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The Loyal Patient at the End of Life: A Roycean Argument for Assisted Suicide
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 March 2005
Extract
The philosophy of Josiah Royce (1855–1916) has recently begun to regain attention; Griffin Trotter, in particular, has utilized Royce in questions concerning medical ethics. This resurgence in attention is for good reason—Royce's philosophies of loyalty and community provide both a descriptively accurate picture of the self and a prescriptively solid ethical system. Royce recognized, as do all pragmatic philosophers, that persons only exist socially, and this sociality will necessarily influence the individual ethically, but also epistemologically. What we know, how we act, how we think we ought to act are not individual questions, but rather questions that arise for individuals only in the context of a larger community.
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- SPECIAL SECTION: PATIENT ETHICS
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- © 2005 Cambridge University Press
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