Results 201 to 210 of about 85,430 (244)
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The American Journal of Bioethics, 2006
It is no secret that bioethics outside of North America has been growing rapidly in recent years, as is attested to by the number of new bioethics centers, departments, organizations and journals t...
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It is no secret that bioethics outside of North America has been growing rapidly in recent years, as is attested to by the number of new bioethics centers, departments, organizations and journals t...
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Global bioethics and human rights
Medicine and law, 2008The globalization of biomedical related issues has created the urgent need for coordinated intergovernmental action in order to promote respect for human dignity and human rights in this field, as it is clear that individual countries alone cannot satisfactorily address the new and complex challenges.
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Global Bioethics and Global Education
2018A new context for ethics and ethics education is evident in a rapidly changing world and our threatened planet. The current focus on considerations of inter-personal ethics within an anthropocentric perspective on life should be extended to embrace considerations of global and ecological ethics within an eco-centric perspective on global and planetary ...
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Global Bioethics, Global Dialogue: Introduction
2002This volume explores one of the central debates in the field of bioethics in the new century. It analyses the important issue of the possibility of global bioethics from multiple levels and perspectives, taking into account the context of breathtaking technological and social changes, and the challenge of moral pluralism, within which complex ...
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2003
Abstract When Van Potter first proposed the term bioethics in 1970, he described it as the “science of survival.” Worried about the unfolding global environmental crisis, he called for a coordinated response from science and the humanities (Potter 1971 ). By 1990, bioethics had become so strongly associated with the more narrowly focused
Jessica Pierce, Andrew Jameton
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Abstract When Van Potter first proposed the term bioethics in 1970, he described it as the “science of survival.” Worried about the unfolding global environmental crisis, he called for a coordinated response from science and the humanities (Potter 1971 ). By 1990, bioethics had become so strongly associated with the more narrowly focused
Jessica Pierce, Andrew Jameton
openaire +1 more source

