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BIOETHICS
The
Bioethics Imperative XI
Continued
from The Bioethics Imperative X
Mokita:
The truth we all know and agree not to talk about. Papua New
Guinea.
Scenario: The web
page of a professor at a university in the United States advises
students seeking a recommendation to be prepared to answer the question:
How do you think the human species originated? If you cannot truthfully
and forthrightly affirm a scientific answer to this question, then you
should not seek my recommendation for admittance to further education
in the biomedical sciences. Federal officials investigate
the allegation that this professor is discriminating on the basis of religion.
Legal counsel for the students argues that despite their understanding
of evolution, the students were denied recommendations based on personal
religious beliefs. The Department of Justice asks the university to respond
to the allegations. The university stands by the professor, opining that
his policies do not conflict with university policy because the university
does not control or regulate personal matter(s) such as a
letter of reference for a student. A pre-med student transfers to a Christian
school, gets his letter of reference, and then transfers back to complete
his course of study.
Sound far-fetched?
This true story from Dallas was published by the Associated Press on January
30, 2003. On his web site at http://www2.tltc.ttu.edu/dini/Personal/letters.htm,
the professor also refuses to write letters of recommendation for students
he doesnt know well and for students who have not earned an A
in his course.
This issue elicited
a flurry of e-mails at the University of Washington (UW) in January and
February of 2003. Paraphrasing ethical issues raised by faculty here at
UW:
- Should universities
or legal systems have control over a professors decision to recommend
a student or not?
- Is it reasonable
to deny a letter to a student for a particular profession because of
their personal beliefsfor example, can a strong belief in creationism
make a person unsuited or incompetent to become a physician?
- If a professor
puts students to a litmus test before agreeing to a letter
of reference, is the letter worth anything anyway?
- Where do we draw
the line between unsound intellect and a belief we think a reasonable
person can hold while remaining reliable/responsible in their scientific
knowledge?
One professors
approach to this problem of strong belief systems was to announce to the
new class of a few hundred students that he did not care if they believed
in evolution or applied it in their lives, but they did have to understand
and apply the theory of evolution during his course. His stance is that
academic freedom in part is challenging ones own belief systems.
He says that each year several students drop the course over this issuethey
cannot or will not learn about evolutionary theory because they do not
ascribe to it. Genetically modified organisms have sparked similar furor
at UW.
Another professor,
quoting the student in question in Texas, agreed with the professors
refusal to write on behalf of this particular student, arguing that medical
practice depends on fundamental scientific processes, or the difference
between a theory and a hypothesis, and that, as a physician he probably
would be unable to distinguish between marketing hype and sound research
when deciding on prescriptions for his patients.
When is refusing to
write a letter of reference ethical? When is it unethical? When is agreeing
to write a letter of reference unethical?
Next: Ethics
and useful letters of reference
Dina Mandoli
University of Washington, Seattle
mandoli@u.washington.edu
Addendum: April
22, 2003The Justice Department ended its probe after Professor Michael
Dini eliminated the evolution belief requirement in his recommendation
policy and replaced it with a requirement that students be able to explain
the theory of evolution.
Associated
Press
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