Published 2024-03-01
“…It remained largely forgotten until the 1970s, when it resurfaced in the United States[2] as the body of knowledge that can be employed to ensure the responsible pursuit and application of
science. The resurgence was prompted by a response to widespread irresponsible attitudes toward
science and grounded in a pluralistic perspective of morality.[3] In the second half of the twentieth century, states and the
international community assumed the duty to protect
human rights, and bioethics became a venue for discussing rights.[4] There is both a semantic gap and a contextual gap between these two iterations, with some of them already being established.
…”
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