Chapter 1 Introduction: Confronting Numbness Chapter 2 Chapter 1: Basic Facts about HIV/AIDS Chapter 3 Chapter 2: Ethical Foundation Chapter 4 Chapter 3: Ethics and the Beginning of Life Chapter 5 Chapter 4: Ethics and Relationships Chapter 6 Chapter 5: Ethics and the End of Life Chapter 7 Chapter 6: Ethics and Society Chapter 8 Chapter 7: Ethics and Global Structures Chapter 9 Chapter 8: Creating the Future Chapter 10 Appendix I: The Mystery of God and Suffering Chapter 11 Appendix II: Preparing Now for the Hour of Death Chapter 12 Selected Bibliography Chapter 13 Index
Kenneth R. Overberg, S.J. is professor of theology at Xavier University.
Overberg's text is a sophisticated summary and synthesis of the
best contemporary Catholic thinkers on these issues from Karl
Rahner to John Paul II. Ethics and AIDS is a first-rate primer for
those who want an introduction to the topic from a Catholic
theological perspective. It will be a welcome resource for parish
educators, undergraduates and Catholic study groups seeking to
understand Aids and our response as a community of faith to what
John Paul II has labeled 'this terrible evil which has come upon
humanity.'
*The American Spectator*
[Overberg's] careful portrayal and analysis of ethical complexities
is commendable. He carefully analyzes the challenges raised by the
many women who are caught in structures of poverty and oppression,
recognizing that their abilities to choose life for themselves or
their children are undermined by gender discrimination and societal
pressures. O. captures many such dilemmas in ways that move
religious ethical reflection on AIDS forward, past judgmental
moralizing and simplistic solutions.
*Theological Studies, June 2008*
Based on the Church’s defense of human life and dignity, in this
comprehensive work Fr. Overberg seeks to join the AIDS epidemic to
other themes developed in Cardinal Bernardin’s Constent Ethic of
Life. Quite approachable discussions on topics which range from the
promotion of justice and the ethics of HIV prevention to an
understanding of the epidemic’s relationship to the fundamental
option for the poor, all provide a hopeful sign that the Church’s
ethicists and moral theologians are applying their efforts to some
of the most pressing challenges of our time.
*Jon Fuller. S.J., M.D., associate professor of medicine, Boston
University School of Medicine, Center for HIV/AIDS Care and
Research, Boston Medical Cen*
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