CRCS dan ICRS mengudang Anda untuk menghadiri Forum Rabu CRCS&ICRS. Forum Rabu kali ini akan membahas tentang “Apa yang dimaksud dengan Kematian yang Natural? Implikasi-implikasi Bioethikal dari Definisi Baru tentang Kematian”. Prof. Christine Gudorf akan hadir sebagai pembicara. Forum akan dilaksanakan pada:
Hari : Rabu, 12 November 2008
Waktu : 12.30 2.30
Tempat : Ruang 306, Gedung Sekolah Pascasarjana UGM. Jln. Teknika Utara Pogung YKT
Forum ini gratis. Dibawah ini merupakan abstrak dan biografi singkat pembicara.
Abstract:
This presentation will look at the use of technology in medicine (artificial nutrition and hydration, respirators, pacemakers, etc) and how they are complicating definitions of death. The problem I will deal with is recent Catholic documents from the Vatican that require artificial nutrition, hydration and respiration pretty much regardless of circumstances if they are at all available. Doctors cannot refuse, nor patients reject these if necessary to preserve life, regardless of whether the patient is dying or not. The status of developing nations in this teaching is a big part of my critique.
About the speaker:
My teaching, research and publication today are generally restricted to ethics and religion in the western world during the last millennium. I have focused on contemporary ethical and religious questions within and between Christianity, Judaism, Islam and varied tribal religions. In the 1990s, I have been particularly involved in religious and ethical issues around development programs in poor nations, primarily Latin America and Africa, but including some Asian nations ( China , Korea , India and Indonesia ). Those development issues include fertility rates, health, education, the status of women, as well as trade, technology transfer and indebtedness. These interests have developed directly out of my education. I received a BS/BA from Indiana University with majors in Classics, Religion, and Secondary Education in Social Studies. My MA, MPhil and PhD were in Religious Social Ethics from Columbia University in a joint program with Union Theological Seminary. My dissertation was published by University Press of America in 1980 as Catholic Social Teaching on Liberation Themes. Since then I have published six books and nearly a hundred articles and chapters on a wide variety of topics in religion and ethics, including medical ethics, feminism, theological dissent and Christian spirituality. I have been a visiting prof at US and international universities, am a co-editor of the journal of the Society of Christian Ethics, on the editorial boards of the Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Second Opinion, and The Journal of Religious Ethics, and review books and manuscripts for many others. In December 1999 I completed the coursework for a second doctorate, this one in comparative sociology at FIU. I have begun work on a new casebook in environmental ethics; the first of a series of articles on postmodernism in ethics has been accepted in the JAAR; others have been submitted to other journals. (http://religion. fiu.edu/People/ Faculty/gudorf. htm)