Confrontations in “Genethics”: Rationalities, Challenges, and Methodological Responses

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 20 (1):46-55 (2011)
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Abstract

It was only a matter of time before the portmanteau term “genethics” would be coined and a whole field within bioethics delineated. The term can be dated back at least to 1984 and the work of James Nagle, who claims credit for inventing the word, which he takes “to incorporate the various ethical implications and dilemmas generated by genetic engineering with the technologies and applications that directly or indirectly affect the human species.” In Nagle’s phrase, “Genethic issues are instances where medical genetics and biotechnology generate ethical problems that warrant societal deliberation.” The great promises and terrific threats of developments in scientific understanding of genetics, and the power to enhance, modify, or profit from the knowledge science breeds, naturally offer a huge range of issues to vex moral philosophers and social theorists. Issues as diverse as embryo selection and the quest for immortality continue to tax analysts, who offer reasons as varied as the matters that might be dubbed “genethical” for or against the morality of things that are actually possible, logically possible, and even just tenuously probable science fiction

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Citations of this work

Guest Editorial: On Method and Resolution in Philosophical Bioethics.John Coggon - 2011 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 20 (2):159-163.
The Challenge of Nonconfrontational Ethics.John Harris - 2011 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 20 (2):204-215.
Rationality and the Genetic Challenge Revisited.Matti Häyry - 2011 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 20 (3):468-483.

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References found in this work

Isaiah Berlin.John Gray - 1997 - Princeton University Press.
Medicine, Patients and the Law.Margaret Brazier & Emma Cave - 1992 (MB), 2011 - Penguin Books.
A companion to genethics.Justine Burley & John Harris - 2002 - In Justine Burley & John Harris (eds.), A Companion to Genethics. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 1–4.
If You Have Said A, You Must Also Say B: Is This Always True?Søren Holm - 2004 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 13 (2):179-184.

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