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Contemporary Debates in Bioethics: European Perspectives

出版社
出版日期
2018/11/02
閱讀格式
EPUB
書籍分類
學科分類
ISBN
9783110571455

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The volume aims to capture a European gist of theoretical sensibilities, conceptual resources, and research interests, but not in an adversarial way, as opposed to American bioethics. The volume gathers contributions from European scholars as they collaborate and form a research network, drawing on a diversity of philosophical traditions and local knowledge, with the aim of debating universal bioethical problems. ABSTRACTING & INDEXING Contemporary Debates in Bioethics: European Perspectives is covered by the following services: Web of Science - Book Citation Index - Social Sciences & Humanities
  • Cover
  • Half-Title
  • Titlepage
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Christopher Gyngell
    • 1 Good Parents and New Reproductive Technologies
      • 1.1 Introduction
      • 1.2 Use of RGTs
      • 1.3 Should parents influence the genes of their children?
      • 1.4 Does the method matter?
      • 1.5 Conclusion
    • References
  • Bogdan Olaru
    • 2 Bypassing Morality Through Conventional and Unconventional Forms of Moral Enhancement
      • 2.1 The argument emanating from similarity
      • 2.2 Selecting for particular ways of reasoning, disruptions of one’s narrative identity, and freedom from any mental manipulations
      • 2.3 Fundamental similarity between conventional and nonconventional moral enhancement
      • 2.4 The constraint of moral equality between the enhancer and the enhanced person
    • References
  • Marcello Ienca
    • 3 The Neuroenhancement Continuum and the Minimal Rule
      • 3.1 Introduction
      • 3.2 Nootropics and the origin of human neuroenhancement
      • 3.3 The neuroenhancement continuum: nootropics and other enhancers
      • 3.4 The neuroenhancement continuum II: cognition and other systems
      • 3.5 A minimal rule for the administration of neuroenhancers: MiRNA
      • 3.6 Application of the MiRNA
      • 3.7 Safety, self-determination, equality, and information
      • 3.8 Conclusion
    • References
  • Blanca Rodríguez López
    • 4 Procreative Beneficence: is Selection Really Better Than Genetic Modification?
      • 4.1 Introduction
      • 4.2 Some considerations on the PPB
      • 4.3 Selection
      • 4.4 PPB and the nonidentity problem
      • 4.5 Why selection is not morally superior
      • 4.6 Conclusion: a defense for an extension of PPB
    • References
  • Daniela Rusnac
    • 5 Practical Ethics Issues in Gene Therapy and Genetic Testing
      • 5.1 Introduction
      • 5.2 Genetic testing
      • 5.3 Gene therapy
      • 5.4 Conclusion
    • References
  • Emilian Mihailov
    • 6 Refocusing the Nudge Debate on Organ Donation
      • 6.1 Introduction
      • 6.2 The success of opt-out systems
      • 6.3 Tempering the opt-out enthusiasm
      • 6.4 Opt-out policy and consent standards
      • 6.5 Beyond the dichotomy of presumed and explicit consent
      • 6.6 Nudging beyond potential donors
      • 6.7 Conclusion
    • References
  • Mihaela Frunză, Iulia Grad, Sandu Frunză, Ovidiu Grad
    • 7 CLICK HERE! To Find More About Organ Transplantation: Ethical Aspects of Media Stories on Organ Donation from Romanian Newspapers
      • 7.1 Introduction
      • 7.2 Sensational stories on organ donation in the Romanian paper-based media (2008–2012)
      • 7.3 “Look, mom, now I’ve got hands!” Unlikely stories of transplantation from recent Romanian periodicals
      • 7.4 From mutual ignorance to mutual partnerships: students’ campaigns promoting organ donation
      • 7.5 Conclusions
    • References
  • Mihaela Constantinescu
    • 8 Seeing the Forest Beyond the Trees: A Holistic Approach to Health-Care Organizational Ethics
      • 8.1 Introduction
      • 8.2 Organizational ethics in health care
      • 8.3 Compliance versus integrity: an apparent dichotomy
      • 8.4 Embedding ethics in HCOs: optimal alignment between culture and structure
      • 8.5 Conclusion and suggestions for future research
    • References
  • Eva De Clercq
    • 9 Disability @ the Movies: Toward a Disability-Conscious Bioethics
      • 9.1 Introduction
      • 9.2 What can a body do?
      • 9.3 Moral imagination at the movies
      • 9.4 Disability stereotypes on the silver screen
      • 9.5 Disability in contemporary cinema: from isolation to inclusion?
      • 9.6 Conclusion: the power of re-signification
    • References
  • Constantin Vică
    • 10 The Info-Computational Turn in Bioethics
      • 10.1 All watched over by machines of loving grace?
      • 10.2 The digital epidemiology
      • 10.3 Ways of understanding the info-computational turn
      • 10.4 Conclusions
    • References
  • Adriana Paladi, Victoria Federiuc
    • 11 The Principle of Autonomy in Palliative Care: the Moldavian Perspective
      • 11.1 Introduction
      • 11.2 Principle of autonomy
      • 11.3 Moral requirement of patient information
      • 11.4 Some reasons for covering up bad news
      • 11.5 The case of the Republic of Moldova
      • 11.6 Delivering bad news in a sensitive manner
      • 11.7 Conclusion
    • References
  • Laurențiu Staicu, Octavian Buda
    • 12 Philosophical Foundations and The Role Of Counseling in The Ethics of Informed Consent
      • 12.1 Introduction
      • 12.2 Informed consent as an expression of liberty
      • 12.3 Informed consent as an expression of morality
      • 12.4 A moral dilemma and its philosophical presuppositions
      • 12.5 Conclusions
    • References
  • Cristian Iftode
    • 13 Bioethics as Biopolitics: A Foucauldian Perspective
      • 13.1 Introduction
      • 13.2 Madness, the asylum institution, and the psychiatric power
      • 13.3 Biopolitics as “power’s hold over life”: the three levels of an analysis of “normalization”
      • 13.4 In search of a new “ethics of life”: ethical subjectivation vs. political subjection
      • 13.5 Final remarks
    • References
  • Isabelle Wienand, Milenko Rakic, Sophie Haesen, Bernice Elger
    • 14 How Should One Die? Nietzsche’s Contribution to the Issue of Suicide in Medical Ethics
      • 14.1 Introduction
      • 14.2 The hermeneutic challenge of HTH §185
      • 14.3 The religious interpretation of suicide
      • 14.4 Conclusion
    • References
  • Contributors
  • Back Cover

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