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Dismemberment, divorce and hostile takeovers: A comment on corporate moral personhood

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Abstract

We can explain our intuitions about corporate takeover cases by appeal to Peter French's picture of the corporation as a moral person. He argues that corporations are persons in much the same sense as you and I, and are entitled to the same rights as humans. On this analysis, takeovers are murders, attempted murders, attempts to enslave, etc. I want to explore the consequences of this view for corporate takeovers. I shall argue that, though French can explain why our moral intuitions seem to arise in response to some concern about the corporations themselves, his analysis commits us to the wrong intuitions in some cases. I shall then offer an account of these intuitions which focuses on the character of corporations.

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Rita C. Manning is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at San Jose State University. She has published widely — on Artificial Intelligence, Ancient Philosophy, Ethics, Philosophy of Law, Social and Political Philosophy, and Informal Logic, in addition to Business Ethics. She is currently working on a Feminist critique of Moral Philosophy.

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Manning, R.C. Dismemberment, divorce and hostile takeovers: A comment on corporate moral personhood. J Bus Ethics 7, 639–643 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00382798

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00382798

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