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DomovVědecká a ediční činnostVědecké akceAkcePřednáškyElodie Boublil: Vulnerability, Interdependency and the Care for the Living

čtvrtek | 30. 3. 2023 | 14:00

lecture | Academic Conference Center, Husova 4a, Prague

Elodie Boublil: Vulnerability, Interdependency and the Care for the Living

Organized by the Interdisciplinary Research Lab for Bioethics (IRLaB)

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Abstract
The contemporary emphasis on vulnerability and interdependence stresses the ethical necessity of a critical care concept to undermine the individualistic paradigm of autonomy and the modern understanding of well-being in terms of individual self-achievement and world mastery. This talk explores how the philosophical investigation of vulnerability has led to an existential, social, and ethical reflection that brought to light a fundamental interdependence among living beings. This presentation examines the nature of this interdependence and the type of relationships involved in these dynamics. I argue that caring for the living involves a holistic approach of the human being that considers not only the plurality of her interpersonal relations but also her relation to the environment and her relation to her "self" as a person with rights and responsibilities. Moreover, speaking of interdependence also implies examining the philosophical understanding of our modern concepts of nature and culture along the lines of a philosophical critique of the immunity paradigm and cultural biology anew. Drawing on phenomenological ethics, this talk shows that the concept of responsibility that stems from this renewed understanding of interdependence implies a responsive ethics that articulates the relational dignity of human beings as persons with the care for the living they demonstrate in the "forms of life" they inhabit with others. It bears consequences for contemporary issues in bioethics, such as caring for vulnerable people or determining our moral standing. speaking of interdependence also implies examining the philosophical understanding of our modern concepts of nature and culture along the lines of a philosophical critique of the immunity paradigm and cultural biology anew. Drawing on phenomenological ethics, this talk shows that the concept of responsibility that stems from this renewed understanding of interdependence implies a responsive ethics that articulates the relational dignity of human beings as persons with the care for the living they demonstrate in the "forms of life" they inhabit with others. It bears consequences for contemporary issues in bioethics, such as caring for vulnerable people or determining our moral standing. speaking of interdependence also implies examining the philosophical understanding of our modern concepts of nature and culture along the lines of a philosophical critique of the immunity paradigm and cultural biology anew. Drawing on phenomenological ethics, this talk shows that the concept of responsibility that stems from this renewed understanding of interdependence implies a responsive ethics that articulates the relational dignity of human beings as persons with the care for the living they demonstrate in the "forms of life" they inhabit with others. It bears consequences for contemporary issues in bioethics, such as caring for vulnerable people or determining our moral standing. Drawing on phenomenological ethics, this talk shows that the concept of responsibility that stems from this renewed understanding of interdependence implies a responsive ethics that articulates the relational dignity of human beings as persons with the care for the living they demonstrate in the "forms of life" they inhabit with others. It bears consequences for contemporary issues in bioethics, such as caring for vulnerable people or determining our moral standing. Drawing on phenomenological ethics, this talk shows that the concept of responsibility that stems from this renewed understanding of interdependence implies a responsive ethics that articulates the relational dignity of human beings as persons with the care for the living they demonstrate in the "forms of life" they inhabit with others. It bears consequences for contemporary issues in bioethics, such as caring for vulnerable people or determining our moral standing.