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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Bioethical Prescriptions collects F.M. Kamm's articles on bioethics, which have appeared over the last twenty-five years and which have made her among the most influential philosophers in this area. Kamm is known for her intricate, sophisticated, and painstaking philosophical analyses of moral problems generally and of bioethical issues in particular. This volume showcases these articles - revised to eliminate redundancies - as parts of a coherent whole. A
substantive introduction identifies important themes than run through the articles. Section headings include Death and Dying; Early Life (on conception and use of embryos, abortion, and childhood); Genetics and Other Enhancements (on cloning and other genetic technologies); Allocating Scarce Resources; and
Methodology (on the relation of moral theory and practical ethics).
Contents:
Introduction ; Acknowledgments ; Part I Death and Dying ; Chapter 1 Rescuing Ivan Ilych: How We Live and How We Die ; Chapter 2 Conceptual Issues Related to Ending Life ; Chapter 3 Problems with <"Assisted Suicide: The Philosophers' Brief>" ; Chapter 4 Four-Step Arguments for Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia ; Chapter 5 Some Arguments by Velleman Concerning Suicide and Assisted Suicide ; Chapter 6 Brody on Active and Passive Euthanasia ; Chapter 7 A Note on Dementia and Advance Directives ; Chapter 8 Brain Death and Spontaneous Breathing ; Part II Young Life ; Chapter 9 Using Human Embryos for Biomedical Research ; Chapter 10 Ethical Issues in Using and Not Using Human Embryonic Stem Cells ; Chapter 1 Ronald Dworkin's Views on Abortion ; Chapter 12 Creation and Abortion Short ; Chapter 13 McMahan on the Ethics of Killing at the Margins of Life ; Chapter 14 Some Conceptual and Ethical Issues in Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy ; Part III Genetic and Other Enhancements ; Chapter 15 Genes, Justice, and Obligations to Future People ; Chapter 16 Moral Status, Personal Identity, and Substitutability: Clones, Embryos, and Future Generations ; Chapter 17 What Is and Is Not Wrong with Enhancement ; Part IV Allocating Scarce Resources ; Chapter 18 Health and Equity ; Chapter 19 Health and Equality of Opportunity ; Chapter 20 Is it Morally Permissible to Discontinue NonFutile Use of a Scarce Resource? ; Chapter 21 Aggregation, Allocating Scarce Resources, and Discrimination Against the Disabled ; Chapter 22 Rationing and the Disabled: Several Proposals ; Chapter 23 Learning from Bioethics: Moral Issues in Rationing Non-Medical Scarce Resources ; Part V Methodology ; Chapter 24 The Philosopher as Insider and Outsider ; Chapter 25 Theory and Analogy ; Chapter 26 Relations between High Theory, Low Theory, and Applying Applied Ethics ; Chapter 27 Understanding, Justifying, and Finding Oneself ; Index
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Oxford University Press (Oxford University Press Inc)
Publication date: January, 2014
Pages: 656
Dimensions: 156.00 x 241.00 x 49.00
Weight: 926g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Ethics
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