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This article reviews suggestions for how ethical tools are to be evaluated and argues that the concept of ethical soundness as presented by Kaiser etal. (2007) is unhelpful. Instead, it suggests that the quality of an ethical tool is determined by how well it achieves its assigned purpose(s). Those are different for different tools, and the article suggests a categorization of such tools into three groups. For all ethical tools, it identifies comprehensiveness and user-friendliness as crucial. For tools that have reaching a decision in a democratic context as a main purpose, it identifies transparency, guiding users toward a decision and justification of the decision-supporting mechanism. For tools that aim to engage the public, it identifies procedural fairness as essential. It also notes that the scope of use for ethical tools is limited to the same moral community, and that this feature is frequently overlooked.

Nyckelord

applied ethics; consensus conference; ethical matrix; ethical soundness; ethical tools

Publicerad i

Metaphilosophy
2015, volym: 46, nummer: 2, sidor: 263-279
Utgivare: WILEY-BLACKWELL

SLU författare

Associerade SLU-program

Mistra Biotech

Globala målen (SDG)

SDG16 Fredliga och inkluderande samhällen

UKÄ forskningsämne

Filosofi
Etik

Publikationens identifierare

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/meta.12130

Permanent länk till denna sida (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/67489