Rescuing Solidarity from Its Carers. A Response to Professor ter Meulen

Main Article Content

Giovanni De Grandis

Abstract

The paper points out three serious problems in Ruud ter Meulen’s view of solidarity and of its role in healthcare ethics. First, it is not clear whether and to what extent ter Meulen expects normative concepts to be rooted in existing social practices: his criticism of liberal theories of justice seems to imply a different view on this issue than his implicit assumption that normative concepts are independent from social and historical trends. Second, it is not clear at which level his notion of solidarity is meant to be applied: does it provide principles for individuals or for institutions? Nor is it clear at what level of generality it should work: is it meant for healthcare institutions or for states, for citizens or for healthcare practitioners? Third, it is not at all clear how the communitarian and the universalist aspirations in his conception of solidarity can be reconciled.
In light of such difficulties it is argued that within philosophical discourse solidarity can be a useful notion only if it can be clearly distinguished from existing and commonly used ethical concepts. Three examples of such narrow and specific uses of solidarity are presented. Finally, a sceptical view of confining the work of applied philosophers to articulating normative concepts is put forward and an alternative view of blending empirical and philosophical analysis is proposed. This vision of field philosophy requires serious attention and careful understanding of the circumstances and constraints within which normative recommendations operate. It is suggested that such a modest and empirically grounded understanding of normative work is a better way of honouring the belief that philosophy is rooted in social institutions and in complex webs of relations.

Article Details

How to Cite
“Rescuing Solidarity from Its Carers. A Response to Professor Ter Meulen”. 2015. Diametros, no. 43 (March): 28-43. https://doi.org/10.13153/diam.43.2015.712.
Section
Special Topic - Solidarity and Justice in Health Care
Author Biography

Giovanni De Grandis, Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Dr. Giovanni De Grandis
Postdoctoral researcher
RESET project
Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
NTNU Dragvoll
NO-7491 Trondheim
Norway
E-mail: giovanni.de.grandis@ntnu.no

Giovanni De Grandis was educated at the University of Turin (Università degli Studi di Torino) (BA, PhD) and at University College London (MA). He has taught Ethics and Political Philosophy in Oxford and London for many years. In recent years his interest has turned increasingly to applied ethics and public policy. He has been part of the UCL-Lancet commission on Healthy Cities. He was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Copenhagen, where he worked on the EU-funded AGORA project on digital technologies in philosophical scholarship. Currently he is a postdoctoral researcher at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, where he is working on a project on Personalised Medicine.

How to Cite

“Rescuing Solidarity from Its Carers. A Response to Professor Ter Meulen”. 2015. Diametros, no. 43 (March): 28-43. https://doi.org/10.13153/diam.43.2015.712.
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