Abstract
Van Rensselaer Potter was the first voice to utter the word
“bioethics,” yet he is too little appreciated by
the bioethics community. My expectations for my first visit
with Professor Van Rensselaer Potter were primed by conversations
with leaders and historians of the field of biomedical ethics,
including Warren Reich, Al Jonsen, and David Thomasma. When
mentioning my interest in environmental ethics and my concerns
for the current state of biomedical ethics, I was told that
I must meet Van. On my first visit to Madison, Wisconsin, Van
met me at the McArdle Laboratories for Cancer Research at the
University of Wisconsin, where he spent essentially his entire
academic career as a basic oncological researcher. He was dressed
informally and driving a rusting1984 Subaru station wagon with
a license plate that read YES ZPG. We spent this first portion
of our visit at the Institute where he is an Emeritus Professor
and has contributed to understanding cancer metabolism as
recognized by his election to the National Academy of Sciences.
However, Van felt most at home in his shack located outside
Madison. This country retreat included a rather primitive hut
surrounded by acres of property owned by the family. I felt
at the heart of Van's world when I sat in one of a pair
of inexpensive plastic outdoor chairs in a particularly secluded
part of the woods on the property, the place where Van himself
communed with nature.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Health Policy,Issues, ethics and legal aspects,Health (social science)
Cited by
6 articles.
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