Article Text
Abstract
It is hypothesised and argued that “the four principles of medical ethics” can explain and justify, alone or in combination, all the substantive and universalisable claims of medical ethics and probably of ethics more generally. A request is renewed for falsification of this hypothesis showing reason to reject any one of the principles or to require any additional principle(s) that can’t be explained by one or some combination of the four principles. This approach is argued to be compatible with a wide variety of moral theories that are often themselves mutually incompatible. It affords a way forward in the context of intercultural ethics, that treads the delicate path between moral relativism and moral imperialism. Reasons are given for regarding the principle of respect for autonomy as “first among equals”, not least because it is a necessary component of aspects of the other three. A plea is made for bioethicists to celebrate the approach as a basis for global moral ecumenism rather than mistakenly perceiving and denigrating it as an attempt at global moral imperialism.
- four principles approach to medical ethics
- principlism
- intercultural ethics
- Thomas Beauchamp
- James Childress
- Jehovah’s Witnesses
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Footnotes
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Defending the four principles approach as a good basis for good medical practice and therefore for good medical ethics
- In defence of moral imperialism: four equal and universal prima facie principles
- The bioethical principles and Confucius’ moral philosophy
- When four principles are too many: a commentary
- What principlism misses
- Medical ethics for children: applying the four principles to paediatrics
- The revised International Code of Medical Ethics: an exercise in international professional ethical self-regulation
- A waste of time: the problem of common morality in Principles of Biomedical Ethics
- Theoretical resources for a globalised bioethics
- Dr Daly's principlist defence of multiple heart valve replacements for continuing opiate users: the importance of Aristotle’s formal principle of justice