Chanakya
,
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2015
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This is from another thread, where continuing this discussion would obviously have been off-topic. This thread's for that broader discussion, that I’ve quoted below from my post there and boldfaced:
I feel stupid posting this, because I’m sure I just missed the link, but the AMA does explain its position on executions:
https://code-medical-ethics.ama-assn.org/ethics-opinions/capital-punishment
Eta: they also lay out their position on Torture, which is nice:
https://code-medical-ethics.ama-assn.org/ethics-opinions/torture
That makes their position crystal clear, thanks for posting.
(Well, not the details of it. Doesn't stipulate that doing this will cost a doctor his licence. But that might well follow, given these very clear guidelines.)
Interesting that the ethical concerns of a professional body is allowed to go against direct legal mandate. Wonder if this has ever actually been challenged in a court of law.
I like their stand on torture, clearly calling it out as vile and barbaric. Wish they'd done the same for executions as well. ...Still, what they do have, in terms of clear guidelines , is admirable.
This larger discussion will probably be off-topic --- and maybe I'll start a thread, later when I'm free --- but I wonder what other professions have this kind of extra-legal ethical angle, and what exactly the legal standing of this sort of thing is.
I mean, these are four different things. One, some doctor personally deciding he won't involve himself in taking life. Two, an association putting out general guidelines like these, just non-enforceable guidelines. Three, enforcing those guidelines on pain of revoking membership, when the membership mainly means dinners, dances, networking, and informal recognition. And four, enforcing them by taking away the man's licence, and his right to practice his profession. Four very different things. And the last particularly, I do wonder if it might hold up in a court of law.
I suppose an equivalent would be the confessional thing. Regardless of my opinion on the specifics --- which is that medicine is a bona fide profession with real ethics, while priesting away is nonsensical cosplay and charlatanry and exactly the opposite of ethical --- but regardless, again, it's one thing for a priest to take his vows seriously and not divulge details about somone who's confessed to a crime to the police, and a very different thing for the church to forbid him to do that on pain of defrocking him and losing his career. (Although does the church only licence priests, or are they more like employees? If the latter, then that might be a separate, fifth, category.)