Core Competencies for Health Care Ethics Consultants: In Search of Professional Status in a Post-Modern World
Tóm tắt
Từ khóa
Tài liệu tham khảo
American Society for Bioethics & Humanities. (2011). Core competencies for healthcare ethics consultation (2nd ed.). Glenview, IL: American Society for Bioethics and Humanities.
Beauchamp, T. (2004). Does ethical theory have a future in bioethics? Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 32, 209–217.
Caws, P. (1991). Committees and consensus: How many heads are better than one? Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 16.4, 375–391.
Chrysostom, S. (1994). Nicene and post-Nicene fathers: Homilies on the Gospel of Saint Matthew (Vol. 10). Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (1999). Healthcare ethics committees: Re-examining their social and moral functions. HEC Forum, 11.2, 87–100.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2000). The foundations of Christian bioethics. Salem, MA: Scrivener Publishing.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2003). The bioethics consultant: Giving moral advice in the midst of moral controversy. HEC Forum, 15.4(December), 362–382.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2006). Critical reflections on theology’s handmaid: Why the role of philosophy in Orthodox Christianity is so different. Philosophy & Theology, 18.1, 53–75.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2007). The Euthyphro’s dilemma reconsidered: A variation on a theme from Brody on halakhic method. In M. Cherry & A. Iltis (Eds.), Pluralistic casuistry (pp. 109–130). Dordrecht: Springer.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2009). Credentialing strategically ambiguous and heterogeneous social skills: The emperor without clothes. HEC Forum, 21.3, 293–306.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2010a). Moral obligation after the death of God: Critical reflections on concerns from Immanuel Kant, G.W.F. Hegel, and Elizabeth Anscombe. Social Philosophy & Policy, 27.2, 317–340.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2010b). Kant, Hegel, and Habermas: Reflections on ‘Glauben und Wissen’. The Review of Metaphysics, 63.4, 871–903.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (2011a). Confronting moral pluralism in posttraditional Western societies: Bioethics critically reassessed. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 36.3, 243–260.
Engelhardt, H. T, Jr. (Ed.). (2011b). Bioethics critically reconsidered: Having second thoughts. Dordrecht: Springer.
Fox, E., Myers, S., & Pearlman, R. A. (2007). Ethics consultation in United States hospitals: A national survey. American Journal of Bioethics, 72, 13–25.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1977). Faith and knowledge. W. Cerf & H. S. Harris (Trans.). Albany: State University of New York Press.
Hegel, G. W. F. (1991). Elements of the philosophy of right. A. W. Wood (Ed.), H. B. Nisbet (Trans.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Knowles, D. (1962). The evolution of medieval thought. New York: Vintage Books.
May, T. (2001). The breadth of bioethics: Core areas of bioethics education for hospital ethics committees. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 26.1, 101–118.
Moreno, J. (1988). Ethics by committee: The moral authority of consensus. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 13.4, 411–432.
Moreno, J. (1991). Consensus, contracts, and committees. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 16.4, 393–408.
Rawls, J. (1985). Justice as fairness: Political not metaphysical. Philosophy & Public Affairs, 14(Summer), 223–251.
Tertullian. (1994). In A. Roberts & J. Donaldson (Eds.), Ante-Nicene fathers, Latin Christianity: Its founder, Tertullian. (Vol. 3). Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers.
Tong, R. (1991). The epistemology and ethics of consensus: Uses and misuses of ‘ethical’ expertise. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 16(4), 409–426.
Vattimo, G. (1991). The end of modernity. J. R. Snyder (Trans.). Baltimore: Jon R. Snyder.
Wildes, S. J., & Kevin, W. M. (1993). The priesthood of bioethics and ethics and the return of casuistry. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 18.1, 33–49.