•  3699
    A comparison of approaches to virtue for nursing ethics
    Ethical Perspectives 26 (3): 427-457. 2019.
    As in many other fields of practical ethics, virtue ethics is increasingly of interest within nursing ethics. Nevertheless, the virtue ethics literature in nursing ethics remains relatively small and underdeveloped. This article aims to categorize which broad theoretical approaches to virtue have been taken, to undertake some initial comparative assessment of their relative merits given the peculiar ethical dilemmas facing nurse practitioners, and to highlight the prob- lem areas for virtue ethi…Read more
  •  54
    An internal morality of nursing: what it can and cannot do
    Nursing Philosophy 14 (2): 109-116. 2013.
    It has been claimed that there are certain acts that nurses as people practising nursing must never do because they are nurses and this is regardless of what the same agent should do; that certain actions are not part of proper nursing practice. The concept of an internal morality has been discussed in relation to medicine and has been used to ground the actions proper to medicine in a realist tradition. Although the concept of an internal morality of nursing is not explicitly mentioned in the l…Read more
  •  69
    Contemporary nursing wisdom in the UK and ethical knowing: difficulties in conceptualising the ethics of nursing
    with Graham Carr, Joan Curzio, and Louise Terry
    Nursing Philosophy 15 (1): 50-56. 2013.
    This paper's philosophical ideas are developed from a General Nursing Council for England and Wales Trust‐funded study to explore nursing knowledge and wisdom and ways in which these can be translated into clinical practice and fostered in junior nurses. Participants using Carper's (1978) ways of knowing as a framework experienced difficulty conceptualizing a link between the empirics and ethics of nursing. The philosophical problem is how to understand praxis as a moral entity with intrinsic va…Read more