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The wonder of the human body

Author: Matt James
Date: 11.05.2010
Category: Emerging Technologies

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Originally Posted in English

The question of how we perceive and value the human body is becoming an increasingly pertinent question to ponder and consider. An exhibition which generates as much acclaim as it does criticism in response to this question, Body Worlds, went on show at London’s O2 arena from October 2008 to August 2009. The travelling exhibition explores the ageing process and exemplifies the technique of plastination in preserving human bodies and body parts in order to reveal the inner anatomical structures.

All the bodies used in the exhibition belonged to people who authorised the use of their bodies after their deaths for the educational benefit of both medical professionals and non-professionals. Plastination of the bodies involve an impregnational technique carried out in a vacuum where the body tissue is saturated with special plastics. Consequently, the body tissues gain an increased rigidity thus allowing them to be displayed upright and positioned in lifelike poses. The exhibition takes between 60 to 90 minutes to view and having viewed it one is hard pressed not to come away with a greater appreciation and wonder of the human body. However, as well as the educational benefit Body Worlds also helps to stimulate questions concerning how one views the human body.

Human dignity

First, concerns have been expressed over the artistic representation of plastinated specimens which have now been recreated into “whole body exhibits”. Does this violate human dignity? It is emphasised that each person who has had their dead body plastinated made the decision independently. Consequently, it could be said that agreeing to have their body plastinated is an expression of their personal dignity. But it is the wider ramifications of this decision which need to be carefully thought through. Considering dignity on this personal level fails to take into consideration the individual’s role in humanity as a whole. On the individual level, a body donor may see their dignity as being preserved through plastination but at a wider social level, a plastinate could become part of a larger voyeuristic event which in turn violates human dignity. Whilst the educational benefits of Body Worlds are immense and bring the body ‘to life’ more than even the best anatomical text book, one can easily slip into forgetting that the bodies before you are not cleverly created plastic models but actual bodies.

In a world which seems dominated by the cult of celebrity and TV reality shows could the motive of furthering scientific knowledge of the body quickly be routed and perverted by voyeuristic tendencies? Does the act of putting corpses on display actually help to depersonalise human beings? They become objects to be processed in a pragmatic way and even openly described as ‘whole body exhibits’ rather than dead persons who have actually lived. Von Hagens has argued that the public have a ‘right to view bodies’. This is true and in many respects the wonder of the human body and the insights which the contemporary natural sciences can afford us in order to enrich our understanding should be made available and accessible to all. However, taking this right to its extreme form whereby it becomes a right to reveal the human object at all costs, one could be in danger of quickly arriving at a far more unnatural place of prostituting the body.

Keywords: human body, plastination, immortality

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Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down angeleyes19828 (0)
United States

I think this is a really neat exhibit. I have heard of it, before but never have actually seen it. I think there is truly a lot of detachment from the boyd in Western society today. Our children watch tv where people are killed and truly are desensitized by dead bodies.

I think this is a neat exhibit from what I have seen on the website for Body Worlds. I think it shows how unique the human body is, but as Christians and as the church we need to remind ourselves and focus not only on the body but the soul as well.

Many churches have health programs that not only focus on the physical but the spiritual. It is all connected.


20.10.2010
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Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down SFouch (0)
United Kingdom

I think it is interesting that in Western culture we have developed a very sirupted, and indeed detached view of the body - making it something of a problem to be managed by self rather than part of self.  We see the spiritual ivoed fromt he amterial, the boy as a comodity to be exploiuted or refined for xternal purposes, and when it goes wrong an embaressment to hide from view.

Sadly, the church has been comlicit in this, having wed itself to a Cartesian dualims and buying into a Neo-Platonic view of the body as a temporary encumberance - the tent that we dwell in for a while, but not the true self.  The Biblical view is more rich and complex, and also more implicit (as with all cultural undertanding of self).

The theology and spiritual anthropology of the body is one of the issues that the church in the West needs to rediscover for all sort of reasons - not just in bio and sexual ehtics, but also in our undertanding of worship, mission, and indeed our new resurrection life in the Kingdom of God.  And this is not academic, it really does work itself out in how we live and practice.


12.10.2010

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