Hi

Now that you mention medicine, I suddenly thought of the hippocratic
oath. Doctors must once in a while be faced with the same dilemma,
represented by the question "Should I cure Adolf Hitlers appendicitis?"
Well, doctors have the hippocratic oath, which in one modern version states:
/ I will treat without exception all who seek my ministrations, so long
as the treatment of others is not compromised thereby.../

Actually, there are several useful lessons for OST practitioners in that
oath. You can find the classic and a modern version here:
http://www.geocities.com/everwild7/noharm.html

I especially like the part from the classic version that says:
/Into whatever houses I enter, I will go into them for the benefit of
the sick, and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and
corruption; *and, further, from the seduction of females or males, of
freemen and slaves.*/

Not that that's ever really been an issue in my OST practice :o)

Cheers

Alex

Alexander Kjerulf
alexan...@kjerulf.com
http://www.positivesharing.com

+45 2688 2373
Tagensvej 126, lejl. 613
2200 K?benhavn N



R. Duff Doel wrote:

This is an interesting discussion. Here's my two cents worth...

A few years ago i took a class called: The Philosophy of Medicine. It
was essentially a medical ethics. The book of case studies was more
than 60% about who actually has the right to decide what happens to
your body (including whether it should live or die), you or the physician.

As much as i enjoyed the class, i was disturbed by the mere existence
of that question. It is my body!

I still feel that way, but the interesting thing is that in a few of
the discussions about various case studies, i saw the "truth" in the
physician overriding the choice of the body's "owner".

The essence of this is that as Funda said, ethics are about why we
choose something, not what we choose.

Harrison said, "I don't really believe that the space is ours to give
or withhold." I agree with this. My time and my energy, however, are
mine to give or withhold.

From an ethical point of view, authenticity and integrity are mine
alone to hold. I cannot be responsible for those things in others.

My world view is that in each act (and thinking and feeling are acts)
that i take, i have the choice about who that act serves. Either it
serves the world (all) or it serves self at the expense of others.

One tool of philosophy is that if you are in doubt about the
significance of an act, take it to the extreme. So, if you have a
company that is ethically questionable. (i am going to choose an
arbitrary example, not to offend any individual views.) Let's say you
have a manufacturer of firearms ammunition. And they want you to hold
Open Space for them so that they can become more effective in their
marketing of bullets. Do you do it? Not so clear. But let's say you
have a troup of militia who want you to Open Space for them so they
can become more effective in their recruiting and training process. Do
you do it? Again, not perfectly clear but becoming more so. So, let's
say you have a team of assassins who want you to Open Space so they
can become more efficient in their missions. Do you do it? Say, a
racist organization with a history of brutality, torture and murder of
minorities comes along...

In each of these cases, i could argue either side. At the very least,
i could say that if i Open Space for the assassins or racist group,
that they could use that experience to come to a more harmonius, a
more caring way of living. But that would be me wanting to impose on
them my view of the world. That would not be an authentic expression
of me serving those groups. Rather, it would be attempting to serve
myself, my views.

If i were to take on the job strictly for the revenue, then it is
clearly not authentically me. (unless i am all about just making money
and don't care about where that comes from).

I do feel that who we choose to Open Space for is an ethical question.
It is a reflection of our own authenticity and integrity in doing our
work.

So, would i Open Space for a company who's ethical standpoint in the
world i disagree with? It depends on why.
And i also agree with Harrison that my being closed would be a show
stopper as the space wouldn't truly be open.

duff


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