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Autonomia pacjenta
Author(s) -
Seweryn Szatkowski
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
etyka
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2392-1161
pISSN - 0014-2263
DOI - 10.14394/etyka.374
Subject(s) - autonomy , action (physics) , value (mathematics) , bioethics , law and economics , personal autonomy , epistemology , social psychology , law , sociology , psychology , political science , computer science , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics , machine learning
Autonomy is almost certainly the most important value “discovered” in bioethics after its birth in 1960s. It is sometimes said that autonomy is a specific kind of freedom – one that can be enjoyed only by rational beings; the most difficult problem connected with its definition is that we can easily define this notion in such a way that autonomy could not be treated as a kind of freedom at all. Among other possibilities, especially interesting definition of autonomy refers not to the autonomous agent oneself but to its action: we can say that patient’s action (his or her consent or refusal of treatment) is autonomous only when it is done: 1. intentionally, 2. with understanding and 3. without any controlling influences.

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