Bioethical motifs in the literary work of Karel Čapek

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Authors

JEMELKA Petr

Year of publication 2019
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Ethics & bioethics (in Central Europe)
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Education

Citation
Web https://content.sciendo.com/view/journals/ebce/9/3-4/article-p168.xml
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ebce-2019-0019
Keywords bioethics; literature; life; humanity; science
Description This text presents an assessment of the literary work of Karel Čapek from a perspective that has not yet been discussed. It focuses on analysing Čapek’s works from the viewpoint of their possible inspiration by bioethical issues. Čapek’s philosophy and the powerful ethical charge of his texts tend to be associated with his interest in pragmatism, a subject to which, however, he took an individual and critical approach. One of the most important categories of his way of thinking is life. In his prose works and plays we therefore see motifs that may be associated with the thematic definition of bioethics. These are questions concerning the value and quality of human life, problems of the dehumanizing impact of science and technology, as well as reflections upon the moral dimension of man’s relationship to nature and also to the relationship between people and animals. Čapek’s work may therefore provide inspiration from the perspective of the history of the gradual formation of the bioethical point of view.

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