Wednesday, April 17, 2013

From U Chicago: Islamic bioethics: between sacred law, lived experiences, and state authority

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23588855


 2013 Apr 16. [Epub ahead of print]

Islamic bioethics: between sacred law, lived experiences, and state authority.

Source

Initiative on Islam and Medicine, Program on Medicine and Religion, The University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., MC 5068, Chicago, IL, USA, apadela@bsd.uchicago.edu.

Abstract

There is burgeoning interest in the field of "Islamic" bioethics within public and professional circles, and both healthcare practitioners and academicscholars deploy their respective expertise in attempts to cohere a discipline of inquiry that addresses the needs of contemporary bioethics stakeholders while using resources from within the Islamic ethico-legal tradition. This manuscript serves as an introduction to the present thematic issue dedicated to Islamic bioethics. Using the collection of papers as a guide the paper outlines several critical questions that a comprehensive and cohesive Islamic bioethical theory must address: (i) What are the relationships between Islamic law (Sharī'ah), moral theology (uṣūl al-Fiqh), and Islamic bioethics? (ii) What is the relationship between an Islamic bioethics and the lived experiences of Muslims? and (iii) What is the relationship between Islamic bioethics and the state? This manuscript, and the papers in this special collection, provides insight into how Islamic bioethicists and Muslim communities are addressing some of these questions, and aims to spur further dialogue around these overaching questions as Islamic bioethics coalesces into a true field of scholarly and practical inquiry.

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