Current Controversies in Bioethics Current Controversies in Philosophy Series
Bioethics is the study of ethical issues arising out of advances in the life sciences and medicine. Historically, bioethics has been associated with issues in research ethics and clinical ethics as a result of research scandals such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study and public debates about the definition of death, medical paternalism, health care rationing, and abortion. As biomedical technologies have advanced, challenging new questions have arisen for bioethics and new sub-disciplines such as neuroethics and public health ethics have entered the scene. This volume features ten original essays on five cutting-edge controversies in bioethics written by leading philosophers.
I. Research Ethics: How Should We Justify Ancillary Care Duties?
II. Clinical Ethics: Are Psychopaths Morally Accountable?
III. Reproductive Ethics: Is There A Solution to the Non-Identity Problem?
IV. Neuroethics: What is Addiction and Does It Excuse?
V. Public Health Ethics: Is Luck Egalitarianism Implausibly Harsh?
S. Matthew Liao and Collin O?Neil?s concise introduction to the essays in the volume, the annotated bibliographies and study questions for each controversy, and the supplemental guide to additional current controversies in bioethics give the reader a broad grasp of the different kinds of challenges in bioethics.
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Bioethics: Current Controversies
S. Matthew Liao and Collin O’Neil
Part I
Research Ethics: How Should We Justify Ancillary Care Duties?
- Locating Medical Researchers’ Ancillary-Care Obligations within the Division of Moral Labor
- The Grounds of Ancillary Care Duties
- Fine Cuts of Moral Agency: Dissociable Deficits in Psychopathy and Autism
- Holding Psychopaths Responsible and the Guise of the Good
- Dividing and Conquering the Nonidentity Problem
- The Nonidentity Problem: United and Unconquered
- Addiction, Habits, and Blame
- How Addicts Lose Control
- Rarely Harsh and Always Fair: Luck Egalitarianism and Unhealthy Choices
- Luck Egalitarianism, Harshness, and the Rule of Rescue
Henry S. Richardson
S. Matthew Liao and Collin O’Neil
Part I Suggested Readings
Part II
Clinical Ethics: Are Psychopaths Morally Accountable?
Dana Kay Nelkin
Agnieszka Jaworska
Part II Suggested Readings
Part III
Reproductive Ethics: Is There a Solution to the Non-Identity Problem?
Melinda A. Roberts and David T. Wasserman
Saul Smilansky
Part III Suggested Readings
Part IV
Neuroethics: What Is Addiction and Does It Excuse?
Timothy Schroeder and Nomy Arpaly
Neil Levy
Part IV Suggested Readings
Part V
Public Health Ethics: Is Luck Egalitarianism Implausibly Harsh?
Zofia Stemplowska
Nir Eyal
Part V Suggested Readings
Supplemental Guide to Further Controversies
Index
S. Matthew Liao is Arthur Zitrin Professor of Bioethics, Director of the Center for Bioethics, and Affiliated Professor of Philosophy, New York University. He is the author or editor of The Right to Be Loved (2015) and Moral Brains: The Neuroscience of Morality (2016), and co-edited Philosophical Foundations of Human Rights (2015). He has been featured in the New York Times and other media outlets and is the Editor in Chief for the Journal of Moral Philosophy.
Collin O’Neil is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Lehman College, City University of New York. His recent publications have appeared in Philosophy & Public Affairs, American Journal of Bioethics, and Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics.
Date de parution : 12-2019
15.2x22.9 cm
Date de parution : 01-2017
15.2x22.9 cm
Thèmes de Current Controversies in Bioethics :
Mots-clés :
Luck Egalitarianism; Non-identity Problem; Nonidentity Problem; Making Consumer Decisions; Good Life; Bad Option Luck; ASD Subject; Harshness Objection; Prediction Error Signal; Option Luck; Distant Future Generation; AC; Chronic Relapsing Disease; Saul Smilansky; DS Child; Moral Labor; Moral Entanglements; Medical Research Ethics; Local Health Care Systems; Low Resource Country; Mesolimbic Dopamine System; Public Health Ethics; Moral Accountability; Expectational Problem; Variant II