|
Future Perfect?: God, Medicine and Human Identity
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Future Perfect?: God, Medicine and Human Identity
|
Authors and Contributors |
Edited by Dr. Celia Deane-Drummond
|
|
Edited by Dr Peter Manley Scott
|
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:240 | Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156 |
|
Category/Genre | Christian theology |
ISBN/Barcode |
9780567234018
|
Classifications | Dewey:610.905 |
---|
Audience | Professional & Vocational | |
Edition |
NIPPOD
|
Illustrations |
1 illus
|
|
Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
|
Imprint |
T.& T.Clark Ltd
|
Publication Date |
2 February 2010 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
|
Description
A collection of essays focussing on the implications for an understanding of human identity in light of the current possibilities in medical science. >
Author Biography
Celia Deane-Drummond is Director of the Laudato Si' Research Institute and Senior Research Fellow in theology at Campion Hall, University of Oxfrod, UK. Peter Manley Scott is Senior Lecturer in Christian Social Thought and Director of the Lincoln Theological Institute, University of Manchester.
Reviews'Together with faith and love, hope has for centuries been identified as one of the chief theological virtues. The essays in Future Perfect? help us to ponder what Christian hope should mean in the face of technological and medical advances that transcend old limits, that give us the power to reshape how and how long we live, and that threaten (or promise) to transform even the meaning of human identity. In thinking theologically with the authors of the essays collected here, readers will be invited to reflect upon the sort of future for which we should hope.'Gilbert Meilaender, Duesenberg Professor in Christian Ethics, Valparaiso University, USA 'Breakthroughs in technology are about to transform human life. Will we still be human? Will we split into more than one species? Will we live forever or merely for hundreds of years? Shock and horror, some say, while others proclaim a new era of technological salvation. Here at last we find something better-sober reflection and honest talk by serious religious intellectuals. The technologies are many: nanotechnology, genetics, cognitive, and computers/robotics. The expected convergences are profound: silicon chips implanted in brains, nanobots destroying cancer or rebuilding organs cell by cell, or genetically enhanced stem cells making aging brains better than new. And the stakes are high: the future of justice, equality, and human nature itself. The time for deep reflection is now. As if for the first time, we need to ask the perennial questions all over again. Who are we? Where are we going?'Professor Ronald Cole-Turner, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, USA 'The editors of Future Perfect are renowned scholars of theology, ethics, and science. They have assembled an impressive array of colleagues who take to a new level the discussion of innovations that are as morally baffling as they are culturally perilous. The meanings of nature, health, suffering, technology, modernity, "perfection," and change are probed with uncommon nuance, with no fear of hard questions, and with creative appeals to Christian concepts such as creation, salvation, eschatology, and love. The international dimension of this work is essential to confront the global scope of the challenges before us. This is a book no one who thinks seriously about such challenges should miss.' Lisa Cahill, Professor of Theology, Boston College, Massachusetts, USA Future Perfect is a first rate collection of essays by a distinguished group of international experts in a wide range of bioethical issues. American readers will particularly benefit from the European perspective on issues relating to religion, science and ethics. The authors also provide excellent models for integrating religious and scientific issues.. This is an important addition to the bioethical literature. -- Thomas A. Shannon, Professor Emeritus of Religion and Social Ethics, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Mention in Church Times, 1st February 2008 * Church Times *
|