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  1. Christian Bioethics: Immanent Goals or a Transcendent Orientation?Mark J. Cherry - 2020 - Christian Bioethics 26 (2):113-123.
    This issue of Christian Bioethics explores foundational debates regarding the orientation and application of Christian bioethics. Should Christian bioethics be approached as essentially a human activity, grounded in scholarly study of theological arguments and religious virtues, oriented toward practical social ends, or should Christian bioethics be recognized as the result of properly oriented prayer, fasting, and asceticism leading to an encounter with God? The gulf between these two general perspectives—the creation of immanent human goods versus submission to a fully transcendent (...)
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  • James Drane's More Humane Medicine : A New Foundation for Twenty-first Century Bioethics?Brad F. Mellon - 2006 - Christian Bioethics 12 (3):301-311.
    James Drane's More Humane Medicine: A Liberal Catholic Bioethics is an outstanding contribution to the study of bioethics in our day. Catholics and others who are interested in the issues discussed here will benefit from this masterful treatment. The author opens with a set of definitions, starting with what he means by a “more humane medicine.” Drane contends that a more humane medicine has become necessary and desired, but not because the traditional medical ethic as “a self-declared and self-imposed ethic, (...)
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