Pharmaceutical Memory Modification and Christianity’s “Dangerous” Memory

Pharmaceutical memory modification is the use of a drug to dampen, or eliminate completely, memories of traumatic experience. While standard therapeutic treatments, even those including intense pharmaceuticals, can potentially offer individual biomedical healing, they are missing an essential perspe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Edwards, Stephanie C. (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Philosophy Documentation Center [2020]
In: Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics
Year: 2020, Volume: 40, Issue: 1, Pages: 93-108
RelBib Classification:CB Christian life; spirituality
FD Contextual theology
NBE Anthropology
NCH Medical ethics
ZD Psychology
Online Access: Volltext (Verlag)
Volltext (doi)
Description
Summary:Pharmaceutical memory modification is the use of a drug to dampen, or eliminate completely, memories of traumatic experience. While standard therapeutic treatments, even those including intense pharmaceuticals, can potentially offer individual biomedical healing, they are missing an essential perspective offered by Christian bioethics: re/incorporation of individuals and traumatic memories into communities that confront and reinterpret suffering. This paper is specifically grounded in Christian ethics, engaging womanist understandings of Incarnational, embodied personhood, and Johann Baptist Metz’s “dangerous memory.” It develops an ethical framework of Christian “enfleshed counter-memory” that responds to the specific challenge of pharmaceutical memory modification, and traumatic experience generally.
ISSN:2326-2176
Contains:Enthalten in: Society of Christian Ethics, Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.5840/jsce202051820