07-09-2010
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 Promoting international dialogue between fundamental and applied ethics
 
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Ethics.be
 
Selection of articles
 Gifts and Alliances in Java
Peter Verhezen (2002)
 Experts or Mediators? Philosophers in the Public Sphere
Michael Dusche (2002)
 Aristotle on Habituation. The Key to Unlocking the Nicomachean Ethics
Nathan Bowditch (2008)
 Jürgen Habermas' s Writings on Europe Not Habermasian Enough?
Vivienne Boon (2007)
 Equality and Democracy The Problem of Minimal Competency
Thom Brooks (2007)
 Individualism and Personalism
Roland Breeur (1999)
 Can War Be a Moral Action? Towards a Normative Theory of Humanitarian Intervention
Reinold Schmücker (2004)
 
Ethical Perspectives
Issue : 17/2 (June - 2010)
Respect for Autonomy and Authenticity. The Pastor's Responsiveness to the Person of the Pastoree
Guus Timmerman
   Page : 309 - 341
  Respect for personal autonomy and authenticity is a very important principle in late modern political and applied ethics. In the context of medicine and nursing, for example, a great deal of ethical research is devoted to this principle, both theoretical and empirical, raising many hotly debated questions, both conceptual – on the concepts of autonomy and authenticity – practical – on the application of the principle of respect for autonomy and authenticity – and methodological – on using empirical methods in ethical research. In the present contribution I present two of the results of my doctoral research concerning personal autonomy and authenticity in the practice of personal pastoral care, using empirical methods.

The first consists of a formulation of the goals of pastoral care as they were found in the cases analysed, the second of the different forms of personal autonomy and authenticity that were identified. Our primary aim is to argue for the importance of a) conducting empirical research into what is actually morally relevant and not just at the surface, and of b) assigning a privileged position in empirical ethical research to practices and the tacit knowing of advanced, reflective practitioners. Abstract concepts of personal autonomy and authenticity and of pastoral care are challenged.
 
Recent issue  17/2 (2010)
Introduction
(Veerle Draulans)
On the Fragile Relationship between Empirics and Ethics
(Veerle Draulans)
Reflective Equilibrium as a Normative Empirical Model
(Ghislaine J.M.W. van Thiel)
Empirical Ethics and the Special Status of Practitioners' Judgements
(Bert Musschenga)
Empirical Ethics. The Case of Dignity in End-of-Life Decisions
(Carlo Leget)
Clarifying the Concept of Human Dignity in the Care of the Elderly. A Dialogue between Empirical and Philosophical Approaches
(Win Tadd)
Empirical Research and Family Ethics
(Annemie Dillen)
Respect for Autonomy and Authenticity. The Pastor's Responsiveness to the Person of the Pastoree
(Guus Timmerman)
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