Principlism and Its Alleged Competitors
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Project MUSE in Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
- Vol. 5 (3) , 181-198
- https://doi.org/10.1353/ken.0.0111
Abstract
Principles that provide general normative frameworks in bioethics have been criticized since the late 1980s, when several different methods and types of moral philosophy began to be proposed as alternatives or substitutes. Several accounts have emerged in recent years, including: (1) Impartial Rule Theory (supported in this issue by K. Danner Clouser), (2) Casuistry (supported in this issue by Albert Jonsen), and (3) Virtue Ethics (supported in this issue by Edmund D. Pellegrino). Although often presented as rival methods or theories, these approaches are consistent with and should not be considered adversaries of a principle-based account.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Critique Of PrinciplismPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2017
- Moving Forward In Bioethical Theory: Theories, Cases, And Specified Principlism *Published by Taylor & Francis ,2017
- Common Morality as an Alternative to PrinciplismKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 1995
- Casuistry: An Alternative or Complement to Principles?Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 1995
- Morality: A New Justification of the Moral Rules.Noûs, 1992
- Casuistry as methodology in clinical ethicsTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 1991
- Practice versus TheoryHastings Center Report, 1990
- After VirtueSociological Analysis, 1982
- Toward a Reconstruction of Medical Morality: The Primacy of the Act of Profession and the Fact of IllnessJournal of Medicine and Philosophy, 1979
- Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong.The Philosophical Review, 1979