The University of St. Thomas

The Church and the Biomedical Revolution

The Church and the Biomedical Revolution

A Lecture Series
Sponsored by The Center for Catholic Studies
and Beyond Career to Calling, a Lilly Grant program

"But where shall wisdom be found? And where is the place of understanding?" Job 28:12

Job’s question is pertinent in every generation, though perhaps no more so than today, as the current biomedical revolution—already global in scale—continues to push back what were once considered the limits of both our knowledge of and control over the fundamental processes of human life. Though far from defeated, the ancient enemies of disease, disability, and premature death increasingly give way to innovative and powerful therapeutic interventions. At the same time, these vastly augmented powers over human life raise troubling questions whose answers are anything but clear. What limits are there, if any, to our technological abilities to reshape human nature, for example, through genetic manipulation? In a world of scarce resources, how should the risks and benefits of biomedical research be allocated? How, in our often divided and morally fragmented world, is it possible to articulate a vision of human flourishing sufficiently rich and compelling to guide these biomedical innovations? Where, indeed, shall wisdom be found?

The premise of this lecture series is that traditional Christianity, as practiced primarily in the Catholic and Orthodox churches, but including all churches committed to what has been called the "Great Tradition," has been and remains an invaluable repository of such wisdom. Accordingly, the overarching aim of the series is to engage the question of the nature and shape of the Church’s contribution to the public/global debate occasioned by the biomedical revolution, which comprise questions of law, policy, and morality, as well philosophy, and, ultimately, theology.




Second in the Series

Catholic Health Care in the Age of Biotechnology:
A Ministry or a Government Sponsored Biomedical Endeavor?

Dr. Marie Hilliard and Dr. Stephen Napier
National Catholic Bioethics Center
 

Summer Seminar for Faculty and Staff
July 14 - 18,  2008
9am - Noon
JRC 247

Dr. Marie Hilliard:  Dr. Hilliard holds graduate degrees in Maternal-Child Health Nursing, Religious Studies, Canon Law and Professional Higher Education Administration, and she has an extensive professional background in medical ethics and public policy and advocacy. She is a practicing registered nurse who has been substantially involved in health care regulation at the state and national levels for twelve years. In addition, she is a canon lawyer and serves as a resource for the United States Bishops on the implementation of the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services as well as Church - State relations.

The Connecticut League for Nursing has recognized Dr. Hilliard for her outstanding contributions to nursing in Connecticut, and she has been recognized as well by the Connecticut Nurses' Association with the Agnes Ohlson Award for Outstanding Contribution to Nursing through Political Action. She is an affiliate member of the National Federation of Licensed Practical Nurses and has served as a board member of a number of health care oriented agencies and coalitions. She has served for two terms as an elected president of both the Connecticut League for Nursing and on the Statewide Steering Committee of the Coalition to Improve End-of-Life Care. She is past chair, and continues to sit on the Executive Board, of the National Advisory Council of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and serves on the Review Board for the Protection of Children and Young People of the Archdiocese for the Military Services.

As a colonel in the United States Army Reserves, Dr. Hilliard continues to practice as a registered nurse. She has been the Acting Deputy Brigade Commander of the 5th Brigade, 98th Training Division, responsible for all United States Army Reserve medical training for the northeastern United States. She developed the northeastern U.S. Licensed Practical Nurse training program which was conducted out of Ft. Devens, Massachusetts and approved by the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Nursing. She has been recognized by the Army for her contributions with the Meritorious Service Medal.
 
Dr. Hilliard has served as an advisor to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops on their Task Force on Catholic Bishops and Catholic Politicians. She has been a guest at the White House at the invitation of President Clinton and has consulted with President Bush on faith and community based initiatives.

Dr. Stephen Napier: Dr. Napier received his Doctorate in philosophy from Saint Louis University and his Masters from the University of South Carolina. His dissertation was on virtue epistemology and cognitive motivation and was written under the direction of James Bohman, Kent Staley and Linda Zagzebski. During his graduate school career Dr. Napier was the recipient of several awards and fellowships including, the James A. Oliver Logic Award, the Graduate-Student Research Excellence Award, the SLU2000 Dissertation Fellowship, and the Midwest Consortium of Catholic Graduate Schools Fellowship. Dr. Napier completed a two-year post-doctoral fellowship in clinical and research ethics at St. Thomas hospital in Nashville during which he performed numerous ethics consults and was involved in the hospital’s Internal Review Board. Before joining the NCBC as a staff ethicist Dr. Napier was a Human Protections Analyst at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and Medical Center (ranked among the top 5 children’s hospitals in the nation) where he also served as Director of Ethics Education. Currently, Dr. Napier serves on the University of Pennsylvania’s Institutional Review Board (IRB 8 – Socio-Behavioral Board). He is married and lives in Philadelphia.

This event is by invitation only.


PAST EVENTS:

First in the Series

The Culture Wars and Bioethics:
Medical Moral-Theology Reconsidered


Dr. H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr.
Thursday, 3 April 2008
7:30pm OEC Auditorium
University of St. Thomas

Dr. Engelhardt holds degrees both in philosophy and medicine and is a well-known and influential voice in the field of bioethics. In addition to his faculty positions at Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine, Dr. Engelhardt has lectured at universities across the world, authored over two hundred and fifty articles and chapters of books, and has written two seminal books on the topic,
The Foundations of Bioethics and The Foundations of Christian Bioethics.

Dr. Engelhardt’s lecture is the first of a three-year long series of lectures and faculty summer seminars on the theme "The Church and the Biomedical Revolution" being sponsored by the Center for Catholic Studies (Beyond Career to Calling), The Murphy Institute for Law & Public Policy, the St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity, and the McLaurin Institute at the University of Minnesota.