Blameworthy bumping? Investigating nudge's neglected cousin.

Abstract:

:The realm of non-rational influence, which includes nudging, is home to many other morally interesting phenomena. In this paper, I introduce the term bumping, to discuss the category of unintentional non-rational influence. Bumping happens constantly, wherever people make choices in environments where they are affected by other people. For instance, doctors will often bump their patients as patients make choices about what treatments to pursue. In some cases, these bumps will systematically tend to make patients' decisions worse. Put another way: doctors will sometimes harm their patients by bumping them in systematic (although still unintentional) ways. I use the case of medical overuse, the provision of medical services where the likely harm outweighs the likely benefit to the patient, as a touchstone for arguing that doctors who systematically bump their patients towards harm can be blameworthy for their unwitting influence.

journal_name

J Med Ethics

authors

Miyata-Sturm A

doi

10.1136/medethics-2018-105179

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2019-04-01 00:00:00

pages

257-264

issue

4

eissn

0306-6800

issn

1473-4257

pii

medethics-2018-105179

journal_volume

45

pub_type

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