Naturalized Bioethics
Herausgeber: Lindemann, Hilde; Verkerk, Marian
Naturalized Bioethics
Herausgeber: Lindemann, Hilde; Verkerk, Marian
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Naturalized Bioethics shows bioethicists and health care professionals a new way to address the ethical issues surrounding health care.
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Naturalized Bioethics shows bioethicists and health care professionals a new way to address the ethical issues surrounding health care.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 292
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 579g
- ISBN-13: 9780521895248
- ISBN-10: 0521895243
- Artikelnr.: 25043582
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 292
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 579g
- ISBN-13: 9780521895248
- ISBN-10: 0521895243
- Artikelnr.: 25043582
Part I. Responsible Knowing: 1. Moral bodies: epistemologies of embodiment
Jackie Leach Scully; 2. Choosing surgical birth: desire and the nature of
bioethical advice Raymond DeVries, Lisa Kane Low, and Elizabeth
Bogdan-Lovis; 3. Holding on to Edmund: the relational work of identity
Hilde Lindemann; 4. Caring, minimal autonomy, and the limits of liberalism
Agnieszka Jaworska; 5. Narrative, complexity, and context: autonomy as an
epistemic value Naomi Scheman; 6. Toward a naturalized narrative bioethics
Tod Chambers; Part II. Responsible Practice: 7. Motivating health: empathy
and the normative activity of coping Jodi Halpern and Margaret Olivia
Little; 8. Economies of hope in a period of transition: parents in the time
leading up to their child's liver transplantation Marre Knibbe and Marian
Verkerk; 9. Consent as a grant of autonomy: a care ethics reader of
informed consent Joan Tronto; 10. Professional loving care and the bearable
heaviness of being Annelies van Heijst; 11. Ideal theory bioethics and the
exclusion of people with severe cognitive disabilities Eva Feder Kittay;
12. Epilogue: naturalized bioethics in practice Marian Verkerk and Hilde
Lindemann.
Jackie Leach Scully; 2. Choosing surgical birth: desire and the nature of
bioethical advice Raymond DeVries, Lisa Kane Low, and Elizabeth
Bogdan-Lovis; 3. Holding on to Edmund: the relational work of identity
Hilde Lindemann; 4. Caring, minimal autonomy, and the limits of liberalism
Agnieszka Jaworska; 5. Narrative, complexity, and context: autonomy as an
epistemic value Naomi Scheman; 6. Toward a naturalized narrative bioethics
Tod Chambers; Part II. Responsible Practice: 7. Motivating health: empathy
and the normative activity of coping Jodi Halpern and Margaret Olivia
Little; 8. Economies of hope in a period of transition: parents in the time
leading up to their child's liver transplantation Marre Knibbe and Marian
Verkerk; 9. Consent as a grant of autonomy: a care ethics reader of
informed consent Joan Tronto; 10. Professional loving care and the bearable
heaviness of being Annelies van Heijst; 11. Ideal theory bioethics and the
exclusion of people with severe cognitive disabilities Eva Feder Kittay;
12. Epilogue: naturalized bioethics in practice Marian Verkerk and Hilde
Lindemann.
Part I. Responsible Knowing: 1. Moral bodies: epistemologies of embodiment
Jackie Leach Scully; 2. Choosing surgical birth: desire and the nature of
bioethical advice Raymond DeVries, Lisa Kane Low, and Elizabeth
Bogdan-Lovis; 3. Holding on to Edmund: the relational work of identity
Hilde Lindemann; 4. Caring, minimal autonomy, and the limits of liberalism
Agnieszka Jaworska; 5. Narrative, complexity, and context: autonomy as an
epistemic value Naomi Scheman; 6. Toward a naturalized narrative bioethics
Tod Chambers; Part II. Responsible Practice: 7. Motivating health: empathy
and the normative activity of coping Jodi Halpern and Margaret Olivia
Little; 8. Economies of hope in a period of transition: parents in the time
leading up to their child's liver transplantation Marre Knibbe and Marian
Verkerk; 9. Consent as a grant of autonomy: a care ethics reader of
informed consent Joan Tronto; 10. Professional loving care and the bearable
heaviness of being Annelies van Heijst; 11. Ideal theory bioethics and the
exclusion of people with severe cognitive disabilities Eva Feder Kittay;
12. Epilogue: naturalized bioethics in practice Marian Verkerk and Hilde
Lindemann.
Jackie Leach Scully; 2. Choosing surgical birth: desire and the nature of
bioethical advice Raymond DeVries, Lisa Kane Low, and Elizabeth
Bogdan-Lovis; 3. Holding on to Edmund: the relational work of identity
Hilde Lindemann; 4. Caring, minimal autonomy, and the limits of liberalism
Agnieszka Jaworska; 5. Narrative, complexity, and context: autonomy as an
epistemic value Naomi Scheman; 6. Toward a naturalized narrative bioethics
Tod Chambers; Part II. Responsible Practice: 7. Motivating health: empathy
and the normative activity of coping Jodi Halpern and Margaret Olivia
Little; 8. Economies of hope in a period of transition: parents in the time
leading up to their child's liver transplantation Marre Knibbe and Marian
Verkerk; 9. Consent as a grant of autonomy: a care ethics reader of
informed consent Joan Tronto; 10. Professional loving care and the bearable
heaviness of being Annelies van Heijst; 11. Ideal theory bioethics and the
exclusion of people with severe cognitive disabilities Eva Feder Kittay;
12. Epilogue: naturalized bioethics in practice Marian Verkerk and Hilde
Lindemann.