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Rev. Nicanor Pier Giorgio Austriaco
Bioethics in Laudato si’:
The Ecological Law as a Moral Principle
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In his encyclical on the environment, Laudato si’, Pope Francis proposes that the natural moral law can be reimagined as an ecological moral law that challenges us to evaluate the morality of our actions not only within our personal and nonpersonal relationships in society but also within the greater reality that is creation. In this essay, the author offers several reflections on the ramifications of this innovative proposal on a contemporary Catholic bioethics that seeks to be faithful to the classical moral tradition.
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Mark S. Latkovic
Thinking about Technology from a Catholic Moral Perspective:
A Critical Consideration of Ten Models
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This article explores ten models for thinking critically about technology’s place in our lives, which have been proposed in some form by various modern philosophers and theologians, including Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI. The author first provides a definition of technology and then analyzes the models. He concludes with a consideration of what he calls a moral “partnering” of man with technology and some thoughts on the role that technology plays in the mission of the Church and in her efforts to evangelize.
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Cory Andrew Labrecque
Catholic Bioethics in the Anthropocene:
Integrating Ecology, Religion, and Human Health
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Pope Francis’s encyclical on ecology addresses the deep and abiding problems of atomism, exploitation, and prodigality that distort the God–human-nature relationship. The invitation to think and act in more integrated and integrating ways—already put forward in Evangelii gaudium—thwarts our becoming “nomads without roots” and binds ostensibly disparate voices in a solidarity that is truly global in its reach. The resolve for such a change in worldview and agency is reminiscent of Van Rensselaer Potter’s original conceptualization of bioethics as a field of study and application that would bridge the disciplines.
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Rita L. Marker
Mental Disability and Death by Dehydration
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Cathleen A. Cleaver
Stem Cell Policy and the Culture of Death
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Edward J. Furton
Philosophy, Law, and Theology
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Bro. Nicanor Pier Giorgio Austriaco, O.P., Ph.D.
Science
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John Markham, M.D.
Medicine
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Daniel P. Maher
Vaccines, Abortion, and Moral Coherence
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Michael R. Panicola
Three Views on the Preimplantation Embryo
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Albert S. Moraczewski, O.P.
May One Benefit from the Evil Deeds of Others?
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Peter J. Cataldo, Ph.D.
A Cooperation Analysis of Embryonic Stem Cell Research
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Lynn A. Jansen, R.N.
Evil, Forgiveness, and the Moral Community
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Colin Harte
Inconsistent Papal Approaches towards Problems of Conscience?
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Sean Nagle
September 11, 2001
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Daniel P. Sulmasy, O.F.M., M.D.
Catholic Health Care at the Edge of Ground Zero
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Patricia Kobielus Thompson, C.R.N.H.
St. John of the Cross and Palliative Care
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The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Bro. Nicanor Pier Giorgio Austriaco, O.P., Ph.D.
Science
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259.
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Edward J. Furton, M.A., Ph.D.
Philosophy, Law, and Theology
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The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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John Markham, M.D.
Medicine
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