Volume 4, Issue 3 (5-2011)                   IJMEHM 2011, 4(3): 47-60 | Back to browse issues page

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Aramesh K. Human dignity in bio-medical ethics. IJMEHM 2011; 4 (3) :47-60
URL: http://ijme.tums.ac.ir/article-1-173-en.html
, kiarasharamesh@tums.ac.ir
Abstract:   (11252 Views)
Throughout history, various religions and schools of philosophy have viewed human dignity as an important issue and a topic of discussion. The theoretical roots of this concept lies in ancient philosophies and religions, in Medieval as well as Modern periods, the most significant of which may be the Cyrus Cylinder, Stoicism, teachings of philosophers of the Renaissance period and of thinkers such as Immanuel Kant and John Locke, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and Abrahamic religions. Human dignity is infallibly referred to as being intrinsic and inviolable, and although there is no one comprehensive, inclusive and universally accepted definition for the term, it is fundamentally the characteristic that lies at the core of the basic rights of humans. In biomedical ethics there are two different dimensions to human dignity: the dignity of the individual and the dignity of humanity as such, and while the former is considered to be absolute, the latter is relative, as it is realized simply by belonging to the human race. Human dignity applies to all the principles of biomedical ethics, and sets the standards for all manners of reasoning and inference in this field. In areas such as research ethics, ethics of beginning of life and end of life care, and public health ethics, human dignity has clear requirements and implications, for instance regarding issues such as unethical uses of the embryo, fetus, and the human body for commercial purposes, the right to live and die with dignity near the end of life, and the right to basic indiscriminate health care.
Full-Text [PDF 188 kb]   (3171 Downloads)    
Type of Study: Research |
Accepted: 2013/08/21 | Published: 2017/09/27

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