'Corpore sano in mens sana': la dimensión moral de la sangre en la donación de sangre
Author(s)
Casado Neira, DavidKeywords
PsychologyPsychologie
Altruism
Blood
Dualism
Embodiment
Morality
Social Psychology
Sozialpsychologie
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http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/6426Abstract
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.Date
2009-10-30Type
journal articleIdentifier
oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/6426http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/6426
urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-64266