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This book is the result of over 30 years of collaboration among its
authors. It uses the systematic account of our common morality
developed by one of its authors to provide a useful foundation for
dealing with the moral problems and disputes that occur in the
practice of medicine. The analyses of impartiality, rationality,
and of morality as a public system not only explain why some
bioethical questions, such as the moral acceptability of abortion,
cannot be resolved, but also provide a method for determining the
correct answer for those occasions when a bioethical question has a
unique correct answer. This new edition includes an entire chapter
that has been added to address the controversial issue of abortion
within the authors' distinct framework.
This book presents the latest revisions of the authors' original
analyses of the concepts of death and disease, analyses that have
had a significant impact on the field of bioethics. It also
includes an added chapter on mental disorders, where the authors'
definition influenced what psychiatry classifies as a mental
disorder, and so has had an impact that reveals beyond the field of
bioethics.
In this edition, the authors also offer a new, more developed
perspective on the concept of valid or informed consent by
considering what information physicians should be required to know
before proposing screening, diagnostic testing, prescribing
medications, or performing surgery. The book also integrates some
of the important insights of the field of clinical epidemiology
into its discussion of valid consent. Its account of paternalism
and its justification, perhaps the most ubiquitous moral problem in
medical ethics, has had considerableinfluence. Its discussion of
euthanasia and physician assisted suicide challenges the standard
views that have been put forward by both proponents and opponents
of physician assisted suicide and voluntary active euthanasia.
The life of an unconscious, terminally ill father is prolonged by
his stubborn daughters over the advice of doctors.
Parents of a permanently unconscious child deny the hopelessness of
her condition for seven years until faced with having to care for
her at home.
A woman's wish to die but still receive treatment for pain is at
first not accepted by her doctor.
These are a few of the scenarios described in this emotionally
engaging and thought-provoking book. Physicians, philosophers,
theologians, and a legal expert recount a dozen revealing stories
about how moral decisions are made in modern hospitals. As the
question of medical treatment moves from what is possible to what
is proper, more and more people will face the issues raised in this
book, whether as patients, relatives, or practitioners.
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