Baruch A. Brody (21 April 1943[1] – 30 May 2018)[2] was an American bioethicist. He was the Leon Jaworski Professor of biomedical ethics and former Director of the Center for Ethics, Medicine and Public Issues at The Baylor College of Medicine[3] and Andrew Mellow professor of Humanities in the Department of Philosophy at Rice University.[4]
Brody was among the first scholars in the field of applied ethics to write about abortion in the era following Roe v. Wade, including four articles in four different journals, culminating in his 1975 book Abortion and the Sanctity of Human Life: A Philosophical View.[8][9]
He has been noted for his contributions to Jewish ethics, as one of a number of "professional bioethicists with medical training" who uses "Judaic resources and reasoning to illustrate and augment their arguments."[10]
Selected publications
Abortion and the Sanctity of Human Life: A Philosophical View. (MIT Press, 1975).
Identity and Essence (Princeton, 1980).
Life and Death Decision Making (Oxford University Press, 1987).
Ethical Issues in Drug Testing Approval and Pricing (Oxford University Press, 1994)
The Ethics of Biomedical Research (Oxford University Press, 1998)