Human Dignity, Human Rights, and Responsibility : the New Language of Global Bioethics and Biolaw / Yechiel Michael Barilan.
2012
BJ1533.R42 B37 2012eb online
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Details
Title
Human Dignity, Human Rights, and Responsibility : the New Language of Global Bioethics and Biolaw / Yechiel Michael Barilan.
ISBN
9780262305815 (electronic bk.)
026230581X (electronic bk.)
1283953072
9781283953078
9780262017978 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
0262017970 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
026230581X (electronic bk.)
1283953072
9781283953078
9780262017978 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
0262017970 (hardcover ; alk. paper)
Publication Details
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 2012.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xiv, 349 pages) : illustrations.
Call Number
BJ1533.R42 B37 2012eb online
Dewey Decimal Classification
179.7
Summary
"'Human dignity' has been enshrined in international agreements and national constitutions as a fundamental human right. The World Medical Association calls on physicians to respect human dignity and to discharge their duties with dignity. And yet human dignity is a term--like love, hope, and justice--that is intuitively grasped but never clearly defined. Some ethicists and bioethicists dismiss it; other thinkers point to its use in the service of particular ideologies. In this book, Michael Barilan offers an urgently needed, nonideological, and thorough conceptual clarification of human dignity and human rights, relating these ideas to current issues in ethics, law, and bioethics. Combining social history, history of ideas, moral theology, applied ethics, and political theory, Barilan tells the story of human dignity as a background moral ethos to human rights. After setting the problem in its scholarly context, he offers a hermeneutics of the formative texts on Imago Dei; provides a philosophical explication of the value of human dignity and of vulnerability; presents a comprehensive theory of human rights from a natural, humanist perspective; explores issues of moral status; and examines the value of responsibility as a link between virtue ethics and human dignity and rights. Barilan accompanies his theoretical claim with numerous practical illustrations, linking his theory to such issues in bioethics as end-of-life care, cloning, abortion, torture, treatment of the mentally incapacitated, the right to health care, the human organ market, disability and notions of difference, and privacy, highlighting many relevant legal aspects in constitutional and humanitarian law"--Publisher.
Note
Title from PDF title page (viewed on Oct. 11, 2012).
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Source of Description
OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
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