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Jeremy Bentham and the Patient in Room 326

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2009

Amnon Goldworth
Affiliation:
Visiting Scholar at the Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford University

Extract

There is large, imposing-looking box in a wing of University College, London, that contains the lifelike remains of the English philosopher, Jeremy Bentham. Bentham requested that upon his death, which occurred in 1832, his body should first be used for purposes of a medical lecture and then be place on display. His request was entirely utilitarian in character. For as a famous individual, Bentham could argue that it made less sense to be buried and then have a statue constructed of his likeness than to eliminate the burial by having himself made into a statue. He called the latter an auto-icon.

Type
Special Section: Medical Futility: Demands, Duties, and Dilemmas
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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