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Systems bioethics
Systems bioethics is my interdisciplinary
approach to framing, asking, and answering ethical and policy questions
in the life sciences writ large. This work ranges well beyond the usual
confines of bioethics, such that it is hardly identifiable with
traditional bioethics. As I am developing it, systems bioethics invokes
aspects of the idea of systems biology: it seeks to define relevant
interests and values, probe their nature, and establish an understanding
of the dynamic, interactive relations among the disparate components of
the particular bioethical ‘system’ under study. The substance of
bioethics is a web of interacting elements each of which must severally
and jointly be brought under scrutiny, perturbed and probed, in order to
anticipate and attempt to resolve impending controversies.
Additionally, inasmuch as I advocate a
systems approach in biology generally, the intersection of history and
philosophy of science and bioethics in my work takes seriously the view
that in both science and ethics, dynamic interactions are central.
Studying the ‘parts’ in isolation one from the other will always yield
partial answers at best. Systems bioethics provides a proactive way to
think about scientific, ethical, and political issues together and
interactively.
This research is currently supported through a seed grant from the
Institute for Humanities Research
at ASU. |
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