"Intuitive Ethics: Understanding and Critiquing the Role of

Intuition in Ethical Decisions"

Brenton Faber

Technical Communication Quarterly 8/2 189-202


abstract

This article examines the role intuition plays in forming ethical decisions. First, the paper reviews examples of intuitive ethics in professional communication research. Second, the paper suggests that intuition is the naturalization of dominant cultural values and beliefs. Third, the paper considers naturalized values within institutions and organizations, demonstrating how naturalized values can lead to unquestioned and oppressive institutional practices. Ethical inquiry, according to this view, investigates and denaturalizes those assumptions that are carried forth by intuition. Fourth, the paper offers a pedagogical example of this theory, demonstrating how a group of business communication students investigated the intuitive practices of a non-profit organization. The paper concludes by suggesting the value that a "critique of intuition" may have for the teaching, study, and practice of professional ethics.