Is caring the ethical ideal?
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 24 (4) , 655-661
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2648.1996.02391.x
Abstract
This paper will examine the claim that caring is an appropriate ethical ideal for nursing. Initially it will examine nursing's philosophy of care and caring, highlighting some areas of difficulty and dissatisfaction articulated by many of its contemporary theorists Evaluation of the notion of caring as an appropriate ethical ideal for nursing will be balanced against those in opposition, and in this process their critique will be discussed This discussion will focus on areas such as virtue, virtue ethics, moral responsibility, feminine values, mothering and the debate between male and female caring Different forms of caring will be evaluated and balanced against different forms of nursing The paper will then suggest that current views which hold aloft nursing as a bedmate of caring may be detrimental to both the cared‐for and the carer, advocating in the process a move toward changeKeywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- A deconstruction of caringJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1993
- Caring In Nursing: Analysis of Extant TheoryNursing Science Quarterly, 1990
- Caring and ExploitationHypatia, 1990
- A Feminist Ethic and the New Romanticism Mothering as a Model of Moral RelationsHypatia, 1989
- Leininger's Theory of Nursing: Cultural Care Diversity and UniversalityNursing Science Quarterly, 1988
- A comparative analysis of lay-caring and professional (nursing) caring relationshipsInternational Journal of Nursing Studies, 1987
- A Caring DilemmaNursing Research, 1987
- Is a science of caring possible?Journal of Advanced Nursing, 1986
- FROM NOVICE TO EXPERT EXCELLENCE AND POWER IN CLINICAL NURSING PRACTICEThe American Journal of Nursing, 1984
- A charter for caringJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1976