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    The Enoch (2017) conception of autonomy as mere sovereign... — Carmelics
    Home/Bioethics
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    Challenges→The sovereign-domain conception of autonomy is not the operative sense of autonomy in bioethics.

    The Enoch (2017) conception of autonomy as mere sovereignty diverges from standard bioethical usage.

    BioethicsRights & Liberty
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    In bioethics, 'autonomy' is not used to mean simply a domain over which one shou...The sovereign-domain conception of autonomy is not the operative sense of autono...

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    The sovereign-domain conception of autonomy is not the operative sense...89%In bioethics, 'autonomy' is not used to mean simply a domain over whic...88%If autonomy means only the ability to govern oneself regardless of how...84%Positing a substantive conception of autonomy as the basis for interpe...77%

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    A third challenge is that not all acts that are generally assumed to violate informed consent seem contrary to autonomous decision-making. Suppose that a sufficiently capacitated adult patient refuses a safe, beneficial, and time-sensitive surgery to prevent a moderate disability, due to a simple misunderstanding of medical facts. There is no time to convince him of his mistake. Being uninformed, his decision cannot count as autonomous. But present medical practices surrounding informed consent

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