Abstract:
This
article provides an introduction to some contemporary issues in medical ethics
and the literature which addresses them from a Buddhist perspective. The first
part of the article discusses Buddhism and medicine and outlines some of the
main issues in contemporary medical ethics. In the rest of the paper three
subjects are considered: i) moral personhood, ī) abortion, and īi) death, dying
and euthanasia. The bibliographic references appended to the article will be
updated periodically (contributions are welcome), and the latest version of the
bibliography will be available from the journal's "Resources"
directory.
BUDDHISM AND
MEDICINE
It has
not gone unnoticed that the Buddhist aim of eliminating suffering coincides
with the objectives of medicine (Duncan et al, 1981; Soni, 1976). The Buddhist
emphasis on compassion finds natural expression in the care of the sick, and
according to the Vinaya the Buddha himself stated "Whoever, O
monks, would nurse me, he should nurse the sick" (Zysk, 1991:41). Buddhist
clergy and laity have been involved with the care of the sick for over two
thousand years. The Indian Buddhist emperor Asoka states in his second Rock
Edict that provision has been made everywhere in his kingdom for medical
treatment for both men and animals, and that medicinal herbs suitable for both
have been imported and planted.
Birnbaum
(1979) and Demieville (1985) provide good general introductions to Buddhism and
medicine. Buddhism appears to have played an important role in the evolution of
traditional Indian medicine (Zysk, 1991), and there are many parallels between
Buddhist medicine, as recorded in the Pali canon, and Aayurveda (Mitra,
1985). There are short monographs by Haldar on the scientific (1977) and public
heath aspects (1992) of medicine in the Pali sources. It is likely that as
Buddhism spread through Asia it would have
interacted with indigenous medical traditions promoting the cross-fertilization
of ideas. Redmond
(1992) discusses the relationship of Buddhism to medicine from Theravāda and
Mahāyāna perspectives and compares Buddhist and Daoist concepts of disease.
Discussions of Tibetan medicine may be found in Clifford (1984), Dhonden
(1986), and Rechung (1976), while Ohnuki-Tierney (1984) discusses illness and
culture in contemporary Japan.
Buddhism's
holistic understanding of human nature encourages a psychosomatic approach to
the pathology of disease (Soni, 1976), something to which Western medicine is
now increasingly attuned. It may also be suggested that the Buddhist philosophy
of origination in dependence is both a fruitful diagnostic model and a
philosophy which encourages a preventive approach to healthcare. However,
disquiet has been voiced recently about how natural" certain forms of
traditional Buddhist medicine are - notably the Tibetan "black pill"
- some recipes for which specify rhinoceros horn and bear-bile among the
ingredients (Leland, 1995).
MEDICAL ETHICS
Despite
Buddhism's long association with the healing arts, little attention has been
paid to the ethical issues which arise from the practice of medicine. A small
number of monographs provide introductions to the issues and dilemmas which
arise in medical practice. These are Ratanakul (1986), Nakasone (1990) and
Keown (1995), and these volumes should be consulted in conjunction with the
sources listed under the specific subject-headings below. Also relevant is the
unpublished Masters thesis by Shoyu Taniguchi (1987a). For general discussions
in the periodical literature see Taniguchi (1987b), Mettanando (1991), and
Ratanakul (1988; 1990). A useful discussion of Buddhism in terms of the
"four principles" approach to medical ethics developed by Beauchamp
and Childress (1989) is provided by Robert Florida (1994).
The
Encyclopedia of Bioethics contains articles on medical ethics in India (Jaqqi, 1987), Asia (Unschuld, 1987), and Japan in the
nineteenth century (Kitagawa, 1987). Also on Japan see Umezawa (1988). On
medical ethics in imperial China
see Unschuld (1979) and on Thailand Violette Lindbeck (1984) and Ratanakul
(1988; 1990).
The
principal issues to be addressed in contemporary medical ethics may be
summarised as moral personhood (the question of who is and who is not entitled
to moral respect), abortion, embryo experimentation, genetic engineering,
consent to treatment, resource allocation, defining death, organ
transplantation, living wills, the persistent vegetative state, and euthanasia.
Little systematic attention has yet been directed to these subjects by Buddhist
practitioners or scholars, and some subjects have not been discussed at all
from a Buddhist perspective. The arrangement of the topics below is neither
comprehensive nor final. It is inevitable there will be overlap between the
sections, and items which appear under one category may contain discussion of
issues or principles which have broader relevance.
At
this time, however, it seems useful to identify three groups of issues and
related literature. These concern: moral personhood, issues surrounding life at
its beginning, and issues surrounding life at its end. There is insufficient
literature on resource-allocation, socio-economic issues, or other questions
about general medical practice to justify a category on those topics in this
review. There are signs, however, that a Buddhist perspective on certain
aspects of medical treatment is beginning to appear, for example Epstein (1993)
and Kabat-Zinn's (1990, 1994) integration of Buddhist meditation into medical practice,
and the growing literature on Buddhism and social justice, such as Jones (1989)
and Sizemore and Swearer (1993).
MORAL PERSONHOOD
Personhood
is both a central problem for Buddhist ethics and Western medical ethics, and
consequently a very promising area for a dialogue between the two. The problem
for Buddhist ethics has always been why should people act ethically if there is
no act, no actor and no consequences of action (Collins, 1982). If there is no
self or other, how can there be karmic consequences, responsibility, loyalty,
or even compassion? Theravādin scholars continue to be divided over whether
Buddhism suggests different ethics for those who persist in the illusion of
self (kammic ethics) and for those who would transcend the illusion of self
(nibbanic ethics). The paradoxical unity of compassionate ethics and nihilistic
insight into selflessness has been the central koan of Mahāyāna Buddhism.
Tantra and Zen suggest that the person who sees that there is no "I"
is beyond good and evil.
For
bioethics, struggles over abortion, animal rights and brain death have brought
personhood to the forefront (Nelkin, 1983). Opponents of abortion and
euthanasia, and advocates for the disabled and animals, on the other hand,
assert that mere humanness or merely being alive should bestow a "right to
life." But most bioethicists believe that human beings and animals take on
ethical significance to the extent that they are "persons." Some,
such as Tooley (1984), would set a standard which would exclude almost all
animals, newborns, and the severely retarded or demented. When they specify
which elements of sentience and neurological integrity create the illusion of
personhood, Western bioethicists begin to sound remarkably Buddhistic:
"the awareness of the difference between self and other; the ability to be
conscious of oneself over time; the ability to engage in purposive
actions" (see, for instance, Fletcher, 1979).
At
the same time, Western bioethicists have become increasingly troubled by
questions about the autonomy, continuity and authenticity of the self. Do
anti-depressants create an inauthentic self, or is the self more authentic when
its cheerful? Is one respecting a patient's autonomy by respecting the
treatment preferences they expressed when healthy, or those they express in the
throes of illness? Is it ever possible for a patient to give truly free and
informed consent to treatment?
The
most radical challenge to Western ethics of self- determination came in 1984
with the publication of British philosopher Derek Parfit's Reasons and
Persons. In this meticulously argued tome, Parfit rejects the existence of
continuous selves and concludes that an individual is as discontinuous from
itself at some later time as it is from other individuals. Consequently,
working for the future welfare of all beings is the same as working for one's
own future welfare, since there will be no "I" to benefit in the
future.
Bioethicists
are only now incorporating Parfit's argument. For instance, researchers find
that is impossible to accurately anticipate one's state of mind when one is
sick or dying, much less when one is unconscious, undercutting the assumption
of continuous personhood undergirding "living wills."
From
a Buddhist/Parfitian perspective, the search for "real" preferences,
central to the identity of the person, is a pointless one. With this
acknowledgement, it is less troubling to place our trust in our family and
friends to make decisions for our future selves (Kuczewski, 1994). More to the
point, a Buddhist/Parfitian would encourage citizens to look beyond their
personal preferences in dying, which may be to "die with dignity" but
may also be to use as many resources as possible to stave off death, and
instead participate in creating a health care system that served the needs of
everyone in society.
Another
area of potential dialogue is in the efforts to go beyond Cartesian (and Hindu
etc.) mind-body dualism in defining life and death. Over the last twenty years
the West has slowly accepted that a "person" is dead if their brain
is destroyed, even if the body continues to function. Yet it still troubles
many Westerners and Buddhists to declare the permanently unconscious
"dead," believing that this is an example of inappropriate mind-body
dualism. Other Westerners and Buddhists believe that only a
"neocortical" definition of death recognizes the centrality of
consciousness and personhood in ethics (Gervais, 1986). More challenging, some
Western ethicists have begun to discuss the status of personhood as future
technologies make possible the continuity of personality from one body to
another (More, 1994). When medical technology offers reincarnation, Buddhist
bioethics will certainly flourish.
ABORTION
Buddhism,
like all religious and secular philosophies, focuses on two central questions
concerning abortion: (a) when does the embryo or fetus acquire the property
which makes termination of pregnancy "killing"?; and (b) is
termination of a pregnancy, before or after this point, ever justifiable?
While
there was a minority tradition in classical Hindu embryology that held that
incarnation does not occur till as late as the seventh month (Lipner, 1989),
most Buddhist commentators have adopted classical Hindu teachings that the
transmigration of consciousness occurs at conception, and therefore that all
abortion incurs the karmic burden of killing. Before modern embryology,
however, in both Buddhist countries and the West, ideas about conception were
scientifically inaccurate, and often associated the beginning of life with
events in the third or fourth month of pregnancy (for a discussion of
traditional Tibetan embryology, see Dhonden, 1980 and Lecso,1987).
Another
problem in early Buddhists' embryology is their assumption that the
transmigration of consciousness is sudden rather than gradual. Based on the
findings of modern neuro-embryology Buddhists today might maintain that the
fetus does not fully embody all five skandhas and the illusion of
personhood until after birth; this is the argument developed by most Western
ethicists to defend abortion (Tooley, 1984; Flower, 1985; Bennett, 1989). If
the fetus is not yet a fully embodied person, then the karmic consequences of
abortion would be even less than the killing of animals, which Buddhism teaches
do have moral status. This neurological interpretation of the skandhas
may be more consistent with Western Buddhism, which often sees the doctrine of
rebirth as peripheral or interprets rebirth metaphorically rather than
literally (Batchelor, 1992; King, 1994).
The
second question is whether abortion always generates bad karma, or in Western
terms, is it ever "justified." This relates to the debate about
whether Buddhist ethics are absolutist, utilitarian or "virtuist,"
i.e. seeing the good in the development of personal qualities. The absolutist
would hold that bad karma is incurred from any act of murder, whatever the
justifications. The utilitarian would argue that murder can be a compassionate
act with positive karmic consequences, taking into account factors such as the
health of the fetus or mother, the population crisis, and the readiness of the
parents to raise a child.
A
virtue-oriented Buddhist would argue that the attitude and motivations of the
pregnant woman and her collaborators would determine the ethics of an abortion.
Along this line, Tworkov (1992) argues that the karmic skilfulness of an
abortion is related to whether the person became pregnant and made her decision
to abort without serious mindfulness. From this perspective, aborting a fetus conceived
without an effort at contraception would be more karmically significant than an
abortion necessitated in spite of contraception.
The
much discussed Japanese tolerance for, and ritualization of, abortion appears
to combine both utilitarian and virtue approaches. The Japanese believe that
abortion is a "sorrowful necessity," and Buddhist temples sell
rituals and statues intended to represent parents' apologies to the aborted,
and wishes for a more propitious rebirth. The Japanese have reached these
accommodations consensually, with little debate, and without discussion of the
rights of women or the unborn (LaFleur, 1990, 1992).
The
Theravādin commentator Buddhaghosa appears to have combined all three views. He
held that killing produces karma jointly through the mental effort and
intensity of the desire to kill, and the virtue of the victim (Florida, 1991).
Since killing big animals required more effort, and was therefore worse than
killing small animals, the karma of feticide would be less than murder of
adults, and less in earlier stages of pregnancy. On the other hand, for
Buddhaghosa, the karma of feticide would be greater than that of killing
villains in self-defence.
Buddhists
have thus far given little thought to the third important question, the
connection between morality and law, specifically how, and on what grounds, the
state should regulate abortion. Some Buddhists have adopted the stance of many
moderates in the West: abortion is murder of a person, but women should have
that choice (for instance, Imamura, 1984 and Lecso, 1987). Since most Buddhists
have no problem with laws to discourage and punish murder in general, implicit
in this position is that murder is either justifiable when it conflicts with
bodily autonomy or, since few Buddhists would imprison butchers, that fetuses
are closer in status to animals. Clearly there is much room for clarification
of the relationship between religious ethics and law in pluralistic societies.
Some
scholars (such as Ling, 1969, and LaFleur, 1992) have looked beyond the
strictly ethical concerns with abortion to examine the cultural aspects of the
question. From this perspective it is sometimes pointed out that Buddhism is
not "pro-natalist," i.e. does not hold that reproduction is a religious
duty - quite the reverse in fact - and does not advocate "family
values," at least in the sense that Confucianism did. Buddhist skepticism
about family and reproduction was a central cause of Confucian and Shinto
persecution. The Sinhalese embrace of contraception and abortion was so
enthusiastic in the 1960s, compared to Sri Lanka's Muslims, Catholics and
Hindus, that racialist monks began to argue that Buddhists had an obligation to
"race-religion-nation" to reproduce.
DEATH, DYING AND
EUTHANASIA
The
themes of impermanence, decay and death are omnipresent in Buddhist literature.
In many Asian cultures Buddhism is identified as the authority par excellence
on matters pertaining to death, and is closely linked to the rites and
ceremonies associated with the transition from this life to the next. Buddhist
literature emphasises the importance of meeting death mindfully since the last
moment of one life can be particularly influential in determining the quality
of the next rebirth.
General
reflections on death will be found in Philip Kapleau's 1972 anthology The
Wheel of Death and his 1989 The Wheel of Life and Death. Stephen
Levine is the author of several books dealing with the subject of death from a
Zen perspective while a contemporary Tibetan perspective is provided by Sogyal
Rinpoche's popular Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, Glenn H. Mullin
(1986) and John Powers (1995, Ch.10). James Whitehill (1974) discussed what can
be learned from the death of the Buddhist masters, and the development of a
corpus of "Great Death" stories of various Buddhist masters is
examined by LaFleur (1974). Other writings on death in Buddhism include Smart
(1968), Amore (1974), and Bowker (1991).
In
a 1993 monograph on the subject of death in Buddhism, Becker asserts that the
Buddhist tradition, especially in Japan, is very tolerant of suicide and
euthanasia. Evidence of this is the Buddha's tolerance of suicide by monks
(Wiltshire, 1983) and Japanese stories praising suicide by monks, samurai and
laypeople. Becker suggests that Buddhism values self-determination and praises
those who decide when and how they will die when they do so in order to have a
dignified conscious death. Becker also concludes that the key point is not
whether there is still warmth or reflexes (as suggested by some readings of the
Visuddhimagga) but whether the patient's skandhas have
permanently left, i.e. the patient is permanently unconscious. In other words,
Buddhism would endorse a brain death definition of death. On the understanding
of death in Japanese religion see also Picken (1977).
A
number of issues in medical ethics turn upon the problem of defining death, but
few writers have addressed the question of a Buddhist definition of death
directly. Only van Loon (1978), Keown (1995), and Mettanando (1991) have argued
for a specific definition: van Loon equates death with neocortical death
whereas Keown and Mettanando support the "whole brain" criterion.
There
has been considerable resistance to the adoption of the brain death standard in
Japan, both from the public and within the medical profession, due in no small
measure to its association with organ transplantation. The brain death
criterion allows organs to be harvested with the minimum delay, thereby
enhancing the prospects for a successful transplant. Japanese tradition,
however, requires the performance of rituals over a lengthy period before an
individual is regarded as having passed on, and is also reluctant to
countenance plundering the bodily organs of future ancestors. Some commentators
suggest that public acceptance of brain death is growing as professional groups
and universities develop criteria, and as pressure from potential beneficiaries
grows. Also, countries such as the Philippines have raised objections to
Japanese patients going abroad for transplants rather than building an organ
retrieval system of their own. The best analysis available (in English) of the
Japanese situation is Hardacre (1994), but relevant material may also be found
in Lock and Honde (1990), Feldman (1988), Becker (1990), and Nudeshima (1991).
For discussions of the issue outside of Japan see Ratanakul (1988, 1990),
Sugunasiri (1990), and Nakasone (1994).
A
more positive attitude towards transplantation is revealed in Tsomo (1993). The
author surveyed teachers from many different traditions about their attitudes
to donation. All were very positive, and emphasized that the corpse is merely
an empty vessel, and that to give of oneself is a great thing, and an act of
compassion.
EUTHANASIA
There
are no monographs devoted specifically to euthanasia in Buddhism. There are a
few periodical articles and the subject is dealt within one or two books.
Relevant issues are the distinction between various forms of euthanasia (e.g.
"active" and "passive") and the use of narcotics in
palliative care which may cloud the mind and interfere with the process of
dying (Keown, 1995; Kapleau, 1989; Lecso, 1986; Ratanakul, 1988, 1990).
Kapleau's
volume The Wheel of Life and Death (1989) contains a short discussion of
euthanasia in conjunction with suicide and it is suggested that Buddhism would
reject the practice of either. Ratanakul concurs, reporting "a growing
consensus among the Thai public that euthanasia (passive or active) is morally
unjustifiable" (1990:27). Keown and Keown (1995) explore Buddhist and
Christian attitudes to euthanasia and suggest both oppose it for similar
reasons. Nakasone, however, is of the opinion that "Evidence indicates
that Buddhists would favor the 'right-to-die' position" (1990:76). Jennifer
Green's short article "Death with Dignity: Buddhism" (1989:40-41)
discusses only the practicalities of funeral arrangements and does not mention
euthanasia. Neuberger (1987) is likewise concerned with practical as opposed to
moral issues.
Euthanasia
has been a special feature in two Buddhist magazines, Raft, and Tricycle.
London-based Raft, the Journal of the Buddhist Hospice Trust, devoted
its No. 2 Winter 1989/90 issue to Euthanasia. Sixteen pages in length it
contains short pieces by authors such as Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, Ajahn Sumedho,
Dame Cicely Saunders and David Stott, exploring the cases for, against, and in
terms of a middle way. A similar range of opinions will be found in the Winter
1992 edition of Tricycle, which contains short articles by Patricia Anderson,
Jeffrey Hopkins, Philip Kapleau, Chogyam Trungpa, and an interview with author
Stephen Levine.
Note:
not all the items in the bibliography which follows are mentioned in the
discussion above.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BUDDHISM AND
MEDICINE
Birnbaum, Raoul
1979. The
Healing Buddha. Boulder,Co: Shambhala.
Clifford, Terry
1984. Tibetan
Buddhist Medicine: the Diamond Healing. York Beach, Maine: Samuel Weiser.
Demieville, P.
1985. Buddhism
and Healing: Demieville's article 'Byoo' from Hooboogirin,
translated by Mark Tatz. Lanhan, Md:University Press of America.
Dhonden, Dr. Yeshe
1986. Health
Through Balance: An Introduction to Tibetan Medicine. Ithaca: Snow Lion.
Duncan, A. S., G. R. Dunstan,
and R. B. Welbourn.
1981.
"Buddhism", Dictionary of Medical Ethics. London: Darton,
Longman and Todd.
Fenner, Edward Todd.
1982. Rasayana
Siddhi: Medicine and Alchemy in the Buddhist Tantras. Ann Arbor, Mich:
University Microfilms International.
Haldar, J. R.
1977. Medical
Science in Pali Literature. Indian Museum Monographs, 10. Calcutta: Indian
Museum.
---.
1992. Development
of Public Health in Buddhism. Varanasi: Indological Book House.
Jaqqi, Q. P.
1987.
"India" (Medical Ethics of). In Encyclopedia of Bioethics, ed.
W. Reich, London: Macmillan, 906-11.
Majupu, Trilok Chandra.
1989. Religious
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Massin, Christopher.
1982. La
medicine Tibetaine. Paris: Editions de la Maisnie.
Meulendbeld, G. Jan (ed.).
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Mitra, J.
1985. A
Critical Appraisal of Ayurvedic Materials in Buddhist Literature (with special
reference to Tripitaka). Varanasi: The Jyotirlok Prakashan.
Ohnuki-Tierney, Emiko
1984. Illness
and Culture in Contemporary Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Rechung Rinpoche, Ven.
1976. Tibetan
Medicine: Illustrated in Original Texts. Berkeley: University of California
Press.
Redmond, Geoffrey P.
1992.
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Future, ed. Ananda W.P. Guruge, Paris: The Permanent Delegation of Sri
Lanka to Unesco, 143-159.
Soni, R. L.
1976.
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and Medicine, ed. D. W. Millard, Vol.3. London: SCM Press, 135-51.
Unschuld, P.U.
1979. Medical
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University of California Press.
---.
1987.
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of Bioethics, ed. WṚeich,
London: Macmillan, 901-6.
Umezawa, K.
1988.
"Medical Ethics in Japan," Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy
42:169-172.
Zysk, K. G.
1991. Asceticism
and Healing in Ancient India: Medicine in the Buddhist Monastery. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
BUDDHISM AND
MEDICAL ETHICS
Beauchamp, Tom L. and James F.
Childress
1989. Principles
of Biomedical Ethics, Third ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Epstein, Mark.
1993.
"Awakening with Prozac: Pharmaceuticals and Practice." Tricycle
Fall:30-34.
Florida, R. E.
1994.
"Buddhism and the Four Principles". In Principles of Health Care
Ethics, ed. R. Gillon and A. Lloyd, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons,
105-16.
Jones, Ken.
1989. The
Social Face of Buddhism: An Approach to Political Activism. Boston: Wisdom
Publications.
Kabat-Zinn, Jon.
1990. Full
Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain
and Illness. New York: Dell.
---.
1994. Wherever
You Go, There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation in Everyday Life. Westport,
Conn.: Hyperion.
Keown, Damien.
1995. Buddhism
& Bioethics. London and New York: Macmillan/St. Martins Press.
Kitagawa, J.
1987.
"Medical Ethics of Japan through the Nineteenth Century," in Encyclopedia
of Bioethics, ed. WṚeich,
London: Macmillan, 922-924.
Leland, Charmiere.
1995.
"Bear Bile and Musk," International Journal of Alternative and
Complementary Medicine 13:16-17.
Lindbeck, Violette.
1984.
"Thailand: Buddhism meets the Western Model," The Hastings Center
Report 14:24-26.
Mettanando, Bhikkhu.
1991.
"Buddhist Ethics in the Practice of Medicine" in Buddhist Ethics
and Modern Society: An International Symposium, ed.C.Wei-hsun Fu and S. A.
Wawrytko, New York, etc: Greenwood Press, 195-213.
Nakasone, R. Y.
1990. Ethics
of Enlightenment. Fremont, Ca: Dharma Cloud Publishers.
---.
1994.
"Buddhism". Encyclopedia of Bioethics. London: Macmillan.
Ratanakul, P.
1986. Bioethics,
an introduction to the ethics of medicine and life sciences. Bangkok:
Mahidol University.
---.
1988.
"Bioethics in Thailand: The Struggle for Buddhist Solutions," Journal
of Medicine and Philosophy 13:301-12.
---.
1990.
"Thailand: refining cultural values." The Hastings Center Report
20:25-27.
Sizemore, Russell and Donald
Swearer, eds.
1990. Ethics,
Wealth and Salvation: A Study of Buddhist Social Ethics. Columbia SC:
University of South Carolina Press.
Taniguchi, S.
1987a.
"A Study of Biomedical Ethics from a Buddhist Perspective". MA
Thesis, Berkeley: Graduate Theological Union and the Institute of Buddhist
Studies.
---.
1987b.
"Biomedical Ethics from a Buddhist Perspective". Pacific World
New Series 3 Fall:75-83.
Umezawa, K.
1988.
"Medical Ethics in Japan," Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy
42:169-172.
BUDDHIST APPROACHES
TO PERSONHOOD
Chaube, D. B.
1991. Mind-Body
Relation in Indian Philosophy. Varanasi: Tara Book Agency.
Collins, Steven.
1982. Selfless
Persons: Imagery and Thought in Theravada Buddhism. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Harvey, P.
1987a.
"The Buddhist Perspective on Respect for Persons". Buddhist
Studies Review 4:31-46.
---.
1987b.
"A Note and Response to 'The Buddhist Perspective on Respect for
Persons'". Buddhist Studies Review 4:97-103.
Klein, A.
1987.
"Finding a Self: Buddhist and Feminist Perspectives" in Shaping
New Vision: Gender and Values in American Culture, ed. C. Atkinson, C.
Buchana, and M. Miles, Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press.
Koyeli, G. D.
1987.
"Individual Autonomy in Traditional Indian Thought," Journal of
Indian Philosophy 15:99-107.
MEDICAL ETHICISTS
ON PERSONHOOD
Fletcher, Joseph.
1979. Humanhood:
Essays in Biomedical Ethics. Buffalo: Prometheus Books.
Gervais, Karen.
1986. Redefining
Death. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Lizza, John P.
1993.
"Persons and death: what's metaphysically wrong with our current statutory
definition of death?" Journal of Medicine & Philosophy
18:351-74.
More, Max.
1993.
"The Diachronic Self: Identity, Continuity, Transformation"
(Unpublished dissertation thesis, available at
gopher://gopher.etext.org:70/00/Politics/ Extropy.Institute/more.03049*
Nelkin, Dorothy.
1983.
"The Politics of Personhood," Milbank Quarterly 61(1):101-12.
Tooley, Michael.
1984. Abortion
and Infanticide. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
PARFIT'S
DECONSTRUCTION OF PERSONHOOD
Gruzalski, B.
1986a.
"Parfit's impact on utilitarianism," Ethics 96:760-83.
---.
1986b.
Symposium on Reasons and Persons. Ethics 96:832-72.
Kuczewski, Mark G.
1994.
"Whose Will Is It Anyway? A Discussion of Advance Directives, Personal
Identity and Consensus in Medical Ethics," Bioethics, 8(1):27-48.
Parfit, Derek.
1984. Reasons
and Persons. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
BUDDHISM AND
ABORTION
Florida, R.
1991.
"Buddhist Approaches to Abortion," Asian Philosophy 1:39-50.
Imamura, Ryo.
1984.
"The Shin Buddhist Stance on Abortion." Buddhist Peace Fellowship
Newsletter 6:6-7.
Jones, K.
1989. The
Social Face of Buddhism. London: Wisdom Publications.
Lecso, P. A.
1987. "A
Buddhist View of Abortion," Journal of Religion and Health
26:214-18.
Stott, D.
1985. A
Circle of Protection for the Unborn. Bristol: Ganesha Press.
Tworkov, H.
1992.
"Anti-abortion/pro-choice: taking both sides," Tricycle
Spring:60-69.
KEY WESTERN
WRITINGS ON ABORTION
Bennett, Michael.
1989.
"Personhood from a Neuroscientific Perspective" in Abortion Rights
and Fetal Personhood, eds. Edd Doer and James Prescott. Long Beach,
California: Centerline Press, 83-86.
Flower, Michael J.
1985.
"Neuromaturation of the human fetus," Journal of Medicine and
Philosophy 10:237-251.
Luker, K.
1984. Abortion
and the Politics of Motherhood. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Tooley, Michael.
1984. Abortion
and Infanticide. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
WRITINGS ON
EMBRYOLOGY, REBIRTH AND KARMA
"Abortion"
in Encyclopaedia of Buddhism.
Batchelor, Stephen.
1992.
"Rebirth: A Case for Buddhist Agnosticism," Tricycle
Fall:16-23.
Dhonden, Y.
1980.
"Embryology in Tibetan Medicine" in Tibetan Medicine.
Dharamsala: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives.
King, Winston.
1994. "A
Buddhist Ethics Without Karmic Rebirth?" Journal of Buddhist Ethics
1:33-44.
Lipner, J. J.
1989.
"The Classical Hindu View on Abortion and the Moral Status of the
Unborn." In Hindu Ethics, ed. H. G. Coward, J. J. Lipner, and K. K.
Young, Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 41-69.
McDermott, James Paul
1984. Development
in the Early Buddhist Concept of Kamma/Karma. New Delhi: Munshiram
Manoharlal.
O'Flaherty, W. D., ed.
1980. Karma
and Rebirth in Classical Indian Traditions. Berkeley: University of
California Press.
Saksena, B.
1935.
"Pali Bhūnahan," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African
Studies 8:713-14.
JAPAN AND ABORTION
Brooks, Anne Page.
1981. "Mizuko
Kuyoo and Japanese Buddhism," Japanese Journal of Religious Studies
8:119-47.
Eiki, H., and T. Dosho.
1987.
"Indebtedness and comfort: the undercurrents of mizuko kuyoo in
contemporary Japan," Japanese Journal of Religious Studies
14:305-20.
LaFleur, W. A.
1990.
"Contestation and Confrontation: The Morality of Abortion in Japan," Philosophy
East and West 40:529-42.
---.
1992. Liquid
Life: Abortion and Buddhism in Japan. Princeton: Princeton University
Press.
---.
1995a.
"The Cult of Jizo: Abortion Practices in Japan and What They Can Teach the
West," Tricycle Summer:41-44.
---.
1995b.
"Silences and Censures: Abortion, History, and Buddhism in Japan. A
Rejoinder to George Tanabe," Japanese Journal of Religious Studies
22/1-2:185-196.
Miura, D.
1983. The
Forgotten Child. Henley-on-Thames, England: Aidan Ellis.
Rand, Yvonne, Sensei.
1994.
"The Buddha's Way and Abortion - Loss, Grief and Resolution." Mind
Moon Circle Autumn:5-8 (also available electronically, filename jizo.zip,
original site coombs.anu.edu.au).
Smith, B.
1988.
"Buddhism and Abortion in Contemporary Japan: Mizuko Kuyoo and the
Confrontation with Death," Japanese Journal of Religious Studies
15:3-24.
Werblowsky, Z.
1984 "Mizuko
Kuyoo; Notulae on the most important 'New Religion' of Japan," Japanese
Journal of Religious Studies 18:295-354.
Young, R. F.
1989.
"Abortion, Grief and Consolation: Prolegomenon to a Christian Response to Mizuko
Kuyoo," Japanese Christian Quarterly (Tokyo) 55:31-39.
BUDDHISM ON
SEXUALITY AND CONTRACEPTION
Ling, T.
1969.
"Buddhist Factors in Population Growth and Control," Population
Studies 23:53-60.
---.
1980.
"Buddhist Values and Development Problems: A Case Study of Sri
Lanka," World Development 8:577-586.
GENETICS AND
REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGIES
Kimura, R.
1990.
"Religious aspects of human genetic information" in Science, Law
and Ethics, Ciba Foundation Symposium. Chichester: Wiley.
Schenker, J. G.
1992.
"Religious views regarding treatment of infertility by assisted
reproductive technologies," Journal of Assisted Reproduction &
Genetics 9:3-8.
DEATH, DYING AND
EUTHANASIA
Amore, R. C.
1974.
"The Heterodox Philosophical Systems" in Death and Eastern Thought,
ed. Frederick H. Holck. Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon, 114-163.
Becker, C. B.
1990.
"Buddhist views of suicide and euthanasia," Philosophy East and
West 40:543-56.
---.
1993 Breaking
the circle: death and the afterlife in Buddhism. Carbondale, Illinois:
Southern Illinois University Press.
Bilimoria, P.
1992.
"The Jaina Ethic of Voluntary Death," Bioethics 6:330-55.
Bowker, John.
1991. The
Meaning of Death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Feldman, E.
1988.
"Defining Death: Organ Transplants, Tradition and Technology in
Japan," Social Science and Medicine 27: 339-43.
Florida, Robert
1993.
"Buddhist Approaches to Euthanasia," Studies in Religion/Sciences
Religieuses 22(1):35-47.
Green, J.
1989.
"Death with dignity: Buddhism," Nursing Times 85: 40-41.
Hardacre, Helen.
1994.
"Response of Buddhism and Shinto to the Issue of Brain Death and Organ
Transplant," Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 3:585-601.
Kapleau, P.
1989. The
Wheel of Life and Death. New York: Doubleday.
---.
1972. The
Wheel of Death. London: George, Allen and Unwin.
Keown, D. and Keown, J.
"Killing,
Karma and Caring: Euthanasia in Buddhism and Christianity," Journal of
Medical Ethics (forthcoming, October 1995).
LaFleur, W. R.
1974.
"Japan" in Death and Eastern Thought, ed. Frederick H. Holck.
Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press, 226-256.
Lamotte, E.
1987.
"Religious Suicide in Early Buddhism," Buddhist Studies Review
4:105-26.
Lecso, P.A.
1986.
"Euthanasia: A Buddhist Perspective," Journal of Religion and
Health 25:51-57.
Levine, S.
1982. Who
Dies? An Investigation of Conscious Living and Conscious Dying. New York:
Doubleday.
Lock, M. and C. Honde
1990
"Reaching Consensus about Death: Heart Transplants and Cultural Identity
in Japan," in Social Science Perspectives on Medical Ethics, ed. G.
Weisz, New York: Kluwer, 99-119.
Miura, D.
1983. The
Forgotten Child. Henley-on-Thames, England: Aidan Ellis.
Mullin, Glenn H.
1986. Death
and Dying in Tibetan Tradition. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Nakasone, R. Y.
1994.
"Buddhism," in Encyclopedia of Bioethics, London: Macmillan,
312-318.
Neuberger, J.
1987. Caring
for Dying People of Different Faiths. The Lisa Sainsbury Foundation Series,
ed. V. Darling and P. Clench. London: Austen Cornish Publishers.
Nudeshima, J.
1991.
"Obstacles to brain death and organ transplantation in Japan," Lancet
338(8774):1063-64.
Picken, S.
1977
"The Understanding of Death in Japanese Religion," Japanese
Religion (July) 9,4,48.
Powers, John
1995. Introduction
to Tibetan Buddhism. Ithaca: Snow Lion.
Raft.
1989.
"Euthanasia." Raft, the Journal of the Buddhist Hospice Trust
2 Winter:1-16.
Ratanakul, P.
1986. Bioethics,
an introduction to the ethics of medicine and life sciences. Bangkok:
Mahidol University.
Sharma, A.
1987.
"Emile Durkheim on Suicide in Buddhism," Buddhist Studies Review
4:119-26.
Smart, N.
1968.
"Attitudes towards death in eastern religions," in Man's concern
with death, ed. Arnold et al Toynbee, Kent: Hodder and Stoughton, 95-115.
Sogyal Rinpoche
1992. The
Tibetan Book of Living and Dying. San Francisco and London: Harper/Rider.
Sugunasiri, S. H.
1990.
"The Buddhist view concerning the dead body," Transplantation
Proceedings 22:947-49.
Thakur, U.
1963. The
History of Suicide in India. New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal.
Tsomo, K. L.
1993.
"Opportunity or Obstacle: Buddhist views of organ donation," Tricycle
Summer:30-35.
Van Loon, L. H.
1978.
"A Buddhist Viewpoint." In Euthanasia. Human Sciences Research
Council,
Publication No.65, ed. Oosthuizen.G.C., H. AṢhapiro, and S. A.
Strauss,
Cape Town: Oxford University Press, 56-79.
---.
1983.
"Some Buddhist Reflections on Suicide," Religion in Southern
Africa 4:3-12.
Whitehill, James
1974
"Mystological Death: Some Buddhist Lessons on Dying and Selfhood," The
Drew Gateway:82-99.
Wiltshire, M. G.
1983.
"The 'Suicide' Problem in the Pali Canon," Journal of the
International Association of Buddhist Studies 6:124-40.
KEY WESTERN
WRITINGS ON EUTHANASIA
Grisez, Germain and Joseph M.
Boyle
1979. Life
and Death with Liberty and Justice. Notre Dame and London: University of
Notre Dame Press.
Gormally, Luke, ed.
1994. Euthanasia,
Clinical Practice and the Law. London:
The Linacre Centre for Health Care Ethics.
Horan, Dennis J. and David Mall,
eds.
1980. Death,
Dying and Euthanasia. Frederick,
Maryland: Aletheia Books,
University Publications of America Inc.
Humphry, Derek and Ann Wickett
1986. The
Right to Die. London:
The Bodley Head.
Keown, John, ed.
1995. Euthanasia
Examined: Ethical, Clinical and Legal Perspectives. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Rachels, James
1986. The
End of Life. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Copyright
1995