
pmid: 22073817
This article examines the special relation between common morality and particular moralities in the four-principles approach and its use for global ethics. It is argued that the special dialectical relation between common morality and particular moralities is the key to bridging the gap between ethical universalism and relativism. The four-principles approach is a good model for a global bioethics by virtue of its ability to mediate successfully between universal demands and cultural diversity. The principle of autonomy (i.e., the idea of individual informed consent), however, does need to be revised so as to make it compatible with alternatives such as family- or community-informed consent. The upshot is that the contribution of the four-principles approach to global ethics lies in the so-called dialectical process and its power to deal with cross-cultural issues against the background of universal demands by joining them together.
Informed Consent, Internationality, Social Values, Beneficence, Cultural Diversity, Bioethics, Principle-Based Ethics, Social Justice, Personal Autonomy, Humans, Ethical Analysis, Ethical Relativism
Informed Consent, Internationality, Social Values, Beneficence, Cultural Diversity, Bioethics, Principle-Based Ethics, Social Justice, Personal Autonomy, Humans, Ethical Analysis, Ethical Relativism
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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