“The aspects of the book related to the philosophy of science and cognitive science (inductive and deductive reasoning, biases, and heuristics) are distilled in reasonable and useful ways. I recommend this book to those addiction professionals who want to create their own framework for ethical decision making.”
--PsycCRITIQUES
Ethical decision-making is required in many of the difficult situations faced by addiction professionals. In this guide, Michael Taleff describes how to integrate critical thinking with ethical decision-making. This is a guide not on “what to do” when confronted with difficult ethical dilemmas, but on how to think about what to do.
The author presents common ethical dilemmas that addiction professionals face in their daily work--such as boundary issues, confidentiality, dual relationships, and more--and asks readers to consider their own responses to these dilemmas. The book then shows readers how to apply new models of ethical thinking to practice.
Key features:
Presents an ethical self-exam to encourage critical thinking about one's own decision-making methodIntroduces a variety of models such as the social contract theory, existentialist theory, and ethical egoismDiscusses how biases, emotional reactions, and fallacies can weaken ethical decision-makingPresents an introductory “Ethics Judgment Kit,” a simple, practical decision-making procedure for studentsThis book demonstrates how critical thinking skills can impact and improve the process of ethical decision-making.