ABSTRACT

This chapter explores whether it is possible to treat incompetent persons paternalistically. What is often seen to be wrong about acting paternalistically towards others is that one is treating these others as if they cannot make their own decisions about their own good. So how should one think about situations where one must make decisions on behalf of people who indeed cannot make their own decisions about their own good – especially if these people are still to some extent capable of expressing their desires and concerns about what happens to them? This is often the case in the medical setting, when a patient has lost decisional capacity or has not developed such a capacity in the first place. Focusing on the medical setting, this chapter argues that insofar as someone has the component elements of agency, they can be the target of unjustified paternalism. The chapter first explores the ways in which patients may lack decisional capacity and whether such patients nevertheless retain a sense of agency that can be disrespected. It then examines whether, on some plausible accounts of paternalism, what constitutes disrespect towards the competent constitutes a similar disrespect to the agential capacities of the incompetent.