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Issue title: Life-Sustaining Treatments in Vegetative State:Scientific Advances and Ethical Dilemmas
Guest editors: Gian Luigi Giglix and Nathan D. Zaslery
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Sgreccia, Elio; *
Affiliations: Vice-President of the Pontifical Academy for Life, Vatican City, Director of the Bioethics Centre of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy | [x] Department of Neurosciences, Ospedale “Santa Maria della Misericordia”, Udine, Italy | [y] Concussion Care Center of Virginia, Inc., Ltd., Tree of Life Services, Inc., Pinnacle Rehabilitation, Inc., Glen Allen, VA, USA
Correspondence: [*] Address for correspondence: Via della Conciliazione 3, 00120 – Vatican City. Tel.: +39 06 69882423; Fax: +39 06 69882014; E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: This article intends to precise the anthropologic fundaments of the Persistent Vegetative State starting from the concept of the human person, as it has been described in relation to the philosophical-theological thought of Thomas Aquinas and other more recent personalists (J. Maritain, E. Mounier, E. Gilson, S. Vanni Rovighi). This view is largely shared by the catholic thought and is present in the Teachings of the Catholic Church. The central point of reflection is in affirming the double unity of the human person: the substantial unity of the spiritual body-soul; the uniqueness of the animative principle (soul) as “form” of corporeity. The spiritual soul is the active principle not only of the superior activities (thought, liberty) but also of the vegetative-sensitive activity of the organism which is part of the person. Thus, as long as a vital unit exists in the individual person, there will exist the presence of a spiritual soul in the organism, defined as a whole unit, and the subject must be considered alive, even when gravely and persistently hindered in the application of his/her cognitive functions.
Keywords: personalism, philosophical anthropology, St. Thomas metaphysics, vegetative state, brain death
DOI: 10.3233/NRE-2004-19413
Journal: NeuroRehabilitation, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 361-366, 2004
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