0
Book Notes |

Theory and Practice in Medical Ethics

[+] Article and Author Information

By Graber Glenn C., Thomasma David C.. . 229 pages. The Continuum Publishing Company; , New York: , 1989.. $24.95.


Ann Intern Med. 1990;112(5):389. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-112-5-389_1
Text Size: A A A

How and where do ethical theory and practice meet? By what method and on what basis are clinical, moral decisions made? How do theories, principles, rules, values, and facts fit together to produce a moral decision? This thorny territory is explored by Graber and Thomasma, both of whom have considerable experience in medical ethics.

The authors tease out and articulate six models of moral reasoning apparently extant in the literature. The models vary from the purely deductive to the purely inductive. Each is illustrated by citations of papers whose authors (wittingly or not) use one or another of these methods

First Page Preview

View Large
First page PDF preview

Figures

Tables

References

Letters

NOTE:
Citing articles are presented as examples only. In non-demo SCM6 implementation, integration with CrossRef’s “Cited By” API will populate this tab (http://www.crossref.org/citedby.html).

Comments

Submit a Comment
Submit a Comment

Summary for Patients

Clinical Slide Sets

Terms of Use

The In the Clinic® slide sets are owned and copyrighted by the American College of Physicians (ACP). All text, graphics, trademarks, and other intellectual property incorporated into the slide sets remain the sole and exclusive property of the ACP. The slide sets may be used only by the person who downloads or purchases them and only for the purpose of presenting them during not-for-profit educational activities. Users may incorporate the entire slide set or selected individual slides into their own teaching presentations but may not alter the content of the slides in any way or remove the ACP copyright notice. Users may make print copies for use as hand-outs for the audience the user is personally addressing but may not otherwise reproduce or distribute the slides by any means or media, including but not limited to sending them as e-mail attachments, posting them on Internet or Intranet sites, publishing them in meeting proceedings, or making them available for sale or distribution in any unauthorized form, without the express written permission of the ACP. Unauthorized use of the In the Clinic slide sets will constitute copyright infringement.

Toolkit

Buy This Article

to gain full access to the content and tools.

Want to Subscribe?

Learn more about subscription options

Advertisement

Related Content

Customize your page view by dragging & repositioning the boxes below.

Topic Collections
PubMed Articles
Involving children in non-therapeutic research: on the development argument.
The state of animal ethics.

Buy This Article

to gain full access to the content and tools.

Want to Subscribe?

Learn more about subscription options

Forgot your password?
Enter your username and email address. We'll send you a reminder to the email address on record.
(Required)
(Required)