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Robert Veatch’s Disrupted Dialogue and its implications for bioethics

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Abstract

In his Disrupted Dialogue: Medical Ethics and the Collapse of Physician-Humanist Communication (1770–1980) Robert Veatch presents a scholarly tour de force of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Anglophone medical ethics to demonstrate how the easy communication between physicians and humanists in the Scottish Enlightenment progressively dissipated as medicine became detached from humanistic disciplines. In this paper I offer two comments—that the discourse of medical ethics in the Scottish Enlightenment was a discourse of Baconian moral science and that nineteenth-century medical ethics in the United States became detached from that discourse. The result was that a principal resource for physicians at the birth of bioethics, the American Medical Association’s Principles of Medicine Ethics of 1957, did not equip physicians with the conceptual tools they needed to formulate and address the ethical challenges that became the agenda of bioethics. The paper opens with a brief portrait of Robert Veatch, the author’s connections to him, and his little-known role as an impresario of the classical music of the Blue Ridge and Appalachia.

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Correspondence to Laurence B. McCullough.

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McCullough, L.B. Robert Veatch’s Disrupted Dialogue and its implications for bioethics. Theor Med Bioeth 43, 221–233 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11017-022-09576-1

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