Qiu Renzong (邱仁宗, c. 1933) is a Chinese
bioethicist. He is a senior research fellow emeritus at China's Institute of Philosophy, and chair of the Academic Committee at the Centre for Bioethics at
Peking Union Medical College.[1]China Daily writes that he is regarded as the scholar who 30 years ago introduced bioethics to China.[2]
Qiu published a paper in 2002 arguing for the recognition in China of
animal rights, and introducing the idea of
speciesism. He argued in favour of a
gradualist approach to the recognition of rights, rejecting the
abolitionist approach as unrealistic. His paper was criticized by Zhao Nanyuan, a professor at
Tsinghua University, who wrote that animal rights arguments are foreign ideas and are "anti-humanity."[3]
Qiu was awarded the 2009
UNESCOAvicenna Prize for Ethics in Science[1] and he shared the Hastings Center's Henry Knowles Beecher Award with Solomon R. Benatar in 2011.[4]
Selected works
Bioethics: Asian Perspectives: A Quest for Moral Diversity. Springer, 2004.
^Li, Peter J. "China: Animal rights and animal welfare" in Bekoff, Marc. Encyclopedia of Animal Rights and Animal Welfare. Greenwood, 2009, pp. 119–120.
Qiu Renzong (邱仁宗, c. 1933) is a Chinese
bioethicist. He is a senior research fellow emeritus at China's Institute of Philosophy, and chair of the Academic Committee at the Centre for Bioethics at
Peking Union Medical College.[1]China Daily writes that he is regarded as the scholar who 30 years ago introduced bioethics to China.[2]
Qiu published a paper in 2002 arguing for the recognition in China of
animal rights, and introducing the idea of
speciesism. He argued in favour of a
gradualist approach to the recognition of rights, rejecting the
abolitionist approach as unrealistic. His paper was criticized by Zhao Nanyuan, a professor at
Tsinghua University, who wrote that animal rights arguments are foreign ideas and are "anti-humanity."[3]
Qiu was awarded the 2009
UNESCOAvicenna Prize for Ethics in Science[1] and he shared the Hastings Center's Henry Knowles Beecher Award with Solomon R. Benatar in 2011.[4]
Selected works
Bioethics: Asian Perspectives: A Quest for Moral Diversity. Springer, 2004.
^Li, Peter J. "China: Animal rights and animal welfare" in Bekoff, Marc. Encyclopedia of Animal Rights and Animal Welfare. Greenwood, 2009, pp. 119–120.