A Presentation of the Northeast Ethics Education Partnership and Ethical Awareness for International Collaboration, Brown University, 2012
Introduction
• Care ethics [The ethics of care] originated among feminists who maintained, on the basis of Carol Gilligan’s work, A Different Voice , that women and girls approach moral issues with a strong concern for empathy and caring in interpersonal relationships.
Care and Virtues
• Care ethics focuses on virtues associated with care as a moral sentiment and response in the context of particular relationships. • The emphasis is on such traits as empathy, sympathy, compassion, loyalty, discernment and love in intimate relationships, rather than the abstract principles and rights of deontological and libertarian ethics.
• Like communitarian ethics, care ethics stresses the interdependence of persons and the importance of particular relationships, especially within the family and other communities
Care Ethics
• Care ethics encourages altruism, which entails concern for others, their feelings and needs, but does not neglect care for oneself. • Care ethics requires the moral agent to balance care of the self with care for others.
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Gilligan’s Ethics of Care
• Gilligan identifies levels and transition periods in the development of the ethics of care. • (1) “From Selfishness to Responsibility” the conflict between what one would do vs. what one ought to do within their attachments and connections to others.
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Ethics of Care
• (2) “Goodness as Self-Sacrifice” – concern for others, their feelings and the need to not inflict harm are major concerns.
• (3) “From Goodness to Truth” – the morality of care must include a care of the self as well as others, to be honest and real with oneself, an increased responsibility to one’s responsibility to the self, as well as others. • Gilligan defines this as “mature care”.
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References: Beauchamp T. and J. Childress. 2009. Principles of Biomedical Ethics, New York: Oxford University Press, 6th ed Gilligan, Carol 1977, “Concepts of the Self and of Morality” Harvard Educational Review: 481-517 Repr. 1986 as “A Different Voice”, In Pearsall, Women and Values: 309-339 Munson, R. 2004. Intervention and Reflection: Basic Issues in Medical Ethics, 8th Ed Australia ; Belmont, CA : Thomson/Wadsworth, Pettersen’s T. 2008., Comprehending Care . United Kingdom: Lexington Books: