Literature DB >> 19438442

What 'empirical turn in bioethics'?

Samia Hurst1.   

Abstract

Uncertainty as to how we should articulate empirical data and normative reasoning seems to underlie most difficulties regarding the 'empirical turn' in bioethics. This article examines three different ways in which we could understand 'empirical turn'. Using real facts in normative reasoning is trivial and would not represent a 'turn'. Becoming an empirical discipline through a shift to the social and neurosciences would be a turn away from normative thinking, which we should not take. Conducting empirical research to inform normative reasoning is the usual meaning given to the term 'empirical turn'. In this sense, however, the turn is incomplete. Bioethics has imported methodological tools from empirical disciplines, but too often it has not imported the standards to which researchers in these disciplines are held. Integrating empirical and normative approaches also represents true added difficulties. Addressing these issues from the standpoint of debates on the fact-value distinction can cloud very real methodological concerns by displacing the debate to a level of abstraction where they need not be apparent. Ideally, empirical research in bioethics should meet standards for empirical and normative validity similar to those used in the source disciplines for these methods, and articulate these aspects clearly and appropriately. More modestly, criteria to ensure that none of these standards are completely left aside would improve the quality of empirical bioethics research and partly clear the air of critiques addressing its theoretical justification, when its rigour in the particularly difficult context of interdisciplinarity is what should be at stake.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 19438442     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8519.2009.01720.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioethics        ISSN: 0269-9702            Impact factor:   1.898


  14 in total

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Authors:  Nathan Emmerich
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2013-12

Review 2.  Secondary use of empirical research data in medical ethics papers on gamete donation: forms of use and pitfalls.

Authors:  Veerle Provoost
Journal:  Monash Bioeth Rev       Date:  2015-03

3.  Critical Realism and Empirical Bioethics: A Methodological Exposition.

Authors:  Alex McKeown
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2017-09

4.  The troubled identity of the bioethicist.

Authors:  Nicky Priaulx
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2013-03

5.  Conceptualizing boundaries for the professionalization of healthcare ethics practice: a call for empirical research.

Authors:  Nancy C Brown; Summer Johnson McGee
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2014-12

6.  Empirical research in medical ethics: how conceptual accounts on normative-empirical collaboration may improve research practice.

Authors:  Sabine Salloch; Jan Schildmann; Jochen Vollmann
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2012-04-13       Impact factor: 2.652

7.  IEEN workshop report: Teaching and learning in interdisciplinary and empirical ethics.

Authors:  Jonathan Ives; John Owens; Alan Cribb
Journal:  Clin Ethics       Date:  2013-06

Review 8.  A systematic review of empirical bioethics methodologies.

Authors:  Rachel Davies; Jonathan Ives; Michael Dunn
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2015-03-07       Impact factor: 2.652

9.  Research across the disciplines: a road map for quality criteria in empirical ethics research.

Authors:  Marcel Mertz; Julia Inthorn; Günter Renz; Lillian Geza Rothenberger; Sabine Salloch; Jan Schildmann; Sabine Wöhlke; Silke Schicktanz
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2014-03-01       Impact factor: 2.652

10.  The is and ought of the Ethics of Neuroenhancement: Mind the Gap.

Authors:  Cynthia Forlini; Wayne Hall
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2016-01-08
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