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Principlism and the Four Principles

Principlism is the bioethical framework that analyses moral problems in medicine through four prima facie principles: respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice.

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Definition

An approach to biomedical ethics that uses four prima facie principles—respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice—as a common framework for identifying and resolving moral problems.

Scope

This topic covers the four-principles approach associated with Beauchamp and Childress, including how each principle is defined, the idea that they are prima facie (binding unless overridden), and the processes of 'specification' and 'balancing' used to apply them to cases. It also covers the framework's wide adoption in clinical ethics teaching and its principal criticisms. The treatment is descriptive: it explains the framework and the debate around it rather than recommending decisions.

Core questions

  • What does each of the four principles require, and how are they defined?
  • How are prima facie principles specified and balanced when they conflict?
  • Is principlism a genuine ethical theory or merely a checklist?
  • Can the four principles be ordered, or do they have equal initial weight?

Key theories

Prima facie principles and balancing
Each principle is binding unless it conflicts with another, in which case the principles are weighed against one another in context; none is absolute or lexically prior.
Specification
Abstract principles are made action-guiding by progressively narrowing their content to fit concrete circumstances, reducing indeterminacy without appealing to a single master theory.

History

The four-principles framework was introduced in the first edition of Beauchamp and Childress's Principles of Biomedical Ethics (1979) and refined across subsequent editions. Raanan Gillon popularized it in British medical education, while Clouser and Gert's 1990 'critique of principlism' became the best-known dissent.

Debates

Whether principlism lacks theoretical unity
Clouser and Gert argue the four principles are unconnected 'chapter headings' that give no guidance when they conflict; defenders reply that specification and balancing, grounded in a 'common morality', supply the needed coherence.

Key figures

  • Tom Beauchamp
  • James Childress
  • Raanan Gillon
  • K. Danner Clouser
  • Bernard Gert

Related topics

Seminal works

  • beauchamp2019
  • clouser1990

Frequently asked questions

What are the four principles?
Respect for autonomy, beneficence (acting for the patient's benefit), non-maleficence (avoiding harm), and justice (fair distribution of benefits, risks, and costs).
Are the principles ranked in order of importance?
No. In the standard account they have equal prima facie weight; their relative importance is determined case by case through balancing rather than by a fixed hierarchy.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts