•  55
    “The angel of the house” in the realm of ART: feminist approach to oocyte and spare embryo donation for research (review)
    with Monika Michalowska
    Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 17 (1): 123-129. 2014.
    The spectacular progress in assisted reproduction technology that has been witnessed for the past thirty years resulted in emerging new ethical dilemmas as well as the revision of some perennial ones. The paper aims at a feminist approach to oocyte and spare embryo donation for research. First, referring to different concepts of autonomy and informed consent, we discuss whether the decision to donate oocyte/embryo can truly be an autonomous choice of a female patient. Secondly, we argue the comm…Read more
  •  37
    ART and Age − Gender Stereotypes in Medical Students’ Views
    with Monika Michałowska
    Diametros 45 71-81. 2015.
    It seems interesting to find out how the situation of the Polish ART practice is reflected in the medical students’ opinions. To answer this question we carried out a two-stage research adopting a data-driven methodology based upon the grounded theory, in which we collected a mixture of quantitative and qualitative data. Our study has revealed students’ high acceptance of IVF and most of the additional procedures, except for IVF in the case of women over 40 and postmenopausal ones. The students’…Read more
  •  18
    Challenges to ART market: a Polish case
    with Monika Michałowska
    Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 18 (1): 141-146. 2015.
    In the paper we are analyzing the Polish ART market. It can be noticed that the lack of legal regulation has resulted in many discrepancies among the policies adopted by various ART agencies. The social acceptance of ART procedures available mostly in private clinics led to growing commercialization of the Polish ART market. Additionally, the language of gift and altruistic rhetoric that are overwhelmingly employed by ART agencies reveals hypocrisy of the Polish ART market.
  •  12
    Monstrous body: between alienness and ownness
    Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 11 (2): 403-414. 2021.
    Monstrosity has its recognized place in cultural narratives but in philosophical discourse it remains mostly untouched. In my paper I make an attempt at phenomenological inquiry into the experience of the Other’s monstrous body. I am beginning with some remarks concerning Georges Canguilhem and Michel Foucault, the philosophers who devoted some attention to the problem of monstrosity and the monstrous, but my analysis is mainly based on the works of Bernhard Waldenfels, Edmund Husserl and Mauric…Read more
  •  5
    In December 2014, Physicians for Human Rights released their analysis of the summary of the Committee Report of the Central Intelligence Agency’s Detention and Interrogation Program. PHR focused on the involvement of health care professionals in the CIA torture program, concluding that the health professionals’ commissions and omissions violated the prescriptions of many fundamental bioethical documents, including international declarations of bioethics and medical research ethics. The medical d…Read more
  •  1
    A New Way of Coming-To-Be
    with Monika Michałowska
    In Monika Michałowska (ed.), Humanity In-Between and Beyond, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-17. 2023.
    Western culture has a long tradition of grappling with the awkward fact that we begin as weak and dependent beings. The technological possibilities of modern science make it possible to realize the human dream of conscious self-creation, including on the level of the body, and to fashion oneself as a new being. A rapid development of science and technology that we have been witnessing recently has not only had an enormous and comprehensive influence on human existence, but also changed the very …Read more