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BIOETHICS
Antonio G. Spagnolo
I. The Origin of Bioethics: a Brief Historical
Overview - II. Scientific Disciplines, Special Questions and General
Reasons which Have Caused the Birth of Bioethics. 1. Experimentation
on Humans Beings. 2. Genetic Experimentation. 3. Themes
Related to Transplants. 4. Problems Connected with the End
of Human Life. 5. The Beginnings of Life and Human Procreation -
III. The Contribution of Philosophy and Theology and the Thesis
of a Lay Bioethics. 1. The Presence of Theology in
the Debate. 2. On the Possibility of a Lay Bioethics
- IV. The Discussion Relating to the Principles of Bioethics
- V. Towards a Non-Conventional, Philosophical Foundation for Bioethics.
1. The Crisis of Principlism and the Rise of the
Problem of Foundations. 2. An Evolutionary Bioethics?
3. Bioethics as Free and Autonomous Choice. 4. The Utilitarian
Address and Ethical Contractualism. 5. The Personalist Model: Beyond
Contractualism and Utilitarianism. 6. Concluding Remarks.
1.The Origin of Bioethics: a Brief Historical Overview
All activity within the sphere of health care, from time immemorial
and in all cultures, has been imbued with both moral and religious
significance, to such an extent that healing has been considered
as a divine gift. Prayers and rituals accompanied the curative act
and in temples dedicated to the gods of convalescence, such as Asclepio
in the Greek and Roman civilizations, where physicians were also
priests, their elected registration testified to the prayers and
gratitude of the patients ( MEDICINE,
I).
Following this period a great asclepiad, the Greek physician Hippocrates
(5th century B.C.), maintained that the art of healing should be
regarded as a scientific activity, based upon observation and on
the natural effects of the attempts to cure an illness. He was,
therefore, attempting to separate medicine from religion, yet not
from moral roots as the medical arts for Hippocrates epitomized
a love for humankind. Thus, in all western traditions, the doctor
has always sought to work according to moral precepts regarding
competence and dedication with respect to the ill, mindful to avoid
further damage and injustice, and curing also above all in
the Jewish-Christian tradition the poor and infirm, foreigners
and even enemies ( MEDICINE,
II-III). Therefore, all medical associations from the Middle Ages
up to and including all of the first part of the 20th century have
preserved images of a trustworthy, dignified and respectable doctor
dedicated to the service of mankind and, consequently, medical ethics
have always had a stable nucleus of moral warnings and ideals, in
spite of social and cultural variables regarding environments and
trends.
However, immediately after the Second World War medical ethics
reached a turning point, due to the advancements taking place within
the medical sciences and through the introduction of technology
in medical intervention. The ethical code that had traditionally
supported the medical profession had to confront new questions,
raised directly as a result of the extraordinary progress being
made in the biomedical sciences: what is the definition of the death
of a man? What are the limits for the use of resuscitation and for
sustaining life? What are the consequences of organ transplants?
What are the implications for interventions on new-born life and
on the human genome? As a response to these questions, philosophers
and theologians, jurists and sociologists, together with doctors
and scientists, began to rethink and revise the old standards. Governments
therefore instituted commissions to elaborate and recommend guide-lines
and the tribunals began to hear and formulate ethical arguments
in line with their sentences encouraging legislators to approve
laws regarding these matters. This, therefore, began the bioethical
movement that brought about a drastic and profound revision
of the centuries-old professional ethics that had governed the behavior
of doctors and their relationships with patients. Medicine also
forced moral philosophy to extend its fields of interest outside
of the arid, theoretical debates thus saving its life
according to S. Toulmin (1982), and as such precipitated a healthy
renewal and to assume a co-responsibility within the environment
regarding bioethical questions.
The United States of America was the cradle for the birth of this
movement where bioethics moved initially from a situation of alarm
to a state of deep concern with respect to scientific progress and
of a society that paradoxically seemed to undermine the capacity
for the survival of humankind. The discoveries in those years, and
in those immediately following, announced in the field of genetic
engineering the frightening possibility to create biological weapons
and to alter the same statute of the diverse forms of life, of species
and individuals, favoring a movement of catastrophic
ideas and fears. In this sense the Dutch oncologist Van Rensselaer
Potter, who coined the term Bioethics in an article
published in 1970, had intended to assign to the new discipline
the task of combining biological knowledge with the knowledge of
a system of human values. He, in fact, had characterized the danger
for the survival of the whole ecosystem into an unnatural split
between the two environments of knowledge, namely the scientific
and the humanistic. So, for this reason, he foresaw the urgency
for a new knowledge that not only finalized the ability to understand
natural phenomena and to explain them, but also a much tighter way
to discover them and to use wisely the scientific-technical knowledge
that favors the survival of the human race and to improve the quality
of life for future generations. Therefore he called bioethics the
science of survival, considering it destined to form a bridge
between those two spheres of knowledge.
Besides that original vein of bioethics, there is another inheritance
to be considered today, which is now prevailing with respect to
V.R. Potters view. In these same years, in fact, the development
of bioethics received a strong input from the young obstetrician-gynaecologist
André E. Hellegers, also Dutch, who was appointed in 1971 to direct
the Kennedy Institute of Ethics (initially called the Kennedy
Center for the study of human reproduction and bioethics,
therefore also introducing here the new word), at Georgetown University
in Washington D.C., a university founded by the Jesuit fathers,
whose atmosphere he remembers to have been congenial regarding the
deepening awareness of philosophy and theology. Hellegers was called
in 1964 to integrate the Pontifical Commission for the Studies
on Family, Population and Birth set into motion by John XXIII
(1958-1963) during the time of the Second Vatican Council and significantly
enlarged upon by his successor Paul VI (a kind of first example
of these bioethics commissions established in the following years
by various national governments). He played a role of great importance
within that commission as a member of the executive committee and
as the secretary of the pastoral section, so achieving a notable
experience for the future development of bioethics. For Hellegers
bioethics had to have a maieutic dimension, able to
recognize the values there involved through a fruitful dialogue
and comparison among medicine, philosophy and ethics. The object
of this new field of study had to be the ethical aspects implicit
in clinical practice. It will be Hellegers who introduces the term
bioethics within the international community and in the university
programs, and inserts it into the field of biomedical sciences,
elaborating a conception of the discipline that corresponds to that
which prevails today. Hellegers has also had the merit to indicate
a specific methodology for this new discipline, that is interdisciplinary,
foretelling that the clinical bio-ethicist would become more expert
than the philosopher or the moral theologian. He was convinced that
the direct study of biological problems would have brought forward
the ethics itself and, utilizing the precision and rigor of the
scientific components, would have been founded and developed that
which would have been called later the ethics of principles
(see below, IV).
And so it was from this viewpoint and not from the original
one accepted by Potter that the term bioethics was introduced
and sanctioned in a definitive way by the powerful Encyclopedia
of Bioethics (New York 1978, 19952). By the first edition of
this work, bioethics came to be defined «as the systematic
study of human conduct in the area of life sciences and healthcare,
insofar as this conduct is examined in the light of moral values
and principles» (p. XIX); as regards medical ethics, it would
include: a) problems concerning values that rise up in all the healthcare
professions, not only in those that are medical, but also those
of the nurse, the pharmacist, the psychologist, the health administrator,
etc.; b) biomedical research and that carried out in the field of
psychological and behavioral sciences, also independently of the
therapies related to such research; c) a broad band of social problems,
such as those related to the public health sector, to medicine at
work, to demographic control, and to healthcare on an international
level; d) the life and health of mankind in relation to that of
the ecosystem, considering animal experimentation and the protection
of the environment.
The Catholic philosopher Daniel Callahan had a similar view. He
was co-founder in 1969, together with the psychiatrist W. Gaylin,
of the famous Hastings Center. This Institute played a relevant
role in the diffusion of bioethics through the research projects
based on a medical-social level, opening up the horizons of bioethics
if compared with Potters perspective, and contributing to
the development of educative projects for the large public and guide-lines
for workers, collaborating moreover on the preparation of many important
entries of the Encyclopedia of Bioethics. It was really this
work that was responsible for, and brought about the development
of bioethics as a discipline. According to Spinsanti, the Encyclopedia
was born before the discipline whose body of knowledge it was presumed
to present, so disconcerting a number of ideas about the subdivision
into other different subject matters and their academic arrangements.
This fact would indicate that bioethics will not become a shrub
with a precarious existence but rather a tree with far-reaching
roots, which extend deeply into Western culture, in the historical
developments of medical practice and in the theoretical developments
of philosophical thought (cf. Spinsanti, Forward in Gracia,
1993).
Bioethics has therefore been a revitalized study of
applied medical ethics, its freshness coming not from technology
or from the novelty of problems, but rather from the method with
which such themes had to be tackled, because of both the diversity
of disciplines involved and the pluralistic context of modern society.
Such methodologies have given a significant weight to theology and
to philosophy so that they cannot be ignored; and above all Christian
theology, whose reflections must not be viewed as ideologically
opposed against a presumed laity of bioethics (see below,
III.2), that would exclude all religious references from this field
of study. Paraphrasing Shakespeare in A Midsummer Nights
Dream (cf. V, I, 15-17), it must be recognized, therefore, that
the pen of theologians and philosophers has given «to
a airy nothing a local habitation and a name»: the home is
that of the Study Centers that have rapidly diffused bioethics thanks
to so many Conferences and publications; the name is that which
has originated putting close together, in a somewhat spontaneous
and intuitive way, the two terms biology and ethics.
II. Scientific Disciplines, Special Questions and General Reasons
which Have Caused the Birth of Bioethics
The great themes that were the main objects of discussion at the
beginning of bioethics as discipline, are those same still debated
today. Even taking into account the renewal due to ongoing scientific
acquisitions and the corresponding clarification of concepts, these
major themes can be brought back to the five following items. They
regard: a) the ethics of experimentation on human beings; b) the
personal and social implications of genetic engineering; c) organ
and tissue transplants; d) the role assigned to medicine when decisions
of life and death are involved, and therefore the ethics of death
and dying; and lastly, e) the consequences connected with the possibility
to control human procreation.
1. Experimentation on Human Beings. The first question
that becomes the object of ethical debate, even before the announcement
of the great discoveries of genetics, has been the methodology to
be used within scientific medicine, and thus the recourse to experimentation
on human subjects to obtain data and validate therapeutic treatments
on and for patients. It was this that differentiated Hippocratic
medicine from modern medicine, which begun with the experiments
of Claude Bernard (1813-1878). Clinical experimentation represents
one of the areas that deeply upset our moral conscience during the
period following the Nuremberg Trial, when it emerged for the first
time, with bewildering evidence, that medicine could be used for
purposes other than healing, and also to commit crimes. Today, these
crimes are well known and have been testified by the documents of
that trial. They remain as a witness to the atrocity that can result
when an absolute power, political or military, is disjointed from
any moral code or when such a power is stated to be the only ruler,
not to mention the collaboration of those physicians who thought
to be justified on the grounds that they were forced,
thereby leaving the political power to exploit them as it sees fit
to do so.
Two accepted standards were born from this tragic moment: the formulation
of the fundamental human rights, which culminated in
the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights
in 1948, and the writing of up-to-date guide-lines for an ethics
concerning experimentation, approved by international Institutions,
such as the World Medical Association, which prepared the
famous Declaration of Helsinki, recently revised in Edinburgh
in October 2000. This international standard requested and implicated
a reflection upon a kind of theoretical foundation for those rights,
that should necessarily be the concern of a systematic discipline,
namely bioethics. The Code of Nuremberg, which recognized
to the subjects the right to the informed consensus and asked the
experimenter to ensure the objective protection of them, was one
of the first ante litteram documents of bioethics.
But also after Nuremberg the North American society in the 60s
had to be confronted with the reality of some experimentation that
could resemble some of the crimes made by the Nazi doctors. Systematically
organized abuses of savage experimentation on human beings produced
profound moral suffering. In 1963, for example, at the Jewish
Chronic Disease Hospital in Brooklyn tumor cells were injected,
during the course of experimentation, into elderly patients moreover
without their permission in order to study the developmental
spread of the tumor. The age of the subjects and the fact that the
eventual negative effects of such an experiment would not
have had time to manifest within them, while such procedure permitted
to study of the mechanisms of metastasis, were the reasons alleged
by the doctors called to respond before the judges of the tribunal.
Or, again, in the period 1965-1971, at Willowbrook State Hospital
in New York a series of experiments were carried out to study immunization
against viral hepatitis, inoculating the virus into some orphan
children, admitted to the hospital, who were psychologically and
mentally handicapped. By this time many other inhuman experiments
had come to light, and in 1974 President Richard Nixon signed a
law regarding research and instituted a National Commission
for the protection of human subjects in biomedical and behavioral
research. The Commission remained in charge from 1974-1978,
producing a series of ethical guide-lines for the research: on prisoners,
on children, on the mentally ill, etc., that were nevertheless indications
for the functioning of the Ethical Committees responsible for the
revision of the protocols of experimentation and the formulation
of fundamental ethical principles that would have to be implemented
in order to guide experimentation on human subjects. Introduced
in the famous Belmont Report (published in the Federal Register
on April 18th 1979), such principles were successively extended
to other bioethical issues, different from those related to experimentation.
2. Genetic Experimentation. With respect to all that had
so far taken place, present ethical problems related to experiments
on human beings involve today a new kind of dramatic dilemma: in
place of prisoners, elderly patients, or the handicapped, contemporary
discussion concerns human embryos, subject to experimentation not
visible to the naked eye. They are stored in refrigerator cells,
some of them falling away, as if it were a sacrifice to be executed
in the name of scientific progress. Pushed forward mainly by the
motivations that such research could result in the healing of numbers
of chronic illnesses that squeeze a fifth of the population of the
world, strong movements of opinion are asking bioethics (perhaps,
more precisely, a certain bioethics), to provide arguments which
can back the thesis that such embryos do not benefit the human condition
that they actually seem to have ( HUMAN
EMBRYO, I-III).
It was undoubtedly the discovery of genetics that
brought into being a strong challenge for bioethics. The discovery
by J.D. Watson and F.H. Crick of the double helix of DNA in 1953,
and above all the discovery of those restriction enzymes that allowed
the break-up of the genome, so giving origins to new combinations
of information (recombinant DNA), were opening the road to a total
manipulation of the human species. The consideration
of this possibility prompted Potter, as we have seen, to invoke
a discipline that compelled us to reflect on the consequences of
such manipulation for the survival of humankind; and it also prompted
the philosopher Hans Jonas to write his book The Imperative of
Responsibility (1979), a responsibility to be understood particularly
with respect to the future generations, who could be damaged by
our interventions on the human genome.
Genetics entered into the Parliaments, through the hearing of the
scientists (it was Watson himself who in 1971 illustrated to the
politicians the possibilities of restriction enzymes), so leading
to the institutions of Ethical Committees having the specific aim
to study the protocols of research in the field of genetics. At
the outset of the 1970s, Paul Berg and his collaborators planned
at Stanford University an experiment that sought to integrate into
the Escherichia coli the genome of the virus SV40 (responsible
for tumors in monkeys but not in humans, even if it had been observed
in association with human cerebral tumors). Everything was ready
for the experiment to proceed when, in the last hour, the awareness
of the risks became too clear: what would have happened if the Escherichia
coli, a habitual dweller within the human bowels, now modified,
were it to get out of control? And if it had infected the researchers?
If it had resulted in an epidemic breakout of cancer?
The experiment was not carried out and the first official action
brought by the same researchers in response to the concern regarding
the possibility of genetic engineering was to announce
in 1973 the famous Gordon Conference (later called Asilomar
I) in the course of which M. Singer and D. Soll prepared a letter
(published in Science 181 (1973), p. 1114) which expressed
to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and to the Institute
of Medicine the worries of the Congress on the possibilities
and risks for public health, asking for the issuing of precise measures.
The NAS, therefore, formed the first Ethical Committee, presided
over by Berg, in order to elaborate a series of recommendations
at the request of the researchers for an auto-regulation, voluntarily
suspending all those not adequately controlled experiments regarding
genetic engineering (for example, the spread through bacteria of
a resistance to antibiotics, the production of dangerous toxins,
the diffusion of oncogenes in the bacterial population, etc.). The
Berg Commission recommended, moreover, to the National Institutes
of Health to establish a permanent Advisory Committee that
would work out the guide-lines for the use of recombinant DNA, as
well as the organization of an International Conference to discuss
the connected risks. It will be the famous conference of Asilomar
(Asilomar II) in 1975 that will identify and classify the dangerous
experiments which demanded a moratorium on an international level.
In 1978 the Congress of the USA authorized the creation of the
Presidents Commission for the study of ethical problems
in medicine and biomedical and behavioral research, composed
of eleven members including scientists, clinicians, theologians,
jurists, ethicists, health administrators and lay members of the
public. The Commission had the task of examining all the emerging
problems related to genetic engineering taking into account also
the points of view of the various religions, educational aspects
for the greater public, social obligations and medical-legal implications
as well as economic and commercial interests. With its report Splicing
Life (1982), the Commission would recognize the exaggeration
of fears with respect to genetic engineering, indicating that the
new knowledge was going to be encouraged because it constituted
an enrichment for humankind, yet representing at the same time new
powers that must be exercised with responsibility.
In the following years the problems connected with the new genetics
were amplified, above all, in relation to the global project of
sequencing the human genome that would have completely revealed
all of the human genetic code, a knowledge that would have entailed
enormous implications on an ethical and social level ( GENETIC
ENGINEERING, III). With the Universal declaration on the human
genome and the human rights, UNESCO affirmed on November 11th
1997 that the human genome is, in a symbolic sense, the heritage
of humanity, subtending the fundamental unity of all members of
the human family and an expression of the acknowledgement of their
intrinsic dignity and diversity. From this preliminary assertion
many other ethical indications were all derived: the prohibition
of discrimination on the basis of individual genetic characteristics,
the legal protection of persons in the case of research, treatment
and diagnosis relative to the genome, the rights to be informed
about the results and the consequences, the reserve about genetic
data identified, conserved or treated with respect to the scope
of research or otherwise, and finally the prohibition of cloning
within the scope of reproduction regarding human beings. The quoted
Declaration reminds the researchers of their responsibility
during the conduct of their research and in the presentation and
use of results; it also reminds of the same responsibility all those
who take decisions in matters of scientific policy, on a private
as well as on a public level. Finally, it also appeals to the responsibility,
solidarity and international cooperation among the political States
in order that they permit freedom within the activity of research,
the use of results for peaceful purposes, the prevention of their
abuse, the international diffusion of the scientific body of knowledge
pertaining to the genome, also in developing countries.
3. Themes Related to Transplants. In the last decades
transplants have considered ever more important
organs: the kidneys, heart, lungs and the liver. Besides other factors
connected with the evolution of surgery, the scientific progress
in this field was possible thanks to the possibility of animal experimentation,
afterwards developing the valid techniques to be used for humans.
Equally determining factors have been the progress of knowledge
in immunology, in particular the study of blood transfusion and
of blood groups, that initiated the discovery of histo-compatibility,
until the setting up of efficacious drugs to combat the phenomenon
of rejection, that has always been the great limitation
for all the transplant techniques. With the same rapidity moral
dimensions for such practices were also outlined. In 1964, after
a decade in which nearly 600 patients in the USA, Great Britain
and France had undergone kidney transplantations, with a survival
rate of two years for 50% of the cases, an editors article
in the scientific magazine Annals of Internal Medicine began
to underline the social and moral aspects of such operations, within
which were included the uncertain quality and prospect for life
of the recipient, the employment of great social resources for the
benefit of a few, the necessity for duty to establish some criteria
of choice of the recipients, and that not everybody with need of
a transplant was being admitted for such an operation. In 1966 the
Ciba Foundation organized a scientific Conference where,
for the first time, in addition to physicians, were also invited
as lecturers: jurists, theologians and other scholars involved with
the ethical and social problems of transplants.
With transplants, bioethics acquired the awareness that it was
asked not only to guarantee the conditions to certify death in order
to remove organs from the corpse, or to ensure a good survival rate
of the living donor: in reality, several other problems had also
to be pondered. With the progressive growth of the number of operations,
the moral questions linked to the significance of the organs removal
made with the full and informed consent of the subject needed to
be studied in depth. Public opinion gradually inclined to consider
donation as a gesture of solidarity towards someone whose life was
at risk. It remained, nevertheless, and above all within the Catholic
moral theology, the problem of legitimacy regarding deliberate exposure
to an alteration of ones essential and physical integrity even if
it was for the benefit of someone else ( TRANSPLANTS,
III.1). Since the organs that could transplant were insufficient
in number with respect to those who had need of them, it became
clear that the determination of the criteria with which to assign
the available organs had a strong socio-ethical component which
required a response. This opened up a way for some hypotheses to
emerge to effect an increase in the number of available organs such
as the assertion of a presumed right of the society
to withdraw in a routine way the organs of all the suitable newly
dead, and to leave out of the consideration the explicit consent
of the subject in life or of the will of the family. The author
of this hypothesis was the psychiatrist Gaylin (co-founder together
with Callahan of the Hastings Center). Others, like P. Ramsey,
supported the idea that such procedures would be private and depend
upon the virtue of the subjects together with their generosity.
R. Veatch underlined the importance of auto-determination of the
subjects for a society that more and more based its values on personal
integrity and on the freedom of choice and this concerned
also the events that would have happened after death (for instance
the removal of an organ for the transplant).
Other ethical problems raised because of the scarcity of organs
to transplant, such as the possible recourse to the sale of organs
or to the use of organs from animals. In 1964, after numerous failed
attempts of xeno transplants, the heart surgeon J. Hardy carried
out the transplant of a chimpanzee heart into a 68 year old patient
who lived for several days. Nearly twenty years after bioethics
dealt with the case of Baby Fae, the baby born with a serious cardiac
defect, and transplanted with the heart of a baboon, that lived
also for only a few days. Successively, the problem raised regarding
the organ removal from anencephalic fetuses, a one that opened the
discussion on the value of fetal/neonatal life that showed some
grave malformation that would surely have resulted in its death,
with the corresponding risk of looking at those lives as a mere
source for organs. Equally relevant were becoming the problems for
the permission of certain transplants that could influence the identity
of the person receiving them, like for example the gonads or part
of the encephalon (hypophysis, hypothalamus). The new frontiers
are today represented by limb transplants (the hand) or by the more
ethereal hypothesis regarding a head/trunk transplant ( TRANSPLANTS,
IV.2). The hypotheses of new techniques are widening with new aims:
the transplant of fetal tissue, parts of organs instead of the organ
in toto (liver), up to the transplant of stem cells, re-programming,
with methods more or less acceptable from an ethical point of view
(also the so-called therapeutic cloning), the nucleus of somatic
cells of the patient, so that the cloned cells form a tissue that
replaces the original one containing the damaged cells ( HUMAN
EMBRYO, IV). The progress of techniques, the limitations on economic
resources allocated for research and the necessity to establish
criteria for the access to the transplant services, have led to
ever more complicated ethical problems which involve society and
politics in a more determinant manner.
4. Problems Connected with the End of Human Life. Medical
progress made ever clearer that doctors were progressively assuming
the power to decide who should continue to live and who should
die: actually it involved the decision to suspend the applications
of some life support systems that technology had at its disposal
(automatic respirators, resuscitation techniques, apparatus for
kidney dialysis). Directly connected with the preceding theme of
transplants, there is the problem regarding the definition of the
death of a person ( DEATH,
IV). Towards the end of the 1950s, French neurologists had
identified a very deep form of coma (coma depassé) correlated
with the absence of any electrical activity in the brain and with
an irreversible malfunction of the organ. Life was only
possible due to the use of an artificial respirator, a fact that
immediately raised diverse ethical problems: on one side, such a
state could be considered a criteria for death, substituting the
criteria of cardio-respiratory death up until now used, and thus
permitting a more diffused removal of organs that could greatly
improve the prospects for successful transplants; on the other side,
there was the problem for the anaesthesiologist about the moral
correctness to apply/continue respiratory support treatments in
patients that had clinical signs indicating irreversibility.
Responding to the questions raised by Dr. Haid, the honored anaesthesiologist
of the University of Innsbruck, concerning the moral correctness
in the use of artificial respiration on the part of doctors, in
1957 pope Pius XII recalled the doctrine about conditions required
for the use of ordinary means, the only methods that
doctors were obligated to apply. The use of extraordinary
means, that is methods or techniques that caused a grave burden
for the patients or for the families, and that only served to prolong
the process of death, had not to be considered, from a moral stance,
as mandatory (cf. Pius XII, Answers to some questions concerning
resuscitation, 24.11.1957). With respect to the questions put
forward, Pius XII nevertheless sent back to medicine the response
concerning a definition for the moment of death. It was some years
later (1968) that a Committee instituted ad hoc at the University
of Harvard formulated the criteria for the assessment of cerebral
brain death, to be used either for the legal permission to remove
organs, or to suspend life support systems in order to avoid a disproportionate
treatment. On a more philosophical plane not everyone was in agreement
with the interpretation given by the Harvard Committee, that is
the consideration of the brain death as a new criterion of death.
Among these was Hans Jonas, who held that these criteria were contrary
to the anthropological significance of death. In fact, although
they served to avoid comatose patients from being continuously maintained
in a living state, it was now the suspension of the methods of resuscitation
to provoke and decree the death of an individual. From a scientific
point of view these criteria left open many doubts, and in the following
years the problem has been studied in detail by other Commissions
and scientific assizes, also including the Pontifical Academy of
Sciences (cf. White et al. 1992). On the Catholic moral plane, an
intervention from John Paul II at the International Congress on
Transplants in the year 2000 recognized for the first time the positive
ethical value of the criteria for neurological death as criteria
for the death of the person (cf. Discourse to the International
Congress of the Transplantation Society, Rome 29.8.2000).
Another significant episode for ethical reflection on the termination
of life regarded the case of Baby Doe (1982), a new-born affected
with Down syndrome and an oesophageal atresia that prevented feeding.
Notwithstanding the perfect surgical curability of the oesophageal
malformation, on the basis of the presence of the syndrome the parents
requested that the operation did not go ahead (a decision incomprehensible
for an otherwise healthy child). Facing the refusal of the doctors
to abide by the request of the parents, the event was brought to
the Supreme Court of the United States which nevertheless declined
to examine the case. It was the direct intervention of President
Ronald Reagan, through his Secretary for health and human services,
to establish the Baby Doe rule: recalling the fact that the
Federal law prohibited any discrimination among its citizens, it
was stated that to a handicapped child had to be applied the same
curative operation as to any other child. The rule, that had a strong
ethical relevance, rather than closing the argument opened it, and
extended to all the problems connected with the resuscitation of
severely handicapped new-born children. It is ever more frequent
that these extreme cases (by now becoming classical
cases for bioethics) are brought to the attention of tribunals in
which, above all in the countries where a Common Law was
in force, they became sources of ethical norms, more
or less subject to discussion. Today, the problem regarding the
end of life is being played out more on the plane of auto-determination
(euthanasia, the right to die, assisted suicide and testaments of
living wills; DEATH,
VII), determining strong pushes in public opinion to arrive at a
legislation that makes possible similar requests on a judicial plane.
5. The Beginnings of Life and Human Procreation. Parallel
to the terminal phase of life, and at the other extreme of the spectrum,
is that of its beginning, which has also been a motive for reflection
within bioethics. The discussion concerning the demographic
explosion emerged during the 1960s ( DEMOGRAPHY),
and the availability of the contraceptive pill realized by the biologist
Gregory Pinkus had quickly raised an international ethical debate
that culminated in the publication of the encyclical Humanae
vitae by pope Paul VI (1968). The arguments that were confronted,
much the same as today, were the presumed equality that the pill
would be able to realize between men and women, permitting them
to do as they wished with their body, without suffering pregnancy,
and so avoiding any sexual discrimination. According to the Catholic
perspective, that the encyclical intended to ground on the basis
of the existence of a natural law and not on arguments inferred
by biblical Revelation, the theme of the discussion was not the
equality between men and women, but rather the fact that contraception
negated the true anthropology of human love, since it was separating
the unitive dimension from the procreative one, in which the former
is finalized (at least in power) by nature (cf. Humanae vitae,
4, 11-14).
In the same years, and connected with the beginning of life, the
problem of abortion, that many states were beginning to legalize,
had attracted the attention of scholars of medical ethics. In September
1967, at a Conference organized by the Kennedy Foundation and the
Harvard University Faculty of Theology, the topic was discussed
within an interdisciplinary context. Although the original idea,
matured also within a scientific environment, it was to investigate
the ethical basis for a restriction of the legislation then applied
to the subject (the famous photographs taken by Lennart Nilsson
were presented in the Conference to support the wonder of new-born
life), the debate moved toward a different direction. The permission
was then supported for an abortive choice, considered as the
lesser of two evils, since the illegality of abortion had
as consequence the increasing one of the most common causes of death
for women, forcing them to prolong impractical pregnancy or resorting
to clandestine abortion. In January of 1973, the well-known sentence
of the United States Supreme Court regarding the case of Roe
versus Wade legitimized abortion on the basis of the sole request
of the woman and not, as it had been before, only when necessary
to save the life of the mother. After this sentence, most of the
bioethical reflection focused on producing works which aims were
to provide arguments to support the pros and cons with respect
to the legitimacy of abortion as a free choice. And also in this
period began the debate on the rights of the fetus and on the status
for prenatal life.
In contrast with contraception and abortion yet derived
from the same desire to control the beginning of life
was the request for a medical intervention to bring about fertilization
that cannot develop naturally. Although only in 1978, in England,
Edwards and Steptoe obtained the birth of a baby conceived in a
test-tube, it had already been hypothesized in the 60s and
70s that fertilization external to the body of women, with
the following transference of the embryo to the uterus, could be
made possible (fertilization already carried out by Edwards for
the first time in 1965). Until this moment the debate concerned
the legality of artificial insemination, especially that with donor
sperm, also in relation to the judicial consequences for marriage
and the child connected with such practices. For many scholars the
possibility to control procreation represented the end of the unknown
variable that was present in the process of procreation; some
of them even spoke of «the end of reproductive roulette».
Others, such as the biochemist, doctor and philosopher Leon Kass,
were struggling to reflect on the consequences related to the new
technologies of reproduction, speaking of «a new biology and
of an old morality to respect». Also after the birth of the
first test-tube babies, healthy and without apparent defects, Kass
asked himself which wisdom could guide the manufacturing
of children and above all in the moment in which «the generation
of human life separates itself from human sexuality and in conclusion
also from the limits of the human body». Once again, it was
Kass who offered a systematic reflection on the consequences of
in vitro fertilization: the problems of the surplus of embryos,
surrogate motherhood, the desire for a perfect child
and the depreciation of those with defects, and in general the inhuman
approach to sexuality, marriage and procreation. The ethical debate
on the beginning of life and on the control of procreation continues
to be very much open, also with problems attached to the use of
certain terminologies. For instance, the action of some drugs called
contraceptives, is in realty that of preventing the implantation
of a fertilized oocyte, that is of a life already begun, or that
of detaching it from the uterus by means of a true abortive mechanism
( HUMAN
EMBRYO, I).
Although life and death are not the only topics bioethics is concerned
with, since the revival of interest in problems raised by the new
biology and the new medicine they have captured the attention of
scholars and of the public. The first bio-ethicists had deeply reflected
on the problems, looking for clarifying the concepts and the logic
of the arguments employed, helping the doctors to become aware of
the power connected with biotechnology, and also helping the patients
to better understand the implications, risks and benefits, that
the medical interventions brought for them. In this clarification,
carried out in a new way by the method of bioethics, theology, and
generally speaking the humanistic disciplines, have given a relevant
contribution.
III. The Contribution of Philosophy and Theology and the Thesis
of a Lay Bioethics
In the scientific congresses held during the decade of 1960 to
1970 on issues related to the new medicine and the new biology,
the term ethics as formerly used with Potter
was used in a broad sense, in reference to the values
connected with human life. When the scholars of the humanistic disciplines
began to participate in the discussions promoted by the scientists,
they employed the concept of ethics in a more precise way, meant
as the analytical and critical study of the norms of behavior for
humankind, ending up by modelling the language of the dialogue according
to this latest meaning. Theologians were among the first to appear
on the scene, but the moral problems provoked by the new biology
were much more complex than those they ever tackled until that moment.
1. The Presence of Theology in the Debate. Already in 1965,
the theologian Karl Rahner noted the coming of a new scientific
age in which the object of the experiment was humankind itself,
now discovered as something operable, and therefore
open to manipulation in each dimension of its physical, psychological
and social life. Also for theology it was becoming clear
that it was no longer possible to consider nature and the destiny
of humankind, and even their salvation, ignoring the course of this
auto-manipulation, that biology and medicine were now making feasible.
Hence, some theologians began to reflect on the broader implications
and doctrinal relapses that the new science was in the process of
determining, for the better and for the worse. Regarding genetic
manipulation, for example, not only were the risks being indicated,
but also some positive interpretations. This new possibility provided
by science could be seen as a sort of continuation of the work of
creation, a work that instead endured spontaneous (and often pathological)
genetic mutations, could now be properly oriented and controlled
by humankind. The human race in fact, because its nature was created
in the image of God, could not only dominate the cosmic reality
but also its own biological reality for the general well being.
This opinion much more mitigated by Rahner himself in his
successive writings was similar to the moral proposals made
in the past years by the Protestant theologian Joseph Fletcher in
his book Morals and Medicine, (1954). He brought into the
discussion the classical approach founded on the value of the natural
moral law, and extended the notion of human rights including
also others, like the right to knowledge for the truth, through
genetic diagnosis, the right to control procreation by means of
contraception and sterilization, the right to a dignified death
through the use of euthanasia, etc. (on this theme, cf. Walters
Religion and the Renaissance of Medical Ethics in the United
States, 1985).
The position expressed by Paul VI in Humanae vitae (1968)
relating to the lack of permission for the pharmacological control
of procreation (cf. nn. 14, 17) persuaded some, among them Hellegers
and Callahan, that theology could not represent the adequate forum
for the deepening of the problems which were located on the border
of disciplines such as biology, medicine and moral theology. Other
authors began to put into discussion the value of the teaching of
the Roman Catholic Magisterium within the field of bioethics, concluding
that bioethics would be born (and must therefore develop) in opposition
to traditional moral prescriptions. However, the numerous links
that bioethics had with moral theology traditions and with classical
medical ethics demonstrated instead that the reason for the birth
of this new discipline was not a break with the past; rather, it
grew slowly, taking a new form and a new name, but without renouncing
those dimensions of caring for humankind which rooted in the great
medical tradition, and that in the ultimate analysis rested on the
Christian culture that it had as its base ( MEDICINE,
II-III).
For the majority of theologians, above all Catholics, the reflections
on the new biology and the new medicine could be brought back into
the domain of practical theology (pastoral and moral
theology), having the task of pointing out which behavior, within
the biomedical environment, was more in accordance with the requests
of Christian faith. They excavated, therefore, into the foundations
of their discipline to rediscover the directions that bioethics
should have followed. In fact, the anchorage of bioethics to the
theological tradition made it such that the direction that resulted
was like a theological voice in the emerging field of
bioethics. As a consequence, philosophers felt a need to distance
themselves from the religious-theological sphere that had characterized
also the language of the first steps of the new medical
ethics and they preferred to come back to their own specific language
and disciplines. But it should not necessarily be interpreted as
the opposition of philosophy to the regards of theology; it was
rather the expression of a new methodology that bioethics did not
exclude, that is the request of the contribution of all the disciplines
that would have enabled it to progress. With respect to the articulated
work developed by theologians to systematize the field of the discipline,
the philosophers, having realized that they also dealt with the
reality of life, began to introduce their specific concepts and
strategies, different from those of the theological ethics. While
theologians had discovered that most of the concepts
and vocabulary to be used in the debate could be imported from their
tradition, the philosophers were finding it far more difficult and
were obliged to go beyond their own formation looking for the intellectual
equipment and tools necessary to enter into the specific bioethics
debate. Their formation was influenced by the philosophical language
of the 1950s, a language that was not congenial for the type
of analysis that the new problems seemed to ask, as the problem
of helping to take practical decisions and contribute to the realization
of social policies (cf. Jonsen, 1998, p. 65). With respect to this,
the contributions coming from different disciplines were not opposed
to each other. Philosophy, theology, law, sociology and all the
other connected disciplines were asked to reflect upon common problems
in order that bioethics would become a «critical conscience
of the technological civilization» (cf. Pessina, 1999), so
helping to clarify and evaluate, from a philosophical and moral
point of view, the specific practical and theoretical contents introduced
by the new biotechnology.
2. On the Possibility of a Lay Bioethics. An
ideological opposition between philosophy and theology could take
place, as in fact happened, above all, in Italy, when the troubled
debate between the religious (Catholic) bioethics and lay bioethics
remained still open, being the search for a foundation of bioethics
one of its main objects of study and discussion. On the basis of
the concept of the neutrality of science, one which
would deserve supplementary clarifications ( ETHICS
OF SCIENTIFIC WORK, IX; MEDICINE, V), some thinkers wanted to oppose
the open vision respectful of the choice of everyone namely
a lay view with a Catholic vision which
was considered to be closed and intolerant and furthermore unacceptable
in a pluralistic society. The terms of the debate were put in Italy
in such a way that the lay bioethics was said to be founded on the
reason and on the values of conscience, while the Catholic view
was founded on the dogmas of the faith, that is two irreconcilable
visions. According to such thinkers, the phrase Catholic bioethics
would be an oxymoron, which resulted in drawing together two contradictory
terms: how could a discipline (bioethics) that claims to be autonomous
with respect to traditional religious morals come to be called Catholic,
with a clear reference to a specific religious context? Bioethics,
therefore, would have to reason and argue etsi Deus non daretur,
as if God did not exist ( AUTONOMY,
V).
In reality the problem as it was proposed some years
ago by C. Flamigni and by other Italian authors in a document called
Manifesto di bioetica laica (1996) did not seem
correctly set out and I believed to exhibit some degree of superficiality.
The ontologically founded personalist formulation, usually employed
by Catholic authors (see below, IV), does not elude to, nor sets
apart, the rational justification of the values and norms that are
proposed, and so it is far from what we could call a fideist attitude
( FIDEISM).
The religious faith, on the other hand, does not mortify the requirements
of reason, indeed if reinforces them, asking at the same time to
correctly interpret the scientific data. Thinkers who are believers,
in fact, are respectful of the reality that he or she believes had
been created by God; they take into account the scientific facts
and from such results they obtain useful elements to be compared
with the principles of faith, not vice-versa ( UNITY
OF KNOWLEDGE, VI). The presumed oxymoron is not such, if one admits
that each discipline includes a certain anthropology. The point
to be made is that this anthropology can be founded on natural reasons
or be in accordance with them, as happens with Christian anthropology,
or, on the contrary, it can be constructed on artificial bases and
preconceptions, often in the name of a misunderstood neutrality
of science.
Having as its base a philosophical anthropology, as well as a
precise biblical anthropology ( LIFE,
II-IV), Catholic bioethics is nothing but a bioethics modelled on
the actual principles of the discipline (which includes biology
and ethics), principles that are moreover illuminated by the light
of Revelation. The biblical-theological principles introduced or
considered in the study of the discipline are in addition
to those pertaining to philosophical reason; they do not substitute
philosophical or scientific principles, but have the capacity to
illuminate the sense for all, that is to say also that which
is known from reason. Utilizing an analogy (cf. Moraczewski, 1994),
we can say that the visible light has given us some information
on the objects which it reflects: color, dimensions, position, etc.
Nevertheless, the same object, for example the human body, seen
through X-rays, gives us even more additional information regarding
the skeletal structure. It is with more sophisticated equipment
that a new reality is evidenced regarding the three dimensional
structure and also the soft tissues: thanks to these tools we approach
a kind of information that could be obtained only by dissecting
the body and directly observe the organs. A bioethics which includes
within its horizon the theological reflections and principles that
reveal the nature and dignity of humankind as an image of God, furnishes
bioethics with the third dimension, through which it
has a better possibility to comprehend what is beneficial and what
is harmful for humankind and for society. The very reason which
gives foundation to this possibility for a greater comprehension
is the convergence between all that is Christian and all that is
authentically human (cf. Gaudium et spes, 22,
41).
I believe that in the cited Manifesto the concept of laity
there proposed resembles more the content of an ethical relativism
than the affirmation of common values for all people, derived from
their equal dignity and recognized in the light of human reason.
A similar position would result in the renouncing of that ethical
effort which was instead, for instance, at the basis of the elaboration
of the doctrine of human rights. The opposition between Catholic
bioethics and lay bioethics is fictitious and
unhelpful. The opposition is rather on the level of the referential
anthropology and of the problem of the foundation of an ethical
judgement, without placing dogmas before the impartial research
concerning the truth. Finally, the historical point of view must
not be forgotten. They were moral theologians and thinkers who were
interested in the relationship between science and religion those
who have contributed in a concrete fashion to the rebirth of medical
ethics in the United States, and consequently to the development
of bioethics. Furthermore, L. Walters emphasized that it was religion
and not only medicine or applied medical ethics, as
observed by S. Toulmin to have a relevant role in the
salvation, that is in the rebirth, of moral philosophy.
IV. The discussion relating to the principles of bioethics
Bioethics, as it was defined and spread through the Encyclopedia
of Bioethics in its first intense season, had substantially
the significance of a normative ethics; its intention was to find
some criteria for action, for guide-lines concerning not only individual
human conduct in the spheres of science, life and health, but also
for de iure condendo (i.e. the rights and law
to be founded) and for the deontological codes of professional ethics.
The first scholars beginning to propose some criteria for orientation
started from the consideration that at the frontline of the problems
posed by the new biotechnology we could not use categories that
depended exclusively on scientific and professional reasons, but
we needed wider anthropological and philosophical frameworks. The
first systematic thinkers of bioethics looked, on the
one hand, for clinical requirements, having the necessity to furnish
the health workers with precise indications for their decisions;
and on the other hand they looked for social ones, in order to establish
public directives in a society that had many diverse value categories.
The proposals came from T.L. Beauchamp and J.F. Childress in the
form of three principles, namely autonomy, beneficence-nonmaleficence
and justice.
Independently of the diverse underlying ethical theories and of
their various interpretations, such principles were charged with
a great importance. In addition to the moral messages received through
education and to the moral experience made continuously by everyone,
the recourse to precise ethical principles that everybody accepted
would have permitted everyone to justify with awareness their real
decisions, adopting a moral alphabet to resolve perplexities before
different situations. Searching, therefore, also to construct a
common language for the pluralist bioethics, and provided with a
rigor adequate for the environment of biomedical science, with the
pretext that the above-mentioned principles could be independent
of the diverse ethical theories that were a basis. The central dogma
of this ethical perspective, called by the critics principlism
, is a radically opposed theory like deontological and utilitarian
and although not in agreement with theoretical concepts or
with methods of justification, could instead arrive at an overlapping
consensus of identical principles and rules, and therefore recommended
actions. From the sharing of moral beliefs of the simple citizens,
they supported, that the contents of the common morality could be
obtained.
Effectively, these few principles identified by Beauchamp and
Childress managed to cover many spheres within biomedicine. The
principle of autonomy functioned as a base for all the
other principles: since the morality of an action implied that the
individual is aware of ones choice in an autonomous way, then
before the analysis of any ethical reference principles we need
to clarify who is the subject of the autonomy there involved and
how such autonomy shall be respected. Upon the principle of respect
for autonomy are founded all the other considerations
regarding the informed consensus, the conscious refusal to be cured,
the truth to make known to the patients, voluntary interruption
of pregnancy, personal will about interventions at the end of life,
the will to live, etc. Nevertheless this principle, together with
the other two principles above identified, would only recall a prima
facie obligation.
They are binding obligations that must be fulfilled in all circumstances,
unless they enter into conflict, on some particular occasion, with
an equal or stronger obligation, or also with some other obligation
which turns out to be more forceful in a particular situation (for
example, the choice of an individual that would threaten public
health, or that was potentially dangerous for the fetus, or would
imply too onerous costs for the State, etc., they all are circumstances
in which it could be justifiable to limit this autonomy, also in
a severe way).
The other two reference principles would intervene to justify such
limitations: the principle of beneficence-nonmaleficence
and the principle of justice. The first of these goes
further than the simple restraint to do harm and endorses the imperative
for positive actions to prevent evil or harm, to remove that which
is harmful, and therefore to promote the good. Such a principle
is recalled in the decision connected with the therapy for pain,
the donation of organs, and the generally agreed diagnostic/therapeutic
responsibility of the doctor. The component of nonmaleficence,
asks again not to inflict what is harmful on anybody and it reflects
the antique maxim of the Hippocratic tradition primum non nocere
(first, do no harm); it should be applied, for example, to the
problems of therapeutic perseverance or to the risks/benefits relationship
of each medical intervention. Also this principle could suffer limitations
when treating problems in which the avoidance to do harm, and actively
to do good, are connected with social obligations of common justice.
The reference is, therefore, to the principle of justice,
that in part comes to us connected with the classical formulas of
suum cuique tribuere (render unto each their due) and of
alterum non laedere (injure no one): it is founded and explained
in terms of impartiality and by the recognition of some rights.
This is invoked in bioethics in relation to the cures necessary
and dutifully employed for each illness, and with respect to the
definition of priority in the distribution of funds in the healthcare
field and also, in general, for the rationalization of all medical
interventions.
The proposal was, therefore, to insert these principles at the
center of a composite ethical theory (not monistic or
absolute, not all deontological, nor all teleological) that would
permit every principle to have a certain weight though without a
priority over the others. In the case of internal conflict among
the various principles, the specific context of any particular case
should be analyzed. As can be imagined, even explicitly declaring
the refusal of any situational ethics, the risk to adopt
it as a frame of reference for the decisions is very strong indeed.
The authors who speak of such a theory make explicit reference to
the role of intuition in the balancing of values balancing
that is, by the way, not always evident, as it should instead be
the action of single identifiable principles, an expression of the
common morality excluding therefore the possibility
to deduce our behavior from some established and fixed principles.
According to the intuitional theory, the weight of the
principles in a situation of conflict go up and down like
a staircase in diverse situations. After all, the distinction
between the principles refers to a deontological, anti-utilitarian
theory: the choice of an action instead of another must not depend
on the fact that the first produces better consequences (consequentialism),
but on the fact of responding to a duty that, in concrete circumstances,
is judged to be better (intuitionism) and becomes, therefore, effectively
obligatory. In the case of conflict between principles, instead,
reference is made to the balancing that must be implemented among
the principles, thus it is necessary to speak of the valuation of
the consequences connected with the decisions, which are inspired
now by one, now by the other of the involved principles. Therefore,
the contemporary reference to a theory both deontological (the prima
facie duties) and teleological in character (utilitarian of
rule), would bring the conviction to have at ones disposal
a suitable method for the solution of any ethical problem within
the biomedical field.
V. Towards a Non Conventional, Philosophical Foundation for Bioethics
The methodological simplicity of the theory of principles has been
the main reason for the success of its wider application, permitting
also non experts to have a scheme with which to address the diverse
ethical problems met in practice. But it soon became manifested
that its utilization had brought about a real ethical relativism.
Also problematic, was the fact that it missed, by definition, an
anthropology and an ontology responsible for the foundation and
justification of the theory itself, so that its significance became
highly decreased: without a base to judge what is beneficial and
what is just for a person, it soon becomes ambiguous to speak of
what is beneficial or pertains to justice. If it is true that the
single principles expressed part of the truth regarding human life
and its needs, they lacked a clear position within a metaphysical
frame, nor did they seem sufficient with respect to the simple,
intuitive balancing of values that should be performed when confronting
a particular situation. Yet again, these principles that were by
choice without a unified ethical theory capable of giving
it a foundation, were thereby not in a position to take into account
the richness of moral life, and so they risked placing such moral
life into an abstract scheme.
1.The Crisis of Principlism and the Rise of the
Problem of Foundations. A proof of the crisis of principlism
and of the attention paid already towards the end of the 1980s
to the epistemological status of bioethics, can be easily seen in
the new definition of bioethics contained in the second
edition of the Encyclopedia of Bioethics (1995). In fact,
we read here that «Bioethics can be defined as the systematic
study of the moral dimensions including moral vision, decisions,
conduct, and policies of the life sciences and healthcare,
employing a variety of ethical methodologies in an interdisciplinary
setting» (p. XXI). Such definitions do no longer refer to
the principles for the study of life sciences and of
healthcare, but rather to diverse ethical methodologies and to an
interdisciplinary approach.
From the outset of the 1990s the problem of the foundations
of bioethics was being raised as the search for a kind of a meta-bioethics
that could define a theoretical-pedagogical plane to find a true
justification of the reason for which a determinate action could
be considered permissible or non permissible. In order to perform
a foundational discourse, in fact, it is not sufficient to elaborate
conceptual paradigms that are adequate for the solutions of extreme
cases only, and based on a pragmatic and flexible consensus, according
to the circumstances. Also when faced with a particular case, you
could not be in a state of complete separation from
the more general reflections on ethical values and absolute principles
of reference: in other words, some theoretical moment is always
necessary beyond any practical moment. Thus it seems reasonable
to offer indications and directions that could be considered to
be, in a sense, strong, and thereby give reason to the
assiological-prescriptive value that is latent within all choices
regarding interventions on human life and on the ecosystem.
The problem of foundation is therefore crucial when speaking of
bioethics, and not wishing to transform the problems that are posed
into a mere question of research for consensus that, even if desirable
in a pluralistic society, does not exceed the limits of conventionalism
and, sooner or later, is destined to demonstrate the inability of
auto-foundation. The major difficulty encountered in the quest for
a bioethical foundation is that we deal with a pluralistic set of
criteria which remain extremely difficult to reconcile among themselves.
It is the pluralism regarding what is the reference anthropology
to be used and what is the theory on the foundation of a judicial
ethics; a pluralism that is very real within society, and not just
epidermic; a pluralism that leads in a natural way to endorse a
true ethics of conditions, that with difficulty could
come to any compromise or agreement, since the only possible foundation
is that of excluding any foundation whatsoever. The awareness of
this underlying limit is necessary to effectively realize what we
could hope or expect from a dialogue and from an interdisciplinary
methodology within bioethics, and to understand what is the true
weight of conclusions that are simply founded on consensus,
as those achieved by Commissions or Ethics Committees, especially
in the perspective of public choices that must be taken for the
good of society.
The fact that more systems of reference exist, nevertheless, does
not represent a pretext to avoid bioethical research, but a challenge
for the theoretical and pedagogical task I am speaking of. It would
seem reductive, in fact, that before the plurality of ethical models
of reference only formal rules could be established, simply based
on the principle of tolerance for each of the individual ethics
(cf. Scarpelli, 1987), which is in turn a form of indifference towards
the very existence of ethical values, above all if one reflects
on the human and social relevance of bioethical problems. When problems
regarding the degree of protection to afford to a human embryo are
considered, or those regarding the survival of the human species,
or the safeguard of the ecosystem, one cannot responsibly escape
from the moral duty to pursue valid directions and rational foundations,
that are shareable, or at least, object of a responsible debate.
As Elio Sgreccia (1999) opportunely indicated in a widely spread
manual of bioethics, a textbook which didactically simplifies and
systematizes the articulated complexity of the diverse ethical formulations,
one of the most important historical-philosophical knots related
to our subject matter was the publishing of the work Principia
Ethica (1903) by the English philosopher G.E. Moore. This takes
us back to the well known Humes Law, that posed
a barrier between the is and the ought,
between the sphere of natural facts and those of moral values. He
strongly criticized the idea that the notion of good
could be defined in relation to human nature and had spoken for
this reason of naturalistic fallacy, taking the notion
of good back to an unnatural property, discernible
only through intuition. While the facts would be known and scientifically
demonstrable, and they can be described with the indicative verb,
the values and moral norms would be instead simple presuppositions
that gave place to indemonstrable prescribed judgements. Therefore,
the passage or the inference between being (here identified
with the observable facts) and the duty to be, were
not possible or legitimate. For many this position resulted in an
incompatibility with the results of moral experience and with each
reasoning within the ethical sphere, since they precisely involve
norms and values. Two opposite alliances between the non-cognitivists
and the cognitivists were then born. According to the
former, values could not be objects of conscience and of qualifiable
affirmations such as true or false, whilst
for the latter the possibility existed to research a rational and
objective foundation for values and moral norms.
To justify ethics and consequently bioethics, it is then necessary
to discuss, first of all, the possibility to overcome the division
due to the naturalistic fallacy, whereby the overpass
is bound to the significance given to the word to be.
To re-compose such a cleavage would be possible only within a metaphysical
perspective, in which to be becomes a source of norm
for ought to, and so for a duty, because the metaphysical
essence and nature of an entity contains and express also the meaning
and the value that entity is called upon to realize. In a human
person, such a fulfilment is reached by means of the exercise of
ones freedom: not the freedom to be what one is not, but rather
the freedom to become more and more oneself ( AUTONOMY,
I). Any meaningful foundation must therefore presuppose a demand
for metaphysics; that is to say the necessity and the capacity to
go further than the empirical facts and understand the
profound reason for the being of things and for the corresponding
truth of their own behaviors, as well as their accordance to the
dignity of the person ( METAPHYSICS,
III.3). The spectrum of the foundational proposals remains
broad. Following the analysis suggested by Sgreccia (1999), a number
of reference models can be identified and recognized in the context
of international bioethics literature, some examples of which I
have here synthetically derived.
2. An evolutionary bioethics? A first model, although directly
opposed to Humes law, has the immediate consequence to affirm
the contingency of any values or norms. It is the proposal of a
purely descriptive ethics, proper to a socio-historical model, according
to which society, in its evolution, would produce and would change
values and norms, because fully depending on its own development,
similarly to how, in biological evolution, certain organs developed
in view of the function they had, for the improvement of the species
and their survival. The model is drawn by the Darwinist theory,
that includes some specific anthropological and sociological visions. The law and the morals are the cultural expression of the evolutionary
push that would originate from the biological selfish
(instinct of survival) and that would always find new forms of adapting.
Like the cosmos and the various forms of life in the world have
been subject to evolution, also society itself is subjet to biological
and sociological evolution, so altering the moral values as well.
When the preceding system is no longer adequate to outline in detail
the new ecosystem, a new system of values is needed
and must be conceived. According to this vision, ethics would have
the function to maintain the evolving equilibrium, that is to say
the equilibrium of the mutation and adaptation of the ecosystem.
If the historical development of bioethics is examined, it could
well be noted that this formulation is indeed very close to the
interpretation of Potter with respect to the task of bioethics,
namely, that which must combine the knowledge of biological facts
with a new system of values tightly connected. One could object
to this thesis on the grounds that, although they have been in intimate
connection, culture is irreducible with respect to nature, while
through these thinkers nature is resolved in the culture and vice-versa:
culture
would not therefore be anything other that an elaboration transcribed
by the evolution of nature. Thereby reducing humankind to a historical
and naturalistic moment within the cosmos, we fall again into relativism:
as such, it is not given to recognize any stable unity, any universality
of values or norms, which could remain valid for humankind throughout
all times.
Such a model possesses diverse ethical consequences. Since the
necessary mechanisms of evolution for the progress of the human
species are those relating to adaptation and to selection ( EVOLUTION,
III-V), each eugenism, either negative or positive, will consequently
be found to be fully justified, if it will serve adaptation to the
environment, to the ecosystem and to the selection of a quality
more suitable for the progress of the species. Therefore, humankind
having achieved the capacity to scientifically dominate evolutionary
mechanisms and biological selection through genetic engineering,
it would be justifiable in its use in a selective way, improving
and altering not only animal species but also humans. From the same
perspective it would be thought permissible, and furthermore compulsory,
to entrust to genetic diagnosis, the selection of the subjects that
would be weaker in order to eliminate them and thereby improve the
species.
If it is obvious that some cultural components and human customs
are subject to evolution, it is equally obvious that human beings
remain human beings, diverse by nature from any other living beings,
and not only because of their neurological complexity. Good and
evil are not interchangeable; the laws of being, the laws of morality,
or also those of science, are not false and true at the same time.
Death,
pain, the desire to know the truth, solidarity and freedom are not
cultural elaborations, but facts and values that accompany humankind
in all seasons throughout history.
3. Bioethics as a Free and Autonomous Choice. Another model
identified by Sgreccia regards the numerous currents of thought
that flow together in the so-called moral subjectivism,
the first principle of which is the assumption that morals cannot
be founded on facts, nor on objective or transcendent values, but
only on the autonomous choice of the subject. It is the maximum
expression of ethical non-cognitivism and therefore
of the presumed non-knowablity of values. The unique foundation
of the moral act is the autonomous choice of the individual subject,
the only limit of which is the freedom owned by other people (who
are able to exercise their freedom); the socio-ethical horizon of
humankind is then represented by the imperative for the liberalization
of society. According to this view, the supreme and ultimate point
of reference is freedom itself. This is the reason that philosophically
supports the various champagnes of liberalization, as
they have been proposed or undertaken, for abortion, euthanasia,
procreation (at whatever cost) and experimentation (without restrictions).
However, we deal here with a reductive view of freedom. That is,
a freedom practised not by everyone, but only by those who can express
themselves or have influence. Authors who oppose such moral
subjectivism point out that life and the respect for it comes
before freedom, because who is not alive cannot be free: when freedom
turns against life, it ends by dissolving itself and drying up its
own roots. Subjectivism understands freedom mainly as freedom
from restrictions and constrictions (freedom from or
of) and not as freedom to construct or freedom of self-giving
in a finalistic sense (freedom for). In other words, it seems
that we deal here with a concept of freedom without responsibility.
Supported by reason, such responsibility would have had the task
of pondering the proper measures and means to manage a project freely
pursued.
4. The utilitarian address and ethical contractualism. Given
the intrinsic weakness that subjectivism associated to a non-cognitivist
ethics has on the social level, attempts were made on the pragmatic
level to reach an inter-subjective agreement that permits to define
a kind of public ethics ( TRUTH,
II.6-7). Nevertheless, some authors have remarked that inter-subjective
alliance is a sort of subjectivism of the majority. In fact, we
continue to deal here with the refusal of a metaphysical perspective
with the capacity to move from phenomenon to foundation; a perspective
that would ensure reason to attain a common truth about a universal
human nature, as the necessary step to find an ethics capable of
recognizing norms valid for everyone ( METAPHYSICS,
III).
Attempts in order to recover an inter-subjective agreement on
the purely pragmatic level have given origins to a third model of
reference, that of the calculation of the consequences of each action
on the basis of a costs/benefits ratio, with the presupposition
that it is not possible to acquire a superior (metaphysical or ontological)
criterium as a universal truth and norm of conduct. An analysis
founded on the preceding ratio certainly has a validity when it
refers to the same value and to the same person, and is in a sense
both homogeneous and subordinate, that is to say when it does not
play the role of a last and absolute principle, but
is rather used as an element of judgement which ultimately refers
to the human person and to his or her values. But when such a ratio
is used in a conclusive and foundational manner, balancing
among them benefits that are non-homogeneous for example
when it confronts the cost of money with the value of a human life
then its utilitarian character emerges, as one favored within
the cultural context of a long empirical philosophical tradition,
reinforced by the implicit action of a collectivist ethics based
on the philosophy of praxis and on the justification of social utilitarianism
( PRAGMATISM).
From this viewpoint, the utilitarianism of science also, believed
necessary for the progress of knowledge and for the whole society,
comes to occupy a preeminent position over the protection of individual
benefits of the person.
Through the analysis of some significant points set forth by the
Warnock Committee (United Kingdom) to endorse the experimentation
on embryos, and in general to justify the procedures for in vitro
fertilization (where, as it is known, in order to obtain a solitary
success rate the loss of many other embryos must be accepted with
the creation of surplus embryos, and the subsequent loss of many
of these), the presence of a utilitarian principle to justify such
procedures can clearly be gathered to be in effect. The same principle
seems to work when we examine the reasons for selective abortion
of malformed fetuses, conceived by some to be the only alternative
to the suffering of the parents and to the prevention of hereditary
illnesses.
A further expression of utilitarianism operates, finally, in the
relationship between medical cures and economic considerations.
It has been verified that medicine always incurs greater costs,
extending the duration of an illness, including those that are incurable,
whilst the demand grows for more understanding of health related
issues, such as global well being and not just therapy,
in support of the principle of the right to health protection.
All of this would involve the necessity on the part of society,
to put the problem of performing crucial choices into the field
of healthcare: which diseases are to be cured at the expense of
the State and which, instead, remain with the fiscal onus upon the
individual and the private sector? Whereas if the assistance is
totally the responsibility of the State, there is the risk that
the choice will be made on the basis of only utilitarian and pragmatic
criteria, that could bring with it the abandoning of patients who
are incurable and non-productive for the society, with a subsequent
and evident discrimination advised by the economic utility of investments.
Another direction for public ethics, analogous in certain aspects
to utilitarianism, is that of ethical contractualism,
also based on the criteria of the inter-subjective agreement stipulated
by the communitarian ethics, that is by whom have the capacity and
faculty to decide. The social consensus of the communitarian ethics
would justify the under-valuation of subjects that are not yet a
part of the community (embryos, fetuses or babies) and that, in
practice, might not be considered fully human persons, since the
recognition of their rights depends on the interpretation of adults.
Analogously, those who cease to partake in a social context, like
for instance ill people deprived of social relations or the incurably
insane, might be considered no longer persons. In this
way, the notion of human person ends up by being reduced
to a mere sociological dimension.
On the basis of the preceding parameters the concept of the quality
of life has been elaborated. The concept is at times ideologically
opposed by some authors to the concept of the sanctity of
life. The quality of life is valued precisely on the basis
of the minimization of the pain, and frequently of the economic
costs, remaining confined to a utilitarian horizon in which it is
not specified of whom must be found the utility, and with
respect to what thing. In so doing, it could be deduced that
human life is appraised only on the basis of the presence/absence
of suffering and with respect to the economic criteria of the productivity
and non-productivity of the costs incurred.
5. The Personalist Model: Beyond Contractualism and Utilitarianism.
In the riverbed of thought inspired by Christianity and in continuity
with the philosophical reflections of the Classical Age, various
authors, among them Sgreccia, have proposed the personalist
model to resolve the antinomy of the preceding models and
to found the objectivity of the values and norms. The personalist
tradition sinks its roots into human reason and into the heart of
its freedom: each human being is a person because of
his or her ability for self-reflection and self-determination;
the human being is the sole living creature that has the capacity
to discern and discover the sense of things and to further give
sense to the expressions of conscious language. In each person,
in every human being, the whole world recapitulates itself and acquires
sense, and at the same time it is passed over and transcended. In
each person is contained the sense of the universe and all of the
values of humanity: the human person is a unity, a whole and not
a part of the whole. From the moment of conception until death,
in each situation regarding suffering or health, the human person
is the ultimate point of reference and the true measure to discriminate
between what is licit and what is illicit.
Personalism must not be confused with subjective individualism,
a conception which maintains that the almost unique element which
constitutes the human person is his or her capacity for auto-decision
and of free choice (see above, n. 3). Classical personalism was
rooted in philosophical realism and Christian theology inherited
and developed it in the light of biblical Revelation, also thanks
to the synthesis made by Thomas Aquinas. Without negating the capacity
for free choice, which is the condition for the historical dimension
of the person, personalism has the intention to maintain an objective
and essential (ontological) status of the human person. The person
is, first of all, a spiritualized body, an incarnate spirit ( SOUL),
someone whose value is what he or she is, and not only
for the choices that he or she makes. In each choice, the human
person engages all what he or she is, existence and essence, body
and spirit; and each choice embraces not only the exercise of freedom,
the faculty to choose, but also a context for the said choice. The
human person and the associated values cannot be resolved or dissolved
into a mere series of choices, ignoring the source from which those
choices stem and the values that they express. Realist personalism
sees in the person a uni-totality of body and spirit
that represents its objective value, with which the subjectivity
is charged through with the duties to both respect him or herself
and the other people. For this reason, the objective and subjective
aspects of the person recall themselves and mutually implicate themselves
into a personalist ethics. The ethical value of an act must therefore
be considered under the subjective profile of the intention, but
must also be considered with respect to its objective contents and
consequences.
6. Concluding Remarks. I believe that bioethics has a need
to regain its foundation in an anthropology that contains an objective
truth regarding humankind, so that an ethics for life can be soundly
founded. Utilitarianism, contractualism or logical positivism, all
assume their own anthropology, more or less implicitly; but they
do not ground the ethics of the act and of the norm in the humanity
of the person, that is in his or her truth; and it is precisely
in the fulfillment of the nature of the person, of his and her truth,
where we have to find again the criteria to judge our ethical choices,
both private and public.
One of the main contributions brought forward in this sense is
that offered in the ethical reflection of the encyclical by pope
John Paul II, Evangelium vitae (1995). The life of each person
is there presented in all its dignity, as an image of God belonging
to the Body of Christ, in the light of the mysteries of Creation
and of Redemption, but also in relation to its rationally, knowable
nature ( LIFE,
III). In this same document it is stated that the faith in the truths
revealed by God, must search for a meeting with reason.
The truths of the Christian faith are not a danger or a threat for
reason, but rather a helping hand for the rational truth; nor must
the faith be conceived as some sort of optional, but as a growing
interior light, that without substituting the light of reason, is
saving it from going astray and furthermore augmenting its depth.
Reason illuminated by the faith can therefore discover and study
in depth a foundational anthropology for bioethics, seeing in humankind
not only the subject who is responsible for the moral act, but giving
to him or her also an ontological dignity that is not constructed
but rather received, and that, therefore, reminds us of a Donor.
This is the conception of a human being always seen as an aim and
never as a means (as it was also for Kants philosophy), a
human being who is in the image and likeness of God, and thereby
complete in his or her full dignity, because of the nature and essence
received, not for the effect of a physical or economic development,
or for the existence of a social responsibility.
Undoubtedly, also the personalist ethical perspective, can be discussed
and reviewed. Its complex articulation, faithful to the complexity
of what is real and to the effort of its conceptual speculation,
does not escape confrontation or critical examination, since it
situates itself in a known public horizon. Personalism
tries to found a bioethics on a more objective basis than the ineffable
intuitions of the intuitionists or the options of the non-cognitivists,
as it is convinced that the truth is not the exclusive heritage
of some, but best shared by all, at least by those that are looking
for it. The future of bioethics, its speculative vivacity and normative
efficaciousness, will depend for the large part on the duty of all
who will know how to dialogue in an interdisciplinary context, transforming
the inevitable pluralism of the many possible approaches to reality
into a common way to reach, with respect to the epistemological
structures of the various forms of knowledge, a better comprehension
of the meaning and value of human existence (cf. Pessina, 1997).
In this sense, quoting again Evangelium vitae: «The
emergence and even more widespread development of bioethics is promoting
more reflection and dialogue between believers and non-believers,
as well as among followers of different religions on ethical
problems, including fundamental issues pertaining to human life»
(n. 27).
Antonio G. Spagnolo
(translated by Ruan Harding)
See also: AUTONOMY;
DEATH; ETHICS OF SCIENTIFIC WORK; ETHICS OF DEVELOPMENT; LIFE; MEDICINE.
Documents
of the Catholic Church related to the subject
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