GenEthics and Religion

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Editor(s): Pfleiderer, G. (Basel)
Brahier, G. (Basel)
Lindpaintner, K. (Newark, DE)

Status: available   
Publication year: 2010
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‘[…] a wonderful compilation of both traditional and contemporary discourses related to the intricate debate of the role of religion in shaping the ethics of genetic technology. […] For a medical doctor, this book would enrich his ability to understand his individual patients and to help his patients make technological choices meaningful to their religious backgrounds. The book would be a welcome addition to the shelves of a theology and a philosophy library. It is well referenced and many of the citations are drawn from source documents/scriptures and are, therefore, of great value to a researcher. It would also be an asset in a personal collection. It has actually found a place in mine.
Sridevi Seetharam, Department of Pathology, Vivekananda Memorial Hospital, Karnataka (The National Medical Journal of India, Vol. 24, No. 3, 2011)

“This very worthwhile volume can be read in one day. It is packed with careful scholarship and not knee-jerk ideological slogans, and there is a genuine struggle to make sense of a biological world that is changing faster than ethicists can find ways of assimilating new knowledge. […] a superb way of making students aware of all the diversity of ethical approaches that confront the world's religions, as well as what troubles the consciences of those scientists who have introduced these new technologies and findings.”
Elof Axel Carlson, Biochemistry Cell Biology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York
The Quarterly Review of Biology, Vol. 86, No. 2, June 2011)

Human gene and cell technology is a diverse and rapidly evolving field of research. As genes represent the 'blueprint' of an organism, their analysis and manipulation is a challenge to our understanding of human nature. Stem cell research, genetic testing, gene therapy, therapeutic and reproductive cloning - all these fields of application have been raising fundamental ethical and religious-theological questions: When does human life begin? Should human beings be allowed to interfere with natural procreation or to manipulate the genome of their own species? Is genetic engineering tantamount to 'playing God'?

Based on the symposium 'GenEthics and Religion' held in Basel, Switzerland in May 2008, this volume examines the role religion can play in establishing ethical guidelines to protect human life in the face of rapid advances in biology and especially gene technology. It does so in a multidisciplinary way with contributions by philosophers, theologians, human geneticists, and several bioethicists representing the Christian, Jewish, Islamic and Buddhist perspectives. The essays illustrating a diversity of views and expressing the problems and self-critical reflectiveness of religious ethicists have been brought up to date and discuss the importance of religious ethics in society’s discourse on gene technology.

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