Applied ethics and research. Between Dualism and membership?

Authors

  • José M.ª García Gómez-Heras Universidad de Salamanca

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3989/arbor.2008.i730.171

Keywords:

Dualism, gnosticism, thecnological progress and moral progress, subject-object polarity, co-membership, anthropological reductionism, enviroment ethics, bioethics

Abstract


The Occidental culture suffers from a chronic illness: the dualism, along with the danger that this illness generates a schizophrenic culture. The anthropologic reductionism reduces the ethics to the exclusive human sphere. It is necessary to substitute the World as environment by the World as co-membership; this drives us to a new human image based on the co-membership principle with the related and subsequent anthropologic change in order to avoid that the worst danger for the man would be the man himself. Ethics belong a ruling part or moment of the science construction.

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Author Biography

José M.ª García Gómez-Heras, Universidad de Salamanca

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Published

2008-04-30

How to Cite

García Gómez-Heras, J. M. (2008). Applied ethics and research. Between Dualism and membership?. Arbor, 184(730), 187–196. https://doi.org/10.3989/arbor.2008.i730.171

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Articles