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UID:https://www.otago.ac.nz/bioethics/news/past-events/bioethics-seminar-whose-justice-for-whom-and-how-a-hermeneutic-exploration-of-confucian-righteousness
URL:https://www.otago.ac.nz/bioethics/news/past-events/bioethics-seminar-whose-justice-for-whom-and-how-a-hermeneutic-exploration-of-confucian-righteousness
DTSTART;TZID=Pacific/Auckland:20170508T130000
DTEND;TZID=Pacific/Auckland:20170508T140000
SUMMARY:Bioethics Seminar: Whose justice for whom and how? A hermeneutic exploration of Confucian 義 “Righteousness"
DESCRIPTION:

This talk will introduce a deliberate hermeneutical approach to bioethics. In our globalised world, &ldquo;Justice&rdquo; seems to be taken for granted, as a general ethical norm to govern social transactions and lines of demarcation, and as a so-called principle in bioethics. This is the result of contingent interactions between political, historical and intellectual processes. Therefore, legitimacy and meaning of yi &#32681; (Confucian) / justice (heterogeneous global) remain an urgent matter for clarification, especially but not solely in cross-cultural discussions. 
Even when there are positive codes, legal regulation and international laws prescribing &ldquo;justice&rdquo; equivocally, the actual meaning is generated in multi-layered segments of practice, between philosophical discourse, institutional and social practice and acts of decision-making. However, bioethics tends to refer to this concept as if it were sufficiently framed, as, &ldquo;a principle&rdquo; or, &ldquo;a norm&rdquo;. 
The meaning of &#32681; justice, be it individual, collective or global, concrete or abstract, is subject to interpretation and experiment, political strategy and implementation, individual struggle and reflection on related outcomes. As a normative learning process, &#32681; justice intrinsically seeks to advance the quality and reliability of an intended human culture, notably in bioethics. 

Speaker : Professor Ole D&ouml;ring, Visiting William Evans Fellow. 


LOCATION:Bioethics Seminar Room, Level one, 71 Frederick Street (entry on Frederick Street), Dunedin. Also video linked Wellington and Christchurch Campus.
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