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Toward a global geroethics – gerontology and the theory of the good human life

Gerontologists have proposed different concepts for ageing well such as ‘successful ageing’, ‘active ageing’, and ‘healthy ageing’. These conceptions are primarily focused on maintaining health and preventing disease. But they also raise the questions: what is a good life in old age and how can it b...

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Published in:Bioethics 2018-05, Vol.32 (4), p.261-268
Main Authors: Ehni, Hans‐Joerg, Kadi, Selma, Schermer, Maartje, Venkatapuram, Sridhar
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Language:English
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Kadi, Selma
Schermer, Maartje
Venkatapuram, Sridhar
description Gerontologists have proposed different concepts for ageing well such as ‘successful ageing’, ‘active ageing’, and ‘healthy ageing’. These conceptions are primarily focused on maintaining health and preventing disease. But they also raise the questions: what is a good life in old age and how can it be achieved? While medical in origin, these concepts and strategies for ageing well also contain ethical advice for individuals and societies on how to act regarding ageing and old age. This connection between gerontology and ethics is overlooked by both schools of thought. We thus develop this research programme for a systematic geroethics in four steps. First, we analyze ‘successful ageing’ as put forward by Rowe and Kahn as a paradigmatic example of a gerontological conception of ageing well. Then, in a second step, we move from criticisms within gerontology to an ethical perspective; in particular, we want to clarify the problem of the claim of universal validity of conceptions of the good life. In a third constructive step, we explain how the ‘capabilities approach’ could be applied in this context as a normative foundation for the implicit normative assumptions of gerontological conceptions of ageing well, such as a particular choice of functionings, the ethical relevance of human agency, and the resulting claims of individuals towards society. Finally, using a concept developed by the German philosopher Ursula Wolf, we systematically develop the different aspects of the connection between ageing well and the theory of the good life in their full complexity and show their interconnectedness.
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subjects active ageing
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Ageism - ethics
Aging
Bioethics
capabilities approach
Connectedness
Ethics
Ethics, Professional
Geriatrics
Geriatrics - trends
geroethics
Gerontology
Health Services for the Aged - ethics
Health Status
Human agency
Humans
Medicine
Older people
Quality of Life
successful ageing
theory of the good life
title Toward a global geroethics – gerontology and the theory of the good human life
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