Manchester University Press
1 Editors’ introduction
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Abstract
This chapter introduces the general themes of and rationale for the book. It explains the importance and scope of the field of bioethics, and of the scholarship of Professor John Harris within that field. It explains how the book’s focus is both on theoretical questions in moral philosophy, and practical questions in policy, health, and science. The chapter also offers an overview of the contents of the book.
Abstract
This chapter introduces the general themes of and rationale for the book. It explains the importance and scope of the field of bioethics, and of the scholarship of Professor John Harris within that field. It explains how the book’s focus is both on theoretical questions in moral philosophy, and practical questions in policy, health, and science. The chapter also offers an overview of the contents of the book.
Chapters in this book
- Front matter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- List of contributors ix
- Series editors’ forewords xvi
- Acknowledgements xx
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Part I Introductions
- 1 Editors’ introduction 3
- 2 Thought and memory 16
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Part II Grounding moral arguments
- 3 On moral nose 33
- 4 Hanging around with Jackson 44
- 5 The unbearable desire for explicitness and rationality in bioethics 56
- 6 Moral epistemology and the survival lottery 64
- 7 Harris and the criticism of the status quo 75
- 8 The natural as a moral category 85
- 9 Making sense of human dignity 92
- 10 Why we should save the anthropocentric person 102
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Part III From ethics to policy and practice
- 11 Why the reasonable man is not always right? 119
- 12 Why the body matters 131
- 13 Harris’s principle of justice in health care 142
- 14 Eqalyty revisited 152
- 15 The safety of the people and the case against invasive health promotion 163
- 16 Could we reduce racism with one easy dip? 170
- 17 Against mumps, Meursault, McDonald’s and Marlboro 181
- 18 Killing and allowing to die 190
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Part IV John Harris responds
- 19 Response to and reflections on chapters 3–18 201
- Bibliography 226
- Index 238
Chapters in this book
- Front matter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- List of contributors ix
- Series editors’ forewords xvi
- Acknowledgements xx
-
Part I Introductions
- 1 Editors’ introduction 3
- 2 Thought and memory 16
-
Part II Grounding moral arguments
- 3 On moral nose 33
- 4 Hanging around with Jackson 44
- 5 The unbearable desire for explicitness and rationality in bioethics 56
- 6 Moral epistemology and the survival lottery 64
- 7 Harris and the criticism of the status quo 75
- 8 The natural as a moral category 85
- 9 Making sense of human dignity 92
- 10 Why we should save the anthropocentric person 102
-
Part III From ethics to policy and practice
- 11 Why the reasonable man is not always right? 119
- 12 Why the body matters 131
- 13 Harris’s principle of justice in health care 142
- 14 Eqalyty revisited 152
- 15 The safety of the people and the case against invasive health promotion 163
- 16 Could we reduce racism with one easy dip? 170
- 17 Against mumps, Meursault, McDonald’s and Marlboro 181
- 18 Killing and allowing to die 190
-
Part IV John Harris responds
- 19 Response to and reflections on chapters 3–18 201
- Bibliography 226
- Index 238