Papers |
Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK
E-mail: jensen{at}gatesscholar.org
Beauchamp and Childress (1994) elaborated an approach to bioethical deliberations based on four universalistic principles. This framework of principlism has been criticized from within biomedical ethics as insufficient and problematic. However, this article considers a more radical sociological critique by John Evans (2002) that rejects the entire approach of defining principles a priori. This sociological critique is based on classical sociologist Max Weber's (1925) distinction between instrumental (thin) and substantive (thick) rationality. As an exploratory assessment of Evans' critique, his conceptualization of thin versus thick rationalization is applied to a large sample of Anglo-American press coverage (n = 5126) of the bioethical controversy surrounding therapeutic cloning. Given the role of mainstream news media as a key arena for the discursive framing of biomedical research and its ethical implications, the findings raise important questions about principlism and the mediation of bioethical debates on issues such as therapeutic cloning.
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M. C Dunn, Z. Gurtin-Broadbent, J. R Wheeler, and J. Ives Jack of all trades, master of none? Challenges facing junior academic researchers in bioethics Clin Ethics, December 1, 2008; 3(4): 160 - 163. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||