Intervention and Reflection: Basic Issues in Medical EthicsThis unique combination of text, reader, and casebook provides coverage of the fundamental topics in current medical ethics and familiarizes the reader with the basic moral and social issues confronting the medical profession today. |
From inside the book
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Page 275
... justified in regulating the actions of a pregnant woman . Should a pregnant woman retain her auton- omy intact ? Or is it legitimate for us to require her , by virtue of being pregnant , to follow a set of rules or laws not applicable ...
... justified in regulating the actions of a pregnant woman . Should a pregnant woman retain her auton- omy intact ? Or is it legitimate for us to require her , by virtue of being pregnant , to follow a set of rules or laws not applicable ...
Page 284
... justify some paternalistic interferences . Paternalism is justified only to pre- serve a wider range of freedom for the individual in question . How far this principle could be extended , whether it can justify all the cases in which we ...
... justify some paternalistic interferences . Paternalism is justified only to pre- serve a wider range of freedom for the individual in question . How far this principle could be extended , whether it can justify all the cases in which we ...
Page 404
... justified them in using human beings , even brain - damaged ones . This principle gives us a guide toward an answer to our question . Since a speciesist bias , like a racist bias , is un- justifiable , an experiment cannot be justified ...
... justified them in using human beings , even brain - damaged ones . This principle gives us a guide toward an answer to our question . Since a speciesist bias , like a racist bias , is un- justifiable , an experiment cannot be justified ...
Contents
MORAL PRINCIPLES ETHICAL THEORIES | 1 |
MAJOR MORAL PRINCIPLES | 31 |
RETROSPECT | 45 |
Copyright | |
46 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
able abortion accept action AIDS allow animals argued argument asked baby become believe benefit body called cause child claim clinical concerned condition consent consider continue costs course court death decide decision determine discussion disease drug duty effect embryo ethical euthanasia example existence experimental experiments fact fetus future gene genetic give given harm hospital human important individual infants infection interest involved issues justified killing kind least less lives means ment moral mother nature organs parents patient person physicians position possible potential practice pregnant present principle problems procedure produce protect question reason receive responsibility result risk rule seems situation social society standard subjects suffering surrogate theory therapy tion transplant treat treatment woman women wrong
References to this book
Ethical Dimensions of International Management Stephen J. Carroll,Martin J. Gannon No preview available - 1997 |