
Ethics Today
Ethical communication involves conveying information between two parties accurately and truthfully. It prioritizes honesty, transparency, and respect to ensure the recipient understands the information. Read this exploration of ethical communication.
Every day, people around the world make ethical decisions regarding
public speech. Is it ever appropriate to lie to a group of people if
it’s in the group’s best interest? As a speaker, should you use evidence
within a speech that you are not sure is correct if it supports the
speech’s core argument? As a listener, should you refuse to listen to a
speaker with whom you fundamentally disagree? These three examples
represent ethical choices speakers and listeners face in the public
speaking context. In this chapter, we will explore what it means to be
both an ethical speaker and an ethical listener. To help you understand
the issues involved with thinking about ethics, this chapter begins by
presenting a model for ethical communication known as the ethics
pyramid. We will then show how the National Communication Association
(NCA) Credo for Ethical Communication can be applied to public speaking.
The chapter will conclude with a general discussion of free speech.
This text was adapted by Saylor Academy under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License without attribution as requested by the work's original creator or licensor.