Sensitive Judgement: an inquiry into the foundations of nursing ethics
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Nursing Ethics
- Vol. 5 (5) , 385-386
- https://doi.org/10.1177/096973309800500502
Abstract
This article considers the foundation of nursing as a moral practice. Its basic claim is that all nursing knowledge and action reside on a moral foundation. The clinical gaze meets vulnerability in the patient’s human condition. To see a patient’s wound is to see his or her hurt and discomfort; it is a concerned observation. To see the factual and pathophysiological is at the same time to see the ethical: the moral realities of suffering, pain and discomfort. A nurse’s emotional sensitivities are central to understanding a patient’s experiences of illness. Emotions reveal value and ascribe moral importance to certain situations; they are addressed centrally by vulnerability and the moral realities of illness. Hence, the essence of nursing knowledge and nursing performance cannot be understood merely as ontology (i.e. as being-with-the-other). Nursing is basically being-for-the-other; it is responsibility; it is ethics.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Upheavals of ThoughtPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2001
- Making a Necessity of VirtuePublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1997
- Emotion And AdaptationPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,1991
- Fundamental Patterns of Knowing in NursingAdvances in Nursing Science, 1978