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Medical ethics

Huntington, N.Y.,: R. E. Krieger Pub. Co. (1927)

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  1. Roboethics.Spyros G. Tzafestas - 2016 - Springer.
    This volume explores the ethical questions that arise in the development, creation and use of robots that are capable of semiautonomous or autonomous decision making and human-like action. It examines how ethical and moral theories can and must be applied to address the complex and critical issues of the application of these intelligent robots in society. Coverage first presents fundamental concepts and provides a general overview of ethics, artificial intelligence and robotics. Next, the book studies all principal ethical applications of (...)
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  • (2 other versions)Toward a reconstruction of medical morality.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):65 - 71.
    At the center of medical morality is the healing relationship. It is defined by three phenomena: the fact of illness, the act of profession, and the act of medicine. The first puts the patient in a vulnerable and dependent position; it results in an unequal relationship. The second implies a promise to help. The third involves those actions that will lead to a medically competent healing decision. But it must also be good for the patient in the fullest possible sense. (...)
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  • Medical Ethics as Taught and as Practiced: Principlism, Narrative Ethics, and the Case of Living Donor Liver Transplantation.Daniel C. O’Brien - 2022 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 47 (1):95-116.
    The dominant model for bioethical inquiry taught in medical schools is that of principlism. The heritage of this methodology can be traced to the Enlightenment project of generating a universalizable justification for normative morality arising from within the individual, rational agent. This project has been criticized by Alasdair MacIntyre who suggests that its failure has resulted in a fragmented and incoherent contemporary ethical framework characterized by fundamental intractability in moral debate. This incoherence implicates principlist conceptions of bioethics. Medical ethics as (...)
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  • Practical experiences in the work of institutional ethics committees in croatia on the example of the ethics committee at clinical hospital center rijeka (croatia).Alekandra Friković & Nada Gosić - 2006 - HEC Forum 18 (1):37-48.
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  • (2 other versions)Toward a Reconstruction of Medical Morality.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):65-71.
    At the center of medical morality is the healing relationship. It is defined by three phenomena: the fact of illness, the act of profession, and the act of medicine. The first puts the patient in a vulnerable and dependent position; it results in an unequal relationship. The second implies a promise to help. The third involves those actions that will lead to a medically competent healing decision. But it must also be good for the patient in the fullest possible sense. (...)
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  • (2 other versions)Toward a reconstruction of medical morality.Edmund D. Pellegrino - 1987 - Journal of Medical Humanities and Bioethics 8 (1):7-18.
    At the center of medical morality is the healing relationship. It is defined by three phenomena: the fact of illness, the act of profession, and the act of medicine. The first puts the patient in a vulnerable and dependent position; it results in an unequal relationship. The second implies a promise to help. The third involves those actions that will lead to a medically competent healing decision. But it must also be good for the patient in the fullest possible sense. (...)
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  • Autonomy in the medical profession in the united kingdom – an historical perspective.J. Stuart Horner - 2000 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 21 (5):409-423.
    This paper reviews the concept of professional autonomy from anhistorical perspective. It became formalised in the United Kingdom onlyafter a long struggle throughout most of the nineteenth century. In itspure form professional autonomy implies unlimited powers to undertakemedical investigations and to prescribe treatment, irrespective of cost.Doctors alone should determine the quality of care and the levels ofremuneration to which they should be entitled. In the second half of thetwentieth century a steady erosion of professional autonomy occurred inthe United Kingdom. The (...)
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  • Evaluation in clinical practice: problems, precedents and principles.Neil Mclntyre - 1995 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 1 (1):5-13.
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  • Truth and Consequences in an Era of “Unsurance”.Richard A. Demme - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (4):69-71.
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  • Doctors Lying in the Trenches.Kate Scannell - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (4):71-74.
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