The Direction of Medical Ethics The direction bioethics, and specifically medical ethics, will take in the next few years will be crucial. It is an emerging specialty that has attempted a great deal, that has many differing agendas, and that has its own identity crisis. Is it a subspecialty of clinical medicine? Is it a medical reform movement? Is it a consumer pro- tection movement? Is it a branch of professional ethics? Is it a ra- tionale for legal decisions and agency regulations? Is it something physicians and ethical theorists do constructively together? Or is it a morally concentrated attack on high technology, with the prac- titioners of scientific medicine and the medical ethicists in an adversarial role? Is it a conservative endeavor, exhibiting a Frankenstein syn- drome in Medical Genetics ("e;this time, they have gone too far"e;), or a Clockwork Orange syndrome in Psychotherapy ("e;we have met- hods to make you talk-walk-cry-kill"e;)? Or does it suffer the afflic- tion of overdependency on the informal fallacy of the Slippery Slope ("e;one step down this hill and we will never be able to stop"e;) that remains an informal fallacy no matter how frequently it's used? Is it a restricted endeavor of analytic philosophy: what is the meaning of "e;disease,"e; how is "e;justice"e; used in the allocation of medical resources, what constitutes "e;informed"e; or "e;consent?"e; Is it applied ethics, leading in clinical practice to some recommenda- tion for therapeutic or preventive action? This incomplete list of questions indicates just how complex,