Whatever that is. The problem is that "dignity" is a squishy,
subjective notion, hardly up to the heavyweight moral demands
assigned to it. The bioethicist Ruth Macklin, who had been fed up
with loose talk about dignity intended to squelch research and
therapy, threw down the gauntlet in a 2003 editorial, "Dignity Is a
Useless Concept." Macklin argued that bioethics has done just fine
with the principle of personal autonomy--the idea that, because all
humans have the same minimum capacity to suffer, prosper, reason,
and choose, no human has the right to impinge on the life, body, or
freedom of another. This is why informed consent serves as the
bedrock of ethical research and practice, and it clearly rules out
the kinds of abuses that led to the birth of bioethics in the first
place, such as Mengele's sadistic pseudoexperiments in Nazi Germany
and the withholding of treatment to indigent black patients in the
infamous Tuskegee syphilis study. Once you recognize the principle
of autonomy, Macklin argued, "dignity" adds nothing.