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Ethics and Bioethics01:22

Ethics and Bioethics

Ethics is a philosophical study of moral actions. Ethics attempts to determine what is valuable for individuals and society. It examines the rational justification of moral judgments and analyzes what is morally just, fair, and right. Bioethics is a sub-discipline of applied ethics that analyzes the philosophical, social, and legal issues in life sciences and medicine. Ethical theories serve as a foundation for decision-making and represent the viewpoints from which people seek direction. They...
Nursing Ethical Principles II01:27

Nursing Ethical Principles II

Ethical principles are essential in guiding nurses to fulfill their responsibilities, focusing on the quality of nursing care and decision-making. These principles, including autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice, and fidelity, shape the ethical framework within healthcare settings.
Consider the following scenario, which illustrates how these principles are applied in the care of Mr. John, a fifty-year-old teacher diagnosed with metastatic liver cancer.
Initially, Mr. John's cancer...
Nursing Ethical Principles I01:22

Nursing Ethical Principles I

Ethical principles serve as the moral compass in the longstanding tradition of nursing, guiding healthcare professionals in their interactions with patients and families. These principles, namely autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice, and fidelity, provide a robust framework for navigating the ethical complexities of daily nursing practice.
Autonomy
Autonomy underscores the significance of a patient's self-determination and freedom from external control. In healthcare, respecting the...
Ethical Dilemmas I01:17

Ethical Dilemmas I

Ethical dilemmas in nursing are of utmost importance, as they often arise from the tension between adhering to core ethical principles and the practical realities of healthcare delivery. These dilemmas require nurses to navigate complex situations where competing ethical considerations pull them in different directions.
Let us explore some examples to understand the potentially complex moral decisions nurses face.
Take the case of caring for minors, particularly in areas related to reproductive...
Ethical Standards I01:25

Ethical Standards I

The American Nurses Association (ANA) created and implemented the first nationally accepted Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements. The Code of Ethics is a living document regularly updated by the ANA and establishes an ethical standard that is non-negotiable for nurses in all roles and settings.
The Code of Ethics provisions outline the nurse's duty to the patient, the healthcare team, the profession, and society. The Code's fundamental principles include advocacy,...
Professional Values01:29

Professional Values

Nurses are responsible for caring for patients during birth, death, illness, and healing. Professional values guide the decisions and actions that nurses make in their careers. If nurses know the decisions and actions to take, providing patients with exceptional care is possible.
The values that are the foundation of the nursing profession are altruism, autonomy, human dignity, and social justice.
First, altruism refers to the concern for the welfare and well-being of others without personal...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 27, 2026

Exploring the Role of Deontic Reasoning and World Knowledge in Wason&#180;s Selection Task
06:08

Exploring the Role of Deontic Reasoning and World Knowledge in Wason´s Selection Task

Published on: July 22, 2025

Global ethics and principlism.

John-Stewart Gordon1

  • 1Hans Jonas Institute, University of Cologne, Germany.

Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
|November 12, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The four-principles approach effectively bridges ethical universalism and relativism by examining common and particular moralities. It offers a model for global bioethics, though autonomy requires cultural adaptation for broader acceptance.

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: May 27, 2026

Exploring the Role of Deontic Reasoning and World Knowledge in Wason&#180;s Selection Task
06:08

Exploring the Role of Deontic Reasoning and World Knowledge in Wason´s Selection Task

Published on: July 22, 2025

Area of Science:

  • Bioethics
  • Moral Philosophy
  • Global Ethics

Background:

  • The four-principles approach is a framework for ethical decision-making.
  • Global ethics faces challenges reconciling universal principles with cultural diversity.
  • The relationship between common morality and particular moralities is central to ethical debates.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze the role of common and particular moralities within the four-principles approach.
  • To evaluate the four-principles approach as a model for global bioethics.
  • To explore the potential for bridging ethical universalism and relativism.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis of the four-principles approach.
  • Examination of the dialectical relationship between common and particular moralities.
  • Discussion of the principle of autonomy in cross-cultural contexts.

Main Results:

  • The dialectical relation between common and particular moralities is key to mediating universalism and relativism.
  • The four-principles approach demonstrates a capacity for addressing cultural diversity in global bioethics.
  • The principle of autonomy requires adaptation, such as incorporating family- or community-informed consent.

Conclusions:

  • The four-principles approach, through its dialectical process, offers a valuable framework for global ethics.
  • Successful application in global bioethics necessitates adapting principles like autonomy to diverse cultural contexts.
  • The approach's strength lies in integrating universal ethical demands with specific cultural considerations.