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(3) I want to talk about rational principles a little more. Although these principles arose in the context of medicine, I think they are more universal and I think they certainly apply to what we've been talking about today.
Non-maleficence (do no harm) and beneficence The first, the original, principle I think was non-maleficence, the notion that above all else, you should do no harm. For most of the history of medicine, for 2,500 years, that was really the predominant principle, because medicine couldn't predictably do much good. There wasn't a lot you could do predictability that could benefit people. We didn't understand germ theory until late in the 19th century. We didn't develop any effective drugs until 1935 when the sulfa drugs emerged and Penicillin came into being in the 40's, antibiotics in the 50's. So these drugs make it possible predictably to benefit people, whereas before it was largely a hit and miss affair. There's a fascinating book about surgery in the American Civil War. That war produced thousands of amputees, something that I was never aware of until I looked at this book. continued...
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