基督教生命伦理学与世俗生命伦理学家的党派承诺:认识上的不公正、道德困境、公民不服从

M. Cherry
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摘要

世俗的生命伦理学家不是站在一个特殊的地方,而是站在特定的文化、社会和历史条件的立场上说话。作为道德和意识形态议程的拥护者,他们把自己的偏见、偏见和世界观带到他们作为道德顾问、社会倡导者和学者的角色中,试图用修辞来影响他人,将政策转向自己喜欢的观点。他们的声明只代表了众多声音中的一种,即使是在以受过教育和知情的语气发表的尖锐言辞中,也是来自权力机构的。本文认为,鉴于进步的世俗生命伦理学的霸权,传统的基督徒在医学中经常面临认识上的不公正。也就是说,基督教关于道德现实的知识经常被贬低或忽视,除非这些规范可以转化为世俗精神并在其内部得到捍卫。我认为,鉴于这种系统性偏见,基督徒也会经历重大的道德困境:他们完全意识到自己的道德义务和应该做什么,但制度化的权力结构使他们几乎不可能这样做。但是,基督教医生不仅仅是技术人员,有义务从合法可用的治疗方法列表中提供任何患者要求的治疗方法。那些反宗教的批评者试图剥夺基督教医生的权利,限制他们如何行医,在那里他们不能提供或推荐堕胎、安乐死、医生协助自杀和其他不适当的护理形式,这是不公正和偏见的,他们把基督徒和其他宗教团体单独挑出来,接受单一治疗。然而,无论法律要求或制度政策要求如何,基督徒都有义务在一切事情上顺服神。因此,他们有时可能会发现自己需要参与公民不服从的行动。
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Christian Bioethics and the Partisan Commitments of Secular Bioethicists: Epistemic Injustice, Moral Distress, Civil Disobedience
Secular bioethicists do not speak from a place of distinction, but from within particular culturally, socially, and historically conditioned standpoints. As partisans of moral and ideological agendas, they bring their own biases, prejudices, and worldviews to their roles as ethical consultants, social advocates, and academics, attempting rhetorically to sway others and shift policy to a preferred point of view. Their pronouncements represent just one voice among others, even when delivered with strident rhetoric, in an educated and knowing tone, from within institutional positions of power. This essay argues that, given the hegemony of progressive secular bioethics, traditional Christians routinely face epistemic injustice within medicine. That is, Christian knowledge regarding moral reality is all too often demeaned or dismissed, unless such norms can be translated into and defended within a secular ethos. Given such systemic bias, I argue, Christians also experience significant moral distress: they are fully aware of their moral obligations and what they ought to do, but institutionalized power structures make it nearly impossible to so act. But, Christian physicians are not mere technicians, obliged to provide whatever patients request from the list of legally available treatments. That antireligious critics seek to remove the rights of Christian physicians to limit how they practice medicine, where they do not offer or refer for abortion, euthanasia, physician-assisted suicide, and other inappropriate forms of care, is unjustified and prejudicial, singling out Christians, and other religious groups, for singular treatment. Regardless of what the law requires or institutional policy demands, however, Christians are obliged to submit to God in all things. As a result, they may at times find themselves required to engage in acts of civil disobedience.
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