About this book the publisher tells us:
At the Roots of Christian Bioethics explores Professor H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr.'s pursuit for the decisive ground of the meaning of human existence and knowledge of appropriate moral choice. Engelhardt has been the most influential, cogent, but critical voice within bioethics of the past several decades. The essays in this volume compass epistemological, methodological and topical contributions to bioethics, political theory, and Christian theology. Each explores Engelhardt's diagnosis of the contemporary social and cultural crisis, seeking to make sense of the decidedly post-Christian and often openly anti-Christian ethics that dominates public morality and politic policy. Each author investigates Engelhardt's personal and tireless enquiry to secure ultimate moral foundations as well as to recognize the full implications of the results of his investigations: that Christian bioethics does not originate in human reason but in the command of God. The book should be read by bioethicists, philosophers, religious scholars, public policy experts, and the Orthodox faithful.Engelhardt is a fascinating figure, with degrees in both medicine and philosophy. He became Orthodox later in life, after publishing landmark works like The Foundations of Bioethics
I asked the Greek Orthodox theologian and ethicist Stanley Harakas to review At the Roots of Christian Bioethics: Critical Essays on the Thought of H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr
Harakas is a prolific fellow, having written an introductory text to Orthodoxy (Orthodox Church: 455 Questions and Answers), a work on liturgical participation (Living the Liturgy: A Practical Guide for Participating in the Divine Liturgy of the Eastern Orthodox Church
Harakas discusses At the Roots of Christian Bioethics: Critical Essays on the Thought of H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr
To enjoy the rest of his review, which will be featured in the fall issue of Logos: A Journal of Eastern Christian Studies, subscribe here.
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