Recover your password.
A password will be e-mailed to you.
Trending
- Continue Training with Integrative Chiropractic During Injury
- Chiropractic Care: A Science-Based Approach to Wellness
- Platelet-Rich Plasma and Tissue Repair Insights
- How Poor Posture Habits Form through Everyday Activities
- The Science of Chiropractic Adjustments to Alleviate Pain
- Better Nerve Health: Understanding Neuropathy
- Impact of Sleep Deprivation on Injury Risks in Athletes
- Sciatic Nerve’s Role and Chiropractic for Pain Relief
- Beginner Weight-Loss Workouts That Keep You Motivated
- ESWT Speeds Recovery from MVA Injuries Non-Invasively
Biocentrism
Biocentrism, in an ecological and political sense, as well as literally, is a moral standpoint that extends value that is inherent to all things. It’s an understanding of how the earth works as it relates to biodiversity. It stands in contrast to anthropocentrism, which centers only on humans value. This extends value to the whole of nature. At least two distinct concerns can drive biocentrism. It’s largely geared toward protecting humanized and sentient entities, when biocentrism is focused on avoiding harm, and it is likely moderated by individual differences in the propensity to anthropomorphize character. When biocentrism is focused on upholding the purity of the environment, it functions at a more systemic level rather than focusing on the protection of, entities that are individuated. While early biocentric beliefs and ideals have expanded through various aspects of society, which has also become the basis of ethics regarding its relation to human biomedical and behavioral research in the practice of human medicine, including natural, alternative care options, such as integrative medicine or other treatment options, such as chiropractic care. Dr. Alex Jimenez discusses how biocentric ethics can apply to health care in the following collection of articles.