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Persona y Bioética
ISSN: 0123-3122
[email protected]
Universidad de La Sabana
Colombia
García-Huidobro, Joaquín; Giménez, Constanza; Honorato, Diego
Antígona y Aristóteles: una lectura a dos voces acerca de la ambigüedad de la técnica
Persona y Bioética, vol. 19, núm. 2, julio-diciembre, 2015, pp. 303-318
Universidad de La Sabana
Cundinamarca, Colombia
Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=83242580003
Abstract
In the "Ode to Man," in Antigone, Sophocles stressed the moral ambiguity of the technique. Since it can be used for both good and
bad, it requires a higher guidance, one represented by divine law. This theme is taken up by Aristotle, but on a secular basis, with
his idea that some things are right or wrong by nature. For Aristotle, the straight orientation of the technique does not depend
primarily on knowledge of certain ethical rules, but on the formation of character, since knowledge of what is good depends on the
moral disposition of the subject.
Keywords
Ethical relativism, technique, Sophocles Antigone, Aristotle (Source: DeCS, Bireme).
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