Abstract

In his paper on “The Sanctity of Human Life: Secular Moral Authority, Biomedicine, and the Role of the State” [11], Kevin Wm. Wildes operates on the assumption of moral pluralism as a given fact. Pluralism results from differing interpretations of a particular matter: What, e.g., does “life” mean? Does it refer simply to biological existence or to something qualitative, personal, spiritual, fulfilled? In what sense life should be considered sacred and inviolable depends upon how it is understood. Furthermore, Wildes points to the fuzziness of such terms as “human dignity” and “sanctity of life”. He refers to a “fragmentation of moral language” and especially sees the loss of a uniform moral language as one of the essential causes of pluralism. “The particularity of moral language” raises the question, whether rationally based common morality exists at all. Unlike medieval natural law, whose fundamental principles were accessible to reason, and unlike the Enlightenment, for which reason was the measure, Wildes sees moral arguments and standpoints as being employed in a pluralistic fashion and as therefore being relative.KeywordsHuman DignityCommon MoralityMoral LanguageLegal EnforcementLegal MoralismThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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