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The Terminal: A tale of virtueDossetor Health Ethics Centre, 515 University Extension Centre, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2T4. Tel: +1780 492 5250; wendy.austin{at}ualberta.ca The movie, The terminal, is used to illustrate Mac Intyre's description of virtue ethics. The terminal is a mythical tale about a traveler, Viktor Navorski, who is stranded by circumstances in a New York airport. Viktor is a person who, without a strict reliance on duty or rules, has developed the disposition to act well despite variation in his circumstances. His character is revealed in contrast to that of three other characters: a cleaner, a flight attendant and the airport manager. Stories like this one may be a good way to open dialogue among clinicians about being virtuous as a practitioner. Such dialogue may make striving to be virtuous an acceptable goal for practitioners and less like an idealistic, pseudo-goal for those aiming for sainthood.
Key Words: ethics movie phronesis practices the good practitioner virtue
Nursing Ethics, Vol. 14, No. 1,
54-61 (2007) |
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