lose the importance in protecting freedom as they become apathetic and complacent about
the knowledge of sacrifice and the lessons learned by their predecessors.
The four objectives capture a holistic approach to human development via moral
individual development. There are many paths for individuals to find enlightenment, the
approach in the presentation is not to suggest that it is the only way, it is to suggest that a path
with a proven record of accomplishment does exist. It only requires individuals with the moral
courage and commitment to ensure that the result is always justifiable by the means. As King
(1986) notes, the process of defining the character of an individual includes the manner in which
they complete any task.
Research Process
The research process was a qualitative search that started with Weber’s (1958) lament
about moral decay causing individuals in a capitalistic system to regress from a human
development perspective. Weber suggested morality allowed mutually beneficial exchanges
between individuals to exist; as a result, this mutual cooperative effort made them more efficient
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and allowed both individuals to prosper. Morality’s absence caused individuals to pray upon each
other as validated by Marx’s (1970) statement about the ends justifying the means. As a result,
Weber (1958) noted that individuals’ prevented or discouraged from seeking better opportunities
suffered developmentally. Opportunity was the incentive for development.
An individual having the opportunity to seek a better life, thereby having incentive for
development forced the research in the breadth to include Friedman’s (2002) socio-economic
beliefs about capitalism, economic and political freedom, and the human development concept of
individual responsibility. Friedman’s work required examples of individuals who searched out
freedom to assist others in developing in a mutually beneficial manner. This was where
Bradford’s journal and King’s books became involved in the research. Bradford’s (1966) journal
provided information on two key points. First, it explained how the Plymouth Plantation
experimented with socialism and then had to switch to a capitalistic system in order to survive.
The second was a letter to Bradford that he incorporated into his journal. The letter included
several human development techniques based upon his group’s established moral norms. In
contrast to Bradford’s journal, popular opinion described King’s work during the civil rights
movement as socialistic in nature. Surprisingly, King (1988) dabbled with socialism only during
his earlier years. King (1986) eventually found socialism deplorable since it had an inherent
tendency to destroy human development. His thoughts were it reduced individuals to be nothing
more than pack animals. As a result, King’s work was comparable to Bradford’ journal since
both had similar conclusions. For example, King’s work offered the human development concept
of agape (1981) and a human development process, the three dimensions of a complete life
(1998) as an answer to Weber’s concern about morality.
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When compiling Friedman’s work with Bradford and King’s, a loose structure of human
development via moral individual development came to the forefront. Maslow’s theories and
Kohlberg’s moral development process reinforced and validated after comparing and contrasting
them. In addition, the moral development research conducted in completing the depth provided
further enhancement. In total, the research provided a complete answer to Weber’s lament.
Analysis
Ultimately, the analysis of the research clears up the ambiguity to define human
development in terms of moral individual development. In addition, it helps to clarify the need to
include social aspects in the process of human development because the goal of human
development is to get the individual to think in positive social terms that engages their creativity
to help others. The analysis also provides a reason to start the human development presentation
with a social problem. The presentation attempts to solve the problem through moral individual
development and then ends with the social responsibility of protecting freedom in order to
sustain human development.
The irony to the analysis was that many of the authors who appeared to exclude moral
development as a key to human development provided the best examples to defend moral
development. For example, Marx (1959) and his theories captured in the Communist Manifesto,
Drolet’s (2008) centralized planning morality theory, and Holt’s (2006) use of rhetoric to name a
few. All of them created theories that logically generated more harm than good since they
mimicked Machiavellian theories (Chisholm, 2007; Major, 2007) that required a select group in a
position of power to control human development. According to Major, Machiavellian theory
suggested that these ordained power brokers were required to harm the populace to protect their
self-interests. Consequently, those same theories expected a common individual to believe that a
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self-professed amoral individual in a position of corruptible power would do what was right for
the populace.
Presentation: Rediscovering a Path to Human Development
Presentation
The research and analysis provide the necessary information to create the essential
message in the presentation, which is to rediscover a successful path to human development. The
concept of human development using moral individual development is nothing new. It has
existed before the ancient Greeks; however, the concept of freedom was a rarity throughout
human history. As King (1998) noted, it was always easier to hate than it was to love. Hate in this
instance emanated from a ruling class or central planning entity. It takes a non-conformist to love
thy neighbor and promote holistic human development. The presentation takes the individual
down the path of the non-conformist as King describes.
In taking the path of the non-conformist, the presentation encourages individual
responsibility, continual development, and the concept of interrelatedness. The concept of
interrelatedness as King (1981), Weaver (2006), and Thoms (2008) defined is a belief that all
individuals were connected. Consequently, the actions by one individual could affect the life of
another individual on another continent. By promoting freedom, respect, mutual cooperation, and
continual improvement, the presentation defines positive social change in that context.
Furthermore, as the individual searches for knowledge, the evil of ignorance (Maslow, 1971)
recedes and the potential for positive growth increases.
Friedman (Friedman & Friedman, 1981) suggested that from ignorance, complacency and
apathy would soon follow and provide the perfect environment to twist the potential good that
freedom offers everyone in to something negative requiring regulation and bureaucratic control.
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Freedom, a conceptual foundational strength in the presentation becomes a negative. This in turn
highlights the limitation of any system built upon freedom; it will always be dependent upon
individuals that have moral courage and foresight to know that being free is always a personal
responsibility. This in turn explains why Maslow (1971) and King (1986) believed that freedom
and positive human development have never been a societal norm throughout human history.
Waypoints
In order to halt this cycle of developmental regression, Maslow (1971) and Friedman
(2002) suggested it was necessary to include the protection of freedom as one of the key
waypoints in rediscovering a path to human development. Along with protecting freedom, the
presentation highlights six waypoints that represent the path to human development, which
fulfills the four objectives. The waypoints represent a navigational path to human development
via individual development. As with Kohlberg’s (1981) stages of development, the first three
waypoints have the potential for concurrent completion.
First waypoint. The first waypoint along the path focuses solely on Major’s (2007) belief
that the natural desire of any individual is to improve their current situation. This is selfish in
nature since it requires the individual to focus only on them self as they satisfy their most basic
needs according to Maslow (1943). In doing so, the premise of the first waypoint is to challenge
the individual to find a calling, acquire knowledge, work to prosperity, and find self-love.
Theoretically, the premise of self-focus is found in Kohlberg’s first stages, King’s length
dimension, the launching point of Taft and White’s (2007) inductive reasoning training process,
and Thoms’s (2008) process involving ethical integrity. In attaining this waypoint, the individual
begins to provide an answer to the objective of repeatability.
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Second waypoint. The second waypoint in the presentation requires an individual to
focus on them self as well. However, instead of fulfilling personal needs this waypoint requires
the individual to self-analyze their daily activities in order to spot strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities, and threats. In doing this self-analysis, the process mimics the first step in Taft and
White’s (2007) training process and captures I.R.’s intent in a letter to Bradford (1966). In
addition, it is similar to King’s (1986) belief that if an individual truly understands them self,
they would understand one of their greatest impediments to their own development. An indicator
of self-understanding is patience and forgiveness. If an individual truly understands them self, he
or she will understand their own limitations and be able to spot similar limitations in others. This
allows the individual to appreciate learning process of others. In addition, it provides further
direction answering the objective of repeatability.
Third waypoint. The third waypoint provides examples of moral codes of conduct that
according to Kenneally (2009) already exist on an international level since many religions have
similar concepts. The human development mechanics of what they have to offer is powerful
enough that many legal systems try to emulate their simplicity as they create social contracts
consisting of laws. Codes of conduct and social contracts of mutual cooperation are an important
component of Kohlberg’s stages four and five. They provide a path so the individual can achieve
Maslow’s self-actualization need. Codes of conduct are a prerequisite in the development of
virtue (Weaver, 2006) and inductive reasoning (Taft, and White, 2007). According to Maslow
(1971), codes of conduct are the invisible hand that helps individuals to distinguish between right
and wrong. In practicing them, codes of conduct will allow the individual to understand when it
is prudent to elicit or offer assistance as the Good Samaritan does in King’s (1998) sermon. As
King (1986) notes, social contracts consisting of laws have no meaning unless there is a general
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societal acceptance of a code of conduct that defines acceptable behavior. Friedman (2002)
expounds on this thought when he mentions that laws without morality become the playthings of
fools, the arrogant, and tyrants. When morality in the form of a code of conduct ceases to support
laws, human development suffers. The total sum of the first three waypoint answers the objective
of repeatability.
Fourth waypoint. The fourth waypoint begins the process of directing the individual’s
attention from himself or herself to other individuals within their sphere of influence. In terms of
Kohlberg’s stages of development, it captures the intent of interpersonal accord and conformity
(1981, p. 18) while stressing the importance of enjoying and appreciating the gift of life. To
define it in terms that King (1998) uses, the fourth waypoint encourages the individual to transfer
from length dimension to the breadth dimension while expressing a neighborly love similar to the
Greek love concept of agape. This waypoint encourages the search for virtue as Thoms (2008)
suggests in his research; as a result, it requires the individual to search for and express the good
they have within themselves and be an example to others. The fourth waypoint begins to answer
the positive social change objective.
Fifth waypoint. The fifth waypoint is to get the individual to think holistically about
their development and to share this knowledge with the community. It attempts to get the student
to think of his or her own development path and use the lessons learned to help others. It captures
King (1986), Kohlberg (1981), Maslow (1943), Thoms (2008), Taft and White (2007), and
Weaver’s (2006) methodology in getting individuals to appreciate and understand the concept of
interrelatedness. As the student understands his or her development, they begin to understand the
support and input of others that help make their developmental progression possible. When they
share their trials, tribulations, and lessons learned, they share their potential for positive social
106
change. As King (1986) states, it is never about the result. Life is always about the path that leads
to the result that defines an individual. This is why, in a free society, the path will always be as or
more important than the result.
Sixth waypoint. The final waypoint serves as a safeguard for future generations as they
begin the process of searching for the first waypoint. It is a method of one generation handing off
the responsibility of maintaining freedom to the next so they can work to protect future
generations. It requires a strong education system that teaches students the lesson learned from
previous generations as one of its core subjects. To do so, future students will know the fallacy of
centrally planned systems that breed dependency and developmental regression. According to
Friedman (2002), protecting political and economic freedom is the only way to sustain the
concept of equal opportunity, which is the driving force behind human development.
When the individual travels down the path as laid out in the six waypoints, the individual
emulates a proven path to successful human development that emphasizes individual moral
development. Human development as defined by Maslow (1943 & 1971) and Kohlberg (1981) is
dependent upon individual moral development. Individual moral development is dependent upon
the individual having the freedom to make choices and to learn from those choices. Furthermore,
the quest for knowledge and continual development allows the individual to avoid lessons learnt
by previous generations in a positive atmosphere. The individual development path laid out
includes multiple theoretical paths that share similarities and promote positive social change. It
has a historical track record of proven human development success. King (1986) offered the
United States as an example of its historical success. In total, the six waypoints satisfy all four
objectives necessary for an effective human development system.
107
Summary and Concluding Remarks
Observations
Similar to the path that an individual takes, there are observations and opportunities that I
identify for further research. The first observation involves a specific code of conduct. Moral
development was the foundation that the essay and presentation were both built upon. Kenneally
(2009) and Taft and White (2007) wrote about the Ten Commandments in a manner that
suggested it had a tremendous effect on morality throughout the Western world. The moral
mechanics of cooperation found in the Ten Commandments need to be researched in a non-
religious manner to determine if an international system of mutual cooperation exists, but often
ignored by arrogant fools and dictators.
Another opportunity for further research stems from King’s (1998) sermon entitled
“Unfulfilled Dreams”. The delivery of the sermon occurred a few short weeks before his sudden
death. In the sermon, King spoke about the good he attempted to complete and the manner in
which he pursued it. Dr. Vincent Harding thought the speech was an admission of guilt about an
adulterous affair. However, the text spoke of another affair that needs more research. King had
admitted to having a lifelong desire or flirtation with the concept of socialism. It appeared that he
was apologizing for wasting time and energy with this flirtation. Despite this, his writing was
poignantly emphatic that human development would suffer if socialism prevailed. It was ironic
that his death opened the door to allow socialistic entities to commandeer the post-King era of
the civil rights movement. His ties to socialism before his death require more research.
The last observation deals with the diversity of thought as defined in Kenneally’s (2009)
research and not the token concept of regulated diversity as King (1981) warned about.
According to Kenneally, diversity is something that does not require an individual to surrender
108
their moral identity or their unique heritage. Diversity of thought is actually diversity in
understanding the perspective of other individuals. Just because an individual understands
another person’s perspective does not mean he or she is required to adapt or even agree with the
other person. However, token diversity in the modern sense requires an individual to assimilate
because of a politically correct token issue. King’s worry was that the individual would lose their
sense of self and self-worth. Research needs conducted in order to ascertain if multiformity,
which diversity has evolved into, promotes human development.
Lesson Learned
As the observations implied, my primary lesson learned was one of maintaining focus on
the subject of moral individual development. In addition to the observations, there was a
tendency to stray into societal development issues as well as leadership development issues. Even
though all three were interrelated, the subject was moral individual development as a means to
human development. To include societal or leadership development issues was limited to
defining their impact on moral individual development. For example, the societal issues of
freedom and socialism affected the development process in many different ways. One provided
the environment for development as the individual saw fit. The other, at best, only restricted
development as the individual developed in a manner regulated by the central planning entity. To
exclude those two issues was to neglect something that had a fundamental impact on the
development potential of the individual. However, the problem arose of where to draw the line
and avoid straying into political issues. When research strayed into political issues the subject of
moral individual development lost focus.
109
Conclusion
In conclusion, the path to completing this project may have been arduous at times due to
my inability to keep on the subject. However, the process of acquiring knowledge and working
on the skill sets necessary to be scholarly professional will be extremely beneficial in future
works. The question remains, if I had to do it over again and take a simpler approach would I
take it. As King (1986) alluded to in his book A Testament of Hope, if an individual wants to
push the boundaries of thought and attainment of knowledge, an individual will need to take the
less travelled path of the non-conformist. On the edge or outside the boundaries of what we know
is where an individual will find positive social change. To answer the question, no, if an
individual researches the boundaries they better have thick skin and be ready to suffer a few
setbacks. This essay is an example of my never-ending development quest while emphasizing the
need to protect freedom of future generations.
110
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