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“Hindu” Bioethics?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Extract

Not much work has been done on Hindu bioethics other than by a select few scholars and medical doctors. Professor Cromwell Crawford, author of Dilemmas of Life and Death: Hindu Ethics in a North American Context and Hindu Ethics for the Twenty-first Century, for example, is well known in the field of Hindu bioethics. Others scholars include Dr. Uma Mysorekar, who is a gynecologist as well as the president of the board of trustees of the Ganesha Temple of Flushing New York. She has published several short pieces on Hindu bioethics, and has even been interviewed by PBS for their “Religion and Ethics” program. Dr. H. L. Trivedi, director of the Institute of Kidney Diseases and Research Center at the Civil Hospital Campus in Ahmedabad, India, is also prominent. His pithy paragraph in Transplant Proceedings on Hinduism and organ transplantation is cited with enormous frequency on the Internet and elsewhere. These thinkers, however, are unequivocally wrong in their position that Hinduism supports organ transplantation, and, more importantly, that it offers any coherent or systematic bioethics whatsoever.

Type
Symposium
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2008

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References

See Cromwell Crawford, S., Dilemmas of Life and Death: Hindu Ethics in a North American Context (New York: Sate University of New York Press, 1995) and Cromwell Crawford, S., Hindu Ethics for the Twenty-first Century (New York: State University of New York Press, 2003).Google Scholar
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I am indebted to Professor Wendy Doniger for this insight. Personal communication from Wendy Doniger to author, August 11, 2006. On file with author.Google Scholar
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These dates differ among scholars. I am using the category as characterized in Michaels, A., Hinduism Past and Present (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004): at 38.Google Scholar
See Sarma, D., Epistemologies and the Limitations of Philosophical Inquiry (New York: RoutledgeCurzon Press, 2004): At 24–30 for more on the Madhva canon.Google Scholar
A version of this section was first published in Sarma, D., Introduction to Madhva Vedanta (Hampshire, England: Ashgate Publishers Ltd., 2003): at 13.Google Scholar
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