Skip to content
Carmelics
TopicsThinkersChangesContributorsLoading account…

    Carmelics

    A reasoning platform. Break down any belief into clear reasons, explore both sides, and weigh the evidence honestly.

    Navigate

    • Topics
    • Search
    • Recent Changes
    • Contribute
    • How It Works
    • Glossary
    • Thinkers
    • Contributors
    • About
    • Statistics
    • Terms
    • Privacy

    Database

    Statements
    —
    Perspectives
    —
    Topics
    —

    Press ? for keyboard shortcuts

    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    Statements
    321,452
    Perspectives
    108,905
    Topics
    42
    Most writers on capacity agree that subjects must have ap... — Carmelics
    Home/Bioethics
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

    Part of a larger discussion

    Supports→Decision-making capacity requires appreciation of the nature and significance of a decision, not merely factual understanding.

    Most writers on capacity agree that subjects must have appreciation of the nature and significance of the decision they face.

    All sources support itBioethics
    ?Rate how convincing each reason is below to see the overall strength.

    No one has weighed in yet. Be the first to share reasons for or against this statement.

    Sign in or register to share your perspective on this statement.

    Topics

    BioethicsAll sources support it

    Connections

    1 topic

    Truth & Knowledge3 linked

    Related

    Next step

    Based on where you are in your exploration

    Browse more in Bioethics
    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Decision-making capacity requires appreciation of the nature and significance of...Grasping information alone is insufficient without genuine belief that it truly ...The facts and their implications for the subject's life must mean something to t...

    Similar

    The appreciation element of capacity derives from the legal requiremen...89%Decision-making capacity requires appreciation of the nature and signi...87%The appreciation requirement in capacity assessment maps onto this leg...75%Any theory of decisional capacity in medicine must classify most ordin...75%

    Source

    AI-extracted
    SEP: decision-capacity
    View source passageHide passage
    In addition to understanding in the basic factual sense alluded to above, most writers on capacity agree that subjects must also have some appreciation of the nature and significance of the decision that they are faced with (Grisso & Appelbaum 1998: 42–52). The facts, and the implications of those facts for the subject’s life, must mean something to the subject. The most minimal way of interpreting this requirement is to see it as requiring that the subject not only grasp information but gen

    Details

    Type
    premise
    Perspectives
    0 (0 for, 0 against)
    Edits
    1 edit

    Open for perspectives

    This idea is waiting for its first supporting or challenging perspective.

    Share the first perspective