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Questions asked by Greek philosophy and science - how do we come to
be? How do we grow? When are we recognizably human? - are addressed
with new intensity today. Modern embryology has changed the methods
of enquiry and given new knowledge. Public interest and concern are
high because medical applications of new knowledge offer benefits
and yet awaken ancestral fears. The law and politics are called
upon to secure the benefits without realizing the fears.
Philosophers and theologians are involved once again. In this
volume some of the world's authorities on the subject trace the
tradition of enquiry over two and a half thousand years. The
answers given in related cultures - Greek, Latin, Jewish, Arabian,
Islamic, Christian - reflected the purposes to be served at
different times, in medical practice, penitential discipline, canon
law, common law, human feeling. But the terms in which the
questions were discussed were those set down by the Greeks and
transmitted through the Arabic authors to medieval Europe.
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