In the latest issue of Standpoint, Nigel Biggar critiques the growing neglect of the arts and humanities in higher education. Scholars of the humanities, he writes, have a responsibility for the moral formation of their students. The article is a revised version of his Trinity Forum lecture at Rhodes House last autumn.
What Are Universities For?
30 06 2010Comments : Comments Off
Tags: academia, education, moral formation, students, university
Categories : Articles
Was the Iraq War Immoral?
15 03 2010
Last week, the Financial Times published an article by Nigel Biggar revisiting the morality of the Iraq War. Biggar responds to debate about whether the war was just in light of the ongoing Chilcot Inquiry, commissioned by Prime Minister Gordon Brown. Read the article here.
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Tags: blair, bush, chilcot inquiry, financial times, iraq war, just war, wmd
Categories : Articles
The Road to Death on Demand
1 03 2010
The new issue of Standpoint includes an article, featured on the magazine’s cover, by Nigel Biggar. It criticizes proposed changes to British law to permit physician assisted suicide. Visit the Standpoint site to read the article and join the discussion. For an in-depth study of the underlying moral and theological issues, see Biggar’s 2004 book, Aiming to Kill. The article was quoted by Dominic Lawson in last week’s Sunday Times.
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Tags: Alzheimer's, Dignitas, Dominic Lawson, euthanasia, Martin Amis, pas, physician assisted suicide, standpoint magazine, Sunday Times
Categories : Articles
Citizen Ethics in a Time of Crisis
22 02 2010
The Guardian has published an impressive collection of short essays on the public place of ethics—in economic, political, and social life. Writers include Philip Pullman, Michael Sandel, Rowan Williams, John Milbank, Polly Toynbee, Madeleine Bunting, Tariq Ramadan, and others. Nigel Biggar’s contribution, The Cult of Freedom, argues that the BBC’s handling of the Ross/Brand affair reveals the moral poverty of an exclusive focus on autonomy and rights.
The pamphlet, entitled Citizen Ethics in a Time of Crisis, was distributed as a supplement with Sunday’s paper and is also available online. It was assembled by the Citizens Ethics Network, which seeks to address the widespread concern that the winner-takes-all
mentality of the banker, and the corrupted values of the politician, have replaced a common sense ethics of fairness and integrity. The Guardian invites online discussion of the essays.
A debate will be held among some of the contributors this Friday, 26 February, in the British Museum. Michael Sandel, Rowan Williams, and Diane Coyle will discuss Who Deserves What? Ethics in a Time of Crisis. Tickets and more information are available here.
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Tags: BBC, Edward Skidelsky, John Milbank, Madeleine Bunting, michael sandel, philip pullman, Polly Toynbee, rowan williams, Tariq Ramadan
Categories : Articles, Other Events
Two Minnesota Films on Abortion
1 02 2010
We have just passed January 22, the date Americans remember as the outbreak of hostilities in the longest-running battle of their culture wars. It was on this day that the Roe v Wade decision legalized abortion. Having taught medical ethics at both Oxford and Notre Dame, I no longer expect to hear arguments on abortion that surprise me. But occasionally I do and my immediate response is always to ask myself what my students would say. Would my students be persuaded or would they shoot it down without even breaking a mental sweat?
This was my reaction to the 2007 film, Juno, and it was my reaction to a three-minute video posted on the Internet by John Piper entitled “No, Mr President.” Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: abortion, adoption, desiring god, diablo cody, john perry, john piper, juno, notre dame, obama, pro-choice, pro-life, rhetoric, roe v wade, spontaneous abortion
Categories : Articles
How Dangerous Is Religion?
27 11 2009
Oxford’s Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics recently held an excellent lecture and discussion on the topic “How Dangerous is Religion?” The lecturer was the Australian philosopher, Tony Coady, who argued that religion is not dangerous. He did a fine job of sorting through the complexity of the claim, including the difficulty of defining religion for such purposes, and the fact that religion can be used for both good and ill (so too with non-religious ideologies). More interesting still was the subsequent discussion. A number of those present offered the following critique of Coady’s argument: while religion itself isn’t necessarily dangerous, fanaticism and extremism are dangerous and certain features of religion make it more susceptible than atheism to those pitfalls. What are the features of religion that create this propensity? Coady’s critics suggested that religion’s dependence on ‘faith’ means it cannot be accountable to rational reflection and critique. While this understanding of faith, as an alternative to reason, is not what Christianity means by the term, I will leave that for another day. Instead I want to respond to the critics’ broader claim: Religion is not accountable to reasoned reflection.
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Tags: atticus finch, bible, coady, dangerous, fundamentalism, john perry, mockingbird, oxford, religion, savulescu, uehiro
Categories : Articles
Biggar on Intentional Medical Killing
17 11 2009The question before us is whether the law should permit doctors to help patients kill themselves, or kill them at their request—that is, the question of the legalisation of physician-assisted suicide or voluntary euthanasia. In the UK, intentional medical killing is currently illegal, as is the case in most jurisdictions. But there are many people who think that the law should be changed, and attempts are frequently made to do so… Read the article in full
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Tags: autonomy, biggar, end of life, euthanasia, palliative, pas, physician assisted suicide
Categories : Articles

