Consumerism a Consequence of the Absence of Ethics

Authors

  • Zdenek Dytrt

Keywords:

consumerism, management, quality, quantity, technology, methods, managerial ethics, philosophy

Abstract

Consumerist society is the consequence of the philosophical movement that started to form at the end of the Second World War Dynamic development of technology required by the war needs started to be asserted in peace conditions of management mainly in information technology and computing The philosophy of management reacted on the changes resulting from the political development and the post-war state of economy It focused on the quantity law that in time changes to quality Qualitative management that focused on the benefits of information technology and computing started to develop It increased the attention to measurable values in economics and limited the observation of immeasurable values of economic phenomena It was done in good faith that desirable development of immeasurable consequences of economic phenomena will be ensured by legislation For that reason a slogan what is not forbidden is allowed was created and it enabled the dance among paragraphs with the help of complicated mathematic methods and computing

How to Cite

Zdenek Dytrt. (2016). Consumerism a Consequence of the Absence of Ethics. Global Journal of Management and Business Research, 16(B7), 47–52. Retrieved from https://journalofbusiness.org/index.php/GJMBR/article/view/102465

Consumerism a Consequence of the Absence of Ethics

Published

2016-05-15