This course examines how ethical decision-making unfolds at the intersection of law and psychology. Drawing on real-life legal casesand a host of classic psychological experiments, we explore how cognitive biases such as loss aversion, status quo bias, and framing effects can complicate even the most straightforward moral choices. You’ll explore how our natural tendency to focus on what is most salient in any given situation can skew risk assessments, and how motivated reasoning and self-serving biases may subtly warp our judgments, whether in the boardroom, the courtroom, or everyday life. Finally, we round out our investigation with practical tools—like decision matrices—that empower you to break down complex decisions into their component parts, ensuring that your choices not only reflect your core values but also withstand rigorous, objective scrutiny.
In this module, students will learn the foundational concepts at the intersection of ethical decision-making and psychology. Through analysis of real-life legal cases and controlled experiments, learners will discover how cognitive biases and framing effects—such as loss aversion, status quo bias, and the endowment effect—influence moral reasoning and judgment. The lectures unpack the complexities of ethical dilemmas by examining how contextual factors, numerical framing, and underlying psychological mechanisms shape our decisions in both personal and professional settings. By engaging with classic studies like the dictator game, the bully game, and landmark legal cases, students will gain a nuanced understanding of how ethical and moral choices are systematically influenced by human psychology.
What's included
9 videos3 discussion prompts
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9 videos•Total 68 minutes
Introduction to the Course•12 minutes
The Duty of Good Faith and Fair Dealing•3 minutes
A Game of Dictators and Bullies•6 minutes
Prospect Theory Part 1•8 minutes
Prospect Theory Part 2•5 minutes
The Endowment Effect and the Status Quo Bias•11 minutes
The Certainty Effect•6 minutes
Framing and Moral Judgments•8 minutes
Framing and Moral Judgments Part 2•8 minutes
3 discussion prompts•Total 90 minutes
Good Faith and Moral Decision-Making•30 minutes
Fairness and Generosity•30 minutes
Biases and Ethical Judgments•30 minutes
Salience, Biases, and Motivated Reasoning in Ethical Choices
Module 2•3 hours to complete
Module details
In Module 2, we introduce the role of salience and cognitive biases in ethical decision-making. We will examine how our attention is involuntarily drawn to specific stimuli, ranging from sensory cutes to vivid memories, and how this selective focus shapes our judgments. We will explore concepts such as the availability heuristic, hindsight bias, and anchoring effects, as well as how motivated reasoning and confirmation bias can distort our evaluation of risks and moral choices. By analyzing classic developmental tests like the Sally-Anne task alongside real-world examples in legal, financial, and everyday contexts, learners will gain insight into how salience influences what we notice, remember, and ultimately decide.
What's included
9 videos3 discussion prompts
Show info about module content
9 videos•Total 76 minutes
Salience•8 minutes
The Egocentric Bias•9 minutes
The Availability Heuristic•12 minutes
The Hindsight Bias•9 minutes
Intertemporal Discounting•5 minutes
The Anchoring Effect•8 minutes
The Anchoring Effect Part 2•8 minutes
Motivated Reasoning•9 minutes
Confirmation Bias•8 minutes
3 discussion prompts•Total 90 minutes
Salience and Ethical Decision•30 minutes
The Impact of Cognitive Shortcuts•30 minutes
Biases and Decision-Making•30 minutes
Hacking Motivated Reasoning: Biases, Self-Serving Beliefs, and Strategies for Objectivity
Module 3•2 hours to complete
Module details
Module 3 focuses on the pervasive influence of motivated reasoning and self-serving biases in ethical decision-making. We will examine how preexisting beliefs shape the intake of new evidence and how individuals tend to favor information that confirms their desired conclusions. Through a series of experiments and real-world examples, learners will explore phenomena such as the self-serving bias, confirmation bias, and the just world hypothesis. The module culminates with practical strategies, such as “consider the opposite” and accountability interventions, that help mitigate these biases and promote more objective, value-aligned decision-making.
What's included
5 videos3 discussion prompts
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5 videos•Total 45 minutes
Biases in Reasoning•10 minutes
The Self-Serving Bias•10 minutes
Motivated Reasoning Part 2•10 minutes
Strategies for Combating Bias•5 minutes
Accountability Experiment•10 minutes
3 discussion prompts•Total 90 minutes
Likability and Evaluative Judgments•30 minutes
Can We Learn To Share Fairly?•30 minutes
Debiasing Strategies•30 minutes
Decision Matrices: Structuring Complex Choices for Fair and Effective Outcomes
Module 4•2 hours to complete
Module details
Module 4 introduces the decision matrix as a systematic tool for multi-attribute decision making. By breaking down complex, holistic judgments into discrete, measurable components, this module demonstrates how to disaggregate factors such as teamwork, sales performance, reliability, and leadership potential in managerial and hiring contexts. Students will learn how to assign appropriate weights to different attributes, aggregate granular judgments mechanically, and reduce the influence of salience and bias. Ultimately, the module equips learners with strategies to align decisions more closely with their organizational values and ethical priorities.
What's included
3 videos1 assignment1 discussion prompt
Show info about module content
3 videos•Total 31 minutes
The Decision Matrix•11 minutes
Decision Matrix Continued: Orville vs. Coworkers•13 minutes
The University of Pennsylvania (commonly referred to as Penn) is a private university, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. A member of the Ivy League, Penn is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States, and considers itself to be the first university in the United States with both undergraduate and graduate studies.
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Is financial aid available?
Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you can’t afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, you’ll find a link to apply on the description page.