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Library | Materyal Türü | Barkod | Yer Numarası | Durum |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... Pamukkale Tıp Fakültesi Kütüphanesi | Kitap | 0013391 | W50M482 1997 | Searching... Unknown |
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Author Notes
Robert Veatch is currently a professor of medical ethics at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics and professor of philosophy at Georgetown University. For ten years previously, he was on the staff of the Hastings Center (formerly the Institute of Society, Ethics, and the Life Sciences). Veatch was born in Utica, New York, and received a B.S. degree from Purdue University (1961), an M.S. from the University of California at San Francisco (1962), and a B.D. (1964), M.A.(1970), and Ph.D. (1971) from Harvard University. A lecturer and writer, Veatch is the author of many important books on ethical issues in biology and medicine. Veatch's areas of interest center on the relation of science to public policy, death and dying, and experimentation on human subjects. He has worked both to assemble numerous case studies and to advance general theoretical reflection in these areas. In A Theory of Medical Ethics (1981), he argues that current medical codes such as the Hippocratic Oath are too restrictive and lack sufficient support for comprehensive use in the medical profession. The solution, he argues, is that medicine can no longer be based on a professionally articulated code. Instead, Veatch proposes a "covenant" theory of medical ethics that resembles the traditional social contract of philosophers such as John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. (Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (1)
Choice Review
Twelve state-of-the-art essays on major issues in biomedical ethics by eminent specialists. The collection is edited by R.M. Veatch (Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University), distinguished figure in the field who is best known for his A Theory of Medical Ethics (1981). These excellent essays appear here for the first time. Although none breaks new ground, each provides a broad, clear overview of the issues. Intended as a textbook for a college or medical school course, Medical Ethics should be accessible to almost anyone interested in this difficult and fascinating area. Even the "expert" will find much of value in almost every contribution. The essays by Judith Areen ("Limiting Procreation"), LeRoy Walters ("Genetics and Reproductive Technologies"), and Albert Jonsen ("Ethical Issues in Organ Transplantation") are particularly informative. For readers inclined to delve more deeply, each essay has its own bibliography; a helpful general index at the end of the book is included. Recommended without qualification for all college and university collections. -R. B. Scott, Jr., William Woods College
Table of Contents
| Preface |
| 1 Medical Ethics: An IntroductionRobert M. Veatch |
| 2 The Normative Principles of Medical EthicsJames F. Childress |
| 3 The Concepts of Health, Illness, and DiseaseArthur L. Caplan |
| 4 The Physician-Patient RelationshipHoward Brody |
| 5 Limiting ProcreationJudith Areen |
| 6 Human ExperimentationA.M. Capron |
| 7 Informed ConsentTom Beauchamp |
| 8 Reproductive Technologies and GeneticsLeRoy Walters |
| 9 Ethical Issues in Organ TransplantationAlbert R. Jonsen |
| 10 Moral Problems in Psychiatry: The Role of Value Judgements in Psychiatric PracticeLoretta M. Kopelman |
| 11 Health-Care Delivery and Resource AllocationAllen Buchanan |
| 12 Death and DyingDan W. Brock |
| 13 AIDS and EthicsRonald Bayer |
| 14 National Health-Care ReformNorman Daniels |
| Glossary |
