Article Text
Statistics from Altmetric.com
In ‘Salvaging the Concept of Nudge’ Yashar Saghai performs an important clarificatory task which certainly advances our philosophical and ethical understanding of nudges in public policy, and in healthcare ethics in particular.1 In this brief commentary I identify some issues which could usefully be taken forward in subsequent discussions.
A central difficulty with ethical discussions of nudging is that insufficient care is taken to distinguish two morally important features of nudges. The first, which Saghai very properly concentrates upon, is the mechanism of nudging. Nudges rely on psychological properties of human decision-makers as the way in which their intended effects are brought about. Much of the ethical concern with nudges focuses on just this. Whatever the motive of the nudger, or the objective of the nudge, or the ex ante or ex post ratification of the nudge by the nudge, operating through influence, impulse or non-rational features of the nudgee's decision-making is wrong. The nature of this wrongness can be spelled out in different ways, and which one of these we choose has important implications for the precise ethical argument …
Footnotes
-
Competing interests None.
-
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.
Linked Articles
- Feature article
- Commentary
- Commentary
- Commentary
- Commentary
- Commentary
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- What is it to do good medical ethics? A kaleidoscope of views
- Suffering, compassion and ‘doing good medical ethics’
- Good medical ethics, from the inside out—and back again
- What moral work can Nussbaum’s account of human dignity do in the context of dementia care?
- Salvaging the concept of nudge
- Human rights and bioethics
- The moral bioenhancement of psychopaths
- The truth behind conscientious objection in medicine
- Why the Kantian ideal survives medical learning curves, and why it matters
- The principle and problem of proximity in ethics