Chapter 3 and Goldman Flashcards

1
Q

autonomy

A

a person’s rational capacity for self-determination

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2
Q

Autonomy Principle

A

Autonomous persons should be allowed to exercise their capacity for self-determination

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3
Q

Paternalism

A

overriding of a person’s actions or decision-making for his/her own good

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4
Q

weak paternalism

A

interference with persons who cannot act autonomously or whose autonomy is compromised

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5
Q

strong paternalism

A

interference with persons who are (at least substantially) autonomous

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6
Q

some justificatons of strong paternalism

A

what a person would consent to under ideal circumstances

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7
Q

informed consent

A

is it always morally obligatory to provide the patient with diagnosis

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8
Q

right to refuse treatment

A

p. 88 and p. 91

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9
Q

futile treatment

A

the pointlessness/ineffectiveness of administering particular treatments
- do patients have the right to continue it? p. 85, p. 92

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10
Q

physician autonomy p. 84

A

the freedom of doctors to determine the conditions they work in and the care they give

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11
Q

2 ways to argue against paternalism

A
  1. honoring the person’s autonomy will not in fact harm them (empirical question)
  2. honoring the person’s autonomy even if it harms them in some ways is better than violating that autonomy because the harm of violating someone’s values/preferences (moral)
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12
Q

Empirical Argument 1:
Doctors should not withhold information because they are bad judges of the impacts on patients
Goldman’s replies

A

this is weak. either get better at judging or withhold information to avoid risk of harm

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13
Q

Empirical argument 2:
utilitarian could argue that lying might lead to worse overall consequences
- undermine trust in doctor
- lose patients
- undermine broader trust in doctors generally
Goldman’s reply:

A

just not true in many cases. you can always get away with lying

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14
Q

Goldman’s preferred approach: refuting the moral argument for paternalism

A
  1. disclosures of information sometimes increases depression and physical deterioration
  2. disclosure may therefore be detrimental to health and hasten death
  3. health and prolonged life have (absolute) priority
  4. worsening health/life are assumed to be against the patient’s values
  5. paternalism is justified
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15
Q

Goldman’s challenge

this premise is not ture: health and prolonged life have (absolute) piority

A

ex. 1: there are rational orderings that do not prioritize it
ex. 2: takinglife/health threatening risks for personal values like completing an important project

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16
Q

life/health as necessary means for other values?

A

if life/health are instrumentally valuable then it is the quality of life that matters, not life itself
- avoidance of depression and pleasure should not be overrated (pleasure machine example)

17
Q

what is among the highest values (usually not overridden by other values)

A

personal autonomy

18
Q

why does autonomy have value

A

because we desire it

19
Q

why do we value autonomy

A

without it we cannot rationally value anything else

20
Q

valuing autonomy is the central way we show…

A

we value the dignity of persons (respecting their rights)