ABSTRACT

The purpose of this volume is to ask and propose a positive answer to the question: "Can we attend to the personhood of individuals within systems and cultures which are mass oriented?" One of the most interesting changes in contemporary thinking has been the emphasis on the unique person. While the distinction between a person (a unique rational being) and individual (one of several similar things) has long existed, it is in the twentieth century that we seem to have become fully conscious of this distinction. There is good reason for such as emphasis today. Repeatedly in this century the case of the person was deemed less important than some policy. Innocent persons slaughtered in the name of some "ism," political bombings and kidnappings, and mass unemployment to name but a few. The cause of our dehumanization seems to be the reduction of the individual person to a part of the political, economic or religious system.

part I|119 pages

Theoretical Considerations

chapter Chapter 1|11 pages

Personal Care in an Impersonal World

chapter Chapter 2|6 pages

The Person: Dying and Bereaved

chapter Chapter 4|8 pages

The Right to Die and the Need to Grieve

chapter Chapter 5|34 pages

Grieving: The Pain and the Promise

part II|68 pages

The Needs of Particular Groups

chapter Chapter 10|24 pages

“It’s Not Over When It’s Over”—The Aftermath of Suicide

(or, Post Suicide Intervention—The Power of the Clergy and Congregation in Preventing the Next Suicide)

chapter Chapter 12|12 pages

SIDS: Parents’ Responses

part IV|7 pages

Special Questions

chapter Chapter 19|5 pages

Hospice Future