The Problem of Clinical Deception and Why We Cannot Begin in the Middle
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Published:2023-01
Issue:1
Volume:53
Page:28-29
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ISSN:0093-0334
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Container-title:Hastings Center Report
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hastings Center Report
Abstract
AbstractIn this brief commentary, I offer an appreciative yet critical analysis of Abram Brummett and Erica Salter's article, “Mapping the Moral Terrain of Clinical Deception.” I challenge the authors to clarify their choice of the term “deception” (as opposed to “lying” or “dishonesty”), and I explain how these different terms may affect one's moral analysis. I also draw attention to the authors’ claim that veracity is the ethical default of clinicians. I argue that their failure to defend this claim renders their framework more limited in its usefulness than they seem to acknowledge. While their framework does an excellent job of identifying morally salient features of clinical deception, it cannot be used to measure the strength of justification for an act of deception apart from a normative conception of truthfulness.
Subject
Health Policy,Philosophy,Issues, ethics and legal aspects,Health (social science),Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Environmental Engineering
Reference13 articles.
1. A.MacIntyre “Review ofLyingby Sissela Bok Right and Wrongby Charles Fried andEthics at the Edges of Lifeby Paul Ramsey ”New Republic May 6 1978 28-30 at 28.
2. Mapping the Moral Terrain of Clinical Deception
3. Immanuel Kant: Practical philosophy
4. BrummettandSalter “Mapping the Moral Terrain of Clinical Deception ” 18.
5. Ibid. 18-19 and 18.