Abstract
AbstractThe permissibility of nudging in public policy is often assessed in terms of the conditions of transparency, rationality, and easy resistibility. This debate has produced important resources for any ethical inquiry into nudging, but it has also failed to focus sufficiently on a different yet very important question, namely: when do nudges undermine a patient’s voluntary consent to a medical procedure? In this paper, I take on this further question and, more precisely, I ask to which extent the three conditions of transparency, rationality, and easy resistibility can be applied to the assessment of voluntary consent too. After presenting two examples, designed to put pressure on these three conditions, I show that, suitably modified, the three conditions can remain significant in the assessment of voluntary consent as well. However, the needed modifications are very substantial and result in a rather complicated view. To propose a tidier solution, I argue that nudging undermines voluntary consent if and only if it cannot be ‘interpersonally justified’ to the patient. I use the three modified conditions to motivate the idea of interpersonal justification and also to further specify the principles it involves. My resulting view is especially attractive because it builds on already existing insights from the debate on nudging, updates those insights with an eye to medical consent, and finally unites them in an elegant and simple framework.
Funder
European Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference58 articles.
1. Barnhill, A. (2014). What is manipulation? In C. Coons & M. Weber (Eds.), Manipulation: theory and practice. (pp. 51–72). Oxford University Press.
2. Beauchamp, T. L., & Childress, J. F. (2013). Principles of biomedical ethics. Oxford University Press.
3. Berg, J. W., & Applebaum, P. S. (2001). Informed consent: legal theory and clinical practice. (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press.
4. Blumenthal-Barby, J. S. (2012). Between reason and coercion: Ethically permissible influence in health care and health policy contexts. Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 22(4), 345–366.
5. Boddington, P. (2012). Ethical challenges in genomics research: a guide to understanding ethics in context. Berlin, New York: Springer.
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献