大卫-德格拉西亚和约瑟夫-米勒姆的《生物伦理学理论》(评论)

IF 1.1 4区 哲学 Q3 ETHICS Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal Pub Date : 2024-01-24 DOI:10.1353/ken.2023.a917931
Colin Hoy, Winston Chiong
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摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 大卫-德格拉兹亚和约瑟夫-米勒姆的《生命伦理学理论》 Colin Hoy(生物)和 Winston Chiong(生物) 评论大卫-德格拉兹亚和约瑟夫-米勒姆的《生命伦理学理论》(剑桥大学出版社,2021 年) 大卫-德格拉兹亚和约瑟夫-米勒姆的《生命伦理学理论》(剑桥大学出版社,2021 年)问世于一个奇怪的时期,对于一个系统理论建构的雄心勃勃的努力来说,似乎与生命伦理学的时尚格格不入。与此同时,一群著名的哲学生物伦理学家撰写了一篇文章,"论证哲学和哲学家在当代生物伦理中仍然扮演着非常重要和有意义的角色"(Blumenthal-Barby et al.)与此同时,美国生命伦理学与人文科学学会年会也多次表达了对哲学在解决健康领域道德问题方面的历史特权,而非更多的经验、情景和社区导向方法的不耐烦。DeGrazia 和 Millum 的著作本身就反映了生物伦理学的现状,以及自 20 世纪末生物伦理学理论建设的鼎盛时期以来,生物伦理学发生了怎样的变化。套用帕菲特的哲学分类法(1984 年),维奇、恩格尔哈特、格特以及博尚和柴尔德里斯等理论家颁布的总体框架必然是修正性的。这些生命伦理学理论是对传统的、家长式的医学伦理的全面替代。然而,今天的生命伦理学已经是一个成熟的、制度化的领域,有着完善的实践和公认的信条(同时也存在着持续的、但普遍有争议的问题)。按照帕菲特的观点,当代生物伦理学的合理和富有成果的理论必须在很大程度上是描述性的,提供一个知识框架,使现有的实践具有连贯性和合理性,同时澄清混乱的问题。在当代生命伦理学中,这一实践的核心内容是应用生物医学伦理学的四项原则--非恶意、受益、公正和自主--这不仅仅是博尚普和柴尔德里斯(2019)最初提出的原则,而是经过数十年的交流、批判和修订后的完善形式。DeGrazia 和 Millum 的理论始于两个核心价值:福祉和对权利持有者的尊重。[本书的大部分内容都运用了反思平衡的方法,用经典的四项原则来明确这两项价值,这些原则在本书中被视为 "中层 "建构,比这两项核心价值更容易应用于具体案例。有经验的生命伦理学家可能会有一种不可思议的感觉,就像从一个新的小路出发,但最终发现自己走的仍然是一条熟悉的路。不过,这种介绍和阐释四项原则的方式可能更容易为更多读者所接受,包括尚未熟悉博尚和柴尔德里斯讨论中所包含的修订、完善和妥协的高年级本科生和研究生。本书还有两个特点,建议将其作为受训人员和感兴趣的非专业人员加深对生命伦理学理解的资源。首先,本书清晰的风格和组织方法为非专业人士提供了一个值得欢迎的方向。在章节结构上,作者先概述了主要的争论观点,然后根据这些观点阐述了自己的立场。每一章都考虑了广义理论的应用,展示了广义理论如何阐明潜在的候选方法或政策,以及如何在理想和非理想情况下使用伦理分析工具来评估这些建议。这种讲授概念论证与实践之间关系的方法,对于许多最初不熟悉理论或对理论望而生畏的人来说,是可以理解的。其次,值得称赞的是,作者决定以电子版的形式提供该书,这也有可能扩大该著作的影响范围,特别是在资源不足的情况下,让生物伦理讨论中经常被忽视的各方参与进来。如上所述,虽然作者的方法是帕菲特意义上的描述性方法,但并不一定保守。在许多地方,作者强调了他们的理论如何包含了未被广泛接受的元素或得出了未被广泛接受的结论,并按照反思平衡的方法,从广泛的原则和对案例的特定判断两方面为这些立场进行了辩护。这要从他们的双重价值说起。
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A Theory of Bioethics by David DeGrazia and Joseph Millum (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • A Theory of Bioethics by David DeGrazia and Joseph Millum
  • Colin Hoy (bio) and Winston Chiong (bio)
Review of David DeGrazia and Joseph Millum, A Theory of Bioethics (Cambridge University Press, 2021)

David DeGrazia and Joseph Millum’s A Theory of Bioethics 2021 arrives at a curious time for an ambitious effort at systematic theory construction, seemingly out of step with bioethical fashion. At the same time, a prominent group of philosophical bioethicists authored an article, possibly with a touch of defensiveness, to “make the case that philosophy and philosophers still have a very important and meaningful role to play in contemporary bioethics” (Blumenthal-Barby et al. 2021). Meanwhile, the annual meeting of the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities included several expressions of impatience with the historical privileging of philosophy over more empirical, situated, and community-oriented approaches to moral problems in health.

DeGrazia and Millum’s work itself reflects the current state of bioethics and how it has changed since the heyday of grand bioethical theory construction in the late twentieth century. To apply Parfit’s philosophical taxonomy (1984), the general frameworks promulgated by theorists like Veatch, Engelhardt, and Gert, as well as Beauchamp and Childress, were by necessity revisionary. These bioethical theories were whole-cloth alternatives to a conventional and paternalistic medical ethos that was already widely acknowledged as unsatisfactory. Today, however, bioethics is a mature and institutionalized field, with well-established practices and a corpus of accepted tenets (alongside matters of ongoing but generally demarcated controversy). A plausible and fruitful contemporary theory of bioethics must be largely descriptive, in Parfit’s sense, providing an intellectual framework that gives coherence and sense to existing practice, while at the same time clarifying matters of confusion.

In contemporary bioethics, a central component of this practice is the application of the four principles of biomedical ethics—non-maleficence, beneficence, justice and autonomy—not merely as originally proposed by Beauchamp and Childress (2019), but in their refined form, following decades of exchange, critique, and revision. DeGrazia and Millum’s theory begins with two core values: well-being and respect for rights holders. [End Page 321] The bulk of the book then applies the method of reflective equilibrium to specify these two values in terms of the canonical four principles, here treated as “mid-level” constructs with readier application to specific cases than the two core values. Experienced bioethicists may have an uncanny sense of setting off from a new trailhead, and yet, eventually finding themselves still walking a familiar path. However, this way of introducing and explicating the four principles will likely be more accessible to a wider audience, including high-level undergraduates and graduate students not already versed in the revisions, refinements, and compromises embedded in Beauchamp and Childress’s discussions.

Two other features recommend this book as a resource for trainees and interested non-experts seeking to deepen their understanding of bioethics. First, the clarity of its style and organizational approach provides a welcome orientation for non-specialists. The chapters are structured so that major contending perspectives are outlined before the authors develop arguments for their own positions in that context. Each chapter proceeds by considering applications of the broader theory, showing how it can illuminate potential candidate approaches or policies, as well as demonstrating how to use the tools of ethical analysis to evaluate these proposals in both ideal and non-ideal cases. This didactic approach to the relationship between conceptual argument and practice will be accessible to many who are initially unfamiliar with or intimidated by theory. Second the commendable decision to make the book electronically available and accessible also has the potential to broaden the reach of the work, and in particular, to engage parties in under-resourced settings, which have so often been overlooked in bioethical discourse.

As noted above, while the authors’ approach is descriptive in Parfit’s sense, it is not necessarily conservative. In many places, the authors highlight how their theory includes elements or renders conclusions that are not broadly accepted, and following the method of reflective equilibrium, they advocate for these positions both in terms of broad principles and particular judgments about cases. This begins with their dual-value...

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: The Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal offers a scholarly forum for diverse views on major issues in bioethics, such as analysis and critique of principlism, feminist perspectives in bioethics, the work of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments, active euthanasia, genetics, health care reform, and organ transplantation. Each issue includes "Scope Notes," an overview and extensive annotated bibliography on a specific topic in bioethics, and "Bioethics Inside the Beltway," a report written by a Washington insider updating bioethics activities on the federal level.
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Contributors Editor's Note Data Solidarity Disrupted: Musings On the Overlooked Role of Mutual Aid in Data-Driven Medicine Allergic Intimacies: Food, Disability, Desire, and Risk by Michael Gill (review) Green Light Ethics: A Theory of Permissive Consent and its Moral Metaphysics by Hallie Liberto (review)
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