Rethinking Autonomy: A Critique of Principlism in Biomedical Ethics

E1008699

"Rethinking Autonomy: A Critique of Principlism in Biomedical Ethics" is a scholarly work that challenges the dominance of autonomy-centered principlism in bioethics, arguing for more culturally and contextually grounded approaches to ethical decision-making in medicine.

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Predicate Object
instanceOf article
scholarly work
addresses clinical ethics
cross-cultural medical practice
patient–physician relationship
aimsTo influence clinical ethical decision-making practices
reshape debates about autonomy in biomedical ethics
arguesFor contextually grounded approaches to ethical decision-making
culturally grounded approaches to bioethics
concerns ethical pluralism in healthcare
limitations of autonomy-focused frameworks
critiques dominance of autonomy in bioethics
individualistic conceptions of the patient
standard four-principle model of biomedical ethics
emphasizes cultural context in medical decision-making
relational aspects of autonomy
social context in medical decision-making
field bioethics
biomedical ethics
focusesOn critique of autonomy-centered principlism
genre academic bioethics literature
mainTopic autonomy in medical ethics
ethical decision-making in medicine
principlism
proposes more pluralistic ethical frameworks in medicine
questions universality of autonomy as a primary bioethical principle
supports context-sensitive bioethical analysis
greater attention to cultural diversity in bioethics
theoreticalOrientation critical of mainstream principlism
relational and contextual ethics

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John Traphagan notableWork Rethinking Autonomy: A Critique of Principlism in Biomedical Ethics