-- Albert Gedraitis
Calendar for Academics in Medical Ethics: June 16-22:
Medical Ethics in the Twenty-First Century
June 16-22, 2013
This seminar will examine the most important ethical questions that arise in the everyday practice of medicine. The framework of its analysis will be the theory of natural law that developed from the synthesis of ancient Greek thought (including the Hippocratic corpus) with Judaism and then Christianity. This framework will be contrasted with principlism and consequentialism as participants consider what sort of practice medicine is, whether it has a rational end or goal, and how medicine and the goods that medicine seeks fit within the broader scope of human goods.
Issues to be covered include the nature of the doctor-patient relationship; the limits of medicine; the meaning of autonomy; the place of conscience in the physician's work; the difference between an intended effect and a side effect; proportionality; human dignity; sexuality and reproduction; the beginning of life; disability; end-of-life care; and death. The seminar will consider an array of common clinical ethical cases and discuss what medicine, and ethics, requires in those scenarios. In the end, participants will develop intellectual tools that have for hundreds of years helped physicians discern how to practice medicine well (to be a good physician) in the face of medicine's moral and clinical complexities.
Faculty
Christopher O. Tollefsen, University of South Carolina
Farr A. Curlin, MD, University of Chicago
Application Process
Applicants are required to submit the following materials to Patrick Hough byApril 1, 2013:
1. Completed application form.
2. Current resume or curriculum vitae.
3. A cover letter (no more than 500 words) describing your experience and interest in the seminar's topic.
4. A letter of recommendation
All inquiries regarding the seminar and the application process can be directed toPatrick Hough. Decisions will be send to applications by April 16, 2013, and a $200 registration fee covering room and board on the campus of Princeton University will be required by May 1, 2013.
Farr A. Curlin is Associate Professor
of Medicine and Co-Director of the
Program on Medicine and Religion at
the University of Chicago. There he
works with colleagues from the
MacLean Center for Clinical Medical
Ethics and the University of Chicago
Divinity School to foster inquiry into
and public discourse regarding the
intersections of religion and the practice
of medicine. After graduating from the
University of North Carolina School of Medicine, he moved to the
University of Chicago. There he completed internal medicine
residency training and fellowships in both health services research
and clinical ethics before joining the faculty. Curlin's empirical
research charts the influence of physicians's moral traditions and
commitments, both religious and secular, on physicians's clinical
practices. His normative work addresses questions regarding whether
and how physicians's religious commitments and practices should
shape their practices of medicine in our plural democracy. Curlin and
colleagues have authored numerous manuscripts published in the
medicine and bioethics literatures, including a New England Journal
of Medicine paper titled "Religion, Conscience, and Controversial
Clinical Practices". He also edited a special issue ofTheoretical
Medicine and Bioethics titled "Conscience and Clinical Practice:
Medical Ethics in the Face of Moral Controversy".
Christopher O. Tollefsen is professor
Christopher O. Tollefsen is professor
of philosophy at the University of
South Carolina and a senior fellow at
the Witherspoon Institute. His areas of specialization include moral
philosophy and practical ethics.
Currently he is doing work in natural
law ethics, liberal perfectionism,
medical ethics, the ethics and politics
of inquiry, philosophical embryology, the nature of human action,
end of life issues, and ethics and education. He has published
extensively in academic journals on topics of bioethics, meta-ethics,
and the New Natural Law Theory, and has written for such popular
publications as The New Atlantis, Public Discourse, First Things, and
Touchstone. He obtained his PhD in philosophy from Emory
University. Professor Tollefsen is the author of Biomedical Research
and Beyond: Expanding the Ethics of Inquiry(2007) and coauthor
(with Robert P. George) of Embryo: A Defense of Human Life (2008).
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