法医遗传学中的"高贵原因诡辩

IF 2.1 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Matthias Wienroth, Carole McCartney
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摘要

在法医遗传学领域,人们经常会发现我们所谓的“高尚原因诡辩”:科学家们认为,“既然我们在抓捕罪犯,那么我们工作中任何道德上的缺陷都会被良好的结果所抵消。”这种诡辩的另一个特点是将个案工作中的“成功”推断为在所有情况下所有法医遗传应用的可靠性和有用性。法医(epi)遗传学技术与更广泛的监测逻辑的日益加深的相互作用,也很少在社区内出现问题,在解决法医遗传学在社会中的作用的基本和复杂问题方面表现出明显的沉默。此外,尽管取得了一些初步进展,法医遗传学在很大程度上仍然满足于“单薄”的经验主义伦理学指导,强调“数学不会说谎”的观念,很少承认这种方法的严重局限性。在实验室环境之外,无论“数学”如何,法医遗传学技术的社会和文化影响都会发生变化。因此,该领域需要采用一种集中和深化其道德善意的精神,将道德视为“生活实践”,与其他公共服务专业和学科类似,具有社区责任。这可以从对专业精神的承诺开始,以诚信和社会正义为基础的强大精神。本文分类如下:法医生物学;伦理及社会影响
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Noble cause casuistry” in forensic genetics
Abstract In the forensic genetics community, too often one can find what we have called “noble cause casuistry”: scientists believing that, “since we are catching criminals, any ethical shortfalls in our work are negated by good outcomes.” Such casuistry is also characterized by the extrapolation of “success” in individual case work to assumptions of reliability and usefulness for all forensic genetic applications, in all contexts. The increasing and deepening interaction of forensic (epi)genetics technologies with broader surveillance logics, is also rarely problematized within the community, with a notable reticence to address fundamental and complex questions about the role of forensic genetics in society. Furthermore, despite some initial progress, forensic genetics largely remains content to be guided by “thin” empiricist ethics, foregrounding notions that “maths does not lie,” with little acknowledgement of the serious limitations of this approach. Outside of laboratory settings, social and cultural effects of forensic genetics technology alter regardless of the “maths.” As such, the field needs to adopt an ethos that centralizes and deepens their ethical bona fides , approaching ethics as “lived practice,” with community accountability similar to other public‐serving professions and disciplines. This could commence with a commitment to professionalism, with a robust ethos grounded in both integrity and social justice. This article is categorized under: Forensic Biology > Ethical and Social Implications
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