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Wednesday, March 17, 2010, 1:28 PM
Wesley J. Smith

I have long thought that bioethics is something of a pseudo field. Not that the matters with which it grapples are not important.  They are crucial.  And not that its thinkers are not morally serious–they are. But it has always seemed to me that bioethics lacks focus, e.g., that there is no bottom line goal or purpose that bioethics seeks to attain.

For example, the guideposts for bioethical analyses were established early, e.g., autonomy, beneficence, distributive justice, and non maleficence. But without a fundamental destination toward which these principles are to be applied, they became mere outcome justifiers. In other words, rather than derive the opinion by applying the principles to best attain the desired end, the opinion often comes first and then the best principle that justifies the predetermined conclusion is harnessed to defend it.

Now, an article written by University of Minnesota bioethicist Leigh Turner in the Journal of Medical Bioethics asks the pithy question, “Does Bioethics Exist?” and reaches a similar conclusion to my own.  From her column (no link, here’s the Abstract):

What is clear, though rarely “acknowledged, is that as bioethics has acquired academic standing, institutional authority and public visibility, just what constitutes “bioethics” is becoming increasingly murky. In a sense, bioethics–if by bioethics is meant a shared mode of normative analysis, a common way of thinking an averarching framework for moral deliberation, a recognised set of tools with which to reason and debate or a widely accepted ethics decision-making–does not exist.

This leads to intellectual chaos (if you will) in the field:

Although an increasing number of individuals make their living as bioethicists, there is no recognizable, widely shared, common moral philosophy that bioethicists draw upon to resolve moral disputes. There is no common creed, widely accepted method of moral reasoning or normative theory, or practical body of wisdom that binds together bioethicists. Within the halls of academe, it is just as possible to establish a successful career as a utilitarian or libertarian as it is publishing and teaching as a neo-Kantian, Rawlsian, virtue theorist, casuist or proponent of natural law. We are well past the time when the “principles of biomedical ethics” [the title of the premier bioethics textbook] provided a common reference point for addressing ethical concerns.

I don’t think it did then, but Turner’s point is right. And she asks:

…does bioethics exist as something other than a loosely connected assemblage of conflicts over norms, principles, practices and policies?…If bioethicists cannot provide thoughtful, persuasive responses to such questions, they might find the expansionist phase of bioethics is replaced by an era of retrenchment and decline.

That is to be urgently wished.  Because while I agree with Turner that bioethics has become more heterodox in the last decade, and hence more chaotic, I disagree with her that there isn’t an over arching belief among its most influential members–and that is opposition to human exceptionalism.  As a consequence, their “expert” opinions–rendered in courts, on government panels, while giving testimony in front of legislative bodies, in teaching the doctors, nurses, and societal leaders of the future in our most prestigious universities, etc.–often push society toward policies that promote the actual or potential exploitation and/or oppression of the most weak and vulnerable among us.

This is why I advocate laws that would set the goal of bioehtical analyses as protecting and promoting intrinsic human dignity–the point of my speech to the United Nations International School.  That would anchor bioethics, give it a beneficial direction, and promote universal human rights. Do that, and the bioethics movement would be rendered less capable of promoting harmful policies that threaten those who are most in need of society’s and medicine’s protection than it is today.

9 Comments

    Joe Z
    March 17th, 2010 | 3:44 pm

    This is the lie behind the move among philosophers to become “relevant” and influential. Bioethics has tried to assume the mantle of the expert, the man in the white coat who can speak on behalf of a consensus generated in the rationally-operating scientific community. This is a white-washed version even of the empirical sciences, and it is nothing more than propaganda in the case of bioethics. The four principles approach marries naive confidence about reaching consensus to deep cynicism about how to make the field look like a field of expertise in the sense of the “hard” sciences. Consensus is generated in bioethics only through vacuity – as you say, the language of commonly-held principles just papers over the rationalizing function those “principles” actually play.

    Ianthe
    March 17th, 2010 | 4:01 pm

    BALONEY. Bioethics is a shill for the culture of death. What’s ethical and what’s ethical, what’s right and what’s wrong, is clear, and needs no discussion. People with ethics don’t discuss ethics. “Bioethics” is just a way to justify murder.

    Ianthe
    March 17th, 2010 | 4:03 pm

    BALONEY. Bioethics is a shill for the culture of death and a way to justify murder. What’s ethical and what’s unethical, what’s right and what’s wrong, is clear. Those who have ethics don’t discuss ethics.

    David
    March 17th, 2010 | 5:30 pm

    WHOAAAAA! Smith,

    Leigh Turner is a male (XY). You aren’t trolling obscure, unsavory, on-line dating sites late at night, I hope.

    Does it exist – and yet he is tenured at a U that has a “Center for Bioethics”. Newsflash, Leigh, bioethics is a human, conceptual invention – put any definition you want on the concept, or demonstrate ANY other concept exists (anyone can argue the existence of bioethics from either side and get nowhere as it’s a semantic argument – definition dependent).

    Whew, someone give this genius a Nobel.

    Jok, I thought we kicked the dip chips of academia aside with the Alan Sokal scandal.

    Meanwhile, real people are dying of cancer, we are running out of usable energy, children are still born HIV+, there’s an organ shortage, a physician shortage, our agriculture is not sustainable, our economy limps along, education is CLEARLY not taken seriously in the US (despite great teachers, real shame), drug resistant bacteria are on the rise, we question if there is enough usable water in the future…

    And we give two chips the post-modern tripe Turner churns out? It’s a shame that a world-class research institution like the U of MN, which produced a true heroes and savior like Normal Borlaug, has Turner occupying office space.

    Go Gophers!

    David
    March 17th, 2010 | 5:33 pm

    hero Norman Borlaug, oops.

    HistoryWriter
    March 18th, 2010 | 9:07 am

    Ianthe: You wrote: “What’s ethical and what’s [un]ethical, what’s right and what’s wrong, is clear, and needs no discussion.”

    Unfortunately you left out two very important words: “to ME.”

    Read it as: “What’s ethical and what’s unethical, what’s right and what’s wrong is clear to ME, and needs no discussion” and it makes perfect sense.

    Otherwise the statement presupposes that there is some universal standard that’s applicable to all people at all times and places — which is definitely not the case.

    Quid est veritas?

    udo schuklenk
    March 18th, 2010 | 10:50 am

    This is funny, postmodern waffle meet Christian neocon…

    David
    March 18th, 2010 | 11:45 am

    udo schuklenk:

    Very piquant.

    Nice.

    SparcVark
    March 18th, 2010 | 1:14 pm

    Wesley? I’ve read his site for more than a year now and have not seen any indication that he is either a Christian or a Neocon, or postmodern in any recognized sense of the term. Not sure who Udo was talking about, frankly.

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