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HOLISTIC DETERMINATION FOR ONESELF: A NEW PARADIGM FOR SELF-DETERMINATION AT END OF LIFE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2013

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Abstract

Autonomous self-determination by competent adults is a cornerstone of medical law. We argue that the application of Kantian autonomy as the paramount model for self-determination at end of life is questionable as it fails to capture subtler nuances of decision-making in this context. We propose an alternative model which we term ‘holistic determination for oneself’ and posit this as a potential contender to the traditional Kantian construct. The paradigm of holistic determination is conceptualised on the basis of sub-determinations which coalesce to form the final determination. This paradigm offers a unique perspective that is multi-axial (based on the levels of decision-making) and multi-dimensional (based on an on-going temporal inter-relational and integrative synthesis of decisions at all levels). Holistic determination for oneself offers a paradigm that is tempered, universal and optimal for self-determination at end of life.

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Copyright © Cambridge Law Journal and Contributors 2013 

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References

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2 See note 1 above.

3 This paper does not seek to critique Price's arguments. Price's article served only as a scintilla for us to engage in further exploration of autonomous self-determination.

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5 Airedale NHS Trust v Bland [1993] A.C. 789 per Lord Goff. This paper will not discuss the sanctity of life doctrine which has been critically considered by Keown, J., “Beyond Bland: a critique of the BMA guidance on withholding and withdrawing medical treatment” (2000) 20 Legal Studies 66CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Price, D., “My view of the sanctity of life: a rebuttal of John Keown's critique” (2007) 27 Legal Studies 549CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Keown, J., “Restoring the Sanctity of Life and Replacing the Caricature: A Reply to David Price” (2006) 26 Legal Studies 109CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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14 Ibid. at para. 4: 400.

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16 H.E. Allison, Kant's theory of freedom (Cambridge 1990): this paper does not propose to examine the fundamentals of Kantian ideology.

17 Ibid., 16.

18 For Kant, the noumenal world represents the contents of the intelligible world whereas the ‘phenomenal world’ is the sensory reality.

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25 The details of the meeting are unknown.

26 Mental Capacity Act 2005 s.4 (7)(b) and the moral arguments of A.E. Buchanan and D.W. Brock, Deciding for others: the ethics of surrogate decision-making (Cambridge 1990), 136–139.

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31 As in Alpha's case above.

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38 This was evident in Alpha's situation, above. Section 4(7)(b) Mental Capacity Act 2005 provides the duty to consult; These duties are also found in the professional guidance of the General Medical Council: End of Life Care (2010) paras. 15 and 16 (Http://www.gmc-uk.org/guidance/ethical_guidance/end_of_life_care.asp).

39 Subject to the duty to maintain confidentiality. Involvement of others for the purposes of consent is recognised in professional guidance, see General Medical Council, Consent: patients and doctors making decisions together (2008) para. 22 (http://www.gmc-uk.org/Consent___English_0911.pdf_48903482.pdf).

40 English courts have rejected substituted judgement as the decision-making standard for those who lack capacity, see: Airedale NHS Trust v Bland [1993] 1 All ER. 821 at 872–3 per Lord Goff and 891–2 per Lord Mustill. Even so, section 4(6) of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 requires decision makers to consider, as is reasonably ascertainable, the person's past wishes, values and beliefs as well as other factors that he would have considered had he been able to do so thereby imbuing a substituted judgment standard into the analysis. For example, in Re G (TJ) [2010] EWHC 3005 the Court of Protection applied the substituted judgment standard in concluding that it was in a woman's interests to act altruistically since this is how she had acted prior to her loss of capacity.

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46 Failure to respect the self-determined choice of a competent person must be guarded against. Duress, perhaps in the form of subtle coercion and disguised as benign benevolence, can be difficult to detect.

47 The balance sheet approach is often used to acquire evidence for best interests determinations in persons who lack capacity.

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52 Section 1(1) Children Act 1989.

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59 This was the situation for Beta, above, who withdrew his prospective refusal of treatment.

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72 The first principles for such a construct must be founded on notions that the characterised person is reasonable and rational and are incorporated into the way in which they as persons represented themselves, their free and equal moral personality: see J. Rawls, “Kantian constructivism in moral theory” in S. Darwall, A. Gibbard and P. Railton (eds.), Moral discourse and practice: some philosophical approaches (New York 1997), 256.

73 J. Jacobs, “Some tensions between autonomy and self-governance” in E.F. Paul, F.D. Miller and J. Paul (eds.), Autonomy (Cambridge 2003), 221–244: our emphasis in the text.

74 See note 73 above and B. Williams, “Practical necessity” in B. Williams (ed.), Moral luck: philosophical papers, 19731980 (Cambridge 1981).

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79 See note 65 above.

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83 Heteronomy results if the will “seeks the law that is to determine anywhere else other than in the fitness of its maxims for its own giving of universal law”: I. Kant (1785), “Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals” M.J. Gregor, (ed. and transl.) The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Immanuel Kant, Practical Philosophy (Cambridge 1996) 4: 385–463; at 4: 441.

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85 O. O'Neill, “Autonomy: The Emperor's New Clothes” (2003) 77 (Supplementary Volume) Aristotelian Society 1–21.

86 Rousseau's approach to “taint free” determination is to consider legislation by co-ordinated individual selves that works for the common good, and one that will lean towards public utility. See J-J. Rousseau (1755) “Discourse on Political Economy” V. Gourevitch (ed. and transl.) Rousseau: The Discourses and other early political writing (Cambridge 1997).

87 In Levinasian terms there are two types of knowledge: that which brings “the other” into the category of “sameness” (termed “comprehensional ontology”) and knowledge that allows the manifestation of alterity.

88 See the discussion of Levinas in “Philosophy and the idea of infinity.” Originally published in French in (1957) 62 Revue de Metaphysique et des Morale 241–253, cited by A. Strhan, “The very subjection of the subject: Levinas, heteronomy and the philosophy of education” (2009) at http://kent.academia.edu/AnnaStrhan/Papers/373666/The_very_subjection_of_the_subject_Levinas_heteronomy_and_the_philosophy_of_education accessed 30 May 2013.

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94 At end of life or, for that matter, at any other time.

95 We are grateful to Professor Prodyot Samanta (President, ThirdEye RiskInsights, New York and Professor of Enterprise Risk Management) for comments and assistance with the development of the mathematical expression for our paradigm. Prodyot has provided several insights into the interplay between rationality, emotions and the specific implications for decision-making (in financial contexts): Jones and Johnson (1973, Journal of Personality), Monat (1976, Journal of Human Stress), Breznitz (2001, British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology and Loewenstein (2001, 1996).

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100 This has long been accepted as a theoretical construct in other areas of academia. See, for example, D. Kahneman, P. Slovic, A. Tversky, Judgment under uncertainty: Heuristics and biases (Cambridge University Press 1982). Kahneman and Tversky were awarded the Nobel Prize (for Economics) in 2002.

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102 See note 100 above.

103 This is discussed in more detail in section IV E Holistic determination and self-regulation.

104 General Medical Council, Good Medical Practice (General Medical Council 2013); Good clinical practice also requires accurate record keeping and respect for patients' rights to confidentiality.

105 I. Kant (1785) “Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals” M.J. Gregor, (ed. and transl.) The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Immanuel Kant, Practical Philosophy (Cambridge 1996) 4:440.

106 P. Guyer, “Kant on the theory and practice of autonomy” in E.F. Paul, F.D. Miller and J. Paul (eds.), Autonomy (New York 2003), 70–98.

107 Ibid., 104.

108 See note 84 above [5:29].

109 See note 104 above at p.78.

110 See note 104 above at p.79.

111 See note 84 above [4:421; 4:429; 4:431].

112 A. Maclean, Autonomy, informed consent and medical law. A relational challenge (Cambridge 2009), 20–21; Secker, B., “The appearance of Kant's deontology in contemporary Kantianism: concepts of patient autonomy in bioethics” (1999) 24 Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 48CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Wilson, J., “Is respect for autonomy defensible?” (2007) 33 Journal of Medical Ethics 353CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

113 See note 104 above pp. 70–98.

114 See note 104 above p.80.

115 See note 104 above pp. 90–91.

116 Adapted from the last words of Sydney Carton in Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities (1859) (Penguin Books 1970).