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Technological developments in the life sciences confront us with
new facets of a Faustian seduction. Are we "playing God" more and
more, as claimed by critical authors of modernity? Achievements in
genetic research produce ethical dilemmas which need to be the
subject of reflection and debate in modern societies. Denial of
ambivalences that ethical dilemmas arouse constitutes a threat to
societies as well as to individuals. The book presents a
compilation of some of the results of the interdisciplinary
European study "Ethical Dilemmas Due to Prenatal and Genetic
Diagnostics" (EDIG), which investigated some of these dilemmas in
detail in a field which is particularly challenging: prenatal
diagnosis. When results from prenatal diagnosis show fetal
abnormalities, women and their partners are confronted with ethical
dilemmas regarding: the right to know and the right not to know;
decision-making about the remainder of the pregnancy and the desire
for a healthy child; responsibility for the unborn child, for its
well-being and possible suffering; life and death. This book
provides answers from an ethical, psychoanalytical and medical
viewpoint.
This book brings together cutting-edge expertise from
psychoanalysis, psychiatry, neuroscience and social science to shed
light on the dark side of chronic depression. Considering different
forms of depression on a continuum, the book develops new
diagnostical considerations on depression. It includes detailed
case studies from clinical psychoanalytical practice, conceptual
considerations and historical analyses to current empirical and
neurobiological studies on depression. The book is unique in
bridging a gap between Anglo-Saxon/German psychoanalysis and French
traditions in relation to clinical treatment techniques and
conceptualizations of depression and trauma. Chapters present new
research on the social, biographical, genetic and neurobiological
determinants of severe depressive disorder and explore how these
can be differentiated and expanded in the face of new cultural
realities as well of new findings particularly in modern
neurosciences. The book explores new understanding and discussion
of treatment options for depression and will be essential reading
for researchers and students in the field of depression and mental
health research. It will also enrich the conceptual and clinical
knowledge of psychoanalysts and psychotherapy researchers and
students.
Technological developments in the life sciences confront us with
new facets of a Faustian seduction. Are we "playing God" more and
more, as claimed by critical authors of modernity? Achievements in
genetic research produce ethical dilemmas which need to be the
subject of reflection and debate in modern societies. Denial of
ambivalences that ethical dilemmas arouse constitutes a threat to
societies as well as to individuals. The book presents a
compilation of some of the results of the interdisciplinary
European study "Ethical Dilemmas Due to Prenatal and Genetic
Diagnostics" (EDIG), which investigated some of these dilemmas in
detail in a field which is particularly challenging: prenatal
diagnosis. When results from prenatal diagnosis show fetal
abnormalities, women and their partners are confronted with ethical
dilemmas regarding: the right to know and the right not to know;
decision-making about the remainder of the pregnancy and the desire
for a healthy child; responsibility for the unborn child, for its
well-being and possible suffering; life and death. This book
provides answers from an ethical, psychoanalytical and medical
viewpoint.
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Paperback
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R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Not available
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