|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This is the first modern study in English of the life and thought of the ninth-century Byzantine theologian and monastic reformer, Theodore the Stoudite. Cholij analyses Theodore's letters and religious writings in context in order to reach new conclusions concerning the religious and secular issues which engaged him in controversy. This analysis develops a new definition of the origins of the Orthodox sacramental tradition.
This volume brings together a unique collection of legal,
religious, ethical, and political perspectives to bear on debates
concerning biotechnology patents, or 'patents on life'. The
ever-increasing importance of biotechnologies has generated
continual questions about how intellectual property law should
treat such technologies, especially those raising ethical or
social-justice concerns. Even after many years and court decisions,
important contested issues remain concerning ownership of and
rewards from biotechnology - from human genetic material to
genetically engineered plants - and regarding the scope of moral or
social-justice limitations on patents or licensing practices. This
book explores a range of related issues, including questions
concerning morality and patentability, biotechnology and human
dignity, and what constitute fair rewards from genetic resources.
It features high-level international, interfaith, and
cross-disciplinary contributions from experts in law, religion, and
ethics, including academics and practitioners, placing religious
and secular perspectives into dialogue to examine the full
implications of patenting life.
This volume brings together a unique collection of legal,
religious, ethical, and political perspectives to bear on debates
concerning biotechnology patents, or 'patents on life'. The
ever-increasing importance of biotechnologies has generated
continual questions about how intellectual property law should
treat such technologies, especially those raising ethical or
social-justice concerns. Even after many years and court decisions,
important contested issues remain concerning ownership of and
rewards from biotechnology - from human genetic material to
genetically engineered plants - and regarding the scope of moral or
social-justice limitations on patents or licensing practices. This
book explores a range of related issues, including questions
concerning morality and patentability, biotechnology and human
dignity, and what constitute fair rewards from genetic resources.
It features high-level international, interfaith, and
cross-disciplinary contributions from experts in law, religion, and
ethics, including academics and practitioners, placing religious
and secular perspectives into dialogue to examine the full
implications of patenting life.
This is the first modern study in English of the life and thought
of the ninth-century Byzantine theologian and monastic reformer,
Theodore the Stoudite. Cholij provides a guide to and a complete
analysis of all the primary source material attributed to Theodore.
If the monastic leader is considered in the context of the
tradition to which he belonged, it is clear that his religious
formation occurred within a widely established school of Basilian
and Palestinian Christian thought. This encourages a fresh
engagement with the subtleties in Theodore's behaviour towards the
Byzantine religious and secular leaders of his time and provokes
new conclusions concerning the religious and secular issues which
involved Theodore in controversy. Cholij refutes the established
view of Theodore as a breaker of the traditional; Byzantine church
and state relationship and provides new insights into Theodore's
true understanding of the involvement of the Emperor in church
affairs. In his analysis of the rites of holiness that belonged to
Theodore's church, the author identifies a false tradition of
sacramental mysteries in a misreading of Pseudo-Dionysios the
Areopagite and so offers a radically new definition of the origins
of the Orthodox sacramental tradition.
|
|