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    Carmelics

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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    Statements
    321,452
    Perspectives
    108,905
    Topics
    42
    Home/Original/inverse
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    Inverse View

    It is not the case that A physician's epistemic uncertainty about outcome must be disclosed to the patient, making the patient's consent—not the operation's uniqueness—the true justificatory basis.

    ?Set your confidence on the premises below to see your aggregate.

    Reasons For

    1 perspective
    Reason for
    ?
    • 1.Disclosing all epistemic uncertainties may paralyze patients with excessive information, making consent meaningfully impossible rather than informed.
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    • 2.Physicians have fiduciary duties to recommend procedures, not neutrally catalog uncertainties; pure disclosure undermines beneficent medical judgment.
      ?

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    • 3.Procedural uniqueness and experimental status already carry implicit disclosure value; added uncertainty articulation may create redundant legal exposure.
      ?

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    Reasons Against

    1 perspective
    Reason against
    ?
    • 1.Patients are autonomous agents entitled to make decisions based on complete information about risks, not merely structural novelty of procedures.
      ?

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    • 2.Epistemic humility about outcomes respects patient dignity by acknowledging limitations rather than false certainty that conceals actual unknowns.
      ?

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    • 3.Informed consent grounded in disclosed uncertainty provides better ethical justification than operational uniqueness, which patients cannot evaluate.
      ?

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