Course Unit 1 Introduction To Bioethics, Theories and Virtue Ethics
Course Unit 1 Introduction To Bioethics, Theories and Virtue Ethics
BIOETHICS
COURSE MODULE COURSE UNIT WEEK
1 1 1
Introduction to Bioethics
Cognitive:
1. Understand the meaning of Bioethics, health care ethics and Nursing ethics
2. Recognize the importance of bioethics in the field of nursing
Affective:
3. Practice effective listening during class discussion
4. Inquire on topics that are not completely understood
5. Share opinions on the subject matter that can enhance class discussion
Psychomotor:
6. Follow class rules and netiquettes
7. Participate during class discussion
Introduction to Bioethics
BIOETHICS- is a field of study concerned with the ETHICS and philosophical implications of
certain biological and medical procedures, technologies, and treatments, as organ
transplants, genetic engineering, and care of the terminally ill.
A science that deals with the study of the morality of human conduct concerning human life in all its
aspects from the moment of its conception to its natural end.
HEALTHCARE ETHICS-is the field of applied ethics that is concerned with the vast array of moral
decision-making situations that arise in the practice of medicine in addition to the procedures and
the policies that are designed to guide such practice. Health ethics is employed to regulate human
conduct in the practice of health care so that the good may be done and evil may be avoided
thereby ensuring the purpose of health care.
NURSING ETHICS- can be defined broadly as the examination of all kinds of ethical and
bioethical issues from the perspective of nursing theory and practice which, in turn, rest on the
agreed core concepts of nursing, namely: person, culture, care, health, healing, environment and
nursing itself
ETHICS
The PERSON
(Biblical) Created in the image and likeness of God; differing from animals due to
possession of spiritual intelligence and free will;
God produces the human body through the cooperation of human parents; the
creation of the human soul is direct act of God;
Each person is unique and irreplaceable; and are called not only to maturity but to
eternal life
Human act is an act which proceeds from the deliberate free will of man. Man knows what he
is doing and freely chooses to do what he does;
Not all acts are Human Acts; for an act to be human it must have:
KNOWLEDGE and FREEDOM
an idea of reason that serves an indispensable practical function. Without the assumption of
freedom, reason cannot act.
Ethical Philosophers/Bioethicists
Immanuel Kant
(1724-1804)
A German philosopher
was an opponent of utilitarianism
Our emotional preferences which provides us with values, must be checked against certain
rational standards of a PURELY formal kind;
Supreme principle of morality referred to as The Categorical Imperative (CI);
Any choices we make must be such that we would be willing for everyone else to make the
same choices (universality).
John Bordley Rawl
Born: February 21, 1921
an American moral and political
philosopher;
Professorship at Harvard University, University of Oxford;
His magnum opus, A Theory of Justice (1971
According to English philosopher Jonathan Wolff, John Rawls was the most important
political philosopher of the 20th century
Social Contract as a solution to Distributive Justice (the socially just distribution of goods in
a society);
Resultant theory known as "Justice as Fairness”:
1. Society should be structured so that the greatest possible amount of liberty is
given to its members,;
2. Inequalities either social or economic are only to be allowed only if the worst will
result under an equal distribution;
Finally, if there is such a beneficial inequality, this inequality should not make it
harder for those without resources to occupy positions of power, for instance public
office.
St. Thomas Aquinas
Ethics- Moral principles that govern a person's behavior or the conducting of an activity.
Autonomy- The capacity of an agent to act in accordance with objective morality rather than under the
influence of desires
Altruism – unselfish concern for other people
During the 90's a slum in Metro Manila became popular in the medical world because it has become a place
to harvest kidneys. For a good amount of money residence in that area allowed themselves to become
donor to "help" patients with renal failure get a transplant.