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Common Metaphors in Nursing EthicsDean and Professor, California Baptist University
Correspondence: Send ideas, columns, and responses to columns to Constance L. Milton, RN, PhD, Dean and Professor of Nursing, California Baptist University, 8432 Magnolia Avenue, Riverside, CA 92504; phone: (951) 343-4247; e-mail: constancemilton{at}yahoo.com. Metaphors are literary comparisons that are used to create new meaning and insight for concepts, ideas, and situations found in a discipline. This author describes some common moral metaphors used in the discipline of nursing and specifically in situations of nursing ethics. New insights and questions for common usage are offered for the metaphors from a nursing theoretical perspective. Implications for nursing as a discipline are incorporated and discussion points for the future practice of nursing are illuminated.
Key Words: humanbecoming metaphors nursing ethics Parse
Nursing Science Quarterly, Vol. 22, No. 4,
318-322 (2009) |
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