Search by Name

Search by Name

H. Tristram Engelhardt

1941 - 2018

H. Engelhardt Obituary

Hugo Tristram Engelhardt
1941-2018
Hugo Tristram Engelhardt, Jr., PhD, MD, one of the intellectual founders of the fields of bioethics and the philosophy of medicine, whose seminal work continues to frame debates about healthcare policy and medical practice, fell asleep in the Lord at his home with his wife by his side at 4:30 a.m. on Thursday, June 21, 2018, in Houston.
He died of complications due to cancer. He was 77 years old.
Once described as the enfant terrible of bioethics, Professor Engelhardt challenged Western secular liberal moral and political assumptions which, he argued, could not be secured through reason alone, and frequently cause more harm than benefit. His first book Bioethics and Secular Humanism (1991) together with the first and second editions of The Foundations of Bioethics (1986; 1996) examined why sound rational argument is unable to provide the foundations necessary to justify a content-full secular morality or bioethics, much less to secure a canonical political theory to guide healthcare policy.
There are always numerous competing ethical perspectives regarding the politically reasonable or morally rational, each with its own set of moral intuitions and theoretical constructions designed to secure some particular understanding of the moral project. He often noted that because of competing moral intuitions, rational, informed people rank the significance of liberty, equality, security and prosperity differently. Such variations alone yield very different accounts of morality. Given the reality of deep moral pluralism and the inability of reason alone to resolve it, secular moral authority must be created through, and is limited to, the actual agreements of actual persons. In other words, the foundations for secular bioethics and public health care policy are starkly libertarian.
Engelhardt did not celebrate the value of personal liberty nor did he make any particular assumption regarding the rights of persons. Instead, his libertarianism was a default moral and political position. There is a prima facie lack of moral authority to interfere in the choices of persons who are acting with free and consenting others, even if some would condemn their actions as imprudent, misguided, or sinful. Nor does there exist sufficient moral political authority to coerce some into benefiting others through tax-payer financed welfare entitlements.
It is for this unflinching libertarianism that Engelhardt is best known. It is widely assumed not only that Engelhardt affirmed the social and political consequences of his conclusions, but that he celebrated its frequently libertine possibilities.
Many, perhaps most, of his readers have not taken seriously Engelhardt's own admonishments in the Foundations of Bioethics that secular morality permits many activities that he knew to be deeply sinful (e.g., abortion on demand, human embryonic stem cell research, euthanasia, and so forth) as well as imprudent (e.g., turning to a doctor of chiropracty or naturopathy for treatment of heart disease). The challenge is that there simply does not exist secular moral authority to justifiably prohibit freely chosen actions among consenting adult persons.
In 2000, Engelhardt completed this previously one-sided picture with the publication of The Foundations of Christian Bioethics. He presented a deeply serious account of Orthodox Christian bioethics – an account of bioethics grounded in the commands of God, as experienced through the Eastern Orthodox Christian Church. This is not a bioethics that all will endorse through their shared rationality; nor is it a bioethics that can be adequately captured in terms of universal accounts of human rights; nor can it be known through the rational arguments of philosophers. This is a bioethics set within a spiritual framework at one with the commitments, beliefs, and practices of the ancient fathers of the Christian Church. It is a bioethics set within the Holy Traditional Orthodox Christianity of the first millennium. It is all encompassing, transcendentally focused, frequently mystical and framed in terms of our struggle to know God and to find salvation through Him. The Foundations of Christian Bioethics invited readers to join Engelhardt on this mystical noetic journey.
Visitors to Houston routinely could find Engelhardt at St. George Orthodox Church in Houston Texas. He served as a tonsured Reader and was always willing to detail the history of Orthodox Christianity and to explain to all who would listen why they should repent and return to the original Church, the Orthodox Christian Church.
In his final book, After God: Morality & Bioethics in a Secular Age, written while undergoing cancer treatment, and finally published in 2017, Engelhardt worked to articulate the moral and epistemic implications of living in a culture that had come to reject God. He argued that without reference to God to guarantee that the virtuous are rewarded and the vicious suffer, there is no reason to believe that rationality requires one to be moral, much less why it would be prudent to act morally.
While somewhat dark and foreboding, After God ends with hope: "Only God knows the future. Philosophers are not prophets. … The present is full of unanticipated occurrences. There are again Orthodox churches in Rome. Converts stand in the catholicon. Icons weep. Across the world, a literature of traditional Christian moral reflection and Christian bioethics is developing with a significant contribution from Orthodox Christians. In a culture after God, many know that God lives, philosophers among them."
While always the Texian, Engelhard was an internationally renowned scholar in the history of philosophy, history and philosophy of medicine, and bioethics. He earned an MD with honors from Tulane University School of Medicine (1972) and a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin (1969), where he completed his undergraduate work (1963). For the academic year 1969-1970, he was a Fulbright Graduate Fellow at Bonn University, Germany; in 1988-1989, he was a Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in West Berlin (Germany); in fall 1997, he was a Visiting Scholar at the Internationale Akademie für Philosophie im Fürstentum Liechtenstein, and in spring 1998 a Visiting Scholar at Liberty Fund, Indianapolis, Indiana.
At the time of his death, he was Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Rice University and Professor Emeritus in the Departments of Medicine and Community Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, having joined the faculties of both institutions in 1983.
He began his academic career in 1972 at The University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston in what was the Department of the History of Medicine. With the founding of the Institute for Medical Humanities, he was drawn to work in bioethics. He served as the Associate Editor of the first edition of the Encyclopedia of Bioethics. In 1977, he was named the Rosemary Kennedy Professor of Philosophy of Medicine at Georgetown University with appointments in the Department of Philosophy and the School of Medicine. He was also a senior research scholar at Georgetown University's Kennedy Institute, working within the Center for Bioethics.
In 1975, Engelhardt co-founded the Philosophy and Medicine book series with Stuart Spicker (with some 129 published volumes currently in print) and, in 1976, he co-founded The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy with Edmund Pellegrino (now in its 43rd year of continuous publication). Together these projects created an international scholarly focus to frame the intellectual fields of the philosophy of medicine and bioethics as they explored foundational issues in health care policy, the nature of health and disease, and the character of medical explanation. In 1982, Professor Engelhardt returned to Texas, where he was appointed Professor in the Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, and Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Rice University. He also worked with the Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy. In 1992, he founded the Philosophical Studies in Contemporary Culture book series. In 1995, following his conversion to Orthodox Christianity, he founded the journal Christian Bioethics: Non-Ecumenical Studies in Medical Morality (now in its 24th year of continuous publication).
He is author of five book length monographs: Bioethics and Secular Humanism: The Search for a Common Morality (SCM Press and Trinity Press International, 1991); The Foundations of Bioethics (Oxford University Press, 1986; with a second edition in 1996); The Foundations of Christian Bioethics (Swetz & Zeitlinger, 2000); and After God: Morality & Bioethics in a Secular Age (St. Vladimir's Seminar Press, 2017). He has published more than 300 articles and book chapters, more than 110 book reviews and other publications, together with more than twenty-five edited or co-edited books. His work has been translated into numerous languages, including Chinese, German, Portuguese, Italian, Spanish, and Japanese.
The impressive range and depth of his work in philosophy, medicine, bioethics, and theology illustrate his profound appreciation that careful and critical analytical work is central to reigning in the untutored desire to claim the current canons of political correctness as truth.
Engelhardt has had a lasting effect on generations of students. Over the decades, Engelhardt developed a growing class of loyal students to labor with him as he edited the two international academic journals and two major book series; taught classes on philosophy, healthcare policy, and bioethics; wrote his own books and scholarly articles; lectured around the world; organized national and international conferences and much more. In exchange, Engelhardt worked tirelessly for his students, many of whom today are tenured professors in the United States, Hong Kong, and elsewhere in the world. He insisted on excellence, never accepted excuses, and taught them that sleep interfered with scholarly productivity and good mentoring.
Engelhardt never ceased aggressively to pursue his duties to his students. His intellect, energy, generosity, and wit will be sorely missed.
Professor Engelhardt is survived by his beloved wife of 52 years, Susan Gay Malloy Engelhardt, three cherished daughters, Susan Elizabeth Engelhardt, Christina Tristram Engelhardt Partridge (Brian), Preotessa Dorothea Tristram Engelhardt Anitei (Fr. Iulian), 13 grandchildren (Duncan, Keegan, Aidan, Colman and Finan Partridge; Macrina, Theodora, Stefan, Photinia, Paul, Alexandra and Symeon Anitei; and Austin Engelhardt), and his brother, John Hugo Engelhardt.
Sunday evening, June 24, a Trisagion will be held at 6 p.m. followed by visitation and prayers at 8 followed by reading of psalms. All at St. George Orthodox Church in Houston. On the following day, Monday, June 25, the Office of the Burial of the Dead will be served at St. George Orthodox Church at 10 a.m. Burial will follow at Holy Archangels Orthodox Monastery near Kendalia, Texas sometime between 4 and 5 p.m. of the same day, followed by a mercy meal.
In lieu of flowers donations may be made to Holy Protection Orthodox Church, 13850 Beechnut Street, Houston, 77083.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Houston Chronicle on Jun. 23, 2018.

Memories and Condolences
for H. Engelhardt

Not sure what to say?





Griffin Trotter

June 14, 2022

My godfather, mentor, friend -- you are sorely missed.

Br. Benjamin Cyrus

October 27, 2018

I just learned a few moments ago that my friend, prayer partner, and ally against the darkness passed away. Although I will miss his presence, I know that he took seriously the mandate to pray unceasingly, and know that his prayers continue. Memory eternal. Remember, O Lord, thy servant, who has fallen asleep.

Dragan Pavlovic

July 16, 2018

I just learned that my e.mail to Herman will not reach him...

My thoughts will, of course, reach him inevitably. This will not prevent my deep, deep sorrow.

My condolence to you and your wonderful family.
Dr. Dragan Pavlovic, Paris

John & Susie Sobchak

June 26, 2018

I will always remember the Reader Herman and how he so beautifully recited Ezekiel 37 during the Lamentations Service of Holy Week. He had a presence when he read, that reached into your heart. Our favorite memory of Dr. Engelhardt was running into an office building in Hong Kong as a monsoon was easing away,and taking the elevator to a floor where the Greek Orthodox Cathedral was housed. As the elevator door in this skyscraper opened, the elevator was filled with incense and the whole family smiled as we heard the familiar voice of our beloved Reader Herman from Houston, Texas!

May his memory be eternal

Kang Chen

June 25, 2018

I am stunned and saddened by the passing of Dr. Engelhardt. His seminars on Kant and Hegel were no less than life-changing for me. He was unfailingly generous and practiced the non-coercion he advocated in his books; at the beginning of each semester, he would tell the class which sessions he had to reschedule, choose a make-up date based on unanimous consent, and hold the make-up session at a restaurant where he picked up the tab for all of us. My deepest condolences to his family.

June 25, 2018

Dear Susan,

My heartfelt condolences to you and the whole family! I will pray to the infinitely merciful God for Tris's soul and for all of you for consolation and peace.
In Christ
Josef (Seifert) ([email protected])

Brenda Beust Smith

June 24, 2018

I am so sorry for Tris' family and friends. I know this is a terrible loss. And I wanted to share a memory that goes back a long way. Tris often joined a group of us who lived in Riverside section of Houston (N. MacGregor area). We spent a great deal of time on our bikes in Hermann Park where one of us (maybe the Megows? Maybe Tris?) had a movie camera. This was back in the early 50s. We made movies about a monster named Mucaluk (sp?). The guys would chase him into the now reflection pond, then a dirt-bottom little lake. Tris owned some shares of Canada Dry, so he made animated commercials, the kind that required multiple shots as the bottles were moved. The guys showed the movies at St. Thomas until one of the girls wore short shorts and the priests banned any future showings. Tris was a very special person, even back then. He will be terribly missed and I'm so glad he came into my life, even for such a short time. He will be unforgettable.

June 24, 2018

I'm very sorry for your loss. He made quite an impact on me when I was a medical student in Houston. Melissa from New Braunfels

Angelina

June 23, 2018

I am so sorry for the loss of your loved one Professor H. Engelhardt. May it bring you comfort in knowing that God knows your pain, and he cares for you, and will help you through this difficult time. John 6:40

Victoria Buck

June 23, 2018

Memory Eternal! It has been an honor knowing your Husband/Father. He will be greatly missed with his intellect and humor. He gave his life for the good of All! May spiritual peace surround all of you at this time.

June 23, 2018

I am sincerely sorry for your loss. May the God of peace be with you. I'd like to share a beautiful scripture with you found in Phillippians 4:6,7. That reminds us of a gift we have for these hard time

J

June 23, 2018

My sincerest condolences for your loss. Please find comfort in the words of 2 Thessalonians 2:16,17. It will help strengthen you during this time.

June 23, 2018

I would like to offer my deepest condolences to your family. As you reflect on cherished memories, may you find comfort and hope. Jeremiah 29:11,12-TE, Md

June 23, 2018

May you find comfort and peace in your memories of your loved one. My the God of peace comfort you. 2 Thessalonians 2:16,17

Showing 1 - 14 of 14 results

Make a Donation
in H. Engelhardt's name

Memorial Events
for H. Engelhardt

Jun

24

Prayer Service

8:00 p.m.

St. George Orthodox Church

Houston, TX

Jun

24

Service

6:00 p.m.

St. George Orthodox Church

Houston, TX

Jun

25

Service

10:00 a.m.

St. George Orthodox Church

Houston, TX

How to support H.'s loved ones
Honor a beloved veteran with a special tribute of ‘Taps’ at the National WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C.

The nightly ceremony in Washington, D.C. will be dedicated in honor of your loved one on the day of your choosing.

Read more
Attending a Funeral: What to Know

You have funeral questions, we have answers.

Read more
Should I Send Sympathy Flowers?

What kind of arrangement is appropriate, where should you send it, and when should you send an alternative?

Read more
What Should I Write in a Sympathy Card?

We'll help you find the right words to comfort your family member or loved one during this difficult time.

Read more
Resources to help you cope with loss
Estate Settlement Guide

If you’re in charge of handling the affairs for a recently deceased loved one, this guide offers a helpful checklist.

Read more
How to Write an Obituary

Need help writing an obituary? Here's a step-by-step guide...

Read more
Obituaries, grief & privacy: Legacy’s news editor on NPR podcast

Legacy's Linnea Crowther discusses how families talk about causes of death in the obituaries they write.

Read more
The Five Stages of Grief

They're not a map to follow, but simply a description of what people commonly feel.

Read more
Ways to honor H. Engelhardt's life and legacy
Obituary Examples

You may find these well-written obituary examples helpful as you write about your own family.

Read more
How to Write an Obituary

Need help writing an obituary? Here's a step-by-step guide...

Read more
Obituary Templates – Customizable Examples and Samples

These free blank templates make writing an obituary faster and easier.

Read more
How Do I Write a Eulogy?

Some basic help and starters when you have to write a tribute to someone you love.

Read more