'Corpore sano in mens sana'. The Morality of Blood Donation
Abstract
Modern conceptions of health separate body from soul in the familiar Cartesian dualism. In blood donation this separation is easy to identify: embodiment is a civilizing process, and altruism is the moral basis that supports it. The donor is treated as essentially a vessel of blood, a mere container which can be directed to discharge its contents into blood banks. The biomedical use of blood is not morally neutral; indeed, the donor's moral conscience is mobilised in order to get them to donate blood as a gift, or offering. By associating donors' altruism with their bodies' physical nature as a container from which blood can be extracted, altruism is treated as a physiological phenomenon.Keywords
Donación de sangre, Donante, Biomedicina, Encarnación, Embodiment, AltruismoPublished
2006-11-07
How to Cite
Casado Neira, D. (2006). ’Corpore sano in mens sana’. The Morality of Blood Donation. Athenea Digital. Revista De Pensamiento E investigación Social, 1(10), 41–55. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/athenead/v1n10.291
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Copyright (c) 2006 David Casado Neira
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