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Fire, flood, earthquake, famine, pestilence, and warfare are no
strangers to our experience. Once, we sought to placate the gods
who brought these evils upon us. Today, clinicians, engineers, and
politicians replace priests, prophets, seers, and shamans, and we
Americans in particular think to impose our will upon the world. In
times of catastrophe, issues of good and evil surrender to rapid,
nearly automatic, operational response. Yet the catastrophic event
poses unavoidable moral choices, ones that are more politically and
emotionally complex since 9/11 and our "War on Terrorism." This
book benefits from the emergence of bioethics as it has evolved
from its clinical roots to address policy, politics, and social
practice far removed from that origin. At the same time, the
clinical focus on narratives and cases provides a tangible center
for ethical reflection. It reminds us that ethics is about persons
and their choices, a perspective often lost to abstraction when
ethics is left to the ministrations of academe. By treating the
catastrophic event as both a category and a genre, Bioethics
connects to aesthetics and so enables us to enrich ethical inquiry
by ranging from pandemic, hurricane, and flood to terrorist
attack."
Biomedical ethics raises a host of humanistic issues. Among these
are human dignity, personal autonomy, quality of life, and access
to care for all. Now, more than ever, scientific discoveries and
medical technologies prompt us to rethink older perspectives.
Humanists have an unprecedented opportunity to shape the moral
agenda of the future. In this collection of thoughtful articles
from the Humanist Institute, humanist scholars from various fields
explore a number of critical issues in bioethics. The moral status
of the human embryo, scientific medicine versus Eastern concepts of
caregiving, the human genome project, eugenics, contraception, and
the economics of healthcare are just some of the topics considered
in this enlightening volume. The contributors include: Berit
Brogaard, Vern Bullough, Carmela Epright, Faith Lagay, Mason Olds,
Howard B. Radest, Philip Regal, Andreas S. Rosenberg, Harvey
Sarles, David Schafer, Robert B. Tapp, Stephen P. Weldon, and
Michael Werner. For students of ethics, healthcare practitioners
and policy makers, and everyone who wishes to participate
intelligently in decisions involving cure and care, this work is of
great value.
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