The New Definitions of Death for Organ Donation
A Multidisciplinary Analysis from the Perspective of Christian Ethics. Foreword by Professor Josef M. Seifert
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Zusatztext
This book critically examines the moral soundness of the two definitions of death used in organ donation-transplantation: "brain death" (heart-beating) and "controlled cardiac/circulatory death" (non-heart-beating). The author carries out a multidisciplinary study of the crucial moral issues surrounding these new definitions to answer the question: are the donors truly dead at the time of organ removal? The book probes the history of these protocols, and the rationales of pro-"brain death" Catholic scholars who assert that brain-dead individuals are dead because, without a functioning brain, they have undergone a substantial change. The authors arguments, firmly grounded in both classical metaphysics and contemporary biophilosophy, demonstrate that the new definitions of death are unsound because they contradict both Aristotelian-Thomistic anthropology and holistic biophilosophy. The book also looks at the new definitions in terms of Christian ethics. It provides a detailed critical analysis of John Paul IIs 2000 Address to the Transplantation Society, showing that, contrary to popular belief, the Catholic Church has not given any formal approval to the "brain death" protocol.
Autorenportrait
Doyen Nguyen, MD, STD is both a theologian and a hematopathologist. A graduate of Temple University Medical School and a scholar of the Leopold Schepp Foundation, she is a lay Dominican and, currently, an independent academic researcher associated with the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome where she obtained her doctorate in moral theology, specializing in end-of-life ethics.
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 18.04.2018
Umfang: 612 S.
Sprache: ENG
Einband: KT
Format: 3.3 x 22.5 x 15.5 cm
ISBN/EAN: 9783034332774
Umbreit-Nr.: 4997869
