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- aggregation classification "B2".
- aggregation creator person.
- aggregation date "2010".
- aggregation format "application/pdf".
- aggregation hasFormat 1185967.bibtex.
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- aggregation isPartOf urn:isbn:9781443825160.
- aggregation language "eng".
- aggregation publisher "Cambridge Scholars".
- aggregation rights "I have transferred the copyright for this publication to the publisher".
- aggregation subject "Philosophy and Religion".
- aggregation title "Sports and morality or fitness and social status".
- aggregation abstract "In general, ethics aims at the good life and looks for what we prefer or what we think what should be; sports on the contrary is directed towards the best and even more. While sports try to transgress limits and enhance human performances, ethics talk about restraint and limits. Today, this already challenged relationship between sports and ethics is tested by concomitant medical circumstances. Medicine offers us a pile of new strategies to enhance our physical possibilities. Despite many medical ethicists feel appealed to discuss the do’s and don’ts of enhancement, I prefer to discuss the limit between treatment and enhancement and the question: what do we describe as a disease? Do we have good and strong medical arguments for this distinction, and if not, do we not have to reconsider to go on with this distinction as the ethical foundation to differ between good and bad? Or to put it the other way round: do we need to categorize something as a treatment of a disease, in order to tolerate it?".
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