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The History and Future of Bioethics - A Sociological View (Paperback)
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The History and Future of Bioethics - A Sociological View (Paperback)
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It seems like every day society faces a new ethical challenge
raised by a scientific innovation. Human genetic engineering, stem
cell research, face transplantation, synthetic biology - all were
science fiction only a few decades ago, but now are all reality.
How do we as a society decide whether these technologies are
ethical? For decades professional bioethicists have served as
mediators between a busy public and its decision-makers, helping
people understand their own ethical concerns, framing arguments,
discrediting illogical claims, and supporting promising ones. These
bioethicists play an instrumental role in guiding governments'
ethical policy decisions, consulting for hospitals faced with vital
decisions, and advising institutions that conduct research on
humans. Although the bioethics profession has functioned
effectively for many years, it is now in crisis. Policy-makers are
less inclined to take the advice of bioethics professionals, with
many observers saying that bioethics debates have simply become
partisan politics with dueling democratic and republican
bioethicists. While this crisis is contained to the task of
recommending ethical policy to the government, there is risk that
it will spread to the other tasks conducted by bioethicists. To
understand how this crisis came about and to arrive at a solution,
John H. Evans closely examines the history of the bioethics
profession. Bioethics debates were originally dominated by
theologians, but came to be dominated by the emerging bioethics
profession due to the subtle and slow involvement of the government
as the primary consumer of bioethical arguments. After the 1980s,
however, the views of the government changed, making bioethical
arguments less legitimate. Exploring the sociological processes
that lead to the evolution of bioethics to where it is today, Evans
proposes a radical solution to the crisis. Bioethicists must give
up its inessential functions, change the way they make ethical
arguments, and make conscious and explicit steps toward
re-establishing the profession's legitimacy as a mediator between
the public and government decision-makers.
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