Appeals to "human dignity" are at the core of many of the most
contentious social and political issues of our time. But these appeals
suggest different and at times even contradictory ways of understanding
the term. Is dignity something we all share equally, and therefore the
reason we all ought to be treated as equals? Or is it what distinguishes
some greater and more admirable human beings from the rest? What notion
of human dignity should inform our private judgments and our public
life?
In Neither Beast Nor God, Gilbert Meilaender elaborates the
philosophical, social, theological, and political implications of the
question of dignity, and suggests a path through the thicket.
Meilaender, a noted theologian and a prominent voice in America's
bioethics debates, traces the ways in which notions of dignity shape
societies, families, and individual lives, and incisively cuts through
some common confusions that cloud our thinking on key moral and ethical
questions. The dignity of humanity and the dignity of the person, he
argues, are distinct but deeply connected--and only by grasping them
both can we find our way to a meaningful understanding of the human
condition.