Citation Tools
Extended essay
First among equals? Adaptive preferences and the limits of autonomy in medical ethics
Download to a citation manager
Download the citation for this article by clicking on one of the following citation managers:
- Cite this article as:
- First among equals? Adaptive preferences and the limits of autonomy in medical ethics
Other content recommended for you
- Autonomy-based criticisms of the patient preference predictor
- Defining categories of actionability for secondary findings in next-generation sequencing
- Defending the four principles approach as a good basis for good medical practice and therefore for good medical ethics
- What do patients value in their hospital care? An empirical perspective on autonomy centred bioethics
- Clarifying substituted judgement: the endorsed life approach
- Medical ethics for children: applying the four principles to paediatrics
- Undermining autonomy and consent: the transformative experience of disease
- The bioethical principles and Confucius’ moral philosophy
- In defence of personal autonomy
- Ethics needs principles—four can encompass the rest—and respect for autonomy should be “first among equals”