Medicine After the Holocaust: From the Master Race to the Human Genome and BeyondSheldon Rubenfeld, Holocaust Museum Houston Rubenfeld and the contributors to this collection posit that German physicians betrayed the Hippocratic Oath when they chose knowledge over wisdom, the state over the individual, a führer over God, and personal gain over professional ethics. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Remembrances of Nuremberg | 11 |
Historical Facts and Some | 17 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
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Medicine after the Holocaust: From the Master Race to the Human Genome and ... S. Rubenfeld No preview available - 2010 |
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aid in dying American bioethics assisted suicide behavior bioethics Caplan chapter clinical concentration camps crimes culture Death with Dignity DeBakey decision dehumanization Dignity Act disabled disease Dutch end-of-life eugenics euthanasia Euthanasia Program evil example experiments films genes genetic genocide genomic biobanks German hereditary Hippocratic Oath Hitler Holocaust Museum Houston Human Experimentation Human Genome Project human rights human subjects research ideology individuals informed consent institutions International issues Jewish medical ethics Jews Journal Judaism killing legalizing assisted suicide lethal lives medical profession medical students Medicine Michael moral murder National Nazi Doctors Nazi Germany Nazism Nuremberg Code Oregon patients percent Physician-Assisted Dying Physician-Assisted Suicide physicians policies political practice principles professionalism Professor protect psychiatrist race racial hygiene research participants responsibility risk role scientific scientists social society terminally ill Third Reich torture treatment Trial Ulf Schmidt United University Press values York