JohnsonMaxwell E., “Back Home to the Font: Eight Implications of a Baptismal Spirituality,”Worship71 (November 1997): 498–499.
2.
Journals abound, and now even a television show is being planned on ethics for PBS.
3.
PellegrinoEdmund, and ThomasmaDavid, Helping and Healing: Religious Commitment in Health Care (DC: Georgetown Univ. Press,1997) 78.
4.
John PaulI.I., Veritatis Splendor (Boston: St. Paul Books,1993), n.103.
5.
RadleyAlan, ed., Worlds of Illness (London: Routledge, 1993) 3.
6.
MountEricJr., Professional Ethics in Context (Kentucky: WJK Press,1990) 71.
7.
PellegrinoEdmund, Humanism and the Physician (Knoxville: Univ. of Tenn. Press,1979) 229.
8.
AshleyBenedict, and O'RourkeKevin, Health Care Ethics: A Theological Analysis, 4th ed. (DC: Georgetown Univ. Press, 1997) 83.
9.
PellegrinoEdmund, and ThomasmaDavid, The Virtues in Medical Practice (NY: Oxford UP,1993), chap. 3.
10.
PellegrinoEdmund, and ThomasmaDavid, The Virtues in Medical Practice (NY: Oxford UP,1993), 47.
11.
See VanceRichard, “We are All Pragmatists Now: The Limits of Modern Medical Ethics in American Medical Education,” in GoldberyMichael, ed., Against the Grain: New Approaches to Professional Ethics (Valley Forge, PA: Trinity Press International, 1993) 37–54.
12.
MacIntyreAlasdair, After Virtue, 2nd ed., (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1984), ch. 5 & 6.
13.
HauerwasStanley, Suffering Presence: Theological Reflections on Medicine, the Mentally Handicapped and the Church (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press,1986) 48–9.
14.
SmithTheophus, “After Teaching: Wisdom” in Michael Goldberg, ed., Against the Grain, 110ff.
15.
SmithTheophus, “After Teaching: Wisdom” in Michael Goldberg, ed., Against the Grain, 112.