The term "bioethics" was first used by VR Potter just over thirty years (Potter, 1970). This fissure is rooted in the huge asymmetry between current technological development that gives man the power to manipulate the privacy of people and altering the environment, and the absence of a corresponding increase in their sense of responsibility for which would force him to direct this new power for the benefit of himself and of his natural surroundings.
Bioethics thus emerges as an attempt to establish a bridge between experimental science and humanities. It is expected to formulate principles that will address responsibly globally-also-the ...