2 pages single spaced! need a tutor - Sociology
Ethics Evaluation #2 Due by Friday, August 13th at 11:59 PM PST Description: Ethics evaluations are short, 850-1000 word decisions offered on a particular issue and/or debate in ethics written from the perspective of a professional ethicist (that’s you). In them, you will consider the situation at hand and offer a reasoned analysis of your decision using specific criteria and ethical theory to back up your decision. You have a choice between two prompts with a case study for your evaluation: pick only one. In your evaluation, you are to offer your verdict on how the case should proceed by considering all of the information provided. This includes supporting your argument (thesis statement) throughout the paper and responding to all questions listed in the prompt you have chosen. Goal: The goal of this assignment is two-fold. First, it is to assess your comprehension of the moral theories and the course material. Second, it assesses your ability to deliberate about and apply these ideas in a real-world context. Guidelines: ● For this assignment, you have the choice between two prompts. You may choose either one but cannot write about both. ● These are short (less than 2-pages single-spaced). Therefore, it is important to be as clear and concise as you possibly can. That means no introductions or conclusions (I love them, but there is no space here). Instead, everything in your paper should be geared towards supporting your argument. ● “I”, first-personal language is fine. Imagine that your report will assist ethicists, policy-makers, etc., in making their decision as to how to act. ● Assume I (your reader) knows all the details of this case. You only need to explicitly refer to the details insofar as they are helpful for building your argument. Do not spend 250 words re-explaining the case to me. ● You must begin your paper with a thesis statement. Your thesis statement for this paper is your answer to the primary question of whichever prompt you choose as well as your main argument/justification. For example, for the prompt: Is it or is it not morally permissible for Patrick to accompany his friend Carlos to Dignitas, you might answer: “I will argue that it is morally permissible for Patrick to accompany Carlos to Dignitas because [one key reason that follows from one of the major theories].” Please underline your thesis statement in your paper. ● You are to draw on one and only one reading in ethical theory we’ve discussed so far: Aristotle, Kant, Mill, or Held, and any one other assigned class reading. Do not source any additional readings. ● You must choose a different ethical theory than you used in your first Ethics Evaluation. 1 A few notes on citations: ● Please include at least two citations from the primary texts (this means one from each text) and use them to support your argument. ● A few notes on citations: ○ Citations should never stand alone. In other words, they should always be followed by two things: 1) an explanation of what’s being said in the citation/the main idea or ideas being expressed; and 2) an argument for how the idea(s) presented there support your own overall position. ○ Be purposeful in your choice of citations. They should not only be clearly relevant, but should not be too long, given that the assignment is so short already (as a general rule of thumb, choose citations that are no more than ~2 sentences). ○ You may quote from lecture but these quotes will not count as your primary source citations. If quoting from lecture, please follow the same guidelines above re: explaining what’s being said and applying the idea(s) to your own argument. ● For the most part, you will be paraphrasing, explaining, and arguing key ideas from the text in your own words. Remember that a major grading criterion is comprehension of the text. In other words, I am both: looking that you understand the material, and that you can apply it to the prompt. ● No bibliography is needed, just cite the text(s) using the author’s last name and page # when quoting or paraphrasing. ● While I am looking for your opinion and your voice, those must be grounded in the readings and ideas. The most compelling positions are those which are grounded in reasoned argument and show a deep understanding of the relevant material. ● Submit your final assignment by Friday, August 13th at 11:59 PM PST in either a doc, docx, or pdf. Note: I am aware that these cases permit a lot of ambiguity. We have far less information about the situations, beliefs of those involved, etc., than would be the case in an actual clinical setting. I am asking you to work with the information that is provided to you. It is okay to take certain liberties with the information to fill in any gaps. 2 Rubric: The assignment will be evaluated out of 10 points based on the following criteria: 3 YOU HAVE THE CHOICE BETWEEN THE FOLLOWING TWO PROMPTS. SELECT ONLY ONE: PROMPT #1: Patrick is a 45-year-old student nurse in his last year of training. His friend Carlos has had human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) for many years. Carlos is now in the terminal stages of the disease and is in constant pain and suffering. Carlos and Patrick have been friends for a long time and Patrick has always said that he would be there to support Carlos. Carlos now asks him to travel with him to Dignitas in Switzerland so that he can be assisted to end his life. Patrick wants to be there for his friend. Personally, Patrick does not have any ethical quandaries about whether he should prevent Carlos from making a decision to seek assistance to end his own life. However, he has taken an oath at his new workplace which includes not supporting assisted dying, and so he is now worried that his professional duties to his new place of employment would be compromised by travelling to Switzerland with Carlos. Using any one ethical theory (that you did not use in your first assignment) and any one additional class reading to support and argue your position, respond to the following question: Is it or is it not morally permissible for Patrick to accompany his friend Carlos to Dignitas? In generating your argument, please also respond to the following questions as a way of supporting your main argument: 1. To what extent must Patrick’s obligations to his workplace be followed, irrespective of the consequences? 2. What would you advise Patrick to do? PROMPT #2: Mike and Lauren, both in their late 20s, have been happily married for four years. Lauren has congenital deafness due to a known gene mutation, and Mike is an unaffected carrier. They have a one-in-two chance of having a deaf child, and theywish to avoid that risk. They are referred to the Pre-implanation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD) clinic as they are seeking in vitro fertilization with PGD so that an embryo without the mutation causing deafness can be selected for implantation. Using any one ethical theory (that you did not use in your first assignment) and any one additional class reading to support and argue your position, respond to the following question: Is it or is it not morally permissible for Lauren and Mike to select against an embryo carrying the congenital deafness mutation? In generating your argument, please also respond to the following questions as a way of supporting your main argument: 4 ● Is there a moral difference between selecting against an embryo (i.e., that which has not yet been implanted in a womb) and aborting a fetus with known congenital deafness? How is this difference (or non-difference) relevant to your argument/position? ● You are tasked with authorizing their request to either approve or deny the IVF. Which do you decide, and on what grounds? The following information is relevant for this case (Prompt #2): The 2008 amendments to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act (1990) provide that embryo testing is acceptable where there is a significant risk that the child to be born will have or will develop a serious illness or disability. The HFEA Code of Practice provides that in deciding whether to offer PGD the clinic should consider factors such as the likely degree of suffering associated with the condition, the availability of effective treatment, the degree of any intellectual impairment, and the social support available. The genetic mutation here results in deafness, but this is not a life-shortening condition and there are no other clinical manifestations of the condition. The World Health Organisation states that a disability is not just a health problem but reflects the interaction between features of a person’s body and features of the society in which the person lives. Some members of the deaf community do not consider deafness to be a disability. 5 Feedback for the first Ethic Evaluation Score (68/100) you make many interesting points here. However, I felt a disconnect between the position you were arguing and the core tenets of utilitarianism itself. I did not see any argument as to how an ethical theory that supports the greatest good for the greatest number could possibly support Pippas decision. Moving forward, itll also be important to select citations from the primary text which you are tasked both with explaining and then applying to your argument. These are key opportunities to demonstrate knowledge of the material and to apply said knowledge to your argument. Its also important to note that your thesis statement should already anticipate the theory youll be drawing on. Please feel free to reach out to me if youd like to discuss my comments and feedback further, and/or to work together on your next assignment. Ethical Decision Making and parental autonomy It is morally acceptable for Pippa to exercise her parental autonomy and not vaccinate her daughter, even though that decision would put others at risk because Pippas decision is about to be informed by past events that have left her highly suspicious of the vaccination. However, I believe that it is her right to seek answers regarding the rubella vaccine, which is not forthcoming at the moment. The decision to seek vaccination does not feel her with joy but continued mental uncertainty, as it is the case of her three-year-old son, with whom she is not even sure whether the seizure that occurs is likely to reappear in the future. Therefore, it is imperative to understand and ensure that she is well informed and be allowed to make an informed decision. Thus, I will embrace the Utilitarianism theory, which fosters happiness and oppose actions that cause unhappiness.  Pippa is reluctant to take her daughter for the vaccine for reasons well known. Forcing her to vaccinate her child is unethical and violates the ethical concepts as defined under utilitarian theory. John Stuart Mill illustrates that three basic concepts need to be fully assessed in moral and ethical decision-making. These include personal happiness, an action that promotes peace, and ensuring that everyones satisfaction equally counts. From the basis of this theory, Pippa is not happy, which means that there is no personal happiness essential in building universal joy and peace. The consequence of an action is fundamental to decision making and thus should inform whether a given decision is morally and ethically sound or not (Mill et al. 68). As a result, an action must base on the needs of numerous people in a specific situation. The assessment of these elements is based on a critical understanding of better processes, which is necessary for developing a positive sense of essential processes that define vital underlying concepts. Understanding fundamental concepts that define crucial aspects that help establish the validity of particular concerns is provided by evaluating various actions. As a result, it is necessary to comprehend the total impact of the activity expressed in many scenarios. Understanding strategic concepts that provide a strategic emphasis on better measurements that assist define positive transformation underpins the integration of essential processes within a particular context.  Pippa has two options in this case, and each of the decisions she makes has far-reaching consequences, although there is a difference to the extent of the decision and how easy it is to make an informed decision. One of the decisions is to vaccinate her daughter and live a life of unhappiness and many uncertainties. Another option is to reject vaccination until she can fully comprehend the basis of decision-making and understand the potential effects. However, based on the information provided, it is evident that refusing the vaccine is more fulfilling and brings her more joy and fewer uncertainties, which she should prioritize.  The ability to make an educated decision is based on the assessment of a given actions outcomes. The methods used to complete a task are unimportant since they do not serve as a foundation for evaluating and developing critical conclusions. As a result, when a person is considering a decision, they must assess the consequences of the action, mainly whether the action is in many peoples best interests. As a result, a critical assessment of these notions is essential in defining strategic concepts that characterize positive development. The two principles are very much consistent with each other since they operate to create a shared understanding within a given setting. Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill developed the good with pleasure just like Epicurus. They also held that we ought to maximize the good, mainly focusing on the tremendous amount of good for the most significant number. Thus, the decision made in this context assesses if a specific activity is valid and whether it will have the desired impact on an individuals growth. In both cases, a critical evaluation of the action carries out to ensure that the action can be effectively integrated. It is essential to determining essential aspects that define a greater understanding of crucial concepts that represent a greater understanding of critical measures that restrict positive outcomes. Integration of higher-level thinking in determining a beneficial effect is based on a combination of essential processes that aid in comprehending strategic concepts that define key demands in individuals (Mill et al. 69). Ethics play a critical role in focusing on the vital factors that characterize a positive connection in a fundamentally different way. Working for an organization where personal ethical values and underlying moral policy are successfully linked is always a good idea. However, there are times when a companys ethical code and personal ethical values are at odds. A persons understanding of the companys ethical policy is critical in building a strong focus on critical factors that define a favorable corporate environment. The underlying positive concepts that define a strong understanding of the fundamental issue that defines positive change are quickly impacted (Mill et al. 70). The ethical policy incorporates fundamental principles that describe how people interact within a specific organizational framework. Within an organizational context, and ethical policy should take precedence, although personal moral ideas are critical in personal space. Generating the greatest good for a large number means that many individuals tend to agree with a given issue in question, thus reducing the harmful effect on their overall well-being. Therefore, minimizing suffering is equal to generating the greatest good for the most significant number. It is the responsibility of healthcare providers to inform Pippa on the importance of vaccination and how she can overcome her fears and allow vaccination. She needs guidance to make an informed decision and ensure that she makes her happy and does not expose any individual to adverse risks that are likely to occur. The article also outlines no specific theory that emphasizes assigning pleasures of the intellect, feeling of imagination and moral sentiments. A much higher satisfaction defines a broader perspective that defines individual-level well-being and performance. The utilitarian writers have concentrated on mental well-being superiority over bodily pleasure, safety, and costliness. This means that for Pippa, her mental well-being is better and defines the overall ability to make an informed choice based on the current information. It is also worth noting that some kinds of pleasure are more valuable than others hence build a more interactive context for change and improved performance (Mill et al. 71). ARISTOTLE Nicomachean Ethics translated and edited by ROGER CRISP St Annes College, Oxford Book II Chapter 1 Virtue, then, is of two kinds: that of the intellect and that of character. Intellectual virtue owes its origin and development mainly to teaching, for which reason its attainment requires experience and time; virtue of character (eÅthos) is a result of habituation (ethos), for which reason it has acquired its name through a small variation on `ethos. From this it is clear that none of the virtues of character arises in us by nature. For nothing natural can be made to behave differently by habituation. For example, a stone that naturally falls downwards could not be made by habituation to rise upwards, not even if one tried to habituate it by throwing it up ten thousand times; nor can ®re be habituated to burn downwards, nor anything else that naturally behaves in one way be habituated to behave differently. So virtues arise in us neither by nature nor contrary to nature, but nature gives us the capacity to acquire them, and completion comes through habituation. Again, in all the cases where something arises in us by nature, we ®rst acquire the capacities and later exhibit the activities. This is clear in the case of the senses, since we did not acquire them by seeing often or hearing often; we had them before we used them, and did not acquire them by using them. Virtues, however, we acquire by ®rst exercising them. The same is true with skills, since what we need to learn before doing, we learn by doing; for example, we become builders by building, and lyre-players by playing the lyre. So too we become just by doing just actions, temperate by temperate actions, and courageous by coura- geous actions. What happens in cities bears this out as well, because 23 1103b legislators make the citizens good by habituating them, and this is what every legislator intends. Those who do not do it well miss their target; and it is in this respect that a good political system differs from a bad one. Again, as in the case of a skill, the origin and means of the develop- ment of each virtue are the same as those of its corruption: it is from playing the lyre that people become good and bad lyre-players. And it is analogous in the case of builders and all the rest, since from building well, people will be good builders, from building badly, bad builders. If this were not so, there would have been no need of a person to teach them, but they would all have been born good or bad at their skill. It is the same, then, with the virtues. For by acting as we do in our dealings with other men, some of us become just, others unjust; and by acting as we do in the face of danger, and by becoming habituated to feeling fear or con®dence, some of us become courageous, others cowardly. The same goes for cases of appetites and anger; by conducting themselves in one way or the other in such circumstances, some become temperate and even-tempered, others intemperate and bad-tempered. In a word, then, like states arise from like activities. This is why we must give a certain character to our activities, since it is on the differences between them that the resulting states depend. So it is not unimportant how we are habituated from our early days; indeed it makes a huge difference ± or rather all the difference. Chapter 2 The branch of philosophy we are dealing with at present is not purely theoretical like the others, because it is not in order to acquire knowl- edge that we are considering what virtue is, but to become good people ± otherwise there would be no point in it. So we must consider the matter of our actions, and in particular how they should be performed, since, as we have said, they are responsible for our states developing in one way or another. The idea of acting in accordance with right reason is a generally accepted one. Let us here take it for granted ± we shall discuss it later, both what right reason is and how it is related to the other virtues. But this we must agree on before we begin: that the whole account of what is to be done ought to be given roughly and in outline. As we said at the Nicomachean Ethics 1104a 24 start, the accounts we demand should be appropriate to their subject- matter; and the spheres of actions and of what is good for us, like those of health, have nothing ®xed about them. Since the general account lacks precision, the account at the level of particulars is even less precise. For they do not come under any skill or set of rules: agents must always look at what is appropriate in each case as it happens, as do doctors and navigators. But, though our present account is like this, we should still try to offer some help. First, then, let us consider this ± the fact that states like this are naturally corrupted by de®ciency and excess, as we see in the cases of strength and health (we must use clear examples to illustrate the unclear); for both too much exercise and too little ruin ones strength, and likewise too much food and drink and too little ruin ones health, while the right amount produces, increases and preserves it. The same goes, then, for temperance, courage and the other virtues: the person who avoids and fears everything, never standing his ground, becomes cowardly, while he who fears nothing, but confronts every danger, becomes rash. In the same way, the person who enjoys every pleasure and never restrains himself becomes intemperate, while he who avoids all pleasure ± as boors do ± becomes, as it were, insensible. Temperance and courage, then, are ruined by excess and de®ciency, and preserved by the mean. Not only are virtues produced and developed from the same origins and by the same means as those from which and by which they are corrupted, but the activities that ¯ow from them will consist in the same things. For this is also true in other more obvious cases, like that of strength. It is produced by eating a great deal and going through a great deal of strenuous exercise, and it is the strong person who will be most able to do these very things. The same applies to virtues. By abstaining from pleasures we become temperate, and having become so we are most able to abstain from them. Similarly with courage: by becoming habitu- ated to make light of what is fearful and to face up to it, we become courageous; and when we are, we shall be most able to face up to it. Chapter 3 We must take as an indication of a persons states the pleasure or pain consequent on what he does, because the person who abstains from 25 1104b Book II bodily pleasures and ®nds his enjoyment in doing just this is temperate, while the person who ®nds doing it oppressive is intemperate; and the person who enjoys facing up to danger, or at least does not ®nd it painful to do so, is courageous, while he who does ®nd it painful is a coward. For virtue of character is concerned with pleasures and pains: it is because of pleasure that we do bad actions, and pain that we abstain from noble ones. It is for this reason that we need to have been brought up in a particular way from our early days, as Plato says,10 so we might ®nd enjoyment or pain in the right things; for the right education is just this. Again, if the virtues are to do with actions and situations of being affected, and pleasure and pain follow from every action and situation of being affected, then this is another reason why virtue will be concerned with pleasures and pains. The fact that punishment is based on pleasure and pain is further evidence of their relevance; for punishment is a kind of cure, and cures by their nature are effected by contraries. Again, as we said recently, every state of the soul is naturally related to, and concerned with, the kind of things by which it is naturally made better or worse. It is because of pleasures and pains that people become bad ± through pursuing or avoiding the wrong ones, or at the wrong time, or in the wrong manner, or in any other of the various ways distinguished by reason. This is why some have classi®ed virtues as forms of insensibility or states of rest; but this is wrong, because they speak without quali®cation, without saying `in the right way and `in the wrong way, `at the right time and `at the wrong time, and the other things one can add. We assume, then, that virtue will be the sort of state to do the best actions in connection with pleasures and pains, and vice the contrary. The following considerations should also make it plain to us that virtue and vice are concerned with the same things. There are three objects of choice ± the noble, the useful, and the pleasant ± and three of avoidance ± their contraries, the shameful, the harmful, and the painful. In respect of all of these, especially pleasure, the good person tends to go right, and the bad person to go wrong. For pleasure is shared with animals, and accompanies all objects of 10 Plato, Republic 401e±402a; Laws 653a±c. Nicomachean Ethics 26 choice, because what is noble and what is useful appear pleasant as well. Again, pleasure has grown up with all of us since infancy and is consequently a feeling dif®cult to eradicate, ingrained as it is in our lives. And, to a greater or lesser extent, we regulate our actions by pleasure and pain. Our whole inquiry, then, must be concerned with them, because whether we feel enjoyment and pain in a good or bad way has great in¯uence on our actions. Again, as Heraclitus says, it is harder to ®ght against pleasure than against spirit.11 But both skill and virtue are always concerned with what is harder, because success in what is harder is superior. So this is another reason why the whole concern of virtue and political science is pleasures and pains: the person who manages them well will be good, while he who does so badly will be bad. Let it be taken as established, then, that virtue is to do with pleasures and pains; that the actions which produce it also increase it, or, if they assume a different character, corrupt it; and that the sphere of its activity is the actions that themselves gave rise to it. Chapter 4 Someone might, however, wonder what we mean by saying that becoming just requires doing just actions ®rst, and becoming temperate, temperate actions. For if we do just and temperate actions, we are already just and temperate; similarly, if we do what is literate or musical, we must be literate or musical. But surely this is not true even of the skills? For one can produce something literate by chance or under instruction from another. Someone will be literate, then, only when he produces something literate and does so in a literate way, that is, in accordance with his own literacy. Again, the case of the skills is anyway not the same as that of the virtues. For the products of the skills have their worth within them- selves, so it is enough for them to be turned out with a certain quality. But actions done in accordance with virtues are done in a just or temperate way not merely by having some quality of their own, but 11 Heraclitus, 22 B 85 DK. ¯. c. 500 BCE. Important Ionian philosopher. 27 1105a Book II rather if the agent acts in a certain state, namely, ®rst, with knowledge, secondly, from rational choice, and rational choice of the actions for their own sake, and, thirdly, from a ®rm and unshakeable character. The second and third of these are not counted as conditions for the other skills, only the knowledge. With regard to virtues, knowledge has little or no weight, while the other two conditions are not just slightly, but all-important. And these are the ones that result from often doing just and temperate actions. Actions, then, are called just and temperate when they are such as the just and the temperate person would do. But the just and temperate person is not the one who does them merely, but the one who does them as just and temperate people do. So it is correct to say that it is by doing just actions that one becomes just, and by doing temperate actions temperate; without doing them, no one would have even a chance of becoming good. But the masses do not do them. They take refuge in argument, thinking that they are being philosophers and that this is the way to be good. They are rather like patients who listen carefully to their doctors, but do not do what they are told. Just as such treatment will not make the patients healthy in body, so being this kind of philosopher will not make the masses healthy in soul. Chapter 5 Next we must consider what virtue is. There are three things to be found in the soul ± feelings, capacities, and states ± so virtue should be one of these. By feelings, I mean appetite, anger, fear, con®dence, envy, joy, love, hate, longing, emulation, pity, and in general things accom- panied by pleasure or pain. By capacities, I mean the things on the basis of which we are described as being capable of experiencing these feelings ± on the basis of which, for example, we are described as capable of feeling anger, fear or pity. And by states I mean those things in respect of which we are well or badly disposed in relation to feelings. If, for example, in relation to anger, we feel it too much or too little, we are badly disposed; but if we are between the two, then well disposed. And the same goes for the other cases. Neither the virtues nor the vices are feelings, because we are called good or bad on the basis not of our feelings, but of our virtues and vices; and also because we are neither praised nor blamed on the basis of our Nicomachean Ethics 1105b 28 feelings (the person who is afraid or angry is not praised, and the person who is angry without quali®cation is not blamed but rather the person who is angry in a certain way), but we are praised and blamed on the basis of our virtues and vices. Again, we become angry or afraid without rational choice, while the virtues are rational choices or at any rate involve rational choice. Again, in respect of our feelings, we are said to be moved, while in respect of our virtues and vices we are said not to be moved but to be in a certain state. For these reasons they are not capacities either. For we are not called either good or bad, nor are we praised or blamed, through being capable of experiencing things, without quali®cation. Again, while we have this capacity by nature, we do not become good or bad by nature; we spoke about this earlier. So if the virtues are neither feelings nor capacities, it remains that they are states. We have thus described what virtue is generically. Chapter 6 But we must say not just that virtue is a state, but what kind of state. We should mention, then, that every virtue causes that of which it is a virtue to be in a good state, and to perform its characteristic activity well. The virtue of the eye, for example, makes it and its characteristic activity good, because it is through the virtue of the eye that we see well. Likewise, the virtue of the horse makes a horse good ± good at running, at carrying its rider and at facing the enemy. If this is so in all cases, then the virtue of a human being too will be the state that makes a human being good and makes him perform his characteristic activity well. We have already said how this will happen, and it will be clear also from what follows, if we consider what the nature of virtue is like. In everything continuous and divisible, one can take more, less, or an equal amount, and each either in respect of the thing itself or relative to us; and the equal is a sort of mean between excess and de®ciency. By the mean in respect of the thing itself I mean that which is equidistant from each of the extremes, this being one single thing and the same for everyone, and by the mean relative to us I mean that which is neither excessive nor de®cient ± and this is not one single thing, nor is it the same for all. If, for example, ten are many and two are few, six is the mean if one takes it in respect of the thing, because it is by the same 29 1106a Book II amount that it exceeds the one number and is exceeded by the other. This is the mean according to arithmetic progression. The mean relative to us, however, is not to be obtained in this way. For if ten pounds of food is a lot for someone to eat, and two pounds a little, the trainer will not necessarily prescribe six; for this may be a lot or a little for the person about to eat it ± for Milo,12 a little, for a beginner at gymnastics, a lot. The same goes for running and wrestling. In this way every expert in a science avoids excess and de®ciency, and aims for the mean and chooses it ± the mean, that is, not in the thing itself but relative to us. If, then, every science does its job well in this way, with its eye on the mean and judging its products by this criterion (which explains both why people are inclined to say of successful products that nothing can be added or taken away from them, implying that excess and de®ciency ruin what is good in them, while the mean preserves it, and why those who are good at the skills have their eye on this, as we say, in turning out their product), and if virtue, like nature, is more precise and superior to any skill, it will also be the sort of thing that is able to hit the mean. I am talking here about virtue of character, since it is this that is concerned with feelings and actions, and it is in these that we ®nd excess, de®ciency and the mean. For example, fear, con®dence, appetite, anger, pity, and in general pleasure and pain can be experienced too much or too little, and in both ways not well. But to have them at the right time, about the right things, towards the right people, for the right end, and in the right way, is the mean and best; and this is the business of virtue. Similarly, there is an excess, a de®ciency and a mean in actions. Virtue is concerned with feelings and actions, in which excess and de®ciency constitute misses of the mark, while the mean is praised and on target, both of which are characteristics of virtue. Virtue, then, is a kind of mean, at least in the sense that it is the sort of thing that is able to hit a mean. Again, one can miss the mark in many ways (since the bad belongs to the unlimited, as the Pythagoreans portrayed it, and the good to the limited), but one can get things right in only one (for which reason one is easy and the other dif®cult ± missing the target easy, hitting it dif®cult). For these reasons as well, then, excess and de®ciency are characteristics of vice, the mean characteristic of virtue: 12 Famous athlete from Croton of the later sixth century. Nicomachean Ethics 1106b 30 For good people are just good, while bad people are bad in all sorts of ways.13 Virtue, then, is a state involving rational choice, consisting in a mean relative to us and determined by reason ± the reason, that is, by reference to which the practically wise person would determine it. It is a mean between two vices, one of excess, the other of de®ciency. It is a mean also in that some vices fall short of what is right in feelings and actions, and others exceed it, while virtue both attains and chooses the mean. So, in respect of its essence and the de®nition of its substance, virtue is a mean, while with regard to what is best and good it is an extreme. But not every action or feeling admits of a mean. For some have names immediately connected with depravity, such as spite, shameless- ness, envy, and, among actions, adultery, theft, homicide. All these, and others like them, are so called because they themselves, and not their excesses or de®ciencies, are bad. In their case, then, one can never hit the mark, but always misses. Nor is there a good or bad way to go about such things ± committing adultery, say, with the right woman, at the right time, or in the right way. Rather, doing one of them, without quali®cation, is to miss the mark. It would be equally wrong, therefore, to expect there to be a mean, an excess and a de®ciency in committing injustice, being a coward, and being intemperate, since then there would be a mean of excess and a mean of de®ciency, an excess of excess and a de®ciency of de®ciency. Rather, just as there is no excess and de®ciency of temperance and courage, because the mean is, in a sense, an extreme, so too there is no mean, excess or de®ciency in the cases above. However they are done, one misses the mark, because, generally speaking, there is neither a mean of excess or de®ciency, nor an excess or de®ciency of a mean. Chapter 7 But this general account on its own is not enough. We must also apply it to particular cases, because though more general discussions of actions are of wider application, particular ones are more genuine. This is 13 Unknown. 31 1107a Book II because actions are to do with particulars, and what we say should accord with particulars. We may take them from our diagram. In fear and con®dence, courage is the mean. Of those who exceed it, the person who exceeds in fearlessness has no name (many cases lack names), while the one who exceeds in con®dence is rash. He who exceeds in being afraid and is de®cient in con®dence is a coward. With respect to pleasures and pains ± not all of them, and less so with pains ± the mean is temperance, the excess intemperance. People de®cient with regard to pleasures are not very common, and so do not even have a name; let us call them insensible. In giving and taking money, the mean is generosity, while the excess and de®ciency are wastefulness and stinginess. People with these qualities are excessive and de®cient in contrary ways to one another. The wasteful person exceeds in giving away and falls short in taking, while the stingy person exceeds in taking and falls short in giving away. (At present, we can be content with giving a rough and summary account of these things; a more detailed classi®cation will come later.) There are other dispositions connected with money. One mean is magni®cence, for the magni®cent person, in so far as he deals with large amounts, differs from the generous one, who deals with small. The excess is tastelessness and vulgarity, the de®ciency niggardliness, and they differ from the states opposed to generosity; how they differ will be stated below. In honour and dishonour, the mean is greatness of soul, while the excess is referred to as a kind of vanity, the de®ciency smallness of soul. And just as we said generosity is related to magni®cence, differing from it by being concerned with small amounts, so there is a virtue having to do with small honours that corresponds in the same way to greatness of soul, which is to do with great ones. For one can desire small honours in the right way, and in excessive and de®cient ways as well. The person who exceeds in his desires is described as a lover of honour, the person who is de®cient as not caring about it, while the one in between has no name. Their dispositions are nameless as well, except that of the lover of honour, which is called love of honour. This is why those at the extremes lay claim to the middle ground. We ourselves sometimes refer to the person in the middle as a lover of honour, sometimes as one who does not care about it; and sometimes we praise the person who loves Nicomachean Ethics 1107b 1108a 32 honour, sometimes the one who does not care about it. The reason for our doing this will be stated below. For now, let us discuss the remaining virtues and vices in the way laid down. In anger too there is an excess, a de®ciency, and a mean. They are virtually nameless, but since we call the person in between the extremes even-tempered, let us call the mean even temper. Of those at the extremes, let the one who is excessive be quick-tempered, and the vice quick temper, while he who is de®cient is, as it were, slow-tempered, and his de®ciency slow temper. There are three other means, having something in common, but also different. For they are all to do with our association with one another in words and actions, but differ in that one is concerned with the truth to be found in them, while the other two are respectively concerned with what is pleasant in amusement and in life as a whole. We should talk about these things as well, then, so that we can better see that in all things the mean is praiseworthy, while the extremes are neither praise- worthy nor correct, but blameworthy. Most of them again have no names, but, for the sake of clarity and intelligibility, we must try, as in the other cases, to produce names ourselves. With respect to truth, then, let us call the intermediate person truthful and the mean truthfulness; pretence that exaggerates is boast- fulness and the person who has this characteristic is a boaster, while that which understates is self-depreciation and the person who has this is self-deprecating. In connection with what is pleasant in amusement, let us call the intermediate person witty, and the disposition wit; the excess clownishness, and the person with that characteristic a clown; and the person who falls short a sort of boor and his state boorishness. With respect to the remaining kind of pleasantness, that found in life in general, let us call the person who is pleasant in the right way friendly and the mean friendliness, while he who goes to excess will be obsequious if there is no reason for it, and a ¯atterer if he is out for his own ends; someone who falls short and is unpleasant all the time will be a quarrelsome and peevish sort of person. There are also means in the feelings and in connection with the feelings. Shame, for example, is not a virtue, but praise is also bestowed on the person inclined to feel it. Even in these cases one person is said to be intermediate, and another ± the shy person who feels shame at everything ± excessive; he who is de®cient or is ashamed of nothing at 33 Book II all is called shameless, while the person in the middle is properly disposed to feel shame. Appropriate indignation is a mean between envy and spite; these three are concerned with pain and pleasure felt at the fortunes of those around us. The sort of person to experience appropriate indignation is pained by those who do well undeservedly; the envious person goes beyond him and is pained by anybodys doing well; while the spiteful person, far from being pained at the misfortunes of others, actually feels enjoyment. There will also be an opportunity elsewhere to discuss means like these. As for justice, since it is a term used in more than one way, we shall distinguish its two varieties after discussing the other virtues, and say how each variety is a mean. Chapter 8 Of these three dispositions, then, two are vices ± one of excess, the other of de®ciency ± and the third, the mean, is virtue. Each is in a way opposed to each of the others, because the extremes are contrary to the mean and to one another, and the mean to the extremes. For as the equal is greater in relation to the less, but less in relation to the greater, so the mean states are excessive in relation to the de®ciencies, but de®cient in relation to the excesses; this is so in both feelings and actions. For the courageous person seems rash in relation to the coward, and a coward in relation to the rash person. Similarly, the temperate seems intemperate in relation to the insensible, but insensible in relation to the intemperate, and the generous person wasteful in relation to the stingy person, but stingy in relation to the wasteful. This is why those at one extreme push away the intermediate person to the other, the coward calling the courageous person rash, the rash person calling him a coward, and analogously in other cases. Since they are set against one another in this way, the greatest opposition is that of the extremes to one another, rather than to the mean. For they are further from each other than from the mean, as the great is further from the small and the small further from the great than either is from the equal. Again, some of the extremes seem rather like the mean, as rashness seems like courage, and wastefulness like gener- Nicomachean Ethics 1108b 34 osity. The greatest dissimilarity is that between extremes; and the things that are furthest from each other are de®ned as contraries, so that the further things are apart, the more contrary they will be. In some cases, the de®ciency is more opposed to the mean than is the excess, in others the excess is more opposed than the de®ciency; for example, it is not rashness, the excess, which is more opposed to courage, but cowardice, the de®ciency; while it is not insensibility, the de®ciency, but intemper- ance, the excess, which is more opposed to temperance. There are two reasons for this. One derives from the nature of the thing itself. Because one extreme is nearer and more like the mean, we set in opposition to the mean not this but rather its contrary; for example, since rashness is thought to be more like courage and nearer to it, and cowardice less like it, it is cowardice rather than rashness that we set in opposition, because things that are … IMMANUEL KANT Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals TRANSLATED AND EDITED BY MARY GREGOR WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY CHRISTINE M. KORSGAARD Harvard University CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS PUBLISHED BY THE PRESS SYNDICATE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE T h e Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, U K 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211, USA 477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, vie 3207, Australia Ruiz de Alarcon 13, 28014 Madrid, Spain Dock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town 8001, South Africa http://www.cambridge.org © Cambridge University Press 1997 This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 1998 Eleventh printing 2006 Printed in the United Kingdom at the University Press, Cambridge Typeset in 10/12 Ehrhardt A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data Kant, Immanuel, 1724-1804. [Grundlegung zur Metaphysik der Sitten. English] Groundwork of the metaphysics of morals/Immanuel Kant; translated and edited by Mary Gregor; with an introduction by Christine M. Korsgaard. p. cm. - (Cambridge texts in the history of philosophy) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0 521 62235 2 (hardback). - ISBN 0 521 62695 l (paperback) 1. Ethics. - Early works to 1800. I. Gregor, Mary J. II. Title. III. Series. B2766.E6G7 1998 I 7 o - d c 2 i 97-30153 CIP ISBN o 521 62235 2 hardback ISBN o 521 62695 1 paperback 4:393 Section I Transition from common rational to philosophic moral cognition It is impossible to think of anything at all in the world, or indeed even beyond it, that could be considered good without limitation except a good will. Understanding, wit, judgment3 and the like, whatever such talents of mind5 may be called, or courage, resolution, and perseverance in ones plans, as qualities of temperament, are undoubtedly good and desirable for many purposes/ but they can also be extremely evil and harmful if the will which is to make use of these gifts of nature, and whose distinctive constitution is therefore called character, is not good. It is the same with gifts of fortune. Power, riches, honor, even health and that complete well- being and satisfaction1 with ones condition called happiness, produce bold- ness and thereby often arrogance as well unless a good will is present which corrects the influence of these on the mind and, in so doing, also corrects the whole principle of action and brings it into conformity with universal ends* - not to mention that an impartial rational spectator can take no delight in seeing the uninterrupted prosperity of a being graced with no feature of a pure and good will, so that a good will seems to constitute the indispensable condition even of worthiness to be happy. Some qualities are even conducive^ to this good will itself and can s Geistes. Compare Kants use of Geist in Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View (7:225) and of Geisteskrdfte in The Metaphysics of Morals (6:445). * in mancher Absicht, perhaps in many respects u Beschaffenheit, occasionally translated as character. Constitution is also used to translate Einrichtung and sometimes Anlage, which is used rather loosely in the Groundwork. v Kant uses a great variety of words for what could be called pleasure {Lust) in the most general sense. Although he later draws broad distinctions among pleasures in terms of their origins (e.g., between the pleasure of taste and that of sensation, and between both of these and moral pleasure), these distinctions still leave a number of words problematic. Within the Groundwork (4:396) he suggests a distinction between Zufriedenheit or satisfaction in general and reasons own kind of Zufriedenheit, which in that context I have translated as content- ment. However, his vocabulary is not consistent, and I have not attempted to make it so. Mut. . . Ubermut x allgemein-zweckmdfiig mache y beforderlich. Compare The Metaphysics of Morals (6:407-9). Befordern is usually translated as to further or to promote. GROUNDWORK OF THE METAPHYSICS OF MORALS make its work much easier; despite this, however, they have no inner 4:394 unconditional worth but always presuppose a good will, which limits the esteem one otherwise rightly has for them and does not permit their being taken as absolutely good. Moderation in affects and passions, self-control, and calm reflection are not only good for all sorts of purposes but even seem to constitute a part of the inner worth of a person; but they lack much that would be required to declare them good without limitation (however unconditionally they were praised by the ancients); for, without the basic principles of a good will they can become extremely evil, and the coolness of a scoundrel makes him not only far more dangerous but also immediately more abominable in our eyes than we would have taken him to be without it. A good will is not good because of what it effects or accomplishes, because of its fitness to attain some proposed end, but only because of its volition, that is, it is good in itself and, regarded for itself, is to be valued incomparably higher than all that could merely be brought about by it in favor of some inclination and indeed, if you will, of the sum of all inclina- tions. Even if, by a special disfavor of fortune or by the niggardly provision of a stepmotherly nature, this will should wholly lack the capacity to carry out its purpose - if with its greatest efforts it should yet achieve nothing and only the good will were left (not, of course, as a mere wish but as the summoning of all means insofar as they are in our control) - then, like a jewel, it would still shine by itself, as something that has its full worth in itself. Usefulness or fruitlessness can neither add anything to this worth nor take anything away from it. Its usefulness would be, as it were, only the setting to enable us to handle it more conveniently in ordinary com- merce or to attract to it the attention of those who are not yet expert enough, but not to recommend it to experts or to determine its worth. There is, however, something so strange in this idea of the absolute worth of a mere will, in the estimation of which no allowance is made for any usefulness, that, despite all the agreement even of common under- standing with this idea, a suspicion must yet arise that its covert basis is perhaps mere high-flown fantasy and that we may have misunderstood the 4:395 purpose of nature in assigning reason to our will as its governor. Hence we shall put this idea to the test from this point of view. In the natural constitution of an organized being, that is, one consti- tuted purposively for life,2 we assume as a principle that there will be found in it no instrument for some end other than what is also most appropriate to that end and best adapted to it. Now in a being that has reason and a will, if the proper end of nature were its preservation, its welfare, in a word its happiness, then nature would have hit upon a very bad z zweckmdfiig zum Leben eingerichteten. Zweck is translated as end except when it occurs as part of zweckmdfiig, Zweckmdfiigkeit, and zwecklos. FROM COMMON RATIONAL COGNITION TO PHILOSOPHY arrangement in selecting the reason of the creature to carry out this purpose. For all the actions that the creature has to perform for this purpose, and the whole rule of its conduct, would be marked out for it far more accurately by instinct, and that end would have thereby been at- tained much more surely than it ever can be by reason; and if reason should have been given, over and above, to this favored creature, it must have served it only to contemplate the fortunate constitution of its nature, to admire this, to delight in it, and to be grateful for it to the beneficent cause, but not to submit its faculty of desire* to that weak and deceptive guidance and meddle with natures purpose. In a word, nature would have taken care that reason should not break forth into practical use and have the presumption, with its weak insight, to think out for itself a plan for happiness and for the means of attaining it. Nature would have taken upon itself the choice not only of ends but also of means and, with wise foresight, would have entrusted them both simply to instinct. And, in fact, we find that the more a cultivated reason purposely occupies itself with the enjoyment of life and with happiness, so much the further does one get away from true satisfaction; and from this there arises in many, and indeed in those who have experimented most with this use of reason, if only they are candid enough to admit it, a certain degree of misology, that is, hatred of reason; for, after calculating all the advantages they draw - 1 do not say from the invention of all the arts of common luxury, but even from the sciences (which seem to them to be, at bottom, only a luxury of the understanding) - they find that they have in fact only brought more trouble upon themselves instead of gaining in happiness; 4:396 and because of this they finally envy rather than despise the more com- mon run of people, who are closer to the guidance of mere natural instinct and do not allow their reason much influence on their behavior. And to this extent we must admit that the judgment of those who greatly moder- ate, and even reduce below zero, eulogies extolling the advantages that reason is supposed to procure for us with regard to the happiness and satisfaction of life is by no means surly or ungrateful to the goodness of the government of the world; we must admit, instead, that these judg- ments have as their covert basis the idea of another and far worthier purpose of ones existence, to which therefore, and not to happiness, reason is properly destined/ and to which, as supreme condition, the private purpose of the human being must for the most part defer. Since reason is not sufficiently competent to guide the will surely with a Begehrungsvermogen. For Kants definition of this term see Critique of Practical Reason (5:8 n) and The Metaphysics of Morals (6:211). Vermogen by itself is sometimes translated as capacity or ability. * bestimmt. Except when it has this sense of vocation, Bestimmung and its cognates are translated in terms of determination. GROUNDWORK OF THE METAPHYSICS OF MORALS regard to its objects and the satisfaction of all our needs (which it to some extent even multiplies) - an end to which an implanted natural instinct would have led much more certainly; and since reason is nevertheless given to us as a practical faculty, that is, as one that is to influence the mill; then, where nature has everywhere else gone to work purposively in dis- tributing its capacities/ the true vocation of reason must be to produce a will that is good, not perhaps as a means to other purposes, but good in itself for which reason was absolutely necessary. This will need not, be- cause of this, be the sole and complete good, but it must still be the highest good and the condition of every other, even of all demands for happiness. In this case it is entirely consistent with the wisdom of nature if we perceive that the cultivation of reason, which is requisite to the first and unconditional purpose, limits in many ways - at least in this life - the attainment of the second, namely happiness, which is always conditional; indeed it may reduce it below zero without nature proceeding unpur- posively in the matter, because reason, which cognizes its highest practical vocation in the establishment of a good will, in attaining this purpose is capable only of its own kind of satisfaction, namely from fulfilling an end which in turn only reason determines, even if this should be combined with many infringements upon the ends of inclination. 4:397 We have, then, to explicate** the concept of a will that is to be esteemed in itself and that is good apart from any further purpose, as it already dwells in natural sound understanding and needs not so much to be taught as only to be clarified - this concept that always takes first place in estimating the total worth of our actions and constitutes the condition of all the rest. In order to do so, we shall set before ourselves the concept of duty, which contains that of a good will though under certain subjective limitations and hindrances, which, however, far from concealing it and making it unrecognizable, rather bring it out by contrast and make it shine forth all the more brightly. I here pass over all actions that are already recognized as contrary to duty, even though they may be useful for this or that purpose; for in their case the question whether they might have been done from duty never arises, since they even conflict with it. I also set aside actions that are really in conformity with duty but to which human beings have no inclination immediately* and c Anlagen d entwickeln. In the context of organisms generally, and more specifically with reference to mans talents and capacities, this is translated as to develop. However, in the context of analytic and synthetic propositions, see the Jasche Logik (9:111, Anmerkung 1), where it is said that in an implicitly identical proposition (as distinguished from a tautology), a predicate that lies unentwickelt (implicite) in the concept of the subject is made clear by means of Entwicklung (explicatio). e unmittelbar. Kant occasionally uses direkt as a synonym; no temporal reference is intended. 10 FROM COMMON RATIONAL COGNITION TO PHILOSOPHY which they still perform because they are impelled^to do so through an- other inclination. For in this case it is easy to distinguish whether an action in conformity with duty is done from duty or from a self-seeking purpose. It is much more difficult to note this distinction when an action conforms with duty and the subject has, besides, an immediate inclination to it. For exam- ple, it certainly conforms with duty that a shopkeeper not overcharge an inexperienced customer, and where there is a good deal of trade a prudent merchant does not overcharge but keeps a fixed general price for everyone, so that a child can buy from him as well as everyone else. People are thus served honestly; but this is not nearly enough for us to believe that the merchant acted in this way from duty and basic principles of honesty; his advantage required it; it cannot be assumed here that he had, besides, an immediate inclination toward his customers, so as from love, as it were, to give no one preference over another in the matter of price. Thus the action was done neither from duty nor from immediate inclination but merely for purposes of self-interest. On the other hand, to preserve ones life is a duty, and besides every- one has an immediate inclination to do so. But on this account the often anxious care that most people take of it still has no inner worth and their maxim has no moral content. They look after their lives in conformity with 4:398 duty but not from duty. On the other hand, if adversity and hopeless grief have quite taken away the taste for life; if an unfortunate man, strong of soul and more indignant about his fate than despondent or dejected, wishes for death and yet preserves his life without loving it, not from inclination or fear but from duty, then his maxim has moral content. To be beneficent^ where one can is a duty, and besides there are many souls so sympathetically attuned that, without any other motive of vanity or self-interest they find an inner satisfaction in spreading joy around them and can take delight in the satisfaction of others so far as it is their own work. But I assert that in such a case an action of this kind, however it may conform with duty and however amiable it may be, has nevertheless no true moral worth but is on the same footing with other inclinations, for example, the inclination to honor, which, if it fortunately lights upon what is in fact in the common interest and in conformity with duty and hence honorable, deserves praise and encouragement but not esteem; for the maxim lacks moral content, namely that of doing such actions not from inclination but from duty. Suppose, then, that the mind of this philanthro- pist were overclouded by his own grief, which extinguished all sympathy with the fate of others, and that while he still had the means to benefit f getrieben. Antrieb is translated as impulse. g Wohltdtig sein. In view of Kants distinction between Wohltun and Wohlwollen (6:393, 450 ff.), Wohltun and its cognates are translated in terms of beneficence and Wohlwollen in terms of benevolence. 11 GROUNDWORK OF THE METAPHYSICS OF MORALS others in distress their troubles did not move him because he had enough to do with his own; and suppose that now, when no longer incited to it by any inclination, he nevertheless tears himself out of this deadly insensibil- ity and does the action without any inclination, simply from duty; then the action first has its genuine moral worth. Still further: if nature had put little sympathy in the heart of this or that man; if (in other respects an honestA man) he is by temperament cold and indifferent to the sufferings of others, perhaps because he himself is provided with the special gift of patience and endurance toward his own sufferings and presupposes the same in every other or even requires it; if nature had not properly fash- ioned such a man (who would in truth not be its worst product) for a philanthropist, would he not still find within himself a source from which to give himself a far higher worth than what a mere good-natured tempera- ment might have? By all means! It is just then that the worth of character 4:399 comes out, which is moral and incomparably the highest, namely that he is beneficent not from inclination but from duty. To assure ones own happiness is a duty (at least indirectly); for, want of satisfaction with ones condition, under pressure from many anxieties and amid unsatisfied needs, could easily become a great temptation to transgression of duty. But in addition, without looking to duty here, all people have already, of themselves, the strongest and deepest inclination to happiness because it is just in this idea that all inclinations unite in one sum. However, the precept of happiness is often so constituted that it greatly infringes upon some inclinations, and yet one can form no determi- nate and sure concept of the sum of satisfaction of all inclinations under the name of happiness. Hence it is not to be wondered at that a single inclination, determinate both as to what it promises and as to the time within which it can be satisfied, can often outweigh a fluctuating idea, and that a man - for example, one suffering from gout - can choose to enjoy what he likes and put up with what he can since, according to his calcula- tions, on this occasion at least he has not sacrificed the enjoyment of the present moment to the perhaps groundless expectation of a happiness that is supposed to lie in health. But even in this case, when the general inclination to happiness did not determine his will; when health, at least for him, did not enter as so necessary into this calculation, there is still left over here, as in all other cases, a law, namely to promote his happiness not from inclination but from duty; and it is then that his conduct first has properly moral worth. It is undoubtedly in this way, again, that we are to understand the * ehrlicher. I have translated this as honest because Kant gives the Latin honestas as a parenthetical equivalent of such derivatives oiEhre as Ehrbarkeit. However, the context often makes it clear that he is not thinking of honesty in the narrow sense. allgemeine 12 FROM COMMON RATIONAL COGNITION TO PHILOSOPHY passages from scripture in which we are commanded to love our neighbor, even our enemy. For, love as an inclination cannot be commanded, but beneficence from duty - even though no inclination impels us to it and, indeed, natural and unconquerable aversion opposes it - is practical and not pathologicaP love, which lies in the will and not in the propensity of feeling/ in principles of action and not in melting sympathy; and it alone can be commanded. The second proposition is this: an action from duty has its moral worth not in the purpose to be attained by it but in the maxim in accordance with which it is decided upon, and therefore does not depend upon the realiza- tion of the object of the action but merely upon the principle of volition in 4:400 accordance with which the action is done without regard for any object of the faculty of desire. That the purposes we may have for our actions, and their effects as ends and incentives of the will, can give actions no uncondi- tional and moral worth is clear from what has gone before. In what, then, can this worth lie, if it is not to be in the will in relation to the hoped for effect of the action? It can lie nowhere else than in the principle of the will without regard for the ends that can be brought about by such an action. For, the will stands between its a priori principle, which is formal, and its a posteriori incentive, which is material, as at a crossroads; and since it must still be determined by something, it must be determined by the formal principle of volition as such when an action is done from duty, where every material principle has been withdrawn from it. The third proposition, which is a consequence of the two preceding, I would express as follows: duty is the necessity of an action from respect for lam. For an object as the effect of my proposed action I can indeed have inclination but never respect, just because it is merely an effect and not an activity of a will. In the same way I cannot have respect for inclination as such, whether it is mine or that of another; I can at most in the first case approve it and in the second sometimes even love it, that is, regard it as favorable to my own advantage. Only what is connected with my will merely as ground and never as effect, what does not serve my inclination but outweighs it or at least excludes it altogether from calculations in making a choice-hence the mere law for itself-can be an object of respect and so a command. Now, an action from duty is to put aside entirely the influence of inclination and with it every object of the will; hence there is left for the will nothing that could determine it except J pathologische, i.e., dependent upon sensibility k Empfindung. In the Critique of Judgment (5:206) Kant distinguishes an objective sensation (e.g., green) from a subjective sensation (e.g., pleasure) and suggests that misunderstand- ing could be avoided if feeling (Gefiiht) were used for the latter. I have followed his suggestion, while indicating the German word in a note. lbeiderWahl 13 GROUNDWORK OF THE METAPHYSICS OF MORALS objectively the law and subjectively pure respect for this practical law, and so 4:401 the maxim* of complying with such a law even if it infringes upon all my inclinations. Thus the moral worth of an action does not lie in the effect expected from it and so too does not lie in any principle of action that needs to borrow its motive from this expected effect. For, all these effects (agree- ableness of ones condition, indeed even promotion of others happiness) could have been also brought about by other causes, so that there would have been no need, for this, of the will of a rational being, in which, however, the highest and unconditional good alone can be found. Hence nothing other than the representation of the law in itself, which can of course occur only in a rational being, insofar as it and not the hoped-for effect is the determining ground of the will, can constitute the preeminent good we call moral, which is already present in the person himself who acts in accordance with this representation and need not wait upon the effect of his action. + 4:402 But what kind of law can that be, the representation of which must determine the will, even without regard for the effect expected from it, in order for the will to be called good absolutely and without limitation? Since I have deprived the will of every impulse that could arise for it from obeying some law, nothing is left but the conformity of actions as such with universal law,w which alone is to serve the will as its principle, that is, #A maxim is the subjective principle of volition; the objective principle (i.e., that which would also serve subjectively as the practical principle for all rational beings if reason had complete control over the faculty of desire) is the practical law. tit could be objected that I only seek refuge, behind the word respect, in an obscure feeling, instead of distinctly resolving the question by means of a concept of reason. But though respect is a feeling, it is not one received by means of influence; it is, instead, a feeling self- wrought by means of a rational concept and therefore specifically different from all feelings of the first kind, which can be reduced to inclination or fear. What I cognize immediately as a law for me I cognize with respect, which signifies merely consciousness of the subordination of my will to a law without the mediation of other influences on my sense. Immediate determination of the will by means of the law and consciousness of this is called respect, so that this is regarded as the effect of the law on the subject, and not as the cause of the law. Respect is properly the representation of a worth that infringes upon my self-love. Hence there is something that is regarded as an object neither of inclination nor of fear, though it has something analogous to both. The object of respect is therefore simply the law, and indeed the law that we impose upon ourselves and yet as necessary in itself. As a law we are subject to it without consulting self-love; as imposed upon us by ourselves it is nevertheless a result of our will; and in the first respect it has an analogy with fear, in the second with inclination. Any respect for a person is properly only respect for the law (of integrity and so forth) of which he gives us an example. Because we also regard enlarging our talents as a duty, we represent a person of talents also as, so to speak, an example of the law (to become like him in this by practice), and this is what constitutes our respect. All so-called moral interest consists simply in respect for the law. m die allgemeine Gesetzmdfiigkeit der Handlungen uberhaupt 14 FROM COMMON RATIONAL COGNITION TO PHILOSOPHY / ought never to act except in such a way that I could also will that my maxim should become a universal law. Here mere conformity to law as such, with- out having as its basis some law determined for certain actions, is what serves the will as its principle, and must so serve it, if duty is not to be everywhere an empty delusion and a chimerical concept. Common human reason also agrees completely with this in its practical appraisals and always has this principle before its eyes. Let the question be, for example: may I, when hard pressed, make a promise with the intention not to keep it? Here I easily distinguish two significations the question can have: whether it is prudent or whether it is in conformity with duty to make a false promise. The first can undoubtedly often be the case. I see very well that it is not enough to get out of a present difficulty by means of this subterfuge but that I must reflect carefully whether this lie may later give rise to much greater inconvenience for me than that from which I now extricate myself; and since, with all my supposed cunning, the results cannot be so easily foreseen but that once confidence in me is lost this could be far more prejudicial to me than all the troubles I now think to avoid, I must reflect whether the matter might be handled more prudently by proceeding on a general maxim and making it a habit to promise nothing except with the intention of keeping it. But it is soon clear to me that such a maxim will still be based only on results feared. To be truthful from duty, however, is something entirely different from being truthful from anxiety about detrimental results, since in the first case the concept of the action in itself already contains a law for me while in the second I must first look about elsewhere to see what effects on me might be combined with it. For, if I deviate from the principle of duty this is quite certainly evil; but if I am unfaithful to my maxim of prudence this can 4:403 sometimes be very advantageous to me, although it is certainly safer to abide by it. However, to inform myself in the shortest and yet infallible way about the answer to this problem, whether a lying promise is in conformity with duty, I ask myself: would I indeed be content that my maxim (to get myself out of difficulties by a false promise) should hold as a universal law (for myself as well as for others)? and could I indeed say to myself that every one may make a false promise when he finds himself in a difficulty he can get out of in no other way? Then I soon become aware that I could indeed will the lie, but by no means a universal law to lie; … The Ethics of Care: Personal, Political, and Global Virginia Held OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 1 The Ethics of Care as Moral Theory The ethics of care is only a few decades old.1 Some theorists do not like the term ‘care’ to designate this approach to moral issues and have tried substituting ‘the ethic of love,’ or ‘relational ethics,’ but the discourse keeps returning to ‘care’ as the so far more satisfactory of the terms considered, though dissatisfactions with it remain. The concept of care has the advantage of not losing sight of the work involved in caring for people and of not lending itself to the interpretation of morality as ideal but impractical to which advocates of the ethics of care often object. Care is both value and practice. By now, the ethics of care has moved far beyond its original formulations, and any attempt to evaluate it should consider much more than the one or two early works so frequently cited. It has been developed as a moral theory relevant not only to the so-called private realms of family and friendship but to medical practice, law, political life, the organization of society, war, and international relations. The ethics of care is sometimes seen as a potential moral theory to be sub- stituted for such dominant moral theories as Kantian ethics, utilitarianism, or Aristotelian virtue ethics. It is sometimes seen as a form of virtue ethics. It is almost always developed as emphasizing neglected moral considerations of at least as much importance as the considerations central to moralities of justice and rights or of utility and preference satisfaction. And many who contribute to the understanding of the ethics of care seek to integrate the moral considerations, such as justice, which other moral theories have clarified, satisfactorily with those of care, though they often see the need to reconceptualize these considerations. Features of the Ethics of Care Some advocates of the ethics of care resist generalizing this approach into something that can be fitted into the form of a moral theory. They see it as 9 a mosaic of insights and value the way it is sensitive to contextual nuance and particular narratives rather than making the abstract and universal claims of more familiar moral theories.2 Still, I think one can discern among various versions of the ethics of care a number of major features. First, the central focus of the ethics of care is on the compelling moral salience of attending to and meeting the needs of the particular others for whom we take responsibility. Caring for one’s child, for instance, may well and defensibly be at the forefront of a person’s moral concerns. The ethics of care recognizes that human beings are dependent for many years of their lives, that the moral claim of those dependent on us for the care they need is pressing, and that there are highly important moral aspects in developing the relations of caring that enable human beings to live and progress. All persons need care for at least their early years. Prospects for human progress and flourishing hinge fundamentally on the care that those needing it receive, and the ethics of care stresses the moral force of the responsibility to respond to the needs of the de- pendent. Many persons will become ill and dependent for some periods of their later lives, including in frail old age, and some who are permanently disabled will need care the whole of their lives. Moralities built on the image of the independent, autonomous, rational individual largely overlook the reality of human dependence and the morality for which it calls. The ethics of care attends to this central concern of human life and delineates the moral values involved. It refuses to relegate care to a realm ‘‘outside morality.’’ How caring for particular others should be reconciled with the claims of, for instance, universal justice is an issue that needs to be addressed. But the ethics of care starts with the moral claims of particular others, for instance, of one’s child, whose claims can be compelling regardless of universal principles. Second, in the epistemological process of trying to understand what mo- rality would recommend and what it would be morally best for us to do and to be, the ethics of care values emotion rather than rejects it. Not all emotion is valued, of course, but in contrast with the dominant rationalist approaches, such emotions as sympathy, empathy, sensitivity, and responsiveness are seen as the kind of moral emotions that need to be cultivated not only to help in the implementation of the dictates of reason but to better ascertain what morality recommends.3 Even anger may be a component of the moral indignation that should be felt when people are treated unjustly or inhumanely, and it may contribute to (rather than interfere with) an appropriate interpretation of the moral wrong. This is not to say that raw emotion can be a guide to morality; feelings need to be reflected on and educated. But from the care perspective, moral inquiries that rely entirely on reason and rationalistic deductions or calculations are seen as deficient. The emotions that are typically considered and rejected in rationalistic moral theories are the egoistic feelings that undermine universal moral norms, the favoritism that interferes with impartiality, and the aggressive and vengeful impulses for which morality is to provide restraints. The ethics of care, in contrast, typically appreciates the emotions and relational capabilities that enable morally concerned persons in actual interpersonal contexts to 10 CARE AND MORAL THEORY understand what would be best. Since even the helpful emotions can often become misguided or worse—as when excessive empathy with others leads to a wrongful degree of self-denial or when benevolent concern crosses over into controlling domination—we need an ethics of care, not just care itself. The various aspects and expressions of care and caring relations need to be sub- jected to moral scrutiny and evaluated, not just observed and described. Third, the ethics of care rejects the view of the dominant moral theories that the more abstract the reasoning about a moral problem the better because the more likely to avoid bias and arbitrariness, the more nearly to achieve im- partiality. The ethics of care respects rather than removes itself from the claims of particular others with whom we share actual relationships.4 It calls into question the universalistic and abstract rules of the dominant theories. When the latter consider such actual relations as between a parent and child, if they say anything about them at all, they may see them as permitted and cultivating them a preference that a person may have. Or they may recognize a universal obligation for all parents to care for their children. But they do not permit actual relations ever to take priority over the requirements of impartiality. As Brian Barry expresses this view, there can be universal rules permitting people to favor their friends in certain contexts, such as deciding to whom to give holiday gifts, but the latter partiality is morally acceptable only because uni- versal rules have already so judged it.5 The ethics of care, in contrast, is skeptical of such abstraction and reliance on universal rules and questions the priority given to them. To most advocates of the ethics of care, the compelling moral claim of the particular other may be valid even when it conflicts with the requirement usually made by moral theories that moral judgments be uni- versalizeable, and this is of fundamental moral importance.6 Hence the po- tential conflict between care and justice, friendship and impartiality, loyalty and universality. To others, however, there need be no conflict if universal judgments come to incorporate appropriately the norms of care previously disregarded. Annette Baier considers how a feminist approach to morality differs from a Kantian one and Kant’s claim that women are incapable of being fully moral because of their reliance on emotion rather than reason. She writes, ‘‘Where Kant concludes ‘so much the worse for women,’ we can conclude ‘so much the worse for the male fixation on the special skill of drafting legislation, for the bureau- cratic mentality of rule worship, and for the male exaggeration of the importance of independence over mutual interdependence.’ ’’7 Margaret Walker contrasts what she sees as feminist ‘‘moral understanding’’ with what has traditionally been thought of as moral ‘‘knowledge.’’ She sees the moral understanding she advocates as involving ‘‘attention, contextual and narrative appreciation, and communication in the event of moral deliberation.’’ This alternative moral epistemology holds that ‘‘the adequacy of moral un- derstanding decreases as its form approaches generality through abstraction.’’8 The ethics of care may seek to limit the applicability of universal rules to certain domains where they are more appropriate, like the domain of law, and resist their extension to other domains. Such rules may simply be inappropriate THE ETHICS OF CARE AS MORAL THEORY 11 in, for instance, the contexts of family and friendship, yet relations in these domains should certainly be evaluated, not merely described, hence morality should not be limited to abstract rules. We should be able to give moral guidance concerning actual relations that are trusting, considerate, and caring and concerning those that are not. Dominant moral theories tend to interpret moral problems as if they were conflicts between egoistic individual interests on the one hand, and universal moral principles on the other. The extremes of ‘‘selfish individual’’ and ‘‘hu- manity’’ are recognized, but what lies between these is often overlooked. The ethics of care, in contrast, focuses especially on the area between these extremes. Those who conscientiously care for others are not seeking primarily to further theirown individual interests; their interestsare intertwined withthe persons they care for. Neither are they acting for the sake of all others or humanity in general; they seek instead to preserve or promote an actual human relation between themselves and particular others. Persons in caring relations are acting for self- and-other together. Their characteristic stance is neither egoistic nor altruistic; these are the options in a conflictual situation, but the well-being of a caring relation involves the cooperative well-being of those in the relation and the well- being of the relation itself. In trying to overcome the attitudes and problems of tribalism and religious intolerance, dominant moralities have tended to assimilate the domains of family and friendship to the tribal, or to a source of the unfair favoring of one’s own. Or they have seen the attachments people have in these areas as among the nonmoral private preferences people are permitted to pursue if restrained by impartial moral norms. The ethics of care recognizes the moral value and importance of relations of family and friendship and the need for moral guidance in these domains to understand how existing relations should often be changed and new ones developed. Having grasped the value of caring relations in such contexts as these more personal ones, the ethics of care then often examines social and political arrangements in the light of these values. In its more developed forms, the ethics of care as a feminist ethic offers suggestions for the radical transformation of society. It demands not just equality for women in existing structures of society but equal consideration for the expe- rience that reveals the values, importance, and moral significance, of caring. A fourth characteristic of the ethics of care is that like much feminist thought in many areas, it reconceptualizes traditional notions about the public and the private. The traditional view, built into the dominant moral theories, is that the household is a private sphere beyond politics into which government, based on consent, should not intrude. Feminists have shown how the greater social, political, economic, and cultural power of men has structured this ‘‘private’’ sphere to the disadvantage of women and children, rendering them vulnerable to domestic violence without outside interference, often leaving women eco- nomically dependent on men and subject to a highly inequitable division of labor in the family. The law has not hesitated to intervene into women’s private decisions concerning reproduction but has been highly reluctant to intrude on men’s exercise of coercive power within the ‘‘castles’’ of their homes. 12 CARE AND MORAL THEORY Dominant moral theories have seen ‘‘public’’ life as relevant to morality while missing the moral significance of the ‘‘private’’ domains of family and friendship. Thus the dominant theories have assumed that morality should be sought for unrelated, independent, and mutually indifferent individuals as- sumed to be equal. They have posited an abstract, fully rational ‘‘agent as such’’ from which to construct morality,9 while missing the moral issues that arise between interconnected persons in the contexts of family, friendship, and social groups. In the context of the family, it is typical for relations to be between persons with highly unequal power who did not choose the ties and obligations in which they find themselves enmeshed. For instance, no child can choose her parents yet she may well have obligations to care for them. Relations of this kind are standardly noncontractual, and conceptualizing them as con- tractual would often undermine or at least obscure the trust on which their worth depends. The ethics of care addresses rather than neglects moral issues arising in relations among the unequal and dependent, relations that are often laden with emotion and involuntary, and then notices how often these attri- butes apply not only in the household but in the wider society as well. For instance, persons do not choose which gender, racial, class, ethnic, religious, national, or cultural groups to be brought up in, yet these sorts of ties may be important aspects of who they are and how their experience can contribute to moral understanding. A fifth characteristic of the ethics of care is the conception of persons with which it begins. This will be dealt with in the next section. The Critique of Liberal Individualism The ethics of care usually works with a conception of persons as relational, rather than as the self-sufficient independent individuals of the dominant moral theories. The dominant theories can be interpreted as importing into moral theory a concept of the person developed primarily for liberal political and economic theory, seeing the person as a rational, autonomous agent, or a self-interested individual. On this view, society is made up of ‘‘independent, autonomous units who cooperate only when the terms of cooperation are such as to make it further the ends of each of the parties,’’ in Brian Barry’s words.10 Or, if they are Kantians, they refrain from actions that they could not will to be universal laws to which all fully rational and autonomous individual agents could agree. What such views hold, in Michael Sandel’s critique of them, is that ‘‘what separates us is in some important sense prior to what connects us— epistemologically prior as well as morally prior. We are distinct individuals first and then we form relationships.’’11 In Martha Nussbaum’s liberal feminist morality, ‘‘the flourishing of human beings taken one by one is both analyti- cally and normatively prior to the flourishing’’ of any group.12 The ethics of care, in contrast, characteristically sees persons as relational and interdependent, morally and epistemologically. Every person starts out as a child dependent on those providing us care, and we remain interdependent THE ETHICS OF CARE AS MORAL THEORY 13 with others in thoroughly fundamental ways throughout our lives. That we can think and act as if we were independent depends on a network of social relations making it possible for us to do so. And our relations are part of what constitute our identity. This is not to say that we cannot become autonomous; feminists have done much interesting work developing an alternative con- ception of autonomy in place of the liberal individualist one.13 Feminists have much experience rejecting or reconstituting relational ties that are oppressive. But it means that from the perspective of an ethics of care, to construct morality as if we were Robinson Crusoes, or, to use Hobbes’s image, mushrooms sprung from nowhere, is misleading.14 As Eva Kittay writes, this conception fosters the illusion that society is composed of free, equal, and independent individuals who can choose to associate with one another or not. It obscures the very real facts of dependency for everyone when they are young, for most people at various periods in their lives when they are ill or old and infirm, for some who are disabled, and for all those engaged in unpaid ‘‘dependency work.’’15 And it obscures the innumerable ways persons and groups are interdependent in the modern world. Not only does the liberal individualist conception of the person foster a false picture of society and the persons in it, it is, from the perspective of the ethics of care, impoverished also as an ideal. The ethics of care values the ties we have with particular other persons and the actual relationships that partly constitute our identity. Although persons often may and should reshape their relations with others—distancing themselves from some persons and groups and de- veloping or strengthening ties with others—the autonomy sought within the ethics of care is a capacity to reshape and cultivate new relations, not to ever more closely resemble the unencumbered abstract rational self of liberal po- litical and moral theories. Those motivated by the ethics of care would seek to become more admirable relational persons in better caring relations. Even if the liberal ideal is meant only to instruct us on what would be rational in the terms of its ideal model, thinking of persons as the model presents them has effects that should not be welcomed. As Annette Baier writes, ‘‘Liberal morality, if unsupplemented, may unfit people to be anything other than what its justifying theories suppose them to be, ones who have no interest in each others’ interests.’’16 There is strong empirical evidence of how adopting a theoretical model can lead to behavior that mirrors it. Various studies show that studying economics, with its ‘‘repeated and intensive exposure to a model whose unequivocal prediction’’ is that people will decide what to do on the basis of self-interest, leads economics students to be less cooperative and more inclined to free ride than other students.17 The conception of the person adopted by the dominant moral theories provides moralities at best suitable for legal, political, and economic interac- tions between relative strangers, once adequate trust exists for them to form a political entity.18 The ethics of care is, instead, hospitable to the relatedness of persons. It sees many of our responsibilities as not freely entered into but presented to us by the accidents of our embeddedness in familial and social and historical contexts. It often calls on us to take responsibility, while liberal 14 CARE AND MORAL THEORY individualist morality focuses on how we should leave each other alone. The view of persons as embedded and encumbered seems fundamental to much feminist thinking about morality and especially to the ethics of care (see chapter 3 for further discussion). Justice and Care Some conceptions of the ethics of care see it as contrasting with an ethic of justice in ways that suggest one must choose between them. Carol Gilligan’s suggestion of alternative perspectives in interpreting and organizing the ele- ments of a moral problem lent itself to this implication; she herself used the metaphor of the ambiguous figure of the vase and the faces, from psychological research on perception, to illustrate how one could see a problem as either a problem of justice or a problem of care, but not as both simultaneously.19 An ethic of justice focuses on questions of fairness, equality, individual rights, abstract principles, and the consistent application of them. An ethic of care focuses on attentiveness, trust, responsiveness to need, narrative nuance, and cultivating caring relations. Whereas an ethic of justice seeks a fair solution between competing individual interests and rights, an ethic of care sees the interests of carers and cared-for as importantly intertwined rather than as simply competing. Whereas justice protects equality and freedom, care fosters social bonds and cooperation. These are very different emphases in what morality should consider. Yet both deal with what seems of great moral importance. This has led many to explore how they might be combined in a satisfactory morality. One can persuasively argue, for instance, that justice is needed in such contexts of care as the family, to protect against violence and the unfair division of labor or treatment of children. One can also persuasively argue that care is needed in such contexts of justice as the streets and the courts, where persons should be treated humanely, and in the way education and health and welfare should be dealt with as social responsi- bilities. The implication may be that justice and care should not be separated into different ‘‘ethics,’’ that, in Sara Ruddick’s proposed approach, ‘‘justice is always seen in tandem with care.’’20 Few would hold that considerations of justice have no place at all in care. One would not be caring well for two children, for instance, if one showed a persistent favoritism toward one of them that could not be justified on the basis of some such factor as greater need. The issues are rather what constellation of values have priority and which predominate in the practices of the ethics of care and the ethics of justice. It is quite possible to delineate significant differences between them. In the dominant moral theories of the ethics of justice, the values of equality, impartiality, fair distribution, and noninterference have priority; in practices of justice, individual rights are protected, impartial judgments are arrived at, punishments are deserved, and equal treatment is sought. In contrast, in the ethics of care, the values of trust, solidarity, mutual concern, and empathetic responsiveness have priority; in practices of care, THE ETHICS OF CARE AS MORAL THEORY 15 relationships are cultivated, needs are responded to, and sensitivity is dem- onstrated. An extended effort to integrate care and justice is offered by Diemut Bu- beck. She makes clear that she ‘‘endorse[s] the ethic of care as a system of concepts, values, and ideas, arising from the practice of care as an organic part of this practice and responding to its material requirements, notably the meeting of needs.’’21 Yet her primary interest is in understanding the exploi- tation of women, which she sees as tied to the way women do most of the unpaid work of caring. She argues that such principles as equality in care and the minimization of harm are tacitly, if not explicitly, embedded in the practice of care, as carers whose capacities and time for engaging in caring labor are limited must decide how to respond to various others in need of being cared for. She writes that ‘‘far from being extraneous impositions . . . considerations of justice arise from within the practice of care itself and therefore are an important part of the ethic of care, properly understood.’’22 The ethics of care must thus also concern itself with the justice (or lack of it) of the ways the tasks of caring are distributed in society. Traditionally, women have been expected to do most of the caring work that needs to be done; the sexual division of labor exploits women by extracting unpaid care labor from them, making women less able than men to engage in paid work. ‘‘Femininity’’ constructs women as carers, contributing to the constraints by which women are pressed into ac- cepting the sexual division of labor. An ethic of care that extols caring but that fails to be concerned with how the burdens of caring are distributed contributes to the exploitation of women, and of the minority groups whose members perform much of the paid but ill-paid work of caring in affluent households, in day care centers, hospitals, nursing homes, and the like. The question remains, however, whether justice should be thought to be incorporated into any ethic of care that will be adequate or whether we should keep the notions of justice and care and their associated ethics conceptually distinct. There is much to be said for recognizing how the ethics of care values interrelatedness and responsiveness to the needs of particular others, how the ethics of justice values fairness and rights, and how these are different em- phases.23 Too much integration will lose sight of these valid differences. I am more inclined to say that an adequate, comprehensive moral theory will have to include the insights of both the ethics of care and the ethics of justice, among other insights, rather than that either of these can be incorporated into the other in the sense of supposing that it can provide the grounds for the judgments characteristically found in the other. Equitable caring is not nec- essarily better caring, it is fairer caring. And humane justice is not necessarily better justice, it is more caring justice. Almost no advocates of the ethics of care are willing to see it as a moral outlook less valuable than the dominant ethics of justice.24 To imagine that the concerns of care can merely be added on to the dominant theories, as, for instance, Stephen Darwall suggests, is seen as unsatisfactory.25 Confining the ethics of care to the private sphere while holding it unsuitable for public life, as Nel Noddings did at first and as many accounts of it suggest,26 is also to be 16 CARE AND MORAL THEORY rejected. But how care and justice are to be meshed without losing sight of their differing priorities is a task still being worked on. My own suggestions for integrating care and justice are to keep these concepts conceptually distinct and to delineate the domains in which they should have priority.27 In the realm of law, for instance, justice and the as- surance of rights should have priority, although the humane considerations of care should not be absent. In the realm of the family and among friends, priority should be given to expansive care, though the basic requirements of justice surely should also be met. But these are the clearest cases; others will combine moral urgencies. Universal human rights (including the social and economic ones as well as the political and civil) should certainly be respected, but promoting care across continents may be a more promising way to achieve this than mere rational recognition. When needs are desperate, justice may be a lessened requirement on shared responsibility for meeting needs, although this rarely excuses violations of rights. At the level of what constitutes a society in the first place, a domain within which rights are to be assured and care pro- vided, appeal must be made to something like the often weak but not negligible caring relations among persons that enable them to recognize each other as members of the same society. Such recognition must eventually be global; in the meantime, the civil society without which the liberal institutions of justice cannot function presume a background of some degree of caring relations rather than of merely competing individuals (see chapter 8). Furthermore, considerations of care provide a more fruitful basis than considerations of justice for deciding much about how society should be structured, for instance, how extensive or how restricted markets should be (see chapter 7). And in the course of protecting the rights that ought to be recognized, such as those to basic necessities, policies that express the caring of the community for all its members will be better policies than those that grudgingly, though fairly, issue an allotment to those deemed unfit. Care is probably the most deeply fundamental value. There can be care without justice: There has historically been little justice in the family, but care and life have gone on without it. There can be no justice without care, however, for without care no child would survive and there would be no persons to respect. Care may thus provide the wider and deeper ethics within which justice should be sought, as when persons in caring relations may sometimes compete and in doing so should treat each other fairly, or, at the level of society, within caring relations of the thinner kind we can agree to treat each other for limited purposes as if we were the abstract … Chapter 5: Informed Consent 213 it is possible to have a morally acceptable set of re- quirements for informed consent in sense2 that devi- ates considerably from the conditions of informed consent in sense1. However, the burden of moral proof rests with those who defend such deviations since the primary moral justification of the obligation to obtain informed consent is respect for autonomous action. notes 1. President’s Commission, Making Health Care Decisions, Vol. 1, 15 and Jay Katz, The Silent World of Doctor and Patient (New York: The Free Press, 1984), 87 and “The Regulation of Human Research— Reflections and Proposals,” Clinical Research 21 (1973): 758– 91. Katz does not provide a sustained analysis of joint or shared decisionmaking, and it is unclear precisely how he would relate this notion to informed consent. 2. Jay Katz, “Disclosure and Consent,” in A. Milunsky and G. Annas, eds., Genetics and the Law II (New York: Plenum Press, 1980), 122, 128. 3. We have already noted that Katz’s “idea” of informed consent— as the active involvement of patients in the medical decisionmaking process— is different from our sense 1. Informed Consent— Must It Remain a Fairy Tale? JAY KATZ The ideal of informed consent with its presumptions of autonomy and joint decision-making is yet to be fully realized in practice, says Katz. The concept has been legally recognized, but genuine patient self-determination is still not the norm. Physicians acknowledge it but are likely to see it as a perfunctory fulfillment of legal requirements or as an enumeration of risks. The goal of joint decision-making be- tween physicians and patients is still unfulfilled. Physicians must come to see that they have a “duty to respect patients as persons so that care will encompass allow- ing patients to live their lives in their own self-willed ways.” I. The Pre-History of Informed Consent in Medicine The idea that, prior to any medical intervention, physicians must seek their patients’ informed con- sent was introduced into American law in a brief paragraph in a 1957 state court decision,1 and then elaborated on in a lengthier opinion in 1960.2 The emerging legal idea that physicians were from now on obligated to share decisionmaking authority with their patients shocked the medical commu- nity, for it constituted a radical break with the si- lence that had been the hallmark of physician-patient interactions throughout the ages. Thirty-five years are perhaps not long enough for either law or medi- cine to resolve the tension between legal theory and medical practice, particularly since judges were re- luctant to face up to implications of their novel doctrine, preferring instead to remain quite defer- ential to the practices of the medical profession. Viewed from the perspective of medical history, the doctrine of informed consent, if taken seriously, constitutes a revolutionary break with customary practice. Thus, I must review, albeit all too briefly, the history of doctor-patient communication. Only then can one appreciate how unprepared the medi- cal profession was to heed these new legal com- mands. But there is more: Physicians could not easily reject what law had begun to impose on them, because they recognized intuitively that the radical transformation of medicine since the age of medi- cal science made it possible, indeed imperative, for a doctrine of informed consent to emerge. Yet, bowing to the doctrine did not mean accepting it. Indeed, physicians could not accept it because, for reasons I shall soon explore, the nature of informed consent has remained in the words of Churchill, “an enigma wrapped in a mystery.” Originally published in the Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy, vol. 10, Spring 1994. Used with permission. 05-Vaughn-Chap05.indd 213 26/05/16 4:29 PM 214 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T and specific judgments and measures cannot be competently judged by the layman and that the latter must take doctors’ judgments and measures on ‘authority.’ 7 The necessity for such authority was supported by three claims: First, physicians’ esoteric knowledge, acquired in the course of arduous training and practical experi- ence, cannot be comprehended by patients. While it is true that this knowledge, in its totality, is difficult to learn, understand and master, it does not necessarily follow that physicians cannot translate their esoteric knowledge into language that comports with pa- tients’ experiences and life goals (i.e., into language that speaks to quality of future life, expressed in words of risks, benefits, alternatives and uncertain- ties). Perhaps patients can understand this, but phy- sicians have had too little training and experience with, or even more importantly, a commitment to, communicating their “esoteric knowledge” to pa- tients in plain language to permit a conclusive answer as to what patients may comprehend. Second, patients, because of their anxieties over being ill and consequent regression to childlike think- ing, are incapable of making decisions on their own behalf. We do not know whether the childlike be- havior often displayed by patients is triggered by pain, fear, and illness, or by physicians’ authoritar- ian insistence that good patients comply with doc- tors’ orders, or by doctors’ unwillingness to share information with patients. Without providing such information, patients are groping in the dark and their stumbling attempts to ask questions, if made at all, makes them appear more incapable of under- standing than they truly are. We know all too little about the relative contri- butions which being ill, being kept ignorant, or being considered incompetent make to these re- gressive manifestations. Thus, physicians’ unexam- ined convictions easily become self-fulfilling prophesies. For example, Eric Cassell has consis- tently argued that illness robs patients of autonomy and that only subsequent to the act of healing is au- tonomy restored.8 While there is some truth to these contentions, they overlook the extent to which doctors can restore autonomy prior to the act of healing by not treating patients as children but as adults whose capacity for remaining authors of Throughout the ages physicians believed that they should make treatment decisions for their patients. This conviction inheres in the Hippocratic Oath: “I swear by Apollo and Aesculepius [that] I will follow that system of regimen which according to my ability and judgment I consider for the benefit of my pa- tients . . . .”3 The patient is not mentioned as a person whose ability and judgment deserve consideration. Indeed, in one of the few references to disclosure in the Hippocratic Corpus, physicians are admonished “to [conceal] most things from the patient while at- tending to him; [to] give necessary orders with cheerfulness and serenity, . . . revealing nothing of the patient’s future or present condition.” 4 When twenty-five centuries later, in 1847, the American Medical Association promulgated its first Code of Ethics, it equally admonished patients that their “obedience . . . to the prescriptions of [their] physi- cian should be prompt and implicit. [They] should never permit [their] own crude opinions . . . to influ- ence [their] attention to [their physicians].” 5 The gulf separating doctors from patients seemed unbridgeable both medically and socially. Thus, whenever the Code did not refer to physicians and pa- tients as such, the former were addressed as “gentle- men” and the latter as “fellow creatures.” To be sure, caring for patients’ medical needs and “abstain[ing] from whatever is deleterious and mischievous” 6 was deeply imbedded in the ethos of Hippocratic medi- cine. The idea that patients were also “autonomous” human beings, entitled to being partners in decision- making, was, until recently, rarely given recognition in the lexicon of medical ethics. The notion that human beings possess individual human rights, de- serving of respect, of course, is of recent origin. Yet it antedates the twentieth century and therefore could have had an impact on the nature and quality of the physician-patient relationship. It did not. Instead, the conviction that physi- cians should decide what is best for their patients, and, therefore, that the authority and power to do so should remain vested in them, continued to have a deep hold on the practices of the medical profes- sion. For example, in the early 1950s the influential Harvard sociologist Talcott Parsons, who echoed physicians’ views, stated that the physician is a technically competent person whose competence 05-Vaughn-Chap05.indd 214 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 5: Informed Consent 215 II. The Age of Medical Science and Informed Consent During the millennia of medical history, and until the beginning of the twentieth century, physicians could not explain to their patients, or— from the perspective of hindsight— to themselves, which of their treatment recommendations were curative and which were not. To be sure, doctors, by careful bedside observation, tried their level best “to ab- stain from what is deleterious and mischievous,” to help if they could, and to be available for comfort during the hours, days or months of suffering. Doing more curatively, however, only became pos- sible with the advent of the age of medical science. The introduction of scientific reasoning into medi- cine, aided by the results of carefully conducted re- search, permitted doctors for the first time to discriminate more aptly between knowledge, igno- rance and conjecture in their recommendations for or against treatment. Moreover, the spectacular technological advances in the diagnosis and treat- ment of disease, spawned by medical science, pro- vided patients and doctors with ever-increasing therapeutic options, each having its own particular benefits and risks. Thus, for the first time in medical history it is possible, even medically and morally imperative, to give patients a voice in medical decisionmak- ing. It is possible because knowledge and igno- rance can be better specified; it is medically imperative because a variety of treatments are available, each of which can bestow great benefits or inflict grievous harm; it is morally imperative because patients, depending on the lifestyle they wish to lead during and after treatment, must be given a choice. All this seems self-evident. Yet, the physician- patient relationship— the conversations between the two parties— was not altered with the transfor- mation of medical practice during the twentieth century. Indeed, the silence only deepened once laboratory data were inscribed in charts and not in patients’ minds, once machines allowed physicians’ eyes to gaze not at patients’ faces but at the numbers they displayed, once x-rays and electrocardiograms began to speak for patients’ suffering rather than their suffering voices. their own fate can be sustained and nourished. Cas- sell’s views are reminiscent of Dostoyevsky’s Grand Inquisitor who proclaimed that “at the most fearful moments of life,” mankind is in need of “miracle, mystery and authority.”9 While, in this modern age, a person’s capacity and right to take responsibility for his or her conduct has been given greater recog- nition than the Grand Inquisitor was inclined to grant, it still does not extend to patients. In the con- text of illness, physicians are apt to join the Grand Inquisitor at least to the extent of asserting that, while patients, they can only be comforted through subjugation to miracle, mystery and authority. Third, physicians’ commitment to altruism is a sufficient safeguard for preventing abuses of their professional authority. While altruism, as a gen- eral professional commitment, has served pa- tients well in their encounters with physicians, the kind of protection it does and does not pro- vide has not been examined in any depth. I shall have more to say about this later on. For now, let me only mention one problem: Altruism can only promise that doctors will try to place their pa- tients’ medical needs over their own personal needs. Altruism cannot promise that physicians will know, without inquiry, patients’ needs. Put another way, patients and doctors do not neces- sarily have an identity of interest about matters of health and illness. Of course, both seek restora- tion of health and cure, and whenever such ends are readily attainable by only one route, their in- terests indeed may coincide. In many physician-patient encounters, however, cure has many faces and the means selected affect the nature of cure in decisive ways. Thus, since quality of life is shaped decisively by available treat- ment options (including no treatment), the objec- tives of health and cure can be pursued in a variety of ways. Consider, for example, differences in value preferences between doctors and patients about longevity versus quality of remaining life. Without inquiry, one cannot presume identity of interest. As the surgeon Nuland cogently observed: “A doctor’s altruism notwithstanding, his agenda and value system are not the same as those of the patient. That is the fallacy in the concept of beneficence so cher- ished by many physicians.”10 05-Vaughn-Chap05.indd 215 26/05/16 4:29 PM 216 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T patients should know, particularly in light of the harm that the spectacular advances in medical technology could inflict. Thus, the doctrine was limited in scope, designed to specify those minimal disclosure obligations that physicians must fulfill to escape legal liability for alleged non-disclosures. Moreover, it was shaped and confined by legal as- sumptions about the objectives of the laws of evi- dence and negligence, and by economic philosophies as to who should assume the financial burdens for medical injuries sustained by patients. Even though the judges based the doctrine on “Anglo-American law[̓ s] . . . premise of thorough- going self-determination,”14 the Kansas court put it, or on “the root premise . . . fundamental in Ameri- can jurisprudence that ‘every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body,’”15 as the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia put it in a subse- quent opinion, the doctrine was grounded not in battery law (trespass); but in negligence law. The reasons are many. I shall only mention a compelling one: Battery law, based on unauthorized trespass, gives doctors only one defense— that they have made adequate disclosure. Negligence law, on the other hand, permits doctors to invoke many de- fenses, including “the therapeutic privilege” not to disclose when in their judgment, disclosure may prove harmful to patients’ welfare. Two recent opinions illustrate the problems iden- tified here. First, in a rare opinion, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania reconfirmed its adherence to the mi- nority view among American jurisdictions that bat- tery, not negligence, is the appropriate cause of action whenever lack of informed consent is alleged. The court held that whenever “the patient . . . demon- strated, and the jury found, that he was not advised of . . . material facts, risks, complications and alterna- tives to surgery which a reasonable man would have considered significant in deciding whether to have the operation . . . the causation inquiry ends. The sole issue remaining [is] a determination of damages.”16 Earlier in its opinion, the court quoted, with approval, a prior Pennsylvania decision: [W]here a patient is mentally and physically able to consult about his condition, in the absence of an What captured the medical imagination and found expression in the education of future physi- cians, was the promise that before too long the diag- nosis of patients’ diseases would yield objective, scientific data to the point of becoming algorithms. Treatment, however, required subjective data from patients and would be influenced by doctors’ subjec- tive judgments. This fact was overlooked in the quest for objectivity. Also overlooked was the possibility that greater scientific understanding of the nature of disease and its treatment facilitated better commu- nication with patients. In that respect contemporary Hippocratic practices remained rooted in the past. III. The Impact of Law The impetus for change in traditional patterns of communication between doctors and patients came not from medicine but from law. In a 1957 California case,11 and a 1960 Kansas case,12 judges were as- tounded and troubled by these undisputed facts: That without any disclosure of risks, new technolo- gies had been employed which promised great ben- efits but also exposed patients to formidable and uncontrollable harm. In the California case, a pa- tient suffered a permanent paralysis of his lower ex- tremities subsequent to the injection of a dye, sodium urokan, to locate a block in the abdominal aorta. In the Kansas case, a patient suffered severe injuries from cobalt radiation, administered, in- stead of conventional x-ray treatment, subsequent to a mastectomy for breast cancer. In the latter case, Justice Schroeder attempted to give greater specifi- cations to the informed consent doctrine, first pro- mulgated in the California decision: “To disclose and explain to the patient, in language as simple as necessary, the nature of the ailment, the nature of the proposed treatment, the probability of success or of alternatives, and perhaps the risks of unfortunate results and unforeseen conditions within the body.”13 From the perspective of improved doctor- patient communication, or better, shared decisionmaking, the fault lines inherent in this American legal doc- trine are many: One: The common law judges who promulgated the doctrine restricted their task to articulating new and more stringent standards of liability when- ever physicians withheld material information that 05-Vaughn-Chap05.indd 216 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 5: Informed Consent 217 to the realities of medical practices in an age of sci- ence and to the commands of law. As I said years ago, [T]ranslating the ingredients of [the informed con- sent] process into legal and useful medical prescrip- tions that respect patients’ wishes to maintain and surrender autonomy, as well as physicians’ unend- ing struggles with omnipotence and impotence in the light of medical uncertainty, is a difficult task [which the medical profession] has not pur- sued . . . in any depth.21 Thus, disclosure practices only changed to the extent of physicians disclosing more about the risks of a proposed intervention in order to escape legal liability. Three: Underlying the legal doctrine there lurks a broader assumption which has neither been given full recognition by judges nor embraced by physi- cians. The underlying idea is this: That from now on patients and physicians must make decisions jointly, with patients ultimately deciding whether to accede to doctors’ recommendations. In The Cancer Ward, Solzhenitsyn captured, as only a novelist can, the fears that such an idea engenders. When doctor Ludmilla Afanasyevna was challenged by her pa- tient, Oleg Kostoglotov, about physicians’ rights to make unilateral decisions on behalf of patients, Afa- nasyevna gave a troubled, though unequivocal, answer: “But doctors are entitled to the right— doc- tors above all. Without that right, there’d be no such thing as medicine.”22 If Afanasyevna is correct, then patients must continue to trust doctors silently. Conversation, to comport with the idea of informed consent, ulti- mately requires that both parties make decisions jointly and that their views and preferences be treated with respect. Trust, based on blind faith— on passive surrender to oneself or to another— must be distinguished from trust that is earned after having first acknowledged to oneself and then shared with the other what one knows and does not know about the decision to be made. If all of that had been considered by physicians, they would have appreciated that a new model of doc- tor-patient communication, that takes informed consent seriously required a radical break with current medical disclosure practice. emergency, the consent of the patient is “a prerequi- site to a surgical operation by his physician, and an operation without the patient’s consent is a techni- cal assault.”17 Second, the Court of Appeals of California, in a ground-breaking opinion, significantly reduced the scope of the therapeutic privilege by requiring that in instances of hopeless prognosis (the most common situation in which the privilege has gener- ally been invoked) the patient be provided with such information by asking, “If not the physician’s duty to disclose a terminal illness, then whose?”18 The duty to disclose prognosis had never before been identified specifically as one of the disclosure obligations in an informed consent opinion. Thus, the appellate court’s ruling constituted an important advance. It established that patients have a right to make decisions not only about the fate of their bodies but about the fate of their lives as well. The California Supreme Court, however, reversed. In doing so, the court made too much of an issue raised by the plaintiffs that led the appellate court to hold that doctors must disclose “statistical life expectancy information.”19 To be sure, disclosure of statistical information is a complex problem, but in focusing on that issue, the supreme court’s atten- tion was diverted from a more important new dis- closure obligation promulgated by the appellate court: the duty to inform patients of their dire prog- nosis. The supreme court did not comment on that obligation. Indeed, it seemed to reverse the appel- late court on this crucial issue by reinforcing the considerable leeway granted physicians to invoke the therapeutic privilege exception to full disclo- sure: “We decline to intrude further, either on the subtleties of the physician-patient relationship or in the resolution of claims that the physician’s duty of disclosure was breached, by requiring the disclo- sure of information that may or may not be indi- cated in a given treatment context.”20 Two: The doctrine of informed consent was not designed to serve as a medical blueprint for interac- tions between physicians and patients. The medical profession still faces the task of fashioning a “doc- trine” that comports with its own vision of doctor- patient communication and that is responsive both 05-Vaughn-Chap05.indd 217 26/05/16 4:29 PM 218 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T fractured hip, a peptic ulcer, a stroke, a myocardial infarction. . . . At a time of potent drugs and formi- dable surgery, the exact effects of many therapeutic procedures are dubious or shrouded in dissension.”25 Medical uncertainty constitutes a formidable obstacle to joint decisionmaking for a number of reasons: Sharing uncertainties requires physicians to be more aware of them than they commonly are. They must learn how to communicate them to patients and they must shed their embarrassment over acknowledging the true state of their own and of medicine’s art and science. Thus, sharing uncertainties requires a willingness to admit igno- rance about benefits and risks; to acknowledge the existence of alternatives, each with its own known and unknown consequences; to eschew one single authoritative recommendation; to consider care- fully how to pre sent uncertainty so that patients will not be overwhelmed by the information they will receive; and to explore the crucial question of how much uncertainty physicians themselves can tolerate without compromising their effectiveness as healers. To so conduct oneself is most difficult. For, once doctors, on the basis of their clinical experi- ence and knowledge, conclude which treatment is best, they tend to disregard, if not reject, the view of other colleagues who treat the same condition differently. Consider the current controversy over the management of localized prostate cancer: sur- gery, radiation or watchful waiting.26 Some of the physicians involved in the debate are not even willing to accept that uncertainty exists, or at least they minimize its relevance to choice of treatment. Most who advocate treatment strongly prefer one type over another based on professional special- ization (radiologists tend to recommend radiation; surgeons surgery). Moreover, acknowledgment of uncertainty is undermined by the threat that it will undermine doctors’ authority and sense of superiority. As Nuland put it, to feel superior to those dependent persons who are the sick, is after all a motivating factor that often influences their choice of medicine as a profession.27 All of this suggests that implemen- tation of the idea of informed consent is, to begin with, not a patient problem but a physician problem. Four: The idea of joint decisionmaking is one thing, and its application in practice another. To translate theory into practice cannot be accom- plished, as the Judicial Council of the American Medical Association attempted to do in one short paragraph. The Judicial Council stated that “[t]he patient should make his own determination on treatment. Informed consent is a basic social policy . . . .”23 To translate social policy into medical policy is an inordinately difficult task. It requires a reassessment of the limits of medical knowledge in the light of medical uncertainty, a reassessment of professional authority to make decisions for pa- tients in light of the consequences of such conduct for the well-being of patients, and a reassessment of the limits of patients’ capacities to assume responsi- bility for choice in the light of their ignorance about medical matters and their anxieties when ill. Turn- ing now to these problems, I wish to highlight that, in the absence of such reassessments, informed consent will remain a charade, and joint decision- making will elude us. IV. Barriers to Joint Decisionmaking A . Medical Uncer tainty The longer I reflect about doctor-patient decision- making, the more convinced I am that in this modern age of medical science, which for the first time permits sharing with patients the uncertainties of diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis, the problem of uncertainty poses the most formidable obstacle to disclosure and consent. By medical uncertainty I mean to convey what the physician Lewis Thomas observed so eloquently, albeit disturbingly: The only valid piece of scientific truth about which I feel totally confident is that we are profoundly ignorant about nature. . . . It is this sudden confron- tation with the depth and scope of ignorance that represents the most significant contribution of twentieth-century science to the human intellect. We are, at last facing up to it. In earlier times, we either pretended to understand . . . or ignored the problem, or simply made up stories to fill the gap.24 Alvan Feinstein put this in more concrete language: “Clinicians are still uncertain about the best means of treatment for even such routine problems as . . . a 05-Vaughn-Chap05.indd 218 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 5: Informed Consent 219 but also that we contribute to their welfare includ- ing their health. [Thus the principle asserts] the duty to help others further their important and legitimate interests . . . to confer benefits and ac- tively to prevent and remove harms . . . [and] to balance possible goods against the possible harms of an action.31 Beauchamp and Childress’ unequivocal and strong postulate on autonomy contrasts with the am- biguities contained in their postulate on beneficence. What do they mean by “benefits” and “harms” that allow invocation of beneficence? Do they mean only benefits and harms to patients’ physical integrity, or to their dignitary integrity as choice-making indi- viduals as well? Furthermore, what degree of discre- tion and license is permissible in the duty “to balance?” I have problems with balancing unless it is resorted to only as a rare exception to respect for au- tonomy. While human life is, and human interac- tions are, too complex to make any principle rule absolute, any exceptions must be rigorously justified. I appreciate that mine is a radical proposal and constitutes a sharp break with Hippocratic prac- tices. If informed consent, however, is ever to be based on the postulate of joint decisionmaking, the obligation “to respect the autonomous choices and actions of … 136 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T the personal and professional qualifications, to assume it. Perhaps the current crop of nursing school graduates do not desire it, but there is ample room in the health care system for the sort of “autonomous professional” they wish to be, apart from the hospital nursing role. Wherever we must go to fill this role, it is worth going there, for the traditional nurse is the major force remaining for humanity in a system that will turn into a mechan- ical monster without her. Advocacy or Subservience for the Sake of Patients? HELGA KUHSE Kuhse asks whether nurses should be patient advocates ready when necessary to question physician authority, or be skilled and caring professionals who must always defer to physicians on important medical decisions. Contrary to Lisa Newton’s view, she favors the former, arguing that the nurse’s subservience to physicians is not necessary for managing serious medical problems and issues and that requiring nurses to be subservient would probably harm patients. The view that doctors were gods whose commands must always be obeyed was beginning to be seri- ously questioned in the 1960s and 1970s. There had always been courageous nurses who had occasion- ally challenged orders, but it is almost as if nurses needed a new metaphor to capture their new under- standing of their role before they could finally at- tempt to free themselves from the shackles of the past. This new focus was provided by the metaphor of the nurse as patient advocate. Whereas the old metaphors had focused attention on such virtues as submissiveness and unquestioning obedience and loyalty to those in command, the new metaphor of patient advocate highlighted the virtues of asser- tiveness and courage, and marked a revolutionary shift in the self- perception of nurses and their role. The nurse’s first loyalty, the metaphor suggested, is owed not to the doctor but to the patient. In thus focusing on the nurse’s responsibilities to patients, that is, on the recipients rather than the providers of medical care, the metaphor of the nurse as patient advocate made it possible for nurses to see them- selves as professionals. No longer were they, as the old From Caring: Nurses, Women and Ethics, Helga Kuhse (New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 1997), 35–36, 41–53, 58–60. metaphors had suggested, the loyal handmaidens of medical men: they were professionals whose primary responsibility—like that of all professionals—was to their clients or patients. . . . Nursing—a Naturally Subservient Profession? . . . Our first question must be this: should nurses reject their traditional largely subservient role and act as patient advocates? . . . . . . I shall, without argument, assume that a pro- fession such as medicine or nursing does not exist for the sole or even primary purpose of benefiting its members. This view is widely shared and is im- plicit in most if not all professional codes; it is also regarded as one of the necessary conditions for an organization to claim professional status. For the purposes of our discussion, then, I shall assume that both nursing and medicine are professions which are, or ought to be, aiming at the welfare of others, where those others are patients or clients. This raises the question of the relationship be- tween medicine and nursing, and between doctors and nurses. Might it not be the case that the subordi- nate role of nurses has its basis not in objectionable sexism but rather in a natural hierarchy between the professions, a hierarchy that serves patients best? 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 136 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 3: Paternalism and Patient Autonomy 137 Robert Baker is among those who have pointed out that we cannot simply assume that the nurse’s subservient role has a sexist basis. He does not deny that sexism exists or that the subservient nursing role has traditionally been seen as a feminine one; but, he writes, it is not at all clear whether the role of the nurse is seen as dependent because it is filled by females, who are held to be incapable of independent action by a male-dominated, sexist society . . . or whether females have been channelled into nursing because the profession, by its very nature, requires its members to play a dependent and subservient role (i.e., the traditional female role in a sexist society). In other words, the facts that almost all nurses are women, that the traditional nurse’s role has been a subservient one and that most societies were and are male-dominated and sexist, cannot lead us to the conclusion that the nurse’s role necessarily rests on objectionable sexism. The nurse’s role may, ‘by its very nature’, be a subservient one. But is nursing ‘by its very nature’ subservient to medicine—is it a naturally subservient profession? There is clearly something odd about speaking of the ‘natural subservience’ of nursing to medicine, or for that matter of ‘the natural subservience’ of any  profession in relation to another. To speak of ‘natural subservience’ suggests that the subservient or dominant character of the relevant profession is somehow naturally given and in that sense fixed and largely unchangeable. But is this view correct? As we have seen above, nursing has developed in a very particular social and historical context, in response to the then prevailing goals and purposes of medi- cine on the one hand and the social roles of women and men on the other. Would this not make it more appropriate to view the character of the two health- care professions, and the tasks and privileges that attach to them, as a historically contingent accident or social construct, rather than as a compelling nat- ural necessity? It seems to me the answer must be ‘yes’. There are no natural professional hierarchies that exist inde- pendently of human societies, and we should reject the idea that professions have fixed natures and in- stead view them as changing and changeable social institutions. When looking at professions in this way we may, of course, still want to think of them as  having particular characteristics by which they can be defined (‘social natures’, if you like), but we would now view these characteristics as socially constructed, in much the same way as the institu- tion itself is a social and historical construct. How, then, might one go about capturing the ‘social nature’ or characteristics of a profession?. One might do this in one of two ways: either by focusing on the functions or roles performed by members of the profession or by focusing on the profession’s philosophical presuppositions or goals. Function or Role What is the function or role of a nurse? What is a nurse? The clear and neat boundaries and distinc- tions presupposed by our everyday language and by the terms we use rarely accord with the real world. We often speak of ‘the role’ or ‘the function’ of the nurse, or of the ‘the role’ or ‘the function’ of the doctor. These terms are problematical because nurses and doctors working in different areas of health care perform very different functions and act in many different roles, and there is a considerable degree of overlap between the changeable and changing func- tions performed by members of the two professions. The expansion of knowledge, of nursing educa- tion, and of medical science and technology has resulted in the redefinition and scope of nursing practice. Nurses now carry out a range of proce- dures that were formerly exclusively performed by doctors. Some nurses give injections, take blood samples, administer medication, perform diagnostic procedures, do physical examinations, respond to medical emergencies and so on. Take diagnosis and medical treatment. The diag- nosis and treatment of medical problems had always been regarded as the realm solely of doctors. But, as Tristram H. Engelhardt notes, if one looks closely at the diagnostic activities performed by nurses, it is difficult to see them as essentially different from medical diagnoses. Nursing diagnoses such as ‘ “Airway clearance, ineffective”; “Bowel elimination, alteration in: Diarrhoea”; “Cardiac output, alteration in, decrease”; “Fluid volume deficit”,’ Engelhardt points out, all have their medical equivalents; and 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 137 26/05/16 4:29 PM 138 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T the diagnosis of psychological or psychiatric distur- bances, such as ‘ “Coping, ineffective individual”, or “Thought processes, alteration in” can be given ana- logues in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association.’ Nurses are not permitted by law to perform any ‘medical acts’, but in practice the line be- tween medical and nursing acts has become rather blurred and is, in any case, the result of social and historical choice. Moreover, as nurses have become more assertive and conscious of their own knowl- edge and expertise, there has been a broadening of the definitions of nursing practice. In 1981 the American Nursing Association thus produced a model definition of nursing practice, which included ‘diagnosis . . . in the promotion and maintenance of health’. By 1984, 23 US states had included [nursing] diagnoses, or similar terms, in their nursing prac- tice acts. To conclude, then, the fact that nurses work in very different areas of health care, where they per- form very different functions, and the fact that there are considerable overlaps between contem- porary nursing functions and the functions tradi- tionally performed by doctors makes it difficult to see how it would be possible to define nursing in terms of a particular function or role performed by nurses. If we thus think of ‘the nature’ of nurs- ing in terms of some specific function or role per- formed by all nurses, this suggests not only that nursing lacks a particular nature, but also makes it difficult to claim that nursing is ‘naturally subser- vient’ to medicine. It is true, of course, that nurses frequently work under the direction of doctors, and that control over many of the functions performed by them is retained by the medical profession. It is also true that only doctors may, by law, perform operations, prescribe medical treatments and authorize access to certain drugs. This might lead one to the conclu- sion that nursing and medicine can be distin- guished by the range of socially and legally sanctioned tasks and privileges that members of one but not of the other profession may lawfully engage in. Such a distinction would, of course, be possible. But it is not a distinction that allows one to infer anything about the subservient or dominant ‘nature’ of either one of the two professions. The distribution of socially and legally sanctioned priv- ileges and powers between medicine and nursing is itself a historically contingent fact, and there is nothing to suggest that the current distribution of powers and privileges is either natural or that it is the one that we should, upon reflection, adopt. For example, why should it be the doctor who decides whether a patient should be resuscitated or not? Should it not be the patient? And if not the pa- tient, why not the nurse? Philosophical Commitment Is it possible to distinguish the two professions by their philosophical commitment, that is, by the philosophical presuppositions that guide their re- spective health-care endeavours? It is, again, not easy to see how this might be done. Someone intent on rejecting the view that nursing is naturally sub- servient to medicine might point out that there is no essential difference between the philosophical commitment of the two professions that would allow one to speak of one of them as being subservi- ent to the other. Both nursing and medicine are other-directed and committed to the welfare of cli- ents or patients; members of both professions have a similar understanding of pain and of suffering, of well-being and of health, and both accept the same scientific presuppositions. If there are differences between individual doctors and nurses, these are no more pronounced than those found between in- dividuals from the same professions. Hence, one might conclude, nursing does not have a nature which is different from that of medicine and can therefore not be said to be naturally subservient to medicine. Another, diametrically opposed avenue is some- times chosen by those writing in the field to prove wrong the claim that the nurse’s role is a naturally subservient one. Rather than trying to show that the nurse’s role is—either functionally or in terms of its philosophical commitment—indistinguishable from that of doctors, this second group of nurses claims that the nursing commitment is fundamentally dif- ferent from that of medicine. In other words, those who take this approach start with the premise that 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 138 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 3: Paternalism and Patient Autonomy 139 medicine and nursing have different philosophical commitments or ‘natures’, and then go on to deny that this will necessarily lead to the conclusion that nursing ought to be playing a subservient role to medicine. This is generally done in one of two ways. The first involves drawing a distinction in terms of a com- mitment to ‘care’ and to ‘cure’. Whereas medicine is said to be directed at ‘cure’, the therapeutic com- mitment or moral end of nursing is identified as ‘care’. Medicine and doctors, it is said, often focus on treating or curing the patient’s medical condi- tion; nursing, on the other hand, is based on holistic care, where patients are treated as complex wholes. As a number of Australian nurses put it in their submission to a 1987 inquiry into professional issues in nursing: Medical science and technology is concerned with disease diagnosis and cure. This reductionist model of care inevitably dissects, fragments and depersonalises human beings in the process of caring. The nurse’s caring role demands the preser- vation and integrity of the wholeness of human beings. The second way of attempting to draw a distinc- tion between nursing and medicine involves an appeal to two different ethics. Whereas medicine is said to be based on principles and rules (a so-called [male] ethics of justice), nursing is said to be based on relational caring (a so-called [female] ethics of care). This means, very roughly, that doctors will put ethi- cal principles or rules before the needs or wants of individual patients, whereas nurses regard the needs or wants of individual patients as more important than adherence to abstract principles or rules. These two views do not deny that nursing is context-dependent or that nurses perform very dif- ferent functions in different health-care settings; they also acknowledge that nurses and doctors some- times perform very similar or identical functions and act in very similar roles. None the less, those who take this view assume that nursing is different from medicine because it has a different philosoph- ical commitment or end—that of care. ‘Care’—the nurture, the physical care, and the emotional sup- port provided by nurses to preserve the ‘human face’ of medicine and the dignity of the patient— cannot, the suggestion is, ‘be absent if nursing is present’. There are a number of reasons why I am pessi- mistic about the endeavour of distinguishing nurs- ing from medicine and nurses from doctors in this way. We will discuss some of these at length in later chapters of this book. Here the following will suf- fice: it seems very difficult, in a straightforward and practical sense, to make philosophical com- mitments, such as the commitment to care, the defining characteristic of a profession. Such a defi- nition would presumably include all nurses who have this commitment, but would exclude all those who do not. A registered nurse, who has all the rel- evant professional knowledge and expertise, who performs her nursing functions well, but—let us assume—subscribes to ‘the scientific medical model’ or to an ‘ethics of justice’ would now, presumably, no longer be a nurse. Would her philosophical com- mitment make her a doctor? And would a doctor, who subscribes to ‘care’ now more appropriately be described as a nurse? The problem is raised particularly poignantly in settings, such as intensive care units (ICUs), where the emphasis is on survival and ‘cure’. After Robert Zussman, a sociologist, had observed doctors and nurses in two American ICUs for some time, he reached the conclusion that ICU nurses were not ‘gentle carers’ but technicians. Zussman does not deny that other nurses may well be differently moti- vated, but in the ICU, he says, they are ‘mini-interns’. ‘They are not patient advocates. They are not “angels of mercy”. Like physicians, they have become technicians.’ For all practical purposes, attempts to define a profession in terms of its philosophical commit- ment simply would not work. How would one test a potential nursing candidate for it? How could one ensure continued commitment—especially in a high-technology environment such as intensive care? And why should we assume that ‘care’ should always have priority over either principle or cure? Are there not times when proper care demands that we attempt to ‘cure’ or when ethical principle ought to trump care? If the answer is ‘yes’, as I think it should be, then we should abandon the attempt to 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 139 26/05/16 4:29 PM 140 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T draw a distinction between nursing and medicine in these ways. There is, of course, another reason as well: Even if a sound distinction in the philosophical or ethical commitments of nursing and medicine could be drawn, this would not settle the question of whether nursing is or is not a naturally subservient profes- sion. The fact (if it is a fact) that medicine has one philosophical commitment or nature and nursing another is quite independent of the further question of whether one of the professions is, or ought to be, subservient to the other. Further argument would be needed to show that, for nothing of substance fol- lows from establishing that one thing, or one pro- fession, is different from another. Subservience for the Sake of Life or Limb? What arguments could be provided to show that nurses and nursing ought to adopt a subservient role to doctors and medicine? In accordance with our assumption that nursing is an other-directed profession, a profession that primarily aims at the good of patients, such arguments would have to show that nurses’ subservience would benefit patients more than nurses’ autonomy. . . . [O]ur main focus will be hospital-based nurses. Most nurses work in hospitals, and it is part of their role to carry out the treatment plans of doctors. Here a powerful argument is sometimes put that, regard- less of what is true for other nurses, it is essential that nurses who work in acute-care settings adopt a subservient role. Those who take this view do not necessarily deny that it may be quite appropriate for some nurses, in some contexts, to play an autonomous role; but, they insist, when we are talking about hos- pitals matters are different. Hospitals are bureaucratic institutions and bu- reaucratic institutions, so a typical argument goes, rely for efficient functioning on vertical structures of command, on strict adherence to procedure and on avoidance of initiative by those who have been charged with certain tasks. While this is true of all bureaucratic institutions, strict adherence to rules and to chains of command becomes critically im- portant when we are focusing on hospitals. In such a setting much is at stake. A patient’s health, and even her life, will often depend on quick and reliable responses by members of the health-care team to the directions of the person in charge. Let us accept that efficiency will often depend on some of the central criteria identified above. This does not, however, answer questions regarding the proper relationship between nurses and doctors. Take the notion of a bureaucratic hierarchy. A simple appeal to that notion does not tell us how the bureaucratic hierarchy should be arranged. Here it is generally assumed that it is appropriate for doctors to be in charge and appropriate for nurses to follow the doctors’ orders. But why should this be so? Why is it so widely assumed that doctors should perform the role of ‘captain of the ship’ and nurses those of members of the crew? The Argument from Exper tise The reason most commonly given for this type of arrangement is that doctors, but not nurses, have the relevant medical knowledge and expertise to deal with the varied and often unique medical con- ditions that afflict patients, and the different emer- gencies that might arise. Just as it would not do to put crew-members with only a limited knowledge of navigation in charge of a ship traversing unpredict- able and potentially dangerous waters, so it would not do to put nurses with only a limited knowledge of medicine in charge of the treatment plans of patients. Many a ship and many a patient would be lost as a result of such an arrangement. Hence, if we want ships and patients to be in good hands, it follows that those with expertise—doctors and captains— must be in charge. Such an argument is put by Lisa H. Newton, a vocal critic of nursing’s quest for autonomy. If the purpose of saving life and health is to be accom- plished in an atmosphere which is often tense and urgent, then, Newton argues, all participating activities and agents must be completely subordinated to the medical judgments of the physician. . . . [T]hose other than physicians, involved in medical procedures in a hospital context, have no right to insert their own needs, judgments, or personalities into the situation. The last thing we need at that point is another autono- mous professional on the job, whether a nurse or anyone else. 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 140 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 3: Paternalism and Patient Autonomy 141 is appropriate for doctors to exercise and for nurses to recognize medical authority. . . . There is a connection, then, between the posses- sion of particular expertise and authority. Expertise can be crucial to the achievement of goals and, provided the goals are shared, it will frequently be appropriate for people who are authorities in a par- ticular field to also be in authority. If we accept this argument, it follows that doc- tors ought, other things being equal, to be in charge in medical emergencies and in other specialized contexts that are characterized by an element of urgency. They ought to be in charge because this arrangement best ensures that the therapeutic goal will be reached. Acceptance of this view has, however, less far- reaching consequences than might be assumed. First, even if particular therapeutic treatment goals are most likely to be achieved if a single medically trained person is in charge during, for example, op- erations or resuscitation procedures, this does not entail that the doctor should have overall authority as far as the patient’s treatment is concerned. The authority to decide on an operation or on the desir- ability of implementing resuscitation procedures might, for example, rest with the patient or her rela- tives, and the nurse could conceivably be in charge of the overall treatment plan of the patient. Second, it does not follow that nurses must, even during emergency procedures, blindly follow a doctor’s order. Doctors, like the rest of us, are fallible human beings and sometimes make mistakes. This means that the nurse’s obligation to follow a doctor’s order, even in these specialized contexts, cannot be absolute and may at times be overridden by other consider- ations, such as the avoidance of harm to patients. A study conducted in 1966, when nurses were probably more likely unquestioningly to follow a doctor’s order than they are now, demonstrates that unquestioning obedience to doctors is likely to have some rather undesirable consequences for patients. In the 1966 study, nurses were asked by a doctor, by telephone, to prepare medication which was obvi- ously excessive and to give it to a patient. Twenty-one out of 22 nurses followed the doctors’ orders and were ready to give the medication to the patient when the researchers intervened. . . . There is something right and something wrong about the above kind of argument. To see this, the argument needs untangling. Shared Goals, Urgency and Medical Authority In her argument Newton implicitly assumes that the therapeutic goals of doctors are morally worthy ones, and that the ethical question of whether a doctor should, for example, prolong a patient’s life or allow her to die is not in dispute. This assumption is inher- ent in her observation that the tasks at hand are, or ought to be ‘protective of life itself ’. While we know that this very question is frequently in dispute, let us, for the purpose of our initial discussion, accept and work with that assumption. We shall question it later. There is no doubt that doctors have special med- ical expertise that is relevant to the achievement of various therapeutic goals, including the goal of saving or prolonging life. Extensive medical studies and registration or licensing procedures ensure that doc- tors are experts in medical diagnosis and medical therapy. Their education equips them well to act quickly and decisively in complicated and unfore- seen medical circumstances. As a general rule (but only as a general rule—there could be exceptions to this rule) doctors would thus be better equipped than nurses to respond to a range of medical emergencies. In emergency situations, then, where urgent action is required, it is likely that the best outcome for pa- tients as a whole will be achieved if doctors are in charge. Moreover, since the outcome of medical measures in such contexts often depends crucially on the practical assistance of nurses, it is important that nurses will, as a general rule, quickly and un- questioningly respond to the doctor’s orders. It seems that we should accept this type of ar- gument. During emergency procedures it is more likely that the desired outcome will be achieved if there is not only a single decision-maker, but if this single decision-maker is also the most expert medi- cal professional in the field. This will typically be the doctor. In addition to those cases where urgent action by a medical expert is required to achieve the desired therapeutic goal, there are also some other special- ized contexts, such as the operating room, where it 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 141 26/05/16 4:29 PM 142 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T Given, then, that doctors will occasionally make mistakes and that nurses frequently have the pro- fessional knowledge to detect them, it will be best if  nurses do not understand their duty to follow a doctor’s order as an absolute and exceptionless one. If the doctor’s order is, in the nurse’s profes- sional judgment, clearly wrong, then the nurse must bring her ‘professional intelligence’ into play and question it. . . . Does a nurse who subscribes to the general prop- osition or rule that there are times when it will best serve the interests of patients that she accept the au- thority of doctors thereby necessarily adopt a subser- vient or non-autonomous role? Does she abrogate her autonomy? I think not. As long as a nurse does not surrender her autonomy or judgment, that is, does not blindly follow every order she is given, but rather decides, after reflection, to adopt a general rule that it will be best to accept and act on the doctor’s authority under certain circumstances, then she is not a subservient tool in the doctor’s hands. She is not, as was once proposed, simply ‘an intelligent ma- chine’. She is a moral agent who, in distinction from a mere machine, chooses to act in one way rather than another. To sum up, then: the argument that nurses should—for the sake of achieving certain worthy therapeutic goals such as the saving of life—adopt a  subservient role to doctors typically rests on at least two rather dubious assumptions. The first assumption is that all … 128 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T providers treating the patient. The physician may not discontinue treatment of a patient as long as further treatment is medically indi- cated, without giving the patient reasonable assistance and sufficient opportunity to make alternative arrangements for care. 6. The patient has a basic right to have available adequate health care. Physicians, along with the rest of society, should continue to work toward this goal. Fulfillment of this right is dependent on society providing resources so that no patient is deprived of necessary care because of an inability to pay for the care. Physicians should continue their traditional assumption of a part of the responsibility for the medical care of those who cannot afford essential health care. Physicians should advo- cate for patients in dealing with third parties when appropriate. 2. The patient has the right to make decisions regarding the health care that is recom- mended by his or her physician. Accordingly, patients may accept or refuse any recom- mended medical treatment. 3. The patient has the right to courtesy, respect, dignity, responsiveness, and timely attention to his or her needs. 4. The patient has the right to confidentiality. The physician should not reveal confidential communications or information without the consent of the patient, unless provided for by law or by the need to protect the welfare of the individual or the public interest. 5. The patient has the right to continuity of health care. The physician has an obligation to cooperate in the coordination of medically indicated care with other health care In Defense of the Traditional Nurse LISA H. NEWTON In this essay Newton rejects the contemporary model of a nurse as an “autonomous professional” who can challenge physicians’ authority and be a strong advocate for patients. She argues instead for the traditional notion of nurse as a caregiver cum surrogate mother who is subordinate to physicians. She insists that unambiguous lines of authority and clearly specified roles are essential to a well-run hospital and that in this setting physicians alone must be in charge when serious medical problems come up. From Lisa H. Newton, “In Defense of the Traditional Nurse,” Nursing Outlook, vol. 29 (June 1981). Reprinted with permission. When a truth is accepted by everyone as so obvious that it blots out all its alternatives and leaves no re- spectable perspectives from which to examine it, it becomes the natural prey of philosophers, whose essential activity is to question accepted opinion. A case in point may be the ideal of the “autonomous professional” for nursing. The consensus that this ideal and image are appropriate for the profession is becoming monolithic and may profit from the presence of a full-blooded alternative ideal to re- place the cardboard stereotypes it routinely con- demns. That alternative, I suggest, is the traditional ideal of the skilled and gentle caregiver, whose role in health care requires submission to authority as an essential component. We can see the faults of this traditional ideal very clearly now, but we may perhaps also be able to see virtues that went unno- ticed in the battle to displace it. It is my contention that the image and ideal of the traditional nurse contain virtues that can be found nowhere else in the health care professions, that perhaps make an irreplaceable contribution to the care of patients, 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 128 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 3: Paternalism and Patient Autonomy 129 and that should not be lost in the transition to a new definition of the profession of nursing. A word should be said about what this article is, and what it is not. It is an essay in philosophical analysis, starting from familiar ideas, beliefs, and concepts, examining their relationships and impli- cations and reaching tentative conclusions about the logical defensibility of the structures discovered. It is not the product of research in the traditional sense. Its factual premises—for example, that the “traditional” nursing role has been criticized by those who prefer an “autonomous professional” role—are modest by any standard, and in any event may be taken as hypothetical by all who may be disposed to disagree with them. It is not a polemic against any writer or writers in particular, but a critique of lines of reasoning that are turning up with in- creasing frequency in diverse contexts. Its argu- ments derive no force whatsoever from any writings in which they may be found elsewhere. Role Components The first task of any philosophical inquiry is to de- termine its terminology and establish the meanings of its key terms for its own purposes. To take the first term: a role is a norm-governed pattern of action undertaken in accordance with social expectations. The term is originally derived from the drama, where it signifies a part played by an actor in a play. In cur- rent usage, any ordinary job or profession (physi- cian, housewife, teacher, postal worker) will do as an example of a social role; the term’s dramatic origin is nonetheless worth remembering, as a key to the limits of the concept. Image and ideal are simply the descriptive and prescriptive aspects of a social role. The image of a social role is that role as it is understood to be in fact, both by the occupants of the role and by those with whom the occupant interacts. It describes the charac- ter the occupant plays, the acts, attitudes, and expec- tations normally associated with the role. The ideal of a role is a conception of what that role could or should be—that is, a conception of the norms that should govern its work. It is necessary to distinguish between the private and public aspects of image and ideal. Since role occupants and general public need not agree either on the description of the present operations of the role or on the prescription for its future development, the private image, or self-image of the role occupant, is therefore distinct from the public image or general impression of the role main- tained in the popular media and mind. The private ideal, or aspiration of the role occupant, is distinct from the public ideal or normative direction set for the role by the larger society. Thus, four role-components emerge, from the public and private, descriptive and prescriptive, aspects of a social role. They may be dif- ficult to disentangle in some cases, but they are surely distinct in theory, and potentially in conflict in fact. Transitional Roles In these terms alone we have the materials for the problematic tensions within transitional social roles. Stable social roles should exhibit no significant dis- parities among images and ideals: what the public generally gets is about what it thinks it should get; what the job turns out to require is generally in accord with the role-occupant’s aspirations; and public and role-occupant, beyond a certain base level of “they-don’t-know-how-hard-we-work” grumbling, are in general agreement on what the role is all about. On the other hand, transitional roles tend to exhibit strong discrepancies among the four ele- ments of the role during the transition; at least the components will make the transition at different times, and there may also be profound disagreement on the direction that the transition should take. The move from a general discussion of roles in society to a specific discussion of the nursing pro- fession is made difficult by the fact that correct English demands the use of a personal pronoun. How shall we refer to the nurse? It is claimed that consis- tent reference to a professional as “he” reinforces the stereotype of male monopoly in the professions, save for the profession of nursing, where consistent ref- erence to the professional as “she” reinforces the stereotype of subservience. Though we ought never to reinforce sex and dominance stereotypes, the effort to write in gender-neutral terms involves the use of circumlocutions and “he/she” usages that quickly becomes wearisome to reader and writer alike. Re- ferring to most other professions, I would simply use the universal pronouns “he” and “him”, and ignore the ridiculous accusations of sexism. But against a 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 129 26/05/16 4:29 PM 130 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T background of a virtually all-female profession, whose literature until the last decade universally referred to its professionals as “she”, the consistent use of “he” to refer to a nurse calls attention to itself and distracts attention from the argument. A further problem with gender-neutral termi- nology in the discussion of this issue in particular is that it appears to render the issue irrelevant. The whole question of autonomy for the nurse in profes- sional work arises because nurses have been, and are, by and large, women, and the place of the pro- fession in the health care system is strongly influ- enced by the place of women in society. To talk about nurses as if they were, or might as well be, men, is to make the very existence of a problem a mystery. There are, therefore good reasons beyond custom to continue using the pronoun “she” to refer to the nurse. I doubt that such use will suggest to anyone who might read this essay that it is not ap- propriate for men to become nurses; presumably we are beyond making that at this time. Barriers to Autonomy The first contention of my argument is that the issue of autonomy in the nursing profession lends itself to misformulation. A common formulation of the issue, for example, locates it in a discrepancy between public image and private image. On this account, the public is asserted to believe that nurses are ill-educated, unintelligent, incapable of assuming responsibility, and hence properly excluded from professional status and responsibility. In fact they are now prepared to be truly autonomous profes- sionals through an excellent education, including a  thorough theoretical grounding in all aspects of their profession. Granted, the public image of the nurse has many favorable aspects—the nurse is credited with great manual skill, often saintly dedi- cation to service to others, and, at least below the supervisory level, a warm heart and gentle manners. But the educational and intellectual deficiencies that the public mistakenly perceives outweigh the “posi- tive” qualities when it comes to deciding how the nurse shall be treated, and are called upon to justify not only her traditionally inferior status and low wages, but also the refusal to allow nursing to fill genuine needs in the health care system by assuming tasks that nurses are uniquely qualified to handle. For the sake of the quality of health care as well as for the sake of the interests of the nurse, the public must be educated through a massive educational campaign to the full capabilities of the contemporary nurse; the image must be brought into line with the facts. On this account, then, the issue of nurse autonomy is diagnosed as a public relations problem: the private ideal of nursing is asserted to be that of the autono- mous professional and the private image is asserted to have undergone a transition from an older sub- servient role to a new professional one but the public image of the nurse ideal is significantly not men- tioned in this analysis. An alternative account of the issue of professional autonomy in nursing locates it in a discrepancy be- tween private ideal and private image. Again, the private ideal is that of the autonomous professional. But the actual performance of the role is entirely slavish, because of the way the system works—with its tight budgets, insane schedules, workloads bor- dering on reckless endangerment for the seriously ill, bureaucratic red tape, confusion, and arrogance. Under these conditions, the nurse is permanently barred from fulfilling her professional ideal, from bringing the reality of the nurse’s condition into line with the self-concept she brought to the job. On this account, then, the nurse really is not an autono- mous professional, and total reform of the power structure of the health care industry will be neces- sary in order to allow her to become one. A third formulation locates the issue of auton- omy in a struggle between the private ideal and an altogether undesirable public ideal: on this account, the public does not want the nurse to be an autono- mous professional, because her present subservient status serves the power needs of the physicians; be- cause her unprofessional remuneration serves the monetary needs of the entrepreneurs and callous municipalities that run the hospitals; and because the low value accorded her opinions on patient care protects both physicians and bureaucrats from being forced to account to the patient for the treat- ment he receives. On this account, the nurse needs primarily to gather allies to defeat the powerful interest groups that impose the traditional ideal for their own unworthy purposes, and to replace that 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 130 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 3: Paternalism and Patient Autonomy 131 degrading and dangerous prescription with one more appropriate to the contemporary nurse. These three accounts, logically independent, have crucial elements of content in common. Above all, they agree on the objectives to be pursued: full pro- fessional independence, responsibility, recognition, and remuneration for the professional nurse. And as corollary to these objectives, they agree on the necessity of banishing forever from the hospitals and from the public mind that inaccurate and de- meaning stereotype of the nurse as the Lady with the Bedpan: an image of submissive service, com- forting to have around and skillful enough at her little tasks, but too scatterbrained and emotional for responsibility. In none of the interpretations above is any real weight given to a public ideal of nursing, to the nursing role as the public thinks it ought to be played. Where public prescription shows up at all, it is seen as a vicious and false demand imposed by power alone, thoroughly illegitimate and to be de- stroyed as quickly as possible. The possibility that there may be real value in the traditional role of the nurse, and that the public may have good reasons to want to retain it, simply does not receive any serious consideration on any account. It is precisely that possibility that I take up in the next section. Defending the “Traditional Nurse” As Aristotle taught us, the way to discover the pe- culiar virtues of any thing is to look to the work that it accomplishes in the larger context of its environ- ment. The first task, then, is to isolate those factors of need or demand in the nursing environment that require the nurse’s work if they are to be met. I shall concentrate, as above, on the hospital environment, since most nurses are employed in hospitals. The work context of the hospital nurse actually spans two societal practices or institutions: the hospital as a bureaucracy and medicine as a field of  scientific endeavor and service. Although there is  enormous room for variation in both hospital bureaucracies and medicine, and they may there- fore interact with an infinite number of possible results, the most general facts about both institu- tions allow us to sketch the major demands they make on those whose function lies within them. To take the hospital bureaucracy first: its very nature demands that workers perform the tasks assigned to them, report properly to the proper superior, avoid initiative, and adhere to set proce- dures. These requirements are common to all bu- reaucracies, but dramatically increase in urgency when the tasks are supposed to be protective of life itself and where the subject matter is inherently unpredictable and emergency prone. Since there is often no time to re-examine the usefulness of a pro- cedure in a particular case, and since the stakes are too high to permit a gamble, the institution’s ef- fectiveness, not to mention its legal position, may depend on unquestioning adherence to procedure. Assuming that the sort of hospital under discus- sion is one in which the practice of medicine by quali- fied physicians is the focal activity, rather than, say, a convalescent hospital, further contextual require- ments emerge. Among the prominent features of the practice of medicine are the following: it depends on esoteric knowledge which takes time to acquire and which is rapidly advancing; and, because each patient’s illness is unique, it is uncertain. Thus, when a serious medical situation arises without warning, only physicians will know how to deal with it (if their licen- sure has any point), and they will not always be able to explain or justify their actions to nonphysicians, even those who are required to assist them in patient care. If the two contexts of medicine and the hospital are superimposed, three common points can be seen. Both are devoted to the saving of life and health; the atmosphere in which that purpose is carried out is inevitably tense and urgent; and, if the purpose is to be accomplished in that atmosphere, all participat- ing activities and agents must be completely subordi- nated to the medical judgments of the physicians. In short, those other than physicians, involved in medi- cal procedures in a hospital context, have no right to insert their own needs, judgments, or personalities into the situation. The last thing we need at that point is another autonomous professional on the job, whether a nurse or anyone else. Patient Needs: The Prime Concern From the general characteristics of hospitals and medicine, that negative conclusion for nursing fol- lows. But the institutions are not, after all, the focus 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 131 26/05/16 4:29 PM 132 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T of the endeavor. If there is any conflict between the needs of the patient and the needs of the institutions established to serve him, his needs take precedence and constitute the most important requirements of the nursing environment. What are these needs? First, because the patient is sick and disabled, he needs specialized care that only qualified personnel can administer, beyond the time that the physician is with him. Second, and perhaps most obviously to  the patient, he is likely to be unable to perform simple tasks such as walking unaided, dressing him- self, and attending to his bodily functions. He will need assistance in these tasks, and is likely to find this need humiliating; his entire self-concept as an independent human being may be threatened. Thus, the patient has serious emotional needs brought on by the hospital situation itself, regardless of his dis- ability. He is scared, depressed, disappointed, and possibly, in reaction to all of these, very angry. He needs reassurance, comfort, someone to talk to. The person he really needs, who would be capable of taking care of all these problems, is obviously his mother, and the first job of the nurse is to be a mother surrogate. That conclusion, it should be noted, is inherent in the word “nurse” itself: it is derived ultimately from the Latin nutrire, “to nourish or suckle”; the first meaning of “nurse” as a noun is still, according to Webster’s New Twentieth Century Unabridged Dictionary “one who suckles a child not her own.” From the outset, then, the function of this nurse is identical with that of the mother, to be exercised when the mother is unavailable. And the meanings proceed in logical order from there: the second defi- nitions given for both noun and verb involve caring for children, especially young children, and the third, caring for those who are childlike in their dependence—the sick, the injured, the very old, and the handicapped. For all those groups—infants, children, and helpless adults—it is appropriate to bring children’s caretakers, surrogate mothers, nurses, into the situation to minister to them. It is especially appropriate to do so, for the sake of the psychological economies realized by the patient: the sense of self, at least for the Western adult, hangs on the self- perception of independence. Since disability requires the relinquishing of this self-perception, the patient must either discover conditions excusing his de- pendence somewhere in his self-concept, or invent new ones, and the latter task is extremely difficult. Hence the usefulness of the maternal image associ- ation: it was, within the patient’s understanding of himself “all right” to be tended by mother; if the nurse is (at some level) mother, it is “all right” to reassume that familiar role and to be tended by her. Limits on the “Mother” Role The nurse’s assumption of the role of mother is there- fore justified etymologically and historically but most importantly by reference to the psychological demands of and on the patient. Yet the maternal role cannot be imported into the hospital care situation without significant modification—specifically, with respect to the power and authority inherent in the role of mother. Such maternal authority, includes the right and duty to assume control over children’s lives and make all decisions for them; but the hospital pa- tient most definitely does not lose adult status even if he is sick enough to want to. The ethical legitimacy as well as the therapeutic success of his treatment depend on his voluntary and active cooperation in it and on his deferring to some forms of power and authority—the hospital rules and the physician’s sapiential authority, for example. But these very par- tial, conditional, restraints are nowhere near the threat to patient autonomy that the real presence of mother would be; maternal authority, total, diffuse, and unlimited, would be incompatible with the re- tention of moral freedom. And it is just this sort of total authority that the patient is most tempted to attribute to the nurse, who already embodies the nurturant component of the maternal role. To prevent serious threats to patient autonomy, then, the role of nurse must be from the outset, as essentially as it is nurturant, unavailable for such attribution of au- thority. Not only must the role of nurse not include authority; it must be incompatible with authority: essentially, a subservient role. The nurse role, as required by the patient’s situa- tion, is the nurturant component of the maternal role and excludes elements of power and authority. A further advantage of this combination of mater- nal nurturance and subordinate status is that, just as  it permits the patient to be cared for like a baby 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 132 26/05/16 4:29 PM Chapter 3: Paternalism and Patient Autonomy 133 handle the human needs of the human beings in- volved in the process. The general public entering the hospital as pa- tient or visitor encounters and reacts to that health care system as an indivisible whole, as if under a single heading of “what the hospital is like.” It is at this level that we can make sense of the traditional claim that the nurse represents the “human” as op- posed to “mechanical” or “coldly professional” aspect of health care, for there is clearly some- thing terribly missing in the combined medical and bureaucratic approach to the “case”: they fail to address the patient’s fear for himself and the family’s fear for him, their grief over the separa- tion, even if temporary, their concern for the fi- nancial burden, and a host of other emotional components of hospitalization. The same failing appears throughout the hospi- tal experience, most poignantly obvious, perhaps, when the medical procedures are unavailing and the patient dies. When this occurs, the physician must determine the cause and time of death and the advisability of an autopsy, while the bureaucracy must record the death and remove the body; but surely this is not enough. The death of a human being is a rending of the fabric of human community, a sad and fearful time; it is appropriately a time of bitter regret, anger, and weeping. The patient’s family, caught up in the institutional context of the hospi- tal, cannot assume alone the burden of discovering and expressing the emotions appropriate to the oc- casion; such expression, essential for their own regen- eration after their loss must originate somehow within the hospital context itself. The hospital system must, somehow, be able to share pain and grief as well as it makes medical judgments and keeps records. The traditional nurse’s role addresses itself di- rectly to these human needs. Its derivation from the maternal role classifies it as feminine and permits ready assumption of all attributes culturally typed as “feminine”: tenderness, warmth, sympathy, and a tendency to engage much more readily in the expres- sion of feeling than in the rendering of judgment. Through the nurse, the hospital can be concerned, welcoming, caring, and grief-stricken; it can break through the cold barriers of efficiency essential to its other functions and share human feeling. without threatening his autonomy, it also permits him to unburden himself to a sympathetic listener of his doubts and resentments, about physicians and hospitals in general, and his in particular, without threatening the course of his treatment. His resent- ments are natural, but they lead to a situation of conflict, between the desire to rebel against treat- ment and bring it to a halt (to reassert control over his life), and the desire that the treatment should continue (to obtain its benefits). The nurse’s func- tion speaks well to this condition: like her maternal model, the nurse is available for the patient to talk to (the physician is too busy to talk), sympathetic, un- derstanding, and supportive; but in her subordinate position, the nurse can do absolutely nothing to change his course of treatment. Since she has no more control over the environment than he has, he can let off steam in perfect safety, knowing that he cannot do himself any damage. The norms for the nurse’s role so far derived from the patient’s perspective also tally, it might be noted, with the restrictions on the role that arise from the needs of hospitals and medicine. The patient does not need another autonomous professional at his bedside, any more than the physician can use one or the hospital bureaucracy contain one. The conclusion so far, then is that in the hospital environment, the traditional (nurturant and subordinate) role of the nurse seems more adapted to the nurse function than the new autonomous role. Provider of Humanistic Care So far, we have defined the hospital nurse’s func- tion in terms of the specific needs of the hospital, the physician, and the patient. Yet there is another level of function that needs to be addressed. If we consider the multifaceted demands that the pa- tient’s family, friends, and community make on the hospital once the patient is admitted, it be- comes clear that this concerned group cannot be served exclusively by attending to the medical aspect of care, necessary though that is. Nor is it sufficient for the hospital-as-institution to keep accurate and careful records, maintain absolute cleanliness, and establish procedures that protect the patient’s safety, even though this is important. Neither bureaucracy nor medical professional can 03-Vaughn-Chap03.indd 133 26/05/16 4:29 PM 134 PA R T 2 : M E D I C A L P R O F E S S I O N A L A N D PAT I E N T The nurse therefore provides the in-hospital health care system with human capabilities that would otherwise be unavailable to it and hence unavailable to the community in dealing with it. Such a conclusion is unattractive to the supporters of the autonomous role for the nurse, because the tasks of making objective judgments and of ex- pressing emotion are inherently incompatible; and since the nurse shows grief and sympathy on behalf of the system, she is excluded from decision-making and defined as subordinate. However unappealing such a conclusion may be, it is clear that without the nurse role in this function, the hospital becomes a moral monstrosity, coolly and mechanically dispensing and disposing of human life and death, with no acknowledgement at all of the individual life, value, projects, and relationships of the persons with whom it deals. Only the nurse makes the system morally tolerable. People in pain deserve sympathy, as the dead deserve to be grieved; it is unthinkable that the very societal institution to which we generally consign the suffering and the dying should be incapable of sustaining sympathy and … 682 PA R T 3 : L I F E A N D D E AT H Let us begin with two observations about chronic illness and death: 1. Death does not always come at the right time. We are all aware of the tragedies involved when death comes too soon. We are afraid that it might come too soon for us. By con- trast, we may sometimes be tempted to deny that death can come too late—wouldn’t everyone want to live longer? But in our more sober moments, most of us know perfectly well that death can come too late. 2. Discussions of death and dying usually proceed as if death came only to hermits—or others who are all alone. But most of the time, death is a death in the family. We are connected to family and loved ones. We are sustained by these connections. They are a major part of what makes life worth living for most of us. Because of these connections, when death comes too soon, the tragedy is often two-fold: a tragedy both for the person who is now dead and for those of us to whom she was connected. We grieve both for our loved one who is gone and for ourselves who have lost her. On one hand, there is the unrealized good that life would have been for the dead person herself—what she could have become, what she could have experienced, what she wanted for herself. On  the other, there is the contribution she would have made to others and the ways their lives would have been enriched by her. We are less familiar with the idea that death can come too late. But here, too, the tragedy can be two- fold. Death can come too late because of what living on means to the person herself. There are times when someone does not (or would not) want to live like this, times when she believes she would be better off dead. At times like these, suicide or as- sisted suicide becomes a perfectly rational choice, perhaps even the best available option for her. We are then forced to ask, “Does someone have a right to die?” Assisted suicide may then be an act of com- passion, no more than relieving her misery. There are also, sadly, times when death comes too late because others—family and loved ones— would be better off if someone were dead. (Better off overall, despite the loss of a loved one.) Since lives are deeply intertwined, the lives of the rest of the family can be dragged down, impoverished, com- promised, perhaps even ruined because of what they must go through if she lives on. When death comes too late because of the effect of someone’s life on her loved ones, we are, I think, forced to ask, “Can someone have a duty to die?” Suicide may then be an attempt to do what is right; it may be the only loving thing to do. Assisted suicide would then be helping someone do the right thing. Most professional ethicists—philosophers, theo- logians, and bioethicists—react with horror at the Dying at the Right Time: Reflections on (Un)Assisted Suicide JOHN HARDWIG John Hardwig is a professor emeritus of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Tennessee. In this essay he argues that when “death comes too late,” we may have a duty to die or a duty to help someone else die. Severe, unrelieved pain is just one of several problems that could justify ending a life. Sometimes preserving a life can devastate the lives of those who care about the person. In parti cularly dire situations, there may be moral justification for unassisted suicide, family-assisted suicide, or physician-assisted suicide. John Hardwig, “Dying at the Right Time: Reflections on (Un)Assisted Suicide,” in Ethics in Practice, ed. Hugh LoFollette (Oxford: Blackwell, 2007), 91–102. 10-Vaughn-Chap10.indd 682 26/05/16 4:28 PM Chapter 10: Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide 683 very idea of a duty to die. Many of them even argue that euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide should not be legalized because then some people might somehow get the idea that they have a duty to die. To this way of thinking, someone who got that idea could only be the victim of vicious social pressure or perverse moral reasoning. But when I ask my classes for examples of times when death would come too late, one of the first conditions students always mention is: “when I become a burden to my family.” I think there is more moral wisdom here than in the dismay of these ethicists. Death does not always come at the right time. I believe there are conditions under which I would prefer not to live, situations in which I would be better off dead. But I am also absolutely convinced that I may one day face a duty or responsibility to die. In fact, as I will explain later, I think many of us will one day have this duty. To my way of thinking, the really serious ques- tions relating to euthanasia and assisted suicide are: Who would be better off dead? Who has a duty to die? When is the right time to die? And if my life should be over, who should kill me? 1 However, I  know that others find much of what I have said here surprising, shocking, even morally offensive. So before turning to these questions that I want us to think about, I need to explain why I think some- one can be better off dead and why someone can have a duty to die. (The explanation of the latter will have to be longer, since it is by far the less familiar and more controversial idea.) When Someone Would Be Better Off Dead Others have discussed euthanasia or physician- assisted suicide when the patient would be better off dead. 2 Here I wish to emphasize two points often omitted from discussion: (1) Unrelieved pain is not the only reason someone would be better off dead. (2) Someone can be better off dead even if she has no terminal illness. (1) If we think about it for even a little while, most of us can come up with a list of conditions under which we believe we would rather be dead than continue to live. Severe and unrelieved pain is one item on that list. Permanent unconsciousness may be another. Dementia so severe that we no longer recognize ourselves or our loved ones is yet another. There are some people who prefer not to live with quadriplegia. A future shaped by severe deterioration (such as that which accompanies MS, ALS, AIDS, or Huntington’s chorea) is a future that some people prefer not to live out. (Our lists would be different because our lives and values are different. The fact that some people would not or do not want to live with quadriplegia or AIDS, for example, does not mean that others should not want to live like that, much less that their lives are not worth living. That is very important. The point here is that almost all of us can make a list of conditions under which we would rather not live, and that uncontrolled pain is not the only item on most of our lists.) Focusing the discussion of euthanasia and as- sisted suicide on pain ignores the many other vari- eties of suffering that often accompany chronic illness and dying: dehumanization, loss of indepen- dence, loss of control, a sense of meaninglessness or purposelessness, loss of mental capabilities, loss of mobility, disorientation and confusion, sorrow over the impact of one’s illness and death on one’s family, loss of ability even to recognize loved ones, and more. Often, these causes of suffering are compounded by the awareness that the future will be even bleaker. Unrelieved pain is simply not the only condition under which death is preferable to life, nor the, only legitimate reason for a desire to end one’s life. (2) In cases of terminal illness, death eventually offers the dying person, relief from all her suffering. Consequently, things can be even worse when there is NO terminal illness, for then there is no end in sight. Both pain and suffering are often much worse when they are not accompanied by a terminal ill- ness. People with progressive dementia, for example, often suffer much more if they are otherwise quite healthy. I personally know several old people who would be delighted to learn that they have a termi- nal illness. They feel they have lived long enough— long enough to have outlived all their loved ones and all sense of a purpose for living. For them, even daily existence is much worse because there is no end in sight. 10-Vaughn-Chap10.indd 683 26/05/16 4:28 PM 684 PA R T 3 : L I F E A N D D E AT H Discussions of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide cannot, then, be restricted to those with unrelieved pain and terminal illness. We must also consider requests made by those who have no un- treatable pain and no terminal illness. Often, their case for relief is even more compelling. Sometimes, a refusal of medical treatment will be enough to bring relief. Competent adults who are suffering from an illness have a well-established moral and legal right to decline any form of medical treatment, including life-prolonging medical treat- ment. Family members who must make medical decisions for incompetent people also have the right to refuse any form of medical treatment on their behalf, so long as they are acting in accordance with the known wishes or best interests of their loved one. No form of medical treatment is compulsory when someone would be better off dead. 3 But those who would be better off dead do not always have terminal illnesses; they will not always need any form of medical treatment, not even medi- cally supplied food and water. The right to refuse med- ical treatment will not help these people. Moreover, death due to untreated illness can be agonizingly slow, dehumanizing, painful, and very costly, both in financial and emotional terms. It is often very hard. Refusing medical treatment simply will not always ensure a dignified, peaceful, timely death. We would not be having a national debate about physician- assisted suicide and euthanasia if refusal of medical treatment were always enough to lead to a reasonably good death. When death comes too late, we may need to do more than refuse medical treatment. Religion and Ending a Life Some people can easily see that there are people who would be better off dead. But they still cannot accept suicide or physician-assisted suicide because they believe we have a duty to God not to take our own lives. For them, human life is a gift from God and it remains a gift no matter how much pain and suffering it may bring. It is a sin or an offense against God, the giver of life, to take your own life or to help someone else end theirs. Such believers may also feel that no one should be allowed to end their lives— every life is a gift from God, even the lives of those who do not believe that this is so. I do not understand this position for two rea- sons. First, it involves the assumption that it is possible to take a human life (our own or someone else’s) before God wants it ended, but we cannot possibly preserve it after God wants it ended. For if  we do not make that assumption, we face two dangers—the danger that we are prolonging human life beyond its divine purpose, as well as the danger that we are ending it too soon. If we can extend life longer than God intends, suicide and physician- assisted suicide may be more in accord with God’s wishes than attempts to preserve that life. I can understand the view that everyone dies at precisely the right time, the moment God intends. If that is so, people who commit suicide or who are intentionally killed by physicians also die at precisely the moment God wants them to die. I can also un- derstand the view that we can take life before God wants it ended but we can also extend life longer than God wants it prolonged. But I cannot make sense of the view that we can end a human life too soon but not preserve it too long. Surely, God has given us both abilities or neither one. I also have a second difficulty with this religious objection to suicide, assisted suicide and euthanasia. Suppose there is a right time to die, a divinely or- dained moment when God wants each life to end. Even so, we have no right to assume that God will “take my life” when it’s the right time for me to die. In fact, we cannot even assume that God will send a terminal illness that will kill me at the right time. There could be a religious test—God may want me to take my own life and the question is whether I will meet this final challenge. Or a God who loves me might see that I would benefit spiritually from the process of coming to the conclusion that I should end my own life and then preparing to take it. That might be a fitting ending for me, the culminating step in my spiritual growth or development. In short, a God not totally obsessed with the sheer quantity of our lives may well have purposes for us that are incompatible with longer life—even if we want to live longer. So, I think we should not believe that we always have a duty to God not to take our lives or to assist others in ending theirs. God may want me to step up and assume the responsi- bility for ending my own life or for seeing that 10-Vaughn-Chap10.indd 684 26/05/16 4:28 PM Chapter 10: Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide 685 someone else’s suffering is ended. This observation leads to our next question: Can there be a responsi- bility or duty to die? The Duty to Die I may well one day have a duty to die, a duty most likely to arise out of my connections with my family and loved ones. 4 Sometimes preserving my life can only devastate the lives of those who care about me. I do not believe I am idiosyncratic, morbid or morally perverse in believing this. I am trying to take steps to prepare myself mentally and spiritually to make sure that I will be able to take my life if I should one day have such a duty. I need to prepare myself; it might be a very difficult thing for me to do. Our individualistic fantasy about ourselves some- times leads us to imagine that lives are separate and unconnected, or that they could be so if we chose. If lives were unconnected, then things that happen in my life would not or need not affect others. And  if others were not (much) affected by my life, I  would have no duty to consider the impact of my life on others. I would then be morally free to choose whatever life and death I prefer for myself. I certainly would have no duty to die when I would prefer to live. Most discussions of assisted suicide and eutha- nasia implicitly share this individualistic fantasy: they just ignore the fact that people are connected and lives intertwined. As a result, they approach issues of life or death as if the only person affected is the one who lives or dies. They mistakenly assume the pivotal issue is simply whether the person her- self prefers not to live like this and whether she her- self would be better off dead. 5 But this is morally obtuse. The fact is we are not a race of hermits—most of us are connected to family and loved ones. We prefer it that way. We would not want to be all alone, especially when we are seriously ill, as we age, and when we are dying. But being with others is not all benefits and plea- sures; it brings responsibilities, as well. For then what happens to us and the choices we make can dramat- ically affect the lives of our loved ones. It is these connections that can, tragically, generate obliga- tions to die, as continuing to live takes too much of a toll on the lives of those connected to us. 6 The lives of our loved ones can, we know, be seri- ously compromised by caring for us. The burdens of providing care or even just supervision 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, are often overwhelming. 7 But it can also be emotionally devastating simply to be married to a spouse who is increasingly distant, uncommunicative, unresponsive, foreign and un- reachable. A local newspaper tells the story of a woman with Alzheimer’s who came running into her den screaming: “That man’s trying to have sex with me! He’s trying to have sex with me! Who IS that man?!” That man was her loving husband of more than 40 years who had devoted the past 10 years of his life to caring for her (Smith, 1995). How terrible that experience must have been for her. But how terrible those years must be for him, too. We must also acknowledge that the lives of our loved ones can also be devastated just by having to  pay for health care for us. A recent study docu- mented the financial aspects of caring for a dying member of a family. Only those who had illnesses severe enough to give them less than a 50 percent chance to live six more months were included in this study. When these patients survived their ini- tial hospitalization and were discharged, about one- third required considerable caregiving from their families; in 20 percent of cases a family member had to quit work or make some other major lifestyle change; almost one-third of these families lost all of their savings, and just under 30 percent lost a major source of income (Covinsky et al., 1994). A chronic illness or debilitating injury in a family is a misfortune. It is, most often, nobody’s fault; no one is responsible for this illness or injury. But then we face choices about how we will respond to this misfortune. That is where the responsibility comes in and fault can arise. Those of us with fami- lies and loved ones always have a responsibility not to make selfish or self-centered decisions about our lives. We should not do just what we want or just what is best for us. Often, we should choose in light of what is best for all concerned. Our families and loved ones have obligations to stand by us and to support us through debilitating illness and death. They must be prepared to make sacrifices to respond to an illness in the family. We  are well aware of this responsibility and most 10-Vaughn-Chap10.indd 685 26/05/16 4:28 PM 686 PA R T 3 : L I F E A N D D E AT H families meet it rather well. In fact, families deliver more than 80 percent of the long-term care in the US, almost always at great personal cost. But responsibility in a family is not a one-way street. When we become seriously ill or debilitated, we too may have to make sacrifices. There are limits to what we can ask our loved ones to do to support us, even in sickness. There are limits to what they should be prepared to do for us—only rarely and for a limited period of time should they do all they can for us. Somehow we forget that sick, infirm, and dying adults also have obligations to their families and loved ones: a responsibility, for example, to try to protect the lives of loved ones from serious threats or greatly impoverished quality, or an obligation to avoid making choices that will jeopardize or seri- ously compromise their futures. Our obligations to our loved ones must be taken into consideration in making decisions about the end of life. It is out of these responsibilities that a duty to die can develop. Tragically, sometimes the best thing you can do for your loved ones is to remove yourself from their lives. And the only way you can do that may be to remove yourself from existence. This is not a happy thought. Yet we must recognize that suicides and re- quests for assisted suicide may be motivated by love. Sometimes, it’s simply the only loving thing to do. Who Has a Duty to Die? Sometimes it is clear when someone has a duty to die. But more often, not. WHO has a duty to die? And WHEN—under what conditions? To my mind, these are the right questions, the questions we should be asking. Many of us may one day badly need answers to just these questions. But I cannot supply answers here, for two rea- sons. In the first place, answers will have to be very particular and individualized . . . to the person, to the situation of her family, to the relationships within the family, etc. There will not be simple an- swers that apply to everyone. Secondly and perhaps even more importantly, those of us with family and loved ones should not define our duties unilaterally. Especially not a deci- sion about a duty to die. It would be isolating and distance-creating for me to decide without consulting them what is too much of a burden for my loved ones to bear. That way of deciding about my moral duties is not only atomistic, it also treats my family and loved ones paternalistically—THEY must be allowed to speak for themselves about the burdens my life imposes on them and how they feel about bearing those burdens. I believe in family decision making. Important decisions for those whose lives are interwoven should be made together, in a family discussion. Granted, a conversation about whether I have a duty to die would often be a tremendously difficult conversation. The temptations to be dishonest in such conversa- tions could be enormous. Nevertheless, if we can, we should have just such an agonizing discussion— partly because it will act as a check on the informa- tion, perceptions and reasoning of all of us; but perhaps even more importantly, because it affirms our connectedness at a critical juncture in our lives. Honest talk about difficult matters almost always strengthens relationships. But many families seem to be unable to talk about death at all, much less a duty to die. Certainly most families could not have this discussion all at once, in one sitting. It might well take a number of discussions to be able to approach this topic. But even if talking about death is impossible, there are always behavioral clues—about your caregiver’s tiredness, physical condition, health, prevailing mood, anxiety, outlook, overall well-being, etc. And families unable to talk about death can often talk about those clues. There can be conversations about how the caregiver is feeling, about finances, about tensions within the family resulting from the illness, about concerns for the future. Deciding whether you have a duty to die based on these behavioral clues and conversation about them is more relational than deciding on your own about how burdensome this relationship and care must be. 8 For these two reasons, I cannot say when some- one has a duty to die. But I can suggest a few ideas for discussion of this question. I present them here without much elaboration or explanation. 1. There is more duty to die when prolonging your life will impose greater burdens— emotional burdens, caregiving, disruption 10-Vaughn-Chap10.indd 686 26/05/16 4:28 PM Chapter 10: Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide 687 of life plans, and, yes, financial hardship— on your family and loved ones. This is the fundamental insight underlying a duty to die. 2. There is greater duty to die if your loved ones’ lives have already been difficult or impover- ished (not just financially)—if they have had only a small share of the good things that life has to offer. 3. There is more duty to die to the extent that your loved ones have already made great contributions—perhaps even sacrifices—to make your life a good one. Especially if you have not made similar sacrifices for their well-being. 4. There is more duty to die to the extent that you have already lived a full and rich life. You have already had a full share of the good things life offers. 5. Even if you have not lived a full and rich life, there is more duty to die as you grow older. As we become older, there is a diminishing chance that we will be able to make the changes that would now be required to turn our lives around. As we age, we will also be giving up less by giving up our lives, if only because we will sacrifice fewer years of life. 6. There is less duty to die to the extent that you can make a good adjustment to your ill- ness or handicapping condition, for a good adjustment means that smaller sacrifice will be required of loved ones and there is more compensating interaction for them. (However, we must also recognize that some diseases— Alzheimer’s or Huntington’s chorea—will eventually take their toll on your loved ones no matter how courageously, resolutely, even cheerfully you manage to face that illness.) 7. There is more duty to die to the extent that the part of you that is loved will soon be gone or seriously compromised. There is also more duty to die when you are no longer capable of giving love. Part of the horror of Alzheimer’s or Huntington’s, again, is that it destroys the person we loved, leaving a stranger and eventually only a shell behind. By contrast, someone can be seriously debilitated and yet clearly still the person we love. In an old person, “I am not ready to die yet” does not excuse one from a duty to die. To have reached the age of, say, 80 years without being ready to die is itself a moral failing, the sign of a life out of touch with life’s basic realities. A duty to die seems very harsh, and sometimes it is. But if I really do care for my family, a duty to protect their lives will often be accompanied by a deep desire to do so. I will normally want to protect those I love. This is not only my duty, it is also my desire. In fact, I can easily imagine wanting to spare my loved ones the burden of my existence more than I want anything else. If I Should Be Dead, Who Should Kill Me? We need to reframe our discussions of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. For we must recog- nize that pleas for assisted suicide are sometimes requests for relief from pain and suffering, some- times requests for help in fulfilling one’s obligations, and sometimes both. If I should be dead for either of these reasons, who should kill me? Like a responsible life, a responsible death requires that we think about our choices in the context of the web of relationships of love and care that surround us. We must be sensitive to the suffering as well as the joys we cause others, to the hardships as well as the benefits we create for them. So, when we ask, “Who should kill me?” we must remember that we are asking for a death that will reduce the suffering of both me and my family as much as possible. We are searching for the best ending, not only for me, but for everyone concerned—in the preparation for death, the moment of death, and afterwards, in the memory and on-going lives of loved ones and family. Although we could perhaps define a new profes- sion to assist in suicides—euthanasians??—there are now really only three answers to the question, “Who should kill me?” (1) I should kill myself. (2) A loved one or family member should kill me. (3) A physician should kill me. I will consider these three possibili- ties. I will call these unassisted suicide, family-assisted suicide, and physician-assisted suicide. 1 Unassisted Suicide: I Should Kill Myself The basic intuition here is that each of us should take responsibility for herself. I am primarily the 10-Vaughn-Chap10.indd 687 26/05/16 4:28 PM 688 PA R T 3 : L I F E A N D D E AT H one who wants relief from my pain and suffering, or it is fundamentally my own duty to die and I should be the one to do my duty. Moreover, intentionally ending a life is a very messy business—a heav y, difficult thing for anyone to have to do. If possible, I should not drag others into it. Often, I think, this is the right idea—I should be the one to kill myself. But not always. We must remember that some people are physically unable to do so—they are too weak or incapacitated to commit suicide without assistance. Less persuasive perhaps are those who just can’t bring themselves to do it. Without the assistance of someone, many lack the know-how or means to end their lives in a peaceful, dignified fashion. Finally, many attempted suicides—even serious attempts at suicide—fail or result in terrible deaths. Those who have worked in hospitals are familiar with suicide attempts that leave people with permanent brain damage or their faces shot off. There are also fairly common stories of people eating their own vomit after throwing up the medi- cine they hoped would end their lives. Even more importantly, if I must be the one to kill myself, that may force me to take my life earlier than would otherwise be necessary. I cannot wait until I become physically debilitated or mentally incompetent, for then it will be too late for me to kill myself. I might be able to live quite comfortably for a couple more years, if I could count on someone else to take my life later. But if I cannot count on help from anyone, I will feel pressure to kill myself when unavoidable suffering for myself or my loved ones appears on the horizon, instead of waiting until it actually arrives. Finally, many suicides are isolating—I can’t die with my loved ones around me if I am planning to use carbon monoxide from automobile exhaust to end my life. For most of us, a meaningful end of life requires an affirmation of our connection with loved ones and so we do not want to die alone. The social taboo against ending your own life promotes another type of isolation. The secrecy pre- ceding many …
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Your assignment may be more than 5 paragraphs but not less. INSTRUCTIONS:  To access the FNU Online Library for journals and articles you can go the FNU library link here:  https://www.fnu.edu/library/ In order to n that draws upon the theoretical reading to explain and contextualize the design choices. Be sure to directly quote or paraphrase the reading ce to the vaccine. Your campaign must educate and inform the audience on the benefits but also create for safe and open dialogue. A key metric of your campaign will be the direct increase in numbers.  Key outcomes: The approach that you take must be clear Mechanical Engineering Organic chemistry Geometry nment Topic You will need to pick one topic for your project (5 pts) Literature search You will need to perform a literature search for your topic Geophysics you been involved with a company doing a redesign of business processes Communication on Customer Relations. 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Furman was originally sentenced to death because of a murder he committed in Georgia but the court debated whether or not this was a violation of his 8th amend One of the first conflicts that would need to be investigated would be whether the human service professional followed the responsibility to client ethical standard.  While developing a relationship with client it is important to clarify that if danger or Ethical behavior is a critical topic in the workplace because the impact of it can make or break a business No matter which type of health care organization With a direct sale During the pandemic Computers are being used to monitor the spread of outbreaks in different areas of the world and with this record 3. Furman v. Georgia is a U.S Supreme Court case that resolves around the Eighth Amendments ban on cruel and unsual punishment in death penalty cases. The Furman v. Georgia case was based on Furman being convicted of murder in Georgia. 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The team is currently using an I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option.  I would want to find out what she is afraid of.  I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych Identify the type of research used in a chosen study Compose a 1 Optics effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. 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