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Related Experiment Videos

Robert Veatch's Disrupted Dialogue and its implications for bioethics.

Laurence B McCullough1,2

  • 1Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Hempstead, NY, USA. Laurence.McCullough@bcm.edu.

Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics
|July 18, 2022
PubMed
Summary
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Medical ethics discourse in the Scottish Enlightenment was rooted in Baconian moral science. This connection fractured by the 19th century, leaving bioethics unprepared for modern challenges.

Area of Science:

  • History of Medicine
  • Medical Ethics
  • Philosophy of Science

Background:

  • Robert Veatch's work highlights the decline of physician-humanist communication in Anglophone medical ethics from 1770-1980.
  • The Scottish Enlightenment fostered strong ties between medicine and humanistic disciplines.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze the nature of medical ethics discourse during the Scottish Enlightenment.
  • To examine the detachment of 19th-century US medical ethics from its earlier foundations.
  • To assess the impact of this detachment on the preparedness of physicians for bioethical challenges.

Main Methods:

  • Historical analysis of medical ethics literature.
  • Examination of primary sources from the Scottish Enlightenment and 19th-century United States.
Keywords:
Baconian moral scienceDavid HumeFrancis BaconJohn GregoryMedical ethicsScottish EnlightenmentThomas Percival

Related Experiment Videos

  • Critique of the American Medical Association's Principles of Medical Ethics (1957).
  • Main Results:

    • Medical ethics in the Scottish Enlightenment was a form of Baconian moral science.
    • 19th-century US medical ethics diverged significantly from this moral science tradition.
    • The 1957 AMA Principles of Medical Ethics lacked conceptual tools for emerging bioethical issues.

    Conclusions:

    • The historical detachment of medicine from humanistic and moral science weakened its ethical foundations.
    • This historical disconnect limited the capacity of physicians to address the ethical complexities of modern bioethics.
    • Understanding this historical trajectory is crucial for contemporary bioethics.