支持安乐死的世俗论点的宗教特征,以及它对医学实践的意义。

IF 1.1 3区 哲学 Q3 ETHICS
John Tambakis, Lauris Kaldijian, Ewan C Goligher
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引用次数: 1

摘要

当代生物伦理学一般规定,公共道德审议必须避免允许宗教信仰影响或证明卫生政策和法律的合理性。世俗的前提和论点被假定为维持在多元社会的公共广场上进行道德审议所需的中立和共同基础。然而,仔细检查用于证明安乐死的非有神论论点(关于人类尊严,个人自主和死亡作为毁灭的争议概念),揭示了对多元社会中不被普遍接受的元伦理和形而上学信仰的依赖。这些信仰在非有神论论证中的作用,与基本信仰在宗教信仰框架中为道德信念辩护的方式相同。当宗教信仰被广泛地定义为“在现实的限制和可能性中寻找善”时,这种相似之处就很明显了。从这个解释的角度来看,包括世俗基本承诺的框架在伦理相关方面发挥作用,就像传统宗教综合框架中的指导信仰一样。鉴于宗教和世俗之间的这种基本相似性,当医疗保健中的良心实践被重新考虑时,很明显,那些反对支持安乐死的世俗论点的基本信仰的人不应该被要求提供,参与,或者在多元社会中将病人推荐给安乐死(或其他同样依赖于有争议的信仰框架的有道德争议的做法),这些社会将道德自由视为人类的主要利益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The religious character of secular arguments supporting euthanasia and what it implies for conscientious practice in medicine.

Contemporary bioethics generally stipulates that public moral deliberation must avoid allowing religious beliefs to influence or justify health policy and law. Secular premises and arguments are assumed to maintain the neutral, common ground required for moral deliberation in the public square of a pluralistic society. However, a careful examination of non-theistic arguments used to justify euthanasia (regarding contested notions of human dignity, individual autonomy, and death as annihilation) reveals a dependence on metaethical and metaphysical beliefs that are not universally accepted in a pluralistic society. Such beliefs function in non-theistic arguments in the same way that foundational beliefs justify moral convictions in religious frameworks of belief. This parallel is apparent when religious belief is defined broadly (a la John Reeder) as 'the search for the good in light of the limits and possibilities of the real.' Seen through this interpretive lens, frameworks comprising Secular foundational commitments function, in ethically relevant respects, like the guiding beliefs found in the comprehensive frameworks of traditional religions. When conscientious practice in healthcare is reconsidered in light of this foundational similarity between the religious and the secular, it is clear that those who object to the foundational beliefs underpinning Secular arguments for euthanasia should not be required to provide, participate in, or refer patients for euthanasia (or other ethically controversial practices similarly dependent on contested frameworks of belief) in pluralistic societies that prize moral freedom as a primary human good.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
14.30%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: AIMS & SCOPE Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics examines clinical judgment and reasoning, medical concepts such as health and disease, the philosophical basis of medical science, and the philosophical ethics of health care and biomedical research Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics is an international forum for interdisciplinary studies in the ethics of health care and in the philosophy and methodology of medical practice and biomedical research. Coverage in the philosophy of medicine includes the theoretical examination of clinical judgment and decision making; theories of health promotion and preventive care; the problems of medical language and knowledge acquisition; theory formation in medicine; analysis of the structure and dynamics of medical hypotheses and theories; discussion and clarification of basic medical concepts and issues; medical application of advanced methods in the philosophy of science, and the interplay between medicine and other scientific or social institutions. Coverage of ethics includes both clinical and research ethics, with an emphasis on underlying ethical theory rather than institutional or governmental policy analysis. All philosophical methods and orientations receive equal consideration. The journal pays particular attention to developing new methods and tools for analysis and understanding of the conceptual and ethical presuppositions of the medical sciences and health care processes. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics publishes original scholarly articles, occasional special issues on important topics, and book reviews. Related subjects » Applied Ethics & Social Responsibility – Bioethics – Ethics – Epistemology & Philosophy of Science – Medical Ethics – Medicine – Philosophy – Philosophy of Medicine – Surgery
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