TY - JOUR
T1 - Acknowledging the plural Weberian rationalities in clinical embryology
T2 - When moral values, habits, and/or affection prevail beyond efficiency
AU - Delaunay, Catarina
AU - Gouveia, Luís
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Centre for Social Sciences Hungarian Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - This paper addresses the plural forms of reasoning used by clinical embryologists when deciding the fate of the human embryos they create and manipulate in the laboratory through assisted reproductive technologies (ART). Our analysis draws on empirical material from semi-directive interviews with 20 clinical embryologists working at public and private fertility units/clinics in Portugal. Within bureaucratic organizations based on a high level of functional specialization, embryologists display multiple perspectives about the criteria they use to evaluate and classify embryos’ quality, potential, and viability. Taxonomies, international guidelines, and statistical data are primarily used by embryologists to qualify the embryos, basing their action on instrumental rationality (efficient means and calculated ends recognized inductively). However, beyond technical-scientific facts and theories employed as intellectual tools for action, some of them also mobilize alternative ethical rationalities, specifically, value-rational action based on moral valuations and legitimate rules/ends. Affectual sub-rationality governed by emotions, affects, and feeling states (such as empathy with the beneficiaries), and traditional sub-rationality based on habits and routines (embryologists’ feelings gained by experience) intervene too. Therefore, Weber’s distinctive ideal types, namely his foundational four types of social action and rationality - but also combinations of them - are relevant for rethinking professional practices within ART, especially clinical embryology.
AB - This paper addresses the plural forms of reasoning used by clinical embryologists when deciding the fate of the human embryos they create and manipulate in the laboratory through assisted reproductive technologies (ART). Our analysis draws on empirical material from semi-directive interviews with 20 clinical embryologists working at public and private fertility units/clinics in Portugal. Within bureaucratic organizations based on a high level of functional specialization, embryologists display multiple perspectives about the criteria they use to evaluate and classify embryos’ quality, potential, and viability. Taxonomies, international guidelines, and statistical data are primarily used by embryologists to qualify the embryos, basing their action on instrumental rationality (efficient means and calculated ends recognized inductively). However, beyond technical-scientific facts and theories employed as intellectual tools for action, some of them also mobilize alternative ethical rationalities, specifically, value-rational action based on moral valuations and legitimate rules/ends. Affectual sub-rationality governed by emotions, affects, and feeling states (such as empathy with the beneficiaries), and traditional sub-rationality based on habits and routines (embryologists’ feelings gained by experience) intervene too. Therefore, Weber’s distinctive ideal types, namely his foundational four types of social action and rationality - but also combinations of them - are relevant for rethinking professional practices within ART, especially clinical embryology.
KW - clinical embryology
KW - decision-making processes
KW - embryo assessment
KW - professional jurisdiction
KW - Weberian rationalities
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85185332807&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.17356/ieejsp.v9i3.1148
DO - 10.17356/ieejsp.v9i3.1148
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85185332807
SN - 2416-089X
VL - 9
SP - 61
EP - 86
JO - Intersections East European Journal of Society and Politics
JF - Intersections East European Journal of Society and Politics
IS - 3
ER -