Ethics and Culture
Ethics and Culture
Ethics and Culture
- Edward Tylor
It refers to an appreciation of good
literature, music, art, and food.
For a biologist, it is likely to be a
colony of bacteria or other
microorganisms growing in a nutrient
medium in a laboratory Petri dish.
For anthropologists and other
behavioral scientists, culture is the full
range of learned human behavior
patterns.
Culture is a powerful human
tool for survival, but it is a
fragile phenomenon.
It is constantly changing and
easily lost because it exists only
in our minds
CORE LAYERS OF CULTURE
LAYERS OF CULTURE
Dennis O’Neil
Extreme family
Family solidarity
centeredness
Lavishness, outright
Hospitality
display of generosity
Stereotyping; role-gender
Gender specific values
assignment
http://all-that-is-interesting.com/7-bizarre-cultural-practices/7
THE PROBLEM OF ATE
ABBY…
Ate Abby is a registered nurse assigned in the
Pediatric Ward in one of the premier hospitals in
New York City. Contrary to her profession, her
mother is a well-known “hilot” and an advocate of
natural and traditional medicines in the Philippines.
Ate Abby earned her degree through a scholarship,
though her mother never objected in her academic
pursuits.
Being the eldest in the family, Ate Abby was
exposed to her mother’s traditional medicine
practices. Her mother taught her the skills of “hilot”
which she learned with so much enthusiast as she
wholeheartedly accepted such“gift” without
objection. Even then she was in college, she
practiced already “hilot” and harnessed such skills
and “gift” as she studied her course. She
appreciated the traditional medicine more because
of her gained knowledge in her course.
Ate Abby was using a bottle of Vicks (in tin can) to
determine if a child has dislocations. She would slide
the tin can at the body parts and when it stops, that
is where she applies the “hilot”. Many children in the
community of Ate Abby (in the Philippines) sought
first her traditional medicine before going to a doctor
for consultation. Many parents did not bother to visit
a doctor after the “hilot” because their children
found already the relief and eventually got cured.
Being assigned at the Pediatric Ward in a hospital
with a western setting is “dilemmic” for Ate Abby.
Having 2 kids of her own, it is agonising for her to
witness kids suffer from the rudiments of hospital
SOPs upon admission. She knew that kids’ sickness is
not that serious and easy relief could be achieved
using her knowledge in traditional medicine. She was
tempted several times, in fact many times, to talk to
the parents and offer her help, but she is afraid to be
accused of medical malpractice and
unprofessionalism.
Let’s play roles…
If you were the parent of the child, would you allow a
nurse to apply traditional medicine to your child which
comes with it an explanation on how the procedure is
done?
If you were Ate Abby, would you offer your help
risking no less your precious job?
If you were the doctor of the patient and eventually
the patient recovered quickly upon the administration
of “hilot” would you report Ate Abby to the admin for
malpractice and unprofessionalism?
A medication from a professional point of view
and a medication from the traditional point of
view are both grounded on a universally
acceptable value…
life preservation.
Thank you
SOURCE:
Co, M. (2018). Ethics and Culture. [Powerpoint slides].