Problems Unique to the HolocaustHarry J. Cargas University Press of Kentucky, 1 Jan 1999 - 198 halaman Victims of the Holocaust were faced with moral dilemmas for which no one could prepare, yet many of these life-and-death situations required immediate actions. |
Isi
Can Betrayal Ever Be Legitimate? | 1 |
The Moral Dilemma of Motherhood in the Nazi Death Camps | 7 |
Holocaust Victims of Privilege | 25 |
Suicides or Murders? | 43 |
Holocaust Suicides | 51 |
Victims of Evil or Evil of Victims? | 67 |
Medicine in the Shadow of Nuremberg | 83 |
Is Objectivity Morally Defensible in Discussing the Holocaust? | 98 |
Intruding on Private Grief | 122 |
Christians as Holocaust Scholars | 135 |
Art After Auschwitz | 152 |
Reflections on PostHolocaust Ethics | 169 |
Afterword | 182 |
Contributors | 190 |
193 | |
A Note on Harry James Cargas | 197 |
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American Amery anti-Semitism artists Aryans Auschwitz babies benefits Berg Berg’s Bettelheim bystanders Calel Perechodnik Catholic caust child Christian scholars concentration camps danger death camps defined definition deportation destruction diary difficult Elie Wiesel essay ethical euthanasia evil example experience field film find first five Frankl Franklin Littell gas chambers genetic genocide German Gestapo God’s Goldhagen Harry James Harry James Cargas Hitler Holo Holocaust Holocaust survivors human Ibid influenced Israel issues Jerzy Kosinski Jewish Jews Judenrat justification killing Kosinski lives Lodz Maxwell means memory moral dilemmas mother murder Nazi Nazi Germany non-Jews Nuremberg Code office one’s persecution person physicians Polish possible Primo Levi prisoners problem Protestant question Rabbi racial Reflections religious response Robert Rubenstein scientific Shoah significant social specific suffering sufficient survive teaching Torah trans understanding University Press values victims Warsaw Ghetto women Yad Vashem York