Evolution of Medical Ethics and Bioethics in Greece: ''Ancient-Christian-Contemporary Greece"
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26248/eleutherna.v3i0.144Keywords:
Medical ethics, Bioethics, professional ethics, Hippocratic Oath, doctor -patient relationship, benefit for the patient, Christian anthropologyAbstract
Although its authenticity has been questioned, the text that has been known as
Hippocrates' Oath has played a crucial role to the evolution of medical ethics in
Greek settings. The Oath has greatly influenced Greek ethical thinking not only
during antiquity, but also during early Christian times and Byzantine era. During
the period of Turkish occupation the Oath recurs in Greece, in the texts of the
Greek Enlighters. In modem times we trace it as the Oath taken by graduate students
of Medicine, while it still serves as a basis for debates concerning the modem
challenges of Bioethics and Medicine.
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