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This book explores our ethical responsibilities regarding health in general and disabilities in particular. Disability studies and human enhancement stand out as two emerging areas of research in medical ethics, prompting debates into ethical questions of identity, embodiment, discrimination, and accommodation, as well as questions concerning distributive justice and limitations on people’s medical rights. Edited by two ethicist philosophers, this book combines their mastery of the theoretical debates surrounding disability and human enhancement with attention to real world questions that…mehr
This book explores our ethical responsibilities regarding health in general and disabilities in particular. Disability studies and human enhancement stand out as two emerging areas of research in medical ethics, prompting debates into ethical questions of identity, embodiment, discrimination, and accommodation, as well as questions concerning distributive justice and limitations on people’s medical rights. Edited by two ethicist philosophers, this book combines their mastery of the theoretical debates surrounding disability and human enhancement with attention to real world questions that health workers and patients may face. By including a wide range of high-quality voices and perspectives, the book provides an invaluable resource for scholars who are working on this important and emerging area of leadership and health care ethics.
Jessica Flanigan is Assistant Professor of Leadership Studies and Philosophy, Politics, Economics and Law in the Jepson School of Leadership Studies at the University of Richmond, USA.
Terry L. Price is Professor of Leadership Studies and Philosophy, Politics, Economics and Law in the Jepson School of Leadership Studies at the University of Richmond, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Theorizing about Human Capacity: A View from the Nineteenth Century.- 2. A More “Inclusive” Approach to Enhancement and Disability.- 3. Disability & Doing Justice.- 4. Disability, Well-being, and (In)Apt Emotions.- 5. Kantian Ethics, Well-being, and Disability.- 6. Dementia, Advance Directives, and the Problem of Temporal Selfishness.- 7. How Old is Old? Changing Conceptions of Old Age.- 8. Why Parents Should Enhance Their Children.- 9. Cosmopolitan Moral Enhancement..
1. Theorizing about Human Capacity: A View from the Nineteenth Century.- 2. A More "Inclusive" Approach to Enhancement and Disability.- 3. Disability & Doing Justice.- 4. Disability, Well-being, and (In)Apt Emotions.- 5. Kantian Ethics, Well-being, and Disability.- 6. Dementia, Advance Directives, and the Problem of Temporal Selfishness.- 7. How Old is Old? Changing Conceptions of Old Age.- 8. Why Parents Should Enhance Their Children.- 9. Cosmopolitan Moral Enhancement..
1. Theorizing about Human Capacity: A View from the Nineteenth Century.- 2. A More “Inclusive” Approach to Enhancement and Disability.- 3. Disability & Doing Justice.- 4. Disability, Well-being, and (In)Apt Emotions.- 5. Kantian Ethics, Well-being, and Disability.- 6. Dementia, Advance Directives, and the Problem of Temporal Selfishness.- 7. How Old is Old? Changing Conceptions of Old Age.- 8. Why Parents Should Enhance Their Children.- 9. Cosmopolitan Moral Enhancement..
1. Theorizing about Human Capacity: A View from the Nineteenth Century.- 2. A More "Inclusive" Approach to Enhancement and Disability.- 3. Disability & Doing Justice.- 4. Disability, Well-being, and (In)Apt Emotions.- 5. Kantian Ethics, Well-being, and Disability.- 6. Dementia, Advance Directives, and the Problem of Temporal Selfishness.- 7. How Old is Old? Changing Conceptions of Old Age.- 8. Why Parents Should Enhance Their Children.- 9. Cosmopolitan Moral Enhancement..
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