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Scientific advance, technological development, and society
pp. 199-203
Résumé
To talk about the moral uses of new knowledge in the biomedical sciences is to talk about the ways in which the processes of the acquisition of knowledge and the processes by which ways are found to apply that knowledge can be made more sensitive to the individual and social consequences of these activities. We are faced today with an enormous range of problems which cry out for a solution and a fair number of them require advances in the sciences.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Bondeson William B., Engelhardt Tristram, Spicker Stuart, White Jr Joseph M (1982) New knowledge in the biomedical sciences: some moral implications of its acquisition, possession, and use. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 199-203
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-7723-5_16
Citation complète:
Bondeson William B., 1982, Scientific advance, technological development, and society. In W. B. Bondeson, T. Engelhardt, Spicker & J.M. White Jr (eds.) New knowledge in the biomedical sciences (199-203). Dordrecht, Springer.