Transcript ethics
Ethics, too, are nothing but reverence for life. This is
what gives me the fundamental principle of morality,
namely, that good consists in maintaining, promoting,
and enhancing life, and that destroying, injuring, and
limiting life is evil.
Albert Schweitzer
2011
Marek Vácha
INTRODUCTION TO MEDICAL
ETHICS
HTTP://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=YIZT79UKUFQ
Science x Ethics
science investigates what is
ethics investigates what ought to be
Science
The composition of mammalian blood is
plasma 55% and cellular elements 45 %
leukocytes are: basophils, eosinophyls,
neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes
IgE antibodies are produced in response
to initial exposure to an alergen bind to
receptors an mast cells
blood glucose level is about 90mg/100ml
Ethics
when, if ever, is possible to take a gift or
gratuity from a patient?
Is it permissible to lie to a patient if it is for
his or her good?
what obligations do I have to a colleague
and fellow practitioner when I suspect that
the colleague I am working with is abusing
alcohol or appears chemically impaired
while on duty?
Ethics
…and what about
the Bodies
exhibition?
Is this show
ethically neutral?
…or good?
…or bad?
Is there any sort of pursuit of knowledge that
might be forbidden?
is there a category of a "forbidden knowledge"?
Is there any sort of research that should not
be publicly funded?
Is there any sort of genetic knowledge that it
might be better not to know?
Is any basic research ethically mandatory in
some way?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HkW0C-NyNtQ
Science x Ethics
Methodological Naturalism:
what natural world contains
how it arrived at its current state
laws that regulate its behavior
Ontological Naturalism:
nothing else exists
Science and Philosophy
Philosophy
Science
The aim of the medicine: to elongate the life of the patient
„the art of living“
the ethics according to Aristote
the lenght of life
biological medicine
The aim of the medicine: to elongate the life of the patient, „a horizontal“ of his/her
life
The aim of the moral philosophy: to give a meaningfulness of the life of the patient,
„a vertical“ of his/her life
Ethics and Morality
Ethics is primarily a matter of knowing
Morality is a matter of doing
morality is what people believe to be right
and good
ethics is the critical reflections about
morality and the rational analysis of it.
Good ethics start with good facts!
1. Defining the problem
2. Descriptive – defining what is going on,
description of who the patient is, who the
family is, what is their moral world; what
the options are in terms of diagnosis,
therapy, prognosis, goals, what can be
done, weighting the risks and benefits.
3. Normative – ethics arises from value
conflict – concerns itself with the „should“
questions
Descriptive Ethics and Normative
Ethics
Descriptive Ethics
What do people think is right?
philosophical schools, religions etc.
Normative Ethics
identification of values
what behavior is good and why
supported by arguments
what should I do and why?
Normative Ethics
Normative ethics is the attempt to
determine what moral standards should
be followed so that human behaviour and
conduct may be morally right.
Normative ethics is concerned with
establishing standards for conduct and is
commonly associated with theories about
how one ought to live.
The position of the teacher
the teacher is not in „God-like position“
the teacher is not
a harbinger of an ultimate truth
a opinion-maker
the teacher doesn´t say „how things are“
his/her task is more complicated
to tell to the students what is known about the
problem
and then he/she try to moderate the discussion
The Scandal of Philososphy
We have moved forward in medicine during
the past 2 000 years
we now know much better the human body than
Hippocrates knew
..but have we move forward in philosophy?
is our contemporary philosophy better than the
philosophy of Aristote?
maybe not!
the philosophy might be somewhere between
art and science
The Problems of teaching Philosophy
the notions are generally not so clear as in
science
there is no such thing like „hard data“
different people could have different opinions
„there is only one science but many philosophies“
everyone has his/her own philosophy
a philosophy is joint to the person of the
philosopher and his/her epoch
…but is it true?
What is the difference between a
postmodernist and a member of
the Mafia?
The Mafia makes you an offer
you can´t refuse. A posmodernist
makes you an offer you can´t
understand.
Ethical relativism
„Well..... well.... we will think about it.“
Ethical relativism
there is no goodness or badness
there is no rightness or wrongness
....there are only opinions
Dostojevskij: if God does not exists, all is
permitted.
Why to start with Philosophy?
In the history of the human spirit I distinguish
between epochs of habitation and epochs of
homelessness. In the former, man lives in the
world as in the house, as in a home. In the
latter, man lives in the world as in an open
field and at times does not even have four
pegs with which to set up a tent.
In the former epochs anthropological thought
exist only as a part of cosmological thought.
In the latter, anthropological thought gains
depth and with it, independence.
(Martin Buber: Between Man and Man)
A PROBLEM OF
PERSONHOOD
…WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE A HUMAN?
Herodotus (5th century BC): During Darius´s reign, he
invited some Greeks who were present to a conference, and
ask them how much money it would take for them to be
prepared to eat the corpses of their fathers; they replied that
they would not do that for any amount of money. Next,
Darius summoned some members of the Indian tribe known
as Callatiae, who eat their parents, and asked them in the
presence of the Greeks, with an interpreter present so that
they could understand what was being said, how much
money it would take for them to be willing to cremate their
fathers´ corpses; they cried out in horror and told him not to
say such appalling things. So these practises have become
enshrined as customs just as they are, and I think Pindar
was right to have said in his poem that custom is king of all.
(Blackburn, S., (2001) Ethics. A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press, Oxford, p. 18)
Common Morality
is a product of human experience and
history and is a universaly shared product
is found in all cultures
is not relative to cultures and individuals,
because it transcends both
(Beauchamp, T.L., Childress, J.F., (2009) Principles of Biomedical Ethics. 6th ed. Oxford University Press,
New York, Oxford, p. 4)
animals?
women
nationalities
(nazism)
colour of skin
(American Civil War)
people in the same geographical
locality
tribe
family
The Universal Declaration of Human
Rights
Article 7
All are equal before the law and are entitled
without any discrimination to equal protection of
the law. All are entitled to equal protection
against any discrimination in violation of this
Declaration and against any incitement to such
discrimination.
(Nash, R.F., (1989) The Rights of Nature. A History of
Environmental Ethics. The University of Wisconsin Press,
Madison, London. p. 5)
WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE A
HUMAN PERSON…?
What is a person…?
human eggs?
enemies in war
embryos or fetuses?
different races
newborns?
women and children
the brain dead?
nonhuman animals?
cybrids?
A Theory Based on
biological species
cognitive capacity
moral agency
sentience
communal relationship
A Theory based on Cognitive Properties
a person has to have :
self-consciousness
freedom to act and capacity to engage in
purposeful actions
ability to give and to appreciate reasons for
acting
capacity to communicate with other persons
using a language
rationality and higher order volition
A Theory Based on Sentience
person = a being capable of feeling pain a
pleasure
having the capacity of sentience is a
sufficient condition of moral status
pain is an evil, pleasure a good
to cause pain to any entity is to harm it
even if you were not cognitively capable,
morally capable, or biologically human, pain
and suffering would be real to you
A Theory Based on Sentience
in this theory a fetus does have moral
status at some point after several weeks
of development, and thus abortions at that
point would be prima facie impermissible
this point is prior to the stage of development
at which some legal abortions now occur.
A Theory Based on Sentience
critique
any individual lacking the capacity for sentience
lacks moral status
this theory disallows moral status for early-staged
fetuses as well as for all who have irreversibly lost the
capacity for sentience, such as patients with severe
brain damage
the degree of moral status and the level of moral
protection can vary according to conditions such
as the quality, richness, or complexity of life
as loss of capacity occurs, humans (and nonhumans)
will have a decreased moral status
In this way, the most vulnerable beings can become
the most vulnerable to abuse and exploitation. No
theory is morally acceptable that yields this conditions
A Theory Based on Moral Agency
a person…
is capable of making moral judgments about
the rightness or wrongness of actions
has the motives that can be judged morally
= capacity for moral agency gives an
individual moral respect and dignity
A Theory Based on Relationships
relationships between parties account for
moral status
the less the degree to which the fetus can
be said to be part of a social matrix, the
weaker the argument for regarding
her/him as having the same moral status
as persons
once fetuses are detected in utero by
stethoscope or sonogram, they become in
significant respects part of a social matrix
A Theory Based on Relationships
critique
is it true, that only social bonds and
attitudes alone determine moral status?
the different degrees of moral status, such
as moral agents having a higher degree of
status than individuals lacking such
agency
no matter how much we love a favorite
plant or institution, neither the plant nor
the institution gains status by virtue of this
relationship
A Theory Based on Human Properties
All humans have full moral status and only
humans have that status
an individual has moral status if and only if
that inidividual
is conceived by human parents, or
is an organism with a human genetic code
to be a living member of the species
Homo sapiens sapiens is a necessary and
sufficient condition of moral respect
A Theory Based on Human Properties
no human is excluded on the basis of a
property such as being a fetus, having
brain damage, or having a congenital
anomaly.
the moral status of human infants,
mentally disabeld humans, and those with
a permanent loss of consciousness is not
in doubt
A Theory Based on Human Properties
all humans have human rights, whether or
not the rights are legally recognized in a
political state
je sice pravda, že lidoopi vnímají bolest a
lidé v PVS ne, to ale neznamená, že by
nebylo rozdílu!
Peter Singer
„human being“ and „human person“
person = being able to feel pleasentness and
unpleasentness
patient in PVS or human embryo is not a
person, a dog is.
Peter Singer
if we set a moral frame to incorporate all the
people, a lot of animals are inside as well
if we set a moral frame to incorporate no
animals, a lot of people are left out as well.
Peter Singer
creatures included in Singer´s moral
community has to posses nervous systems
of sufficient sophistication to feel pain
ethics ceases to apply somewhere „between
a shrimp and oyster.“
ethics ends at „the boundary of sentience.“
the fact that a deer does not think like a
person was no more relevant in the
assignation of rights than the advanced
quality of Einstein´s thought compared to an
average person´s.
Peter Singer
creatures included in Singer´s moral
community has to posses nervous systems
of sufficient sophistication to feel pain
ethics ceases to apply somewhere „between
a shrimp and oyster.“
ethics ends at „the boundary of sentience.“
the fact that a deer does not think like a
person was no more relevant in the
assignation of rights than the advanced
quality of Einstein´s thought compared to an
average person´s.
Peter Singer
"We protest his hiring because Dr.
Singer denies the intrinsic moral worth
of an entire class of human beings newborn children - and promotes
policies that would deprive many
infants with disabilities of their basic
human right to legal protection against
homicide." ... Princeton University student
petition protesting Peter Singer's hiring.
Empirical Functionalism
„person“
ethics ceases to
apply somewhere
„between a
shrimp and
oyster.“
„person“
osoba = to, co vnímá
libosti a nelibosti
Peter Singer
Peter Singer
"When the death of a disabled infant will lead
to the birth of another infant with better
prospects of a happy life, the total amount of
happiness will be greater if the disabled
infant is killed. The loss of the happy life for
the first infant is outweighed by the gain of a
happier life for the second. Therefore, if the
killing of the hemophiliac infant has no
adverse effect on others it would be right to
kill him." (Practical Ethics)
Speciesism (P. Singer)
= the belief, that we are entitled to treat
members of other species in a way in
which it would be wrong to treat members
of our own.
Specieism
„If we compare a severely defective human
infant with a nonhuman animal, a dog, a pig,
for example, we will often find the nonhuman
to have superior capacities, both actual and
potential, for rationality, self-consciousness,
communication, and anything else that can
plausibly be considered morally significant.
Only the fact that the defective infant is a
member of the species homo sapiens, leads
it to be treated differently from the dog or
pig.“
Singer, P., (1983) Sanctity of life or quality of life. Pediatrics,72:128-129
Stephen Hawking
„person“
Ontologický personalismus
„person“
Ontologický
personalismus
Nazism
„person“
Ontological Personalism
„person“
Ontological
Personalism
A Theory Based on Human Properties
All humans have full moral status and only
humans have that status
an individual has moral status if nad only if that
inidividual
is conceived by human parents, or
is an organism with a human genetic code
no human is excluded on the basis of a property
such as being a fetus, having brain damage, or
having a congenital anomaly.
the moral status of human infants, mentally
disabeld humans, and those with a permanent
loss of consciousness is not in doubt
A Theory Based on Human Properties
all humans have human rights, whether or
not the rights are legally recognized in a
political state
Critique
dividing Homo sapiens sapiens to two groups
black x white
germans x non-germans
communists x noncommunists
in-group x out-group
beings x persons
...was not good in any case
The attempt to produce Heaven on Earth
often produces Hell. (Karl Popper)
New York 1948: Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Everyone is entitled to all the rights and
freedoms set forth in this Declaration,
without distinction of any kind, such as
race, colour, sex, language, religion,
political or other opinion, national or social
origin, property, birth or other status.
(Article 2)