1. The Bodily Incorporation of Mechanical Devices: Ethical and Religious Issues (Part 2).
- Author
-
COURTNEY S. CAMPBELL, LAUREN A. CLARK, DAVID LOY, JAMES F. KEENAN, KATHLEEN MATTHEWS, TERRY WINOGRAD, and LAURIE ZOLOTH
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL implants ,BIOETHICS ,BIOMEDICAL materials ,MEDICAL equipment ,MEDICAL ethics - Abstract
Mechanical devices implanted in the body present implications for broad themes in religious thought and experience, including the nature and destiny of the human person, the significance of a persons embodied experience, including the experiences of pain and suffering, the persons relationship to ultimate reality, the divine or the sacred, and the vocation of medicine. Community-constituting convictions and narratives inform the method and content of reasoning about such conceptual questions as whether a moral line should be drawn between therapeutic or enhancement interventions andor between somatic and neuralcognitive interventions. By attending to these broader community-forming concepts, it is possible to identify three general orienting themes in religious perspectives on incorporated mechanical devices, which we shall designate as perspectives of “appropriation,” “ambivalence,” and “resistance.” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF