Abstract
		
		Though I am not an Aristotelian there is something the philosopher says  that applies to the question of moral responsibility in business.  Aristotle claims that institutions are to be understood in terms of  their purpose, i.e., the telos that constitutes their fundamental aim. I  argue that the purpose of the corporation is to realize long-term owner  value, which is why corporations were set up in the first place.  However, any departure from this goal, and non-owning managers are  skilled at diverting attention away from a corporations fundamental  purpose, is potentially fatal. A managers fiduciary duty is first to  act in the best interest of the owners, yet a managers immediate  self-interest lies in protecting his or her job. I think this tension  explains why managers became active lobbyists of anti-takeover  legislation throughout state legislatures in the late 1980s. The  academic discipline of business ethics has proven to be a convenient  shroud behind which some purely self-interested, rent-seeking managers  have prospered.