Ethics and religion
Calum MacKellar (Letters, 8 May) is quite right to say that Christians should "be able to speak on behalf of non-religious organisations". However, the Scottish Council on Human Bioethics, of which he is research director, rarely seems to deviate from using the same arguments as those who are opposed to scientific and medical advances on religious grounds, so calling it a non-religious organisation is open to question, particularly when he is an elder of the Church of Scotland
Many of the council's arguments have no objective logic to them. To take one example from their website, they argue that "the creation of animals with certain kinds of quantities of human cells, such as neural or germline cells, would be offensive. Accordingly, such research requires careful consideration and review". This does not follow. Research deserves consideration and review because of the potential harm it could cause, not because someone might find it offensive (unless, of course, it is God who would be offended).
Perhaps it is effective to propagate largely religiously inspired arguments under the auspices of a non-religious organisation, but some might regard this as itself somewhat unethical.
On the other hand, perhaps it's just a happy coincidence that the council has never adopted a non-Christian view on anything, from euthanasia to stem-cell research.
(DR) DAVID SHAW
Lecturer in ethics
University of Glasgow
The full article contains 231 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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Last Updated:
08 May 2008 8:43 PM
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Source:
The Scotsman
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Location:
Edinburgh