Toward Planetary Health Ethics? Refiguring Bios in Bioethics

Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 20 (4):695-702 (2023)
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Abstract

In responding to perceived crises—such as the COVID-19 pandemic—in routinized ways, contemporary bioethics can make us prisoners of the proximate. Rather, we need bioethics to recognize and engage with complex configurations of global ecosystem degradation and collapse, thereby showing us paths toward co-inhabiting the planet securely and sustainably. Such a planetary health ethics might draw rewardingly on Indigenous knowledge practices or Indigenous philosophical ecologies. It will require ethicists, with other health professionals, to step up and become public advocates for environmental sustainability. The COVID-19 pandemic should be seen as opening a portal to planetary health ethics or ecologized bioethics.

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References found in this work

What World is This?: A Pandemic Phenomenology.Judith Butler - 2022 - New York: Columbia University Press.
Man's Responsibility for Nature.John Passmore - 1975 - Philosophy 50 (191):106-113.
The Ethical Animal.C. H. Waddington - 1962 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 13 (50):172-176.
“We” Are In This Together, But We Are Not One and the Same.R. Braidotti - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (4):465-469.

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