Skip to content
Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by Gütersloher Verlagshaus September 9, 2014

Tun und Unterlassen im klinischen Entscheidungskonflikt

Perspektiven einer (nicht nur) theologischen Identitätsethik

  • Christofer Frey and Peter Dabrock

Abstract

To act and to refrain from actions comprises according to the logic of ethical consequentialism to be responsible in any case. This argument is particularly important in medical ethics: Setting actively limits to a life or permitting a long-term suffering of a patient is sometimes interpreted as equally important in the view of morals or ethics. The foundation of this argument is a one-sided theory of causation. The essay presented here tries to differentiate between the idea of causation in activities and the ascription of consequences of non-interference in certain cases. In former times nature presented reasons for nonintervention: God was at work. But when the idea of God is deficient in evidence in certain Western societies a qualified idea of life could replace the former basis of naturallaw or natural theology.

Online erschienen: 2014-9-9
Erschienen im Druck: 2003-2-1

© 2014 by Gütersloher Verlagshaus

Downloaded on 25.4.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.14315/zee-2003-0106/html
Scroll to top button