"Just do your job": technology, bureaucracy, and the eclipse of conscience in contemporary medicine.
Market metaphors have come to dominate discourse on medical practice. In this essay, we revisit Peter Berger and colleagues' analysis of modernization in their book The Homeless Mind and place that analysis in conversation with Max Weber's 1917 lecture "Science as a Vocation" to argue that the rise of market metaphors betokens the carry-over to medical practice of various features from the institutions of technological production and bureaucratic administration. We refer to this carry-over as the product presumption. The product presumption foregrounds accidental features of medicine while hiding its essential features. It thereby confounds the public understanding of medicine and impedes the professional achievement of the excellences most central to medical practice. In demonstrating this pattern, we focus on a recent article, "Physicians, Not Conscripts-Conscientious Objection in Health Care," in which Ronit Stahl and Ezekiel Emanuel decry conscientious refusals by medical practitioners. We demonstrate that Stahl and Emanuel's argument depends on the product presumption, ignoring and undermining central features of good medicine. We conclude by encouraging conscientious resistance to the product presumption and the language it engenders.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Social Change
- Philosophy, Medical
- Humans
- Conscience
- Applied Ethics
- 5003 Philosophy
- 5002 History and philosophy of specific fields
- 5001 Applied ethics
- 2202 History and Philosophy of Specific Fields
- 2201 Applied Ethics
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Social Change
- Philosophy, Medical
- Humans
- Conscience
- Applied Ethics
- 5003 Philosophy
- 5002 History and philosophy of specific fields
- 5001 Applied ethics
- 2202 History and Philosophy of Specific Fields
- 2201 Applied Ethics