Ethical Obligation claims
#21
Posted 2011-November-22, 09:48
#23
Posted 2011-November-23, 08:09
Vampyr said:
This is not true. Your obligation under the Laws of Bridge is the same as anyone's. Your inclination might be different from some.
Isn't "ethical obligation" something of an oxymoron? Ethics generally involve judgment and "accepted standards" rather than adherance to objective, codified rules.
Anyway, it seems perfectly reasonable that different people would feel different ethical obligations. These should not be confused with legal obligations.
#24
Posted 2011-November-23, 12:02
Whether your personal ethics (or mine, or "different people") choose to expand from the minimum is, yes, a continuum. But in bridge, some of your legal obligations (including the fact that you are obliged by Law) *are* ethical obligations.
There are many games and sports (usually of the historical "played by gentlemen" variety) where it is believed best if the players *behave* like ladies and gentlemen, even if they no longer are (or even if they do not do so in Real Life). Those games and sports have by and large had to codify that "belief" as Law in order to get it to trigger, this century. Even so, games get played, and standards slip. I find that - disappointing.
#25
Posted 2011-November-23, 13:55
TimG, on 2011-November-23, 08:09, said:
Anyway, it seems perfectly reasonable that different people would feel different ethical obligations. These should not be confused with legal obligations.
The word 'ethical' is used in a very strange way in bridge. I don't really know why.
In real life, there is obviously a huge difference between legal vs illegal and ethical vs unethical. But in a game like bridge, they ought to coincide, i.e. ethical and legal duties are the same. Obviously you can accidentally infringe a law without being unethical but when making conscious decisions about how to act there should be no such thing as 'legal but unethical' or vice-versa.
Some people think it is 'ethical' to go beyond what the laws require when in possession of unauthorised information for example, but the legal obligation is quite strict so there isn't much room to exceed that without doing something ridiculous.
#27
Posted 2011-November-23, 16:14
billw55, on 2011-November-22, 07:30, said:
As I have stated before, I strongly believe that there should a written rule which states: when a claim is made by declarer, the defense is automatically awarded a trick for every trump they hold (including trumps in separate hands), without regard to any other circumstance whatsoever. Perhaps excepting cases where loss of a trick is entirely impossible (i.e. declarer holds only top trumps in hand).
IMO this would save so much interpreting, lawyering, director calls, and forum threads, that it would be well worth the extra bit of time it takes declarer to remove any non-high trumps.
Pity about the fact you can no longer claim on a cross-ruff
#28
Posted 2011-November-23, 16:27
#29
Posted 2011-November-23, 18:03
nigel_k, on 2011-November-23, 16:27, said:
Whose ethics? The person you are asking used "ethical", not "required by ethics".
#30
Posted 2011-November-23, 21:32
#31
Posted 2011-November-23, 21:55
The pair I was playing against, Noberto Bocchi and his partner (Ferraro?), quietly accepted the claim and we returned the hands to the board. Before we started the next board, though, I woke up and told them that my claim of down one was incorrect and that my line would actually have made the contract. We called the director, and he sorted it out as a make. They then proceeded to kill us anyway.
Edit: Afterwards I apologized to Bocchi and his partner for the trouble (since we had to call the director & stuff), and they looked at me like I was crazy. Bocchi then implied he wouldn't have accepted my incorrect claim except that he was playing professionally in a nationally rated event.
#32
Posted 2011-November-23, 21:58
#33
Posted 2011-November-24, 03:35
CSGibson, on 2011-November-23, 21:55, said:
So, he cheated, but only did so because he was paid for it?
Oops, I used the c-word.
- hrothgar
#34
Posted 2011-November-24, 03:54
#35
Posted 2011-November-24, 12:23
nigel_k, on 2011-November-23, 13:55, said:
In real life, there is obviously a huge difference between legal vs illegal and ethical vs unethical. But in a game like bridge, they ought to coincide, i.e. ethical and legal duties are the same. Obviously you can accidentally infringe a law without being unethical but when making conscious decisions about how to act there should be no such thing as 'legal but unethical' or vice-versa.
Some people think it is 'ethical' to go beyond what the laws require when in possession of unauthorised information for example, but the legal obligation is quite strict so there isn't much room to exceed that without doing something ridiculous.
I agree with Nigel.
I also am interested in his subsequent question. Is there an example of something that is legal but unethical?
To me ethics is really playing lawfully in your deliberate actions and unethical is deliberately taking advantages that are not consistent with the laws.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#36
Posted 2011-November-24, 13:29
Certain sports or games, such as poker, have different base of ethics than others. And for those of us who cannot figure out where the line should be drawn, poker has rules also.
Even war has the Geneva Convention and certain other laws in individual countries.
#37
Posted 2011-November-24, 13:40
Doing nothing when you know something illegal and harmful is being perpetrated; OR a candidate for an office of public trust remaining silent when he knows his opponent is being wrongfully smeared.
See Water Cooler re: Paterno.
#38
Posted 2011-November-24, 16:54
I have no strong opinion about whether this is ethical or not, simply mentioning that some people thought it might not be.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#39
Posted 2011-November-24, 16:56
Again, I note that the ethics of the game are codified in the Laws - given the strength of Law; because when they weren't - when there were things that were legal-but-improper - people did them, because they didn't care.
As far as RL law is concerned, there are many, many unethical actions that are legal. I think the entire raison d'être of The Colbert Report is to point these out - hopefully to either raise indignation in the populace to require change, or embarrass those doing it. Currently, I think one of the reasons I fear for the United States is that I don't expect either to actually happen.
#40
Posted 2011-November-25, 02:09