Engineering Flesh; Towards Professional Responsibility for ‘Lived Bodies’ in Tissue Engineering

Engineering Flesh; Towards Professional Responsibility for ‘Lived Bodies’ in Tissue Engineering
Author :
Publisher : 3TU Ethics
Total Pages : 192
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9789038614281
ISBN-13 : 9038614284
Rating : 4/5 (284 Downloads)

Book Synopsis Engineering Flesh; Towards Professional Responsibility for ‘Lived Bodies’ in Tissue Engineering by :

Download or read book Engineering Flesh; Towards Professional Responsibility for ‘Lived Bodies’ in Tissue Engineering written by and published by 3TU Ethics. This book was released on 2008 with total page 192 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Engineering Flesh. Towards professional responsibility for ‘lived bodies’ in Tissue Engineering This study analyses the work of biomedical engineers as normative work that affects people’s daily lives as bodies. In biomedical engineering, engineers study bodies as machine-like objects and develop technologies from such a perspective. However, in daily life patients live their bodies not as machine-like but as themselves. Biomedical engineering can be said to involve normative work because it affects the way people experience and live their bodies. For example, imaging technologies used to follow the development of a foetus during pregnancy stimulate the perception of the foetus as an individual human being and change the related conceptions of good professional care and responsible parenthood. In this light, I raise the question as to how biomedical engineers can take and shape professional responsibility for this kind of normative work with respect to bodies. To study normative work in biomedical engineering, I have analysed the practice of tissue engineering (TE). In this practice, engineers rather literally make human body parts: TE has as objective to create living body part substitutes (e.g. skin, heart valves and bladders) by using cells. In the tradition of Science and Technology Studies (STS) I have studied normative work in TE empirically by following a specific TE project: namely, a TE heart valve project through participant observations, interviews and other fieldwork approaches. To be able to analyse how the practice of TE affects lived bodies I draw on work in the philosophical tradition of phenomenology. This tradition has as central concept ‘the lived body’ rather than the body as object. In this book I show how TE implies normative work for engineers: in the presentation of their work in terms of ‘mimicking nature’; in making standards for TE heart valves; and in developing networks to stimulate the further development of TE and to enable the impleme


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