Results for ' nazi medicine'

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  1.  65
    The Care-Based Ethic of Nazi Medicine and the Moral Importance of What We Care About.Warren T. Reich - 2001 - American Journal of Bioethics 1 (1):64-74.
    (2001). The Care-Based Ethic of Nazi Medicine and the Moral Importance of What We Care About. The American Journal of Bioethics: Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 64-74.
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  2.  57
    Apologising for the past: German science and nazi medicine.Damian Grace - 2002 - Science and Engineering Ethics 8 (1):31-42.
    Recently, religious organisations, governments and public institutions have begun to offer apologies for historical wrongs. Can they legitimately do so? Departing from the tendency, Professor Hubert Markl, President of the Max Planck Society, has offered strong reasons for not apologising for the crimes of medical scientists who experimented on human subjects during the Nazi era. He argues that only the perpetrators can meaningfully apologise. Markl’'s position is considered and rejected in favour of the view that apologies by proxy for (...)
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  3.  37
    Bioethics and Anti-Bioethics in Light of Nazi Medicine: What Must We Remember?Daniel Wikler & Jeremiah Barondess - 1993 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 3 (1):39-55.
    Only recently have historians explored in depth the role of the medical profession in Nazi Germany. Several recent works reveal that physicians joined the Nazi party in disproportionate numbers and lent both their efforts and their authority to Nazi eugenic and racist programs. While the crimes of the physician Mengele and a few others are well known, recent research points to a much broader involvement by the profession, even in its everyday clinical work. Analogous activities existed in (...)
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  4.  14
    Suffering and the moral orientation of presence: lessons from Nazi medicine for the contemporary medical trainee.Benjamin Wade Frush & Jay R. Malone - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (12):815-819.
    Medical trainees should learn from the actions of Nazi physicians to inform a more just contemporary practice by examining the subtle assumptions, or moral orientations, that led to such heinous actions. One important moral orientation that still informs contemporary medical practice is the moral orientation of elimination in response to suffering patients. We propose that the moral orientation of presence, described by theologian Stanley Hauerwas, provides a more fitting response to suffering patients, in spite of the significant barriers to (...)
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  5.  16
    Ethicizing history. Bioethical representations of Nazi medicine.Mathias Schütz & Harold Braswell - 2023 - Bioethics 37 (6):581-590.
    The article presents and analyzes different approaches of U.S. bioethicists in comprehending the Nazi medical crimes after 1945. The account is divided into two sections: one dealing with discussions on research ethics and the Nuremberg Code up until the 1970s and the other ranging from the 1970s to the present and highlighting bioethics' engagement with Nazi analogies. The portrayal of different bioethical scholars, institutions, and documents—most notably Henry K. Beecher, Jay Katz, the Belmont Report, the Hastings Center, Arthur (...)
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  6.  49
    The Nuremberg Medical Trial: The Holocaust And The Origin Of The Nuremberg Medical Code; Nazi Medicine And The Nuremberg Trials: From Medical War Crimes To Informed Consent. [REVIEW]Susan Lederer - 2007 - Isis 98:424-425.
    Horst H. Freyhofer. The Nuremberg Medical Trial: The Holocaust and the Origin of the Nuremberg Medical Code. viii + 209 pp., illus., index. New York: Peter Lang, 2004. $35.95 .; Paul Julian Weindling. Nazi Medicine and the Nuremberg Trials: From Medical War Crimes to Informed Consent. xii + 482 pp., illus., index. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. $80.
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  7.  42
    The Nazi cosmetic: Medicine in the service of beauty.Sophia Efstathiou - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 43 (3):634-642.
    This paper examines how aesthetic ideals shaped the practice of Nazi medicine. It proposes that Nazi eugenics relied on the conflation of norms of health with norms of beauty determined and performed by Nazi cultures of action. Though theories of biological holism served as vehicles of Nazi ideology, they did so contingently. The anti-totalitarian thinking of biological holist Kurt Goldstein shows that the use of biological holism to promote Nazi ideology was not inevitable. This (...)
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  8.  22
    Essay review: Race hygiene and Nazi medicine[REVIEW]Anne Harrington - 1989 - Journal of the History of Biology 22 (3):501-505.
  9.  20
    Horst H. Freyhofer. The Nuremberg Medical Trial: The Holocaust and the Origin of the Nuremberg Medical Code. viii + 209 pp., illus., index. New York: Peter Lang, 2004. $35.95 .Paul Julian Weindling. Nazi Medicine and the Nuremberg Trials: From Medical War Crimes to Informed Consent. xii + 482 pp., illus., index. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. $80. [REVIEW]Susan E. Lederer - 2007 - Isis 98 (2):424-425.
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  10.  26
    Medicine and the Holocaust: a visit to the Nazi death camps as a means of teaching medical ethics in the Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps.Anthony S. Oberman, Tal Brosh-Nissimov & Nachman Ash - 2010 - Journal of Medical Ethics 36 (12):821-826.
    A novel method of teaching military medical ethics, medical ethics and military ethics in the Israel Defense Force (IDF) Medical Corps, essential topics for all military medical personnel, is discussed. Very little time is devoted to medical ethics in medical curricula, and even less to military medical ethics. Ninety-five per cent of American students in eight medical schools had less than 1 h of military medical ethics teaching and few knew the basic tenets of the Geneva Convention. Medical ethics differs (...)
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  11. The Nazi Doctors and the Nuremberg Code: Human Rights in Human Experimentation.George J. Annas - 1992 - Oxford University Press USA.
    This important new work surveys the source and ramifications of the famed Nuremburg Code -- recognized around the world as one of the cornerstones of modern bioethics.
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  12.  15
    Racial hygiene: Medicine under the Nazis.Mitchell G. Ash - 1990 - History of European Ideas 12 (4):545-547.
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  13.  11
    ‘Witness in White’ medical ethics learning tours on medicine during the Nazi era.Matthew A. Fox & Rael D. Strous - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (11):770-772.
    During the Nazi era, physicians provided expertise and a veneer of legitimacy enabling crimes against humanity. In a creative educational initiative to address current ethical dilemmas in clinical medicine, we conduct ethics learning missions bringing senior physicians to relevant Nazi era sites in either Germany or Poland. The tours share a core curriculum contextualising history and medical ethics, with variations in emphasis. Tours to Germany provide an understanding of the theoretical origins of the ethical violations and crimes (...)
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  14. The Nazi doctors: medical killing and the psychology of genocide.Robert Jay Lifton - 2017 - New York: Basic Books.
    Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize With a new preface by the author In his most powerful and important book, renowned psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton presents a brilliant analysis of the crucial role that German doctors played in the Nazi genocide. Now updated with a new preface, The Nazi Doctors remains the definitive work on the Nazi medical atrocities, a chilling exposé of the banality of evil at its epitome, and a sobering reminder of the (...)
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  15.  18
    From bioethics to biopolitics: “Playing the Nazi card” in public health ethics—the case of Israel.Hagai Boas, Nadav Davidovitch, Dani Filc & Rakefet Zalashik - 2021 - Bioethics 35 (6):540-548.
    While bioethicist Arthur Caplan claims that “The Nazi analogy is equivalent to dropping a nuclear bomb in ethical battles about science and medicine”, we claim that such total exclusion of this analogy is equally problematic. Our analysis builds on Roberto Esposito’s conceptualization of immunitas and communitas as key elements of biopolitics. Within public health theories and practices there is an inherent tension between exclusion (immunitas) and inclusion (communitas) forces. Taking the immunitas logic to the extreme, as National Socialist (...)
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  16.  4
    Racial hygiene: Medicine under the Nazis Robert N. Proctor , ix + 414 pp., hard-cover, $34.95; paperback, $9.95. [REVIEW]M. Ash - 1990 - History of European Ideas 12 (4):545-547.
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  17.  17
    The Nazi War on Cancer.Associate Professor Udo Schuklenk - 2001 - Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (2):142-142.
    It is interesting, that with the notable exception of the Cologne-based geneticist Benno Müller-Hill, German historians of medicine have not bothered a great deal with looking into German medical history during the Third Reich. We owe Pennsylvania State University's Robert N Proctor a great deal of gratitude for uncovering more and more of this history, and for making it accessible in a highly readable format. Proctor has established himself rapidly as the pre-eminent US American historian of science on all (...)
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  18.  58
    A long shadow: Nazi doctors, moral vulnerability and contemporary medical culture.Alessandra Colaianni - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (7):435-438.
    More than 7% of all German physicians became members of the Nazi SS during World War II, compared with less than 1% of the general population. In so doing, these doctors willingly participated in genocide, something that should have been antithetical to the values of their chosen profession. The participation of physicians in torture and murder both before and after World War II is a disturbing legacy seldom discussed in medical school, and underrecognised in contemporary medicine. Is there (...)
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  19.  18
    From scientific exploitation to individual memorialization: Evolving attitudes towards research on Nazi victims’ bodies.Herwig Czech, Paul Weindling & Christiane Druml - 2021 - Bioethics 35 (6):508-517.
    During the Third Reich, state‐sponsored violence was linked to scientific research on many levels. Prisoners were used as involuntary subjects for medical experiments, and body parts from victims were used in anatomy and neuropathology on a massive scale. In many cases, such specimens remained in scientific collections and were used until long after the war. International bioethics, for a long time, had little to say on the issue. Since the late 1980s, with a renewed interest in the Holocaust and other (...)
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  20.  16
    Pandora's box closed: The Royal Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine and Nazi medical experiments on human beings during World War II.James Mills - 2020 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 79:101190.
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  21.  34
    The Nazi doctors and the medical community; Honor or censure? The case of Hans Sewering.Lawrence W. White - 1996 - Journal of Medical Humanities 17 (2):119-135.
    During the Nazi era, most German physicians abrogated their responsibilities to individual patients, and instead chose to advocate the interests of an evil regime. In so doing, several fundamental bioethical principles were violated. Despite gross violations of individual rights, many physicians went on to have successful careers, and in many cases were honored. This paper will review the case of Hans Sewering, a participant in the Nazi euthanasia program who became the President-elect of the World Medical Association. The (...)
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  22.  10
    Recognizing the past in the present: new studies on medicine before, during, and after the Holocaust.Sabine Hildebrandt, Miriam Offer & Michael A. Grodin (eds.) - 2021 - New York: Berghahn Books.
    Following decades of silence about the involvement of doctors, medical researchers and other health professionals in the Holocaust and other National Socialist (Nazi) crimes, scholars in recent years have produced a growing body of research that reveals the pervasive extent of that complicity. This interdisciplinary collection of studies presents documentation of the critical role medicine played in realizing the policies of Hitler's regime. It traces the history of Nazi medicine from its roots in the racial theories (...)
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  23.  16
    The Nazi War on Cancer: Robert N Proctor, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 1999, x+380 pages, $29.95 (hb), pound17.95 (hb). [REVIEW]Associate Professor Udo Schuklenk - 2001 - Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (2):142-142.
    It is interesting, that with the notable exception of the Cologne-based geneticist Benno Müller-Hill, German historians of medicine have not bothered a great deal with looking into German medical history during the Third Reich. We owe Pennsylvania State University's Robert N Proctor a great deal of gratitude for uncovering more and more of this history, and for making it accessible in a highly readable format. Proctor has established himself rapidly as the pre-eminent US American historian of science on all (...)
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  24.  3
    The Nazi War on Cancer. [REVIEW]Udo Schuklenk - 2001 - Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (2):142-142.
    It is interesting, that with the notable exception of the Cologne-based geneticist Benno Müller-Hill, German historians of medicine have not bothered a great deal with looking into German medical history during the Third Reich. We owe Pennsylvania State University's Robert N Proctor a great deal of gratitude for uncovering more and more of this history, and for making it accessible in a highly readable format. Proctor has established himself rapidly as the pre-eminent US American historian of science on all (...)
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  25.  12
    Robert N. Proctor. Racial Hygiene: Medicine Under the Nazis. Cambridge, MA, and London: Harvard University Press, 1988. Pp. viii + 414. ISBN 0-674-74580-9. £25.25, $34.95. [REVIEW]Diane Paul - 1990 - British Journal for the History of Science 23 (1):118-119.
  26.  10
    Dignity, Justice, and the Nazi Data Debate: On Violating the Violated Anew.Carol Viola Anne Quinn - 2018 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    In this work, Carol V.A. Quinn considers survivors’ arguments in the debate concerning the ethics of using Nazi medical data, showing what it would mean to take their claims seriously. Her approach is interdisciplinary, incorporating philosophy, psychology, trauma research, survivors’ testimony, Holocaust poetry, literature, and the Hebrew Bible.
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  27.  27
    No Nazis, no space aliens, no slippery slopes and other rules of thumb for clinical ethics teaching.Tod S. Chambers - 1995 - Journal of Medical Humanities 16 (3):189-200.
  28.  11
    Medicine and State Violence.Esther Cuerda - 2019 - Conatus 4 (2):245.
    During the last decades, in different places and under different circumstances, some physicians and other health professionals have supported state violence. The Holocaust is a prime example for how doctors can cooperate with the state to plan, give ideological support to and implement violent policies. As a consequence of the Industrial Revolution, people gained access to health promotion and health protection, not as an achievement of the welfare state, but as a tool necessary to maintain healthy and more productive workers. (...)
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  29.  23
    Francis R. Nicosia;, Jonathan Huener . Medicine and Medical Ethics in Nazi Germany: Origins, Practices, Legacies. viii + 160 pp., illus., table, app., bibl., index. New York/Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2002. £40, $59.95 ; £13.50, $19.95. [REVIEW]Sheila Faith Weiss & Thomas M. Berez - 2003 - Isis 94 (3):541-543.
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  30.  70
    Human dignity in the Nazi era: implications for contemporary bioethics. [REVIEW]Dónal P. O'Mathúna - 2006 - BMC Medical Ethics 7 (1):1-12.
    Background The justification for Nazi programs involving involuntary euthanasia, forced sterilisation, eugenics and human experimentation were strongly influenced by views about human dignity. The historical development of these views should be examined today because discussions of human worth and value are integral to medical ethics and bioethics. We should learn lessons from how human dignity came to be so distorted to avoid repetition of similar distortions. Discussion Social Darwinism was foremost amongst the philosophies impacting views of human dignity in (...)
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  31.  78
    Attitudes on euthanasia, physician-assisted suicide and terminal sedation -- A survey of the members of the German Association for Palliative Medicine.H. C. Müller-Busch, Fuat S. Oduncu, Susanne Woskanjan & Eberhard Klaschik - 2004 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 7 (3):333-339.
    Background: Due to recent legislations on euthanasia and its current practice in the Netherlands and Belgium, issues of end-of-life medicine have become very vital in many European countries. In 2002, the Ethics Working Group of the German Association for Palliative Medicine (DGP) has conducted a survey among its physician members in order to evaluate their attitudes towards different end-of-life medical practices, such as euthanasia (EUT), physician-assisted suicide (PAS), and terminal sedation (TS). Methods: An anonymous questionnaire was sent to (...)
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  32.  36
    Deadly Medicine: Project T4, Mental Disability, and Racism A very early version of this paper was inspired by the Deadly Medicine Exhibit 1, which was held at Stony Brook University 1, Spring 2009, and was presented at the 1 lecture series accompanying the exhibit, June 1, 2009. [REVIEW]Eva Kittay - 2016 - Res Philosophica 93 (4):715-741.
    Equal moral status for all human beings does not commit us to the malignant exclusionary practices we find in racism and pernicious nationalism. Racism (like the other harmful “ism”) involves a group that is constituted by appropriating to one’s own “primal group” a set “desirable” intrinsic properties (or traits) and expelling from the primal group those with the undesirable properties through subjugation, exploitation, sterilization, or extermination. The moral harm in racism is practiced by a ‘constituted’ group that must always police (...)
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  33.  2
    Indignity of Nazi data: reflections on the utilization of illicit research.Iman Farahani & Joel Janhonen - forthcoming - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy.
    Human rights may feel self-apparent to us, but less than 80 years ago, one of the most advanced countries at the time acted based on an utterly contrary ideology. The view of social Darwinism that abandoned the idea of the intrinsic value of human lives instead argued that oppression of the inferior is not only inevitable but desirable. One of the many catastrophic outcomes is the medical data obtained from inhuman experiments at concentration camps. Ethical uncertainty over whether the resulting (...)
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  34.  5
    The Racial Hygiene Movement and the Corruption of Physical Anthropology: The Nazi Experience.D. John Doyle - 2020 - Ethics in Biology, Engineering and Medicine 11 (1):109-126.
  35.  66
    'Quality of life' and the analogy with the nazis.Cynthia B. Cohen - 1983 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 8 (2):113-136.
    into treatment decisions is viewed as pernicious by some who claim that these presuppose the Nazi position that those who are ‘devoid of value’ must be exterminated. ‘Quality of life’ judgments are said to deny the equal value of human beings and to assume that some lives are not ‘worthy to be lived’. It is argued that the analogy misconstrues the senses of ‘value’ and ‘quality’ employed by Naziism and a ‘quality of life’ position. This leads the analogizers incorrectly (...)
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  36.  4
    In Memoriam: Medicine's Confrontation with Evil.William E. Seidelman - 1989 - Hastings Center Report 19 (6):5-6.
    The proposed public burial of anatomical specimens derived from victims of the Nazis provides an occasion for the medical community worldwide to confront this legacy and the profession's ongoing potential for evil.
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  37.  5
    Where do we Stand in the Historiography of Small Disciplines in Nazi Germany? The Case of Indology.Moritz Epple, Maria Framke, Eli Franco, Horst Junginger & Baijayanti Roy - 2023 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 31 (3):233-243.
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  38. Biomedical ethics and the shadow of Nazism: a conference on the proper use of the Nazi analogy in ethical debate, April 8, 1976.Peter Steinfels & Carol Levine (eds.) - 1976 - [Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y.]: The Center.
     
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  39.  54
    Book review: Nazis, women and molecular biology, memoirs of a lucky self-hater, by Gunther S. STENT. [REVIEW]Donald Livingston - 2001 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 26 (1):119 – 122.
  40.  11
    Justice at Nuremberg: Leo Alexander and the Nazi doctors' trial.Ulf Schmidt - 2004 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Justice at Nuremberg traces the history of the Nuremberg Doctors' Trial held in 1946-47, as seen through the eyes of the Austrian bliogemigrbliogé psychiatrist Leo Alexander. His investigations helped the United States to prosecute twenty German doctors and three administrators for war crimes and crimes against humanity. The legacy of Nuremberg was profound. In the Nuremberg code--a landmark in the history of modern medical ethics--the judges laid down, for the first time, international guidelines for permissible experiments on humans. One of (...)
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  41.  35
    Sweden Asks: Should Convicted Murderers Practice Medicine?Jacob Appel - 2010 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (4):559-562.
    Most reasonable people acknowledge that Karl Helge Hampus Hellekant has committed a grave moral offense: the 33-year-old Swede, also known as Karl Svensson, was convicted of killing trade unionist Björn Söderberg in 1999 at the behest of the Swedish neo-Nazi movement. What is not so clear is whether Hellekant, who is currently free on parole, should be permitted to become a physician. The former extremist was admitted to the medical school at Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute in 2007, but later expelled—following (...)
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  42.  7
    Past: Imperfect; Future: Tense.Matthew K. Wynia - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (5):2-2.
    How should the field of bioethics grapple with a history that includes ethicists who supported eugenics, scientific racism, and even Nazi medicine and also ethicists who created the salutary policy and practice responses to those heinous aspects of medical history? Learning humility from studying historical errors is one path to improvement; finding courage from studying historical strengths is another, but these can be in tension. This commentary lays out these paths and seeks to apply them both to a (...)
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  43. Two book reviews about the implications of nazi experimentation for modern bioethics. [REVIEW]Henry S. Perkins - 1994 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 15 (1):83-86.
     
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  44. Robert Jay Lifton: 1986 The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide, Basic Books, Inc., New York, 561 pp. [REVIEW]E. V. Boisaubin - 1987 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 12 (3):305-307.
  45.  8
    Re-actualizing a cultural exclusion zone.Alexander Chertenko - 2018 - Rivista di Estetica 67:97-116.
    The rise of modernity in the 19th century can, among other things, be vividly illustrated by the phenomenal advance of medical profession and, in particular, surgery as its most radical form. In the 20th century, the doctor has already been steadily associated with the phenomenon of power. Medical experiments on human subjects are generally recognized as one of the most extreme manifestations of this discursive nexus. Despite considerable amount of historical research, predominantly dealing with the experiences of Nazi (...) and its patients in concentration camps and some other disciplinary institutions, as well as somewhat gloomy attraction providing for unabated fascination on the part of trivial literature, such experiments have not yet become an established literary topos. The elusive nature of this phenomenon which belongs to the kern of post-war anxiety, but is rarely addressed to, allows me to attest to the fact that human experiments, especially those conducted in Nazi concentration camps, have become a cultural «exclusion zone». Nonetheless, there is a whole range of texts in which attempts has been made to overcome the cultural taboo and to give voice to the victims of human vivisection. Two of them – Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s Suspicion and Marcel Beyers The Flying Foxes – are analyzed in this paper against the backdrop of the so called «intellectual witness» – a concept proposed by Geoffrey Hartman and meaning a distanced witnessing, mostly on behalf of younger generations or, as in case with Dürrenmatt, of those who stayed aside of the World War II. In both novels, the narrative structures of intellectual witnessing serve to surmount the metaphorizing tendency which turns the reality of human experiments into tropes corroborating the author’s idea or concept. Combining documentary elements with the elements of trivial fiction, Dürrenmatt and Beyer make significant strides in deconstructing the naïve «over-identifying» with the victims, as well as their overt fictionalization. As a result, they manage to open the possibility of witness beyond the perspective of eyewitnesses, and at the same time subjugate this rearticulation of the past to the demands of the present situation that facilitates it. This perilous duality reveals the ethical double bind which seems to be inherent to the most reactualizations of utterly traumatic historical experiences, such as human experimentation, transformed into «exclusion zones» and then voiced through intellectual witness and other forms of «secondary witness». In order to become an object of witnessing, those traumatic experiences must correspond to the anxieties of the present originating from them. While triggering the reactualization process, such anxieties, however, also subject the experience of concrete victims to the desiderata of a traumatized «(intellectual) witness» and, in such a way, misuse the tragedy as a means of the witness’s coming to terms with his or her own trauma. (shrink)
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  46.  49
    The Cambridge world history of medical ethics.Robert B. Baker & Laurence B. McCullough (eds.) - 2008 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The Cambridge World History of Medical Ethics is the first comprehensive scholarly account of the global history of medical ethics. Offering original interpretations of the field by leading bioethicists and historians of medicine, it will serve as the essential point of departure for future scholarship in the field. The volumes reconceptualize the history of medical ethics through the creation of new categories, including the life cycle; discourses of religion, philosophy, and bioethics; and the relationship between medical ethics and the (...)
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  47.  51
    La medicina en el Nacional Socialismo: gestiones de oposición profesional.Horacio Riquelme - 2006 - Polis 13.
    La medicina en Alemania durante la época nacionalsocialista constituyó un área social de intensas contradicciones éticas y existenciales. Frente a los crímenes de lesa humanidad, perpetrados” por médicos serviciales al poder y ávidos de reconocimiento, en nombre de una “ciencia de la raza” y de una “guerra total, hubo también actitudes y gestos oponentes de quienes persistieron –con un alto riesgo personal– en mantener una visión humanista de la profesión y su quehacer en la sociedad. Este artículo continúa la exposición (...)
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  48.  27
    Against Anonymity.Robert Baker - 2014 - Bioethics 28 (4):166-169.
    In ‘New Threats to Academic Freedom’ Francesca Minerva argues that anonymity for the authors of controversial articles is a prerequisite for academic freedom in the Internet age. This argument draws its intellectual and emotional power from the author's account of the reaction to the on-line publication of ‘ After-birth abortion: why should the baby live?’ – an article that provoked cascades of hostile postings and e-mails. Reflecting on these events, Minerva proposes that publishers should offer the authors of controversial articles (...)
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  49.  4
    Medical holocausts.William Brennan - 1980 - Boston: Nordland Pub. International.
    v. 1. Exterminative medicine in Nazi Germany and contemporary America -- v. 2. The language of exterminative medicine in Nazi Germany and contemporary America.
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  50.  45
    Historical Analogies, Slippery Slopes, and the Question of Euthanasia.Walter Wright - 2000 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 28 (2):176-186.
    Is the Nazi euthanasia program a useful analogy for contemporary discussions of euthanasia? This paper explores the logic of slippery slope arguments with the Nazi analogy as a test case.
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