Principles of Biomedical EthicsThis is an extremely thorough revision of the leading textbook of bioethics. The authors have made many improvements in style, organization, argument and content. These changes reflect advances in the bioethics literature over the past five years. The most dramatic expansions of the text are in the comprehensiveness with which the authors treat different currents in ethical theory and the greater breadth and depth of their discussion of public policy and public health issues. In every chapter, readers will find new material and refinements of old discussions. This is evident in the many new sections on topics like communitarianism, ethics of care, relationship-based accounts, casuistry, case-based reasoning, principle-based common-morality theories, the justification of assistance in dying, rationing through priorities in the health care budget, and virtues in professional roles. The most extensive revisions are in chapters 1, 2 and 8. |
Contents
Morality and Moral Justification | 3 |
Types of Ethical Theory | 44 |
Respect for Autonomy | 120 |
Copyright | |
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accept actions allocation American Medical Association analysis argued argument auton balancing believe beneficence benefits biomedical ethics cancer Casuistry Chapter circumstances clinical coherence common morality communitarian competent confidentiality conflict considered costs court criteria critical death decisionmaking decisions determine disclosure discussion disease donate effect England Journal ethical theory ethics of care euthanasia example forms goal harm health care health care professionals hospital human ideals incompetent individual informed consent institutions intervention involve Joel Feinberg Journal of Medicine justice justified kidney killing Medical Ethics ment nonmaleficence norms nursing obligation obligatory paternalism paternalistic patients percent person Philosophy physician placebo practice present priority problems procedures protect rationing reasons reflective equilibrium refuse relevant require respect for autonomy responsibility risk role social society sometimes specific standard subjects suicide surrogate Theory of Justice tion transplantation University Press utilitarian virtues W. D. Ross