Connecting the East and the West, the Local and the Universal: The Methodological Elements of a Transcultural Approach to Bioethics

Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 26 (3):219-247 (2016)
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Abstract

Contemporary bioethical issues are inherently cross-cultural and global in their scope. This is not surprising, as bioethical matters touch everyone in one way or another. Moral quandaries in health-care, life sciences, and biotechnology do not respect natural and human boundaries, the boundaries between and within nation-states, ethnicities, cultures, communities, and social groups. In addition, the simultaneously large-scale and intimate interactions between and within different cultures and civilizations and the rapid pace at which they change are phenomena that distinguish our times from previous eras. Bioethics—as a particular domain of public discourse and an academic discipline—has thus been rapidly...

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