Literature DB >> 24845204

The diagnosis of death and the irreducibility of the human person.

Richard H Bulzacchelli1.   

Abstract

If, as Karol Wojtyla had insisted, the human person is fundamentally irreducible to any natural, biological, social, or even cosmological function, then the diagnosis of death on any of the purely functionalistic grounds available to medical science presents a serious ethical problem. Perhaps we can no longer treat the question of death merely as a medical "diagnosis," regarding, on that basis, the appropriateness of organ transplantation as a purely medical judgment, ethically accountable only to professional standards of care. We will explore this problem from within a personalistic philosophical, and theological framework, according to which the irreducibility of the human person provides the central referent for an analysis of the reductionistic tendencies of contemporary thinking concerning the "diagnosis of death."

Entities:  

Keywords:  brain death; diagnosis of death; irreducibility; person; reductionism

Year:  2013        PMID: 24845204      PMCID: PMC6081763          DOI: 10.1179/0024363912Z.0000000008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Linacre Q        ISSN: 0024-3639


  10 in total

1.  The brain and somatic integration: insights into the standard biological rationale for equating "brain death" with death.

Authors:  A D Shewmon
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  2001-10

Review 2.  The Lazarus phenomenon.

Authors:  Vedamurthy Adhiyaman; Sonja Adhiyaman; Radha Sundaram
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  2007-12       Impact factor: 5.344

3.  The dead donor rule and organ transplantation.

Authors:  Robert D Truog; Franklin G Miller
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2008-08-14       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Consciousness, coma, and brain death--2009.

Authors:  Roger N Rosenberg
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2009-03-18       Impact factor: 56.272

Review 5.  Is it time to abandon brain death?

Authors:  R D Truog
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  1997 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.683

Review 6.  A critique on the concept of "brain death".

Authors:  K G Karakatsanis; J N Tsanakas
Journal:  Issues Law Med       Date:  2002

7.  Brain death in pregnant women.

Authors:  J E Kantor; I A Hoskins
Journal:  J Clin Ethics       Date:  1993

Review 8.  Irreversible maternal brain injury during pregnancy: a case report and review of the literature.

Authors:  D M Feldman; A F Borgida; J F Rodis; W A Campbell
Journal:  Obstet Gynecol Surv       Date:  2000-11       Impact factor: 2.347

Review 9.  Role of brain death and the dead-donor rule in the ethics of organ transplantation.

Authors:  Robert D Truog; Walter M Robinson
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 7.598

10.  Chronic "brain death": meta-analysis and conceptual consequences.

Authors:  D A Shewmon
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 9.910

  10 in total
  1 in total

1.  Persons and evidence for death: A reply to Bulzacchelli.

Authors:  Stephen Napier
Journal:  Linacre Q       Date:  2013-02
  1 in total

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