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The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte

An historian of World War II Germany was asked, about whether there was a single ideological notion that proved to be the most influential in allowing the horrific evils of the Holocaust to take place. It is the very idea, derived from the Romantics, he wrote, that artists are entitled to live outsi...

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Autor principal: Polak, Rabbi Joseph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: University of Illinois at Chicago Library 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9139198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36407930
http://dx.doi.org/10.5210/jbc.v45i1.10810
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author Polak, Rabbi Joseph
author_facet Polak, Rabbi Joseph
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description An historian of World War II Germany was asked, about whether there was a single ideological notion that proved to be the most influential in allowing the horrific evils of the Holocaust to take place. It is the very idea, derived from the Romantics, he wrote, that artists are entitled to live outside of morality. Hitler and others unquestionably saw themselves in this way. With this realization we have arrived at the reductio ad absurdum of this Romantic ethic: the Artist as Murderer. And it is because we believe that like artists, physicians occupy a higher sphere, that we have, in Holocaust times, the transformation of the physician, like the artist, into the murderer. Like the artist, who murders but does not do so with his own hand, the physician supervises executions and unspeakable experiments. Anatomists buttressed their collections at a range of German and Austrian universities, by placing orders from among the executed and about-to-be executed. It is this that I have in mind when I speak of "murder-a-la-carte." Pernkopf was one of these anatomists. Through the atlas he immortalizes the victims. Years later, a surgeon asks about the atlas and protocols for continued use, to benefit patients and educate, are created. The surgeon may well be rescuing the medical profession itself from its own historical sins of presumed unaccountability, of returning it to a human place where the dignity of the patient remains inviolable, and where the victims of medically inspired evil gaze out at us from the pages of the atlas, both as a blessing and as a warning.
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spelling pubmed-91391982022-11-18 The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte Polak, Rabbi Joseph J Biocommun Oration An historian of World War II Germany was asked, about whether there was a single ideological notion that proved to be the most influential in allowing the horrific evils of the Holocaust to take place. It is the very idea, derived from the Romantics, he wrote, that artists are entitled to live outside of morality. Hitler and others unquestionably saw themselves in this way. With this realization we have arrived at the reductio ad absurdum of this Romantic ethic: the Artist as Murderer. And it is because we believe that like artists, physicians occupy a higher sphere, that we have, in Holocaust times, the transformation of the physician, like the artist, into the murderer. Like the artist, who murders but does not do so with his own hand, the physician supervises executions and unspeakable experiments. Anatomists buttressed their collections at a range of German and Austrian universities, by placing orders from among the executed and about-to-be executed. It is this that I have in mind when I speak of "murder-a-la-carte." Pernkopf was one of these anatomists. Through the atlas he immortalizes the victims. Years later, a surgeon asks about the atlas and protocols for continued use, to benefit patients and educate, are created. The surgeon may well be rescuing the medical profession itself from its own historical sins of presumed unaccountability, of returning it to a human place where the dignity of the patient remains inviolable, and where the victims of medically inspired evil gaze out at us from the pages of the atlas, both as a blessing and as a warning. University of Illinois at Chicago Library 2021-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9139198/ /pubmed/36407930 http://dx.doi.org/10.5210/jbc.v45i1.10810 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 License.
spellingShingle Oration
Polak, Rabbi Joseph
The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte
title The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte
title_full The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte
title_fullStr The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte
title_full_unstemmed The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte
title_short The Vienna Protocol and Reflections on Nazi Medicine: Murder à la Carte
title_sort vienna protocol and reflections on nazi medicine: murder à la carte
topic Oration
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9139198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36407930
http://dx.doi.org/10.5210/jbc.v45i1.10810
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