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Abortion in Islam: The Roles of Cultures and Virtues in Medical Ethics
Author(s) -
Kọ́lá Abímbọ́lá
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pacha. revista de estudios contemporáneos del sur global
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2697-3677
DOI - 10.46652/pacha.v2i5.61
Subject(s) - medical ethics , abortion , islam , environmental ethics , engineering ethics , nursing ethics , sociology , normative ethics , information ethics , political science , law , philosophy , pregnancy , theology , biology , genetics , engineering
This paper examines the roles of culture and virtues in medical ethics. It argues that principlism, which is the general approach to medical ethics in Western societies, is not comprehensive enough to fully understand how medical moral dilemmas are resolved in Western and non-Western societies. This is because principlism overlooks the importance of culture and virtues in the medical profession. To fully understand the nature of medico-ethical decision-making, we need to shift focus from principles to the virtues of the medical profession itself and the cultures of the societies within which medicine is practiced. I illustrate these claims with the example of abortion in Islamic ethics.

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