TY - JOUR
T1 - Daniel Callahan’s Decade of Doubt
AU - Shulman, Kaiulani S.
AU - Fins, Joseph J.
N1 - Funding Information:
*Division of Medical Ethics,Weill Cornell Medical College, New York. †Chief, Division of Medical Ethics, E. William Davis, Jr., MD Professor of Medical Ethics, and Professor of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College; Visiting Professor of Law, Solomon Center Distinguished Scholar in Medicine, Bioethics and the Law, Yale Law School. Correspondence: Kaiulani S. Shulman, Division of Medical Ethics, Weill Cornell Medical College, 435 East 70th Street, Suite 4-J, New York, NY 10021. Email: [email protected]. KSS acknowledges receiving a Branford College Mellon Senior Research Grant in support of her undergraduate thesis at Yale College, upon which this paper is based.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by Johns Hopkins University Press.
PY - 2023/3/1
Y1 - 2023/3/1
N2 - Daniel Callahan died on July 16, 2019, just short of his 89th birthday. In the years since, we have seen the overturning of abortion rights, a concern central to his scholarship and musings about the place of religion in American civic life. Callahan’s journey from lay Catholic journalist and commentator at Commonweal to a co-founder of the Hastings Center, during his decade of doubt, is especially relevant today as America revisits established precedent governing a woman’s right to choose. His life-long struggle with faith and the secularization of bioethics is a story worth telling, as it may foster dialogue across a divide between religious and laical thinkers that has fractured our political discourse. We recall Callahan’s misgivings about the marginalization of religious perspectives in public life; he sought not the denial of complexity nor of difference in views, but rather the importance of free and honest debate around deeply held beliefs, contextualized in the realities of the contemporary world. Callahan’s ambivalence about his faith remains a part of the fabric of American life, a story that Callahan chronicled to our collective benefit for over a half-century.
AB - Daniel Callahan died on July 16, 2019, just short of his 89th birthday. In the years since, we have seen the overturning of abortion rights, a concern central to his scholarship and musings about the place of religion in American civic life. Callahan’s journey from lay Catholic journalist and commentator at Commonweal to a co-founder of the Hastings Center, during his decade of doubt, is especially relevant today as America revisits established precedent governing a woman’s right to choose. His life-long struggle with faith and the secularization of bioethics is a story worth telling, as it may foster dialogue across a divide between religious and laical thinkers that has fractured our political discourse. We recall Callahan’s misgivings about the marginalization of religious perspectives in public life; he sought not the denial of complexity nor of difference in views, but rather the importance of free and honest debate around deeply held beliefs, contextualized in the realities of the contemporary world. Callahan’s ambivalence about his faith remains a part of the fabric of American life, a story that Callahan chronicled to our collective benefit for over a half-century.
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U2 - 10.1353/pbm.2023.0022
DO - 10.1353/pbm.2023.0022
M3 - Article
C2 - 37755715
AN - SCOPUS:85160056279
SN - 0031-5982
VL - 66
SP - 249
EP - 266
JO - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
JF - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
IS - 2
ER -