The lawsuits brought against HHS over the contraception mandate raise interesting issues under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and under the Free Exercise Clause insofar as various nonreligious exceptions made in the statute and by HHS undercut the mandate's "general applicability" under Employment Division v. Smith. I think that the suits by religious organizations have a good prospect on the merits if the Administration doesn't cure significant problems with the narrow coverage of the existing and proposed religious exemptions (although I don't think the claims made for general commercial businesses have much of a chance). What I do know is that there's a lot more to the issue than is indicated in this piece, just published in Commonweal, which cites the Smith case in favor of the mandate and then stops. As sometimes happens with student exams, I found myself wondering whether the last few pages of the piece had gotten lost somewhere.
Monday, March 19, 2012
There's Much More to the Contraception-Mandate Litigation Than the Smith Case
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Jesuitry
From the New York Times, 17 March 2012:
In a letter to the president of Georgetown University, John J. DeGioia, 66 members of the law school faculty said Friday that the University should address Ms. Fluke's concerns and consider providing contraceptive coverage in the student health plan. "The current policy puts student health at risk," said M. Gregg Bloche, a professor at the law school, "and with our Jesuit tradition, we should be concerned about that."
Res ipsa loquitur.
Friday, March 16, 2012
Winter 2011 issue of the NCBQ
I just received in the mail the latest issue (volume 11; no. 4; Winter 2011) of the National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly. The NCBQ, edited by Ted Furton, typically includes excellent scholarship on bioethics issues. This issue is no exception. I wanted to call particular attention to a piece by Rev. Kevin Flannery SJ entitled "Vital Conflicts and the Catholic Magisterial Tradition." In this article, Father Flannery discusses the Phoenix abortion case and takes issue with the moral analysis of Therese Lysaught, which was largely based on the analysis of Father Martin Rhonheimer. Father Flannery presented an earlier version of this paper at the University Faculty for Life conference at Notre Dame in June 2011. (I should note that the 2012 UFL conference is scheduled for June 1-2, 2012 at BYU Law School.)
Immigration Policy
John Allen's most recent column points out to one area where the Vatican and the current U.S. Administration are engaging in some constructive cooperation -- immigration policy:
Last week, the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See staged a conference on migration, held at the Pontifical North American College, the American seminary in the Eternal City, which brought together a cross-section of ambassadors, Vatican officials, experts on migration issues and some of the church's leading activists on the pastoral care of migrants.
Both Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Pontifical Council for Culture, and Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the pope's representative to the U.N. in Geneva, were on hand. U.S. Ambassador Miguel Diaz, Obama's envoy to the Vatican, convened the event.
A central aim was to broadcast the message that while migration poses obvious challenges, it also creates a wide range of benefits -- cultural, economic, even religious -- for host countries. As a result, speakers argued, generous immigration policies are in the interests of both church and state.
UST's Murphy Institute's latest "Hot Topics: Cool Talk" program was also about immigration policy. Pepperdine Economist Andy Yuengert and UST Director of Clinical Clinical Education and Director of the Immigration Law Clinic, Virgil Wiebe, presented a fascinating program that also addresed the challenges and benefits of migration for host countries, and placed these challenges and benefits into the context of the Catholic intellectual tradition. You can watch it on our website, here.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
A Muslim-Christian Dialogue
The Religious Freedom Project of Georgetown University's Berkley Center on Religion, Peace, and International Affairs, under the direction of diplomat and scholar Thomas Farr, recently hosted a major conference on challenges to religious freedom at home and abroad. The conference launched a terrific new monograph by Timothy Samuel Shah entitled "Religious Freedom: Why Now? Defending an Embattled Human Right." After the conference dinner, I had the pleasure of conducting a public discussion with the eminent Muslim scholar and public intellectual Shaykh Hamza Yusuf. Topics ranged from the nature and basis of human dignity to the relationship between faith and reason. Here is a video of our conversation:
The conference was co-sponsored by the William E. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution of the Witherspoon Institute, under the leadership of Dr. Matthew Franck.
Reply to a Reader’s Comment Regarding the Meaning of “Health”
The following is my reply to two comments posted by MOJ reader Andrew Mackie-Mason in response to Part 1 of my post on the HHS Contraceptive mandate here. A portion of my original post as well as Andrew’s comment and my reply concern the meaning of “health” and “healthcare.” This conceptual disagreement is part of the basis of the controversy over the HHS mandate and is the source of a wider disagreement in bioethics. I hope that readers find it to be of interest.
_________________________________
Dear Andrew:
Thanks for the post and for taking the points I was (and am) trying to make seriously. By way of response, I have a few questions for you – questions I believe that Matt Bowman and other readers likely share.
First, you suggest that the understanding of “health” that I put forth, as a scientific term with an objective meaning, is mistaken and should be replaced with an understanding of “health” as autonomy that has only a subjective meaning. That is, you argue that “health” is “what each person sees as the proper functioning of their own body as an integral aspect of their self.”
You are of course free to advocate for this position, and you may truly believe that this subjective approach is correct, but you should be prepared to see and embrace the full implications of this view – you should be prepared to follow your argument where it leads.
Thus, if “health” is a subjective determination – a matter of personal autonomy – then you should be prepared to require physicians and hospitals (i.e. “healthcare providers”) to engage in assisted suicide – whether the person is young, old, or middle-aged; suffering from a debilitating, terminal illness or “the picture of health.” Similarly, if “health” is subjective – a matter of individual autonomy – then “health” would seem to include every imaginable kind of plastic surgery, no matter how frivolous or self-indulgent it may appear to the outside observer. Such a perspective is irrelevant, indeed, obnoxious to the concept of “health” that you put forth.
What is more, if autonomy is the touchstone of “health” then you should be prepared to require physicians and hospitals to perform “voluntary amputations” – that is, amputations on individuals who possess healthy limbs (sorry . . . it’s hard to avoid use of the term that doesn’t carry an objective meaning) – that is, limbs that are not diseased or somehow impaired but fully functioning. That is to say, in the case of voluntary amputation, there is nothing wrong with a person’s hand or leg – he or she simply wants to be rid of it.
Now, traditionally, this sort of desire has been seen by the medical profession as a severe pathology and that it would be profoundly unethical to assist an individual in achieving his or her desire to have a limb removed. Although some in the medical field now wish to explore this phenomenon and others even wish to assist these individuals by performing the requested amputations surgically, many continue to see this desire as pathological and the proposed amputation as conferring a disability on the individual (see here and here). Your understanding of health would seem to leave no room for this traditional view. Your view would, it seems, mandate that our healthcare system embrace the subjective desire for loss of limb as a dimension of “health.” Are you prepared to argue for this?
Second, you responded to my characterization of health with respect to the conjugal act in human beings as relying on a “fuzzy teleological objectivism.” Now I understand why you might wish to do so for rhetorical purposes, but are you prepared to do so on a substantive basis? If so, am I correct in assuming that you would wish to characterize the process of providing the body with nutrition – the consumption and digestion of food – as likewise relying on a “fuzzy teleological objectivism”? If so, you must do more than garnish a rhetorical flourish followed by a confident Q.E.D.
The reason why I offered the hypothetical involving a pill that would induce nausea and vomiting that would be marketed to bulimics was precisely to pose this challenge. You ignored this hypothetical in your response. The teleology of the digestive system (not to mention the circulatory system, the pulmonary system, the nervous system, the lymphatic system) is hardly fuzzy. Indeed, you won’t hear that kind of derisive talk concerning bodily functions in medical school. Many physicians today may (sadly) be ethical Nietzscheans, but when it comes to their ontology, they remain committed Aristotelians. The problem that many encounter today (and I would suggest that this is your problem as well) is trying to fit their ethical commitments inside their scientific understanding of “health” without eviscerating the latter.
Now, on your account of “health” as autonomy, the hypothetical pill would seem to be unproblematic. Indeed, if a person wants to control her weight and her body image in this way, taking the pill makes perfect sense. Of course on this account bulimics are “healthy” people. Are you prepared to argue that this is the case? If not, I think you will find that invoking some kind of objective standard – a standard based on how the body functions – to be unavoidable.
Third, you say that there are vaccines that “don't fix any problem in the body,” vaccines that “don't cure a disease or disorder.” What vaccines do you have in mind?
All the vaccines I can think of are true forms of preventive medicine in that they prevent the body from contracting a disease by aiding its resistance to polio, or whooping cough, or German measles, or some such malady. And in this regard vaccines are decidedly unlike contraceptives. These vaccines do not impede the natural function of the human body, they augment it. They stimulate the body’s own immune system in defense of the body against some infection that would harm it, perhaps even fatally.
A contraceptive may “prevent” something (sometimes after the fact!). Again, on your account of “health” based as it is on a subjective determination of the individual, pregnancy would or would not constitute a “disease” and thus an impairment of “health” based upon whether or not the pregnancy was “wanted.” On this same account, however, polio, pertussis or rubella would be a disease only if the person who contracted it didn’t want it. Likewise, a fully functioning eye, hand, liver or kidney would or would not be “diseased” based upon the person’s desire to retain it. Are you prepared to defend this point of view?
You note that some people decide to forego receiving vaccines due to the risk of side effects and others do so for moral or religious reasons. With respect to the former, you say that “it would make perfect sense for someone to weigh whether the lack of functionality in their body was worth the risk/side-effects” such that “[v]accines for willing patients are clearly health care, [whereas] vaccines for unwilling patients clearly aren't.” For you, what distinguishes the two as such – that is, as healthcare – is the subjective evaluation of the individual.
This is not correct. A vaccine is a form of healthcare – the benefit of which is prospective and often accompanied by risk – risk that one’s body may be impaired as a result of the vaccine. That is, the judgment on whether or not to receive the vaccine is based on the function of the body and the risk calculation that this function will be impaired. Thus, it is not necessarily the case that the same vaccine is or isn’t healthcare based on the subjective judgment of the individual. Rather, it is entirely consistent with “health” understood as a scientific matter that the vaccine is healthcare that some individuals chose to forego based upon their assessment of the risk to health as objectively determined.
Of course a subjective judgment may enter into the decision not to receive a vaccine. But such a decision does not alter the status of the vaccine as “healthcare.” It is not the case that a vaccine is or is not “healthcare” depending on the moral or religious objections of the individual. Rather, the vaccination is healthcare that the individual chooses to forego based on other values. There may be many good (perhaps even compelling) reasons to honor these values, but doing so doesn’t alter the meaning of “health.”
Pax Christi,
John
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Ryan on the "New Rehabilitation"
I remember once reading that Michael Moore attacked rehabilitation as not even a real theory of punishment at all -- as without philosophical bona fides. And for the past few decades, rehabilitation has gone largely silent in punishment theory (with honorable exceptions, to be sure).
So those who are interested in punishment theory will want to check out Meghan Ryan's (SMU) extremely interesting new piece, Breakthrough Science and the New Rehabilitation. Here's a bit from deep into the piece.
This New Rehabilitation that is emerging in the wake of these pharmacological, genetic, and neuroscientific revolutions differs in great respect from the old rehabilitation that prevailed in the 1960s and early 1970s. Instead of focusing on changing the character of offenders, or in extreme cases a crude mutilation of an offender’s anatomy, this New Rehabilitation instead focuses on changing the biochemical composition of an offender . . . .
These differences in the New Rehabilitation require us to reevaluate whether this new version of the age-old penological goal poses different ethical concerns. While new scientific advances may increase the effectiveness of rehabilitative efforts, and while the concern that "nothing works" dominated the movement against rehabilitation in the 1970s, there were other concerns about rehabilitation that contributed to the demise of this theory of punishment.
Ryan goes on to explore several similarities and differences between the older and newer varieties of rehabilitation.
What is the object of "human rights"?
To make liberal education sanitary for students. Dante’s Divine
Comedy appears to be on the chopping block, even at universities. From the story:
The classic work should be removed from school curricula, according to Gherush 92, a human rights organisation which acts as a consultant to UN bodies on racism and discrimination.
Dante’s epic is “offensive and discriminatory” and has no place in a modern classroom, said Valentina Sereni, the group’s president . . . .
It represents Islam as a heresy and Mohammed as a schismatic and refers to Jews as greedy, scheming moneylenders and traitors, Miss Sereni told the Adnkronos news agency.
“The Prophet Mohammed was subjected to a horrific punishment – his body was split from end to end so that his entrails dangled out, an image that offends Islamic culture,” she said.
Homosexuals are damned by the work as being “against nature” and condemned to an eternal rain of fire in Hell.
“We do not advocate censorship or the burning of books, but we would like it acknowledged, clearly and unambiguously, that in the Divine Comedy there is racist, Islamophobic and anti-Semitic content. Art cannot be above criticism,” Miss Sereni said.
The concession about not burning books is truly magnanimous. Maybe Ms. Sereni may have missed the exquisite pain previewed for Popes Clement V and Boniface VIII in the Eighth Circle. It's the only explanation for the lack of anti-Catholicism outrage. But Boniface probably deserved a bit of hell, given his pretensions to temporal power. Perhaps Dante and Ms. Sereni agree on the issue of simony. Or the separation of church and state?
No matter –Dante was banished in his own time, so it is fitting that some right-thinking folks wish to banish him today. Still, if I could offer a little legal advice to Messrs. Chaucer, Boccaccio, Cervantes, and Shakespeare -- keep your heads down.
Michael McConnell at St. John's Law School
The Center for Law and Religion is delighted to announce that Professor Michael McConnell (Stanford) will visit us at St. John's Law School next Monday, March 19, at 5:30 pm. His is the fourth session in our ongoing seminar, Colloquium in Law: Law and Religion. Professor McConnell will reconsider Employment Division v. Smith in light of Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC, and he will offer us his always illuminating thoughts about the future of free exercise (those who have not read Professor McConnell's two 1990 pieces on free exercise -- one on the historical origins of free exercise and one in response to Smith -- will profit from them greatly).
Academics in the New York area and beyond are welcome to attend. Please let me know.
Wright on Constitutional Cases and the Four Cardinal Virtues
I always learn from George Wright's work. Here is another paper of his that I just came across, "Constitutional Cases and the Four Cardinal Virtues":
Judges typically decide constitutional cases by referring to one or more legal precedents, rules, tests, principles, doctrines, or policies. This Article recommends supplementing this standard approach with fully legitimate and appropriate attention to what many cultures have long recognized as the four basic cardinal virtues of practical wisdom or reasonable prudence, courage or fortitude, temperance or reasonable self-restraint, and justice as the disposition to give everyone their due.
The Article illustrates the legitimacy and usefulness of this supplementary approach, with judicial attention being paid either to government actors or to some broader public, in a range of important constitutional cases.
Part of the justification for this Article’s recommended approach is drawn directly from reflection on the case law, but the Article also draws upon philosophical discussions of the basic virtues from many cultures in order to address a number of possible critical concerns.