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Integrity as a concept has to do with perceived consistency of actions, values, methods, measures, principles, expectations and outcome. People use integrity as a holistic concept, judging the integrity of systems in terms of those systems' ability to achieve their own goals (if any). A value system's abstraction depth and range of applicable interaction may also function as significant factors in identifying integrity due to their congruence or lack of congruence with empirical observation.Citation needed Some people see integrity as the quality of having a sense of honesty and truthfulness in regard to the motivations for one's actions. Some peopleWho The etymology of the word "integrity" can suggest insight into its use and meaning. It stems from the Latin adjective integer (whole, complete). In this context, integrity may comprise the personal inner sense of "wholeness" deriving from (say) honesty and consistency of character. As such, one may judge that others "have integrity" to the extent that one judges whether they behave according to the values, beliefs and principles they claim to hold.
Testing of integrity One can test a value system's accountability either:
- subjectively, by a person's individual measures or
- objectively, via various scientific methods or via standardized mathematical procedures
Integrity in relation to value-systems A personal or cultural value consists of an assumption from which one can extrapolate implementation or other values.Citation needed
Testing integrity via scientific methodology Formal measures of integrity rely on a set of testing-principlesCitation needed One may test the integrity of a value system scientifically by using the values, methods and measures of the system to formulate a hypothesis of an expected cause-and-effect relationship
. When multiple unbiased testers observe that a given cause consistently leads to an expected effect, one can say that the value system "has integrity".
By analogy, Newtonian physics, general relativity and quantum mechanics exemplify three distinct systems, each scientifically provenCitation needed
Integrity in ethics Ethical meanings of integrity used in medicine and law refer to the wholeness of the human body with respect for "sacred" qualities such as a sense of unity, consistency, purity, unspoiledness and uncorruptedness.Citation needed In discussions on behavior and morality, one view of the property of integrity sees it as the virtue of basing actions on an internally-consistent framework of principles. This scenario may emphasize depth of principles and adherence of each level of postulates or axioms to the those it logically relies upon.Citation needed In the context of accountability, integrity serves as a measure of willingness to adjust a value system to maintain or improve its consistency when an expected result appears incongruent with observed outcome.Citation needed In the context of value theory, integrity provides the expected causation from a base valueCitation needed Some commentatorsWho
Subjective interpretations In popular culture, people sometimes use the word "integrity" in reference to a single "absolute" morality rather than in reference to the assumptions of the value system in question. In an absolute context, the word "integrity" conveys no meaning between people with differing definitions of absolute morality. It becomes nothing more than a vague assertion of perceived political correctness or popularity, similar to using terms such as "good" or "ethical" in a moralistic context.
One can also speak of "integrity" outside of its prescriptive meaning in reference to a person or group of people of which one subjectively approves or disapproves. Thus one can describe a favored person as "having integrity" while describing an enemy as "completely lacking in integrity". Such labeling, in the absence of measures of independent testing, renders the accusation itself baseless and (ironically) others may call the integrity of the assertion into question.
English-speakers may measure assigned "integrity" in non-enumerated units designated as "scraps": speaking of preserving one's "last scraps of integrity" or having "not a scrap of integrity". This may imply that "integrity" in such situations can appear brittle or fragile — and apt to tarnish or decay.
Integrity in modern ethicsIn a formal study of the term "integrity" and its meaning in modern ethics, law professor Stephen L. Carter sees integrity not only as a refusal to engage in behavior that evades responsibilityCitation needed Carter writes:
Integrity [...] requires three steps: (1) discerning what is right and what is wrong; (2) acting on what you have discerned, even at personal cost; and (3) saying openly that you are acting on your understanding of right from wrong.[...] Integrity [...] is not the same as honesty [...]
Christian integrity Strong's Concordance records 16 uses of words translated as "integrity" in the KJV Old Testament, and none in the KJV New Testament.
One view of integrity in a Christian context states: "The Christian vision of integrity suggests that personal authenticity entails living in accordance with personal convictions that are based on an understanding of God's purposes for creation, humankind and the person as a disciple of Jesus."
Law An adversarial process can have general integrity when both sides demonstrate willingness to share evidence, follow guidelines of debate and accept rulings from an arbitrator in a good-faith effort to arrive at either the truth or a mutually equitable outcome. An honorable presentation of the case measures both sides of the argument with a consistent set of principles. Failure to present principles in accordance with observation or to try them unequally can weaken a case.
Psychological/work-selection tests (This section discusses tests which aim to measure the probability of prospective employees proving trustworthy in the organization commissioning such tests.)
The procedures known as "integrity tests" or (somewhat confusingly) as "honesty tests" aim to identify which prospective employees may hide perceived negative or derogatory events from their past (such as doing prison time, getting psychiatric treatment, alcohol problems, drug abuse, etc.) and to identify for the prospective employer which work-candidates may cause strife for such employer. Integrity tests make certain assumptions, specifically:Request quotation
- that persons who have "low integrity" report more dishonest behaviour
- that persons who have "low integrity" try to find reasons in order to justify such behaviour
- that persons who have "low integrity" think others more likely to commit crimes — like theft, for example. (Since people seldom sincerely declare to a prospective employers their past deviance, the "integrity" testers adopted an indirect approach: letting the work-candidates talk about what they think of the deviance of other people, considered in general, as a written answer demanded by the questions of the "integrity test".)Request quotation The pretension of such tests to detect fake answers (they cannot detect false answers, but perpetrate a (noble) lie claiming this ability) plays a crucial role in detecting people who score low in integrity. Naive respondents really believe such pretense and behave accordingly, reporting some of their past deviance and their thoughts about the deviance of others, because of their fear if they do not answer truthfully their untrue answers will reveal their "low integrity". The more Pollyannaish the answers, the higher the "integrity score".
(A HRM college of the UvA Associate Professor, drs. R.J.A.M. Hulst, regards van Minden as an authority in his fieldCitation needed
Other integrities Expand section Disciplines and fields with an interest in integrity include philosophy of action, philosophy of medicine, mathematics, the mind, cognition, consciousness, materials science, structural engineering, and politics. Popular psychology identifies personal integrity, professional integrity, artistic integrity, and intellectual integrity.
The concept of integrity may also feature in business contexts beyond the issues of employee/employer honesty and ethical behavior, specifically in a marketing or branding context. One can speak of the integrity of a brand as a desirable outcome for companies seeking to maintain a consistent, unambiguous position in the mind of their audience. This integrity of brand includes consistent messaging and often includes using a set of graphics standards to maintain visual integrity in marketing communications.
Another use of the term "integrity" defines it as a model of workability.
One-line thoughts Trivia "Integrity is doing the right thing, especially when no one is watching."Cite quote "Integrity is doing what you say you'll do, and saying what you truly think, even if unpopular."Cite quote
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