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Article

O Tempora! O Mores! The Place of Boni Mores in Dignity Discourse

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Citation

Brown J (2020) O Tempora! O Mores! The Place of Boni Mores in Dignity Discourse. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 29 (1), pp. 144-155. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963180119000872

Abstract
In an earlier article, I had argued that Common lawyers and bioethicists may find the Romanistic notion of the actio iniuriarum, and the conception of ¡®dignity¡¯ which is central to this legal mechanism, instructive in complex medico-legal cases. Professor Foster wrote a critical response to that piece, however ¨C in recognition of Foster¡¯s own claim that ¡®to give an account of rights and respect, one necessarily has to resort to the principles on which those ideas are based¡­ one is likely to get more satisfactory answers if one starts from the parent principle, this article submits that ¨C insofar as ¡®dignity¡¯ is employed in any meaningful sense in moral and ethical debate ¨C the principles of this philosophical notion are ultimately derived from the historic operation of that principle within the specific sub-discipline of legal philosophy. As legal philosophy differs significantly between the Common and Civilian traditions, this article suggests that if ¡®dignity¡¯ is to be afforded any place of prominence as a moral guide, it follows that the scope of the legal conception of dignity ¨C between legal traditions ¨C ought to be examined in full. Given the recognised differences between the two major legal families, oxymoronic comparative legal scholarship must be regarded as a necessary part of this process. This article purports to act as a primer for Common lawyers who are unfamiliar with Romanistic concepts such as existimatio and dignitas, as well as acting as a more direct response to Foster¡¯s own article.

Journal
Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: Volume 29, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/01/2020
Publication date online20/12/2019
Date accepted by journal25/09/2018
URL
ISSN0963-1801
eISSN1469-2147

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