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Perceiving Sympathetically: Moral Perception, Embodiment, and Medical Ethics

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Abstract

In recent literature on moral perception, much attention has been paid to questions about the relationship between metaethical commitments and moral experience. Far less attention has been paid to the nature of moral perception, its context-sensitivity, and the role it might play in carrying out everyday tasks with decency and care. I would like to reflect on just these features of moral perception in the context of healthcare. I will argue that healthcare providers do in fact have at least an imperfect duty (in Kant’s sense) to develop their capacities to perceive with sympathy. I will further suggest, for some familiar reasons, that this development is not best accomplished through the model of adherence to ‘ethics codes.’

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Acknowledgements

I would like to thank those present at the APA Eastern division meeting of the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World, December, 2011, for invaluable discussion of the issues considered here.

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Correspondence to J. Jeremy Wisnewski.

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Wisnewski, J.J. Perceiving Sympathetically: Moral Perception, Embodiment, and Medical Ethics. J Med Humanit 36, 309–319 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10912-015-9349-1

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10912-015-9349-1

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