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Medical Law and Moral Rights: Law and Philosophy Library, cartea 71

Autor Carl Wellman
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 oct 2005
Medical Law and Moral Rights discusses live issues arising in modern medical practice. Do patients undergoing intolerable irremediable suffering have a moral right to physician-assisted suicide? Ought they to have a comparable legal right? Do the moral duties of a mother to care for and not abuse her child also apply to her fetus? Ought fetuses to be given legal rights requiring pregnant women to submit to medical treatment without their consent? Ought single women, homosexual couples or persons carrying serious genetic defects to have a legal right to procreate? Ought a physician to perform an abortion requested for some frivolous reason? Ought physicians to be permitted to refuse to provide medically futile treatment demanded by their patients? An examination of relevant court cases shows how United States law answers these questions. The author then advocates improvements in the law to make it respect our moral rights more fully. To justify his conclusions, he proposes original conceptions of the human rights to life, procreational autonomy, privacy, equitable treatment and personal security. Thus, these essays test the usefulness of the theory of rights explained and defended in An Approach to Rights and elsewhere.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781402037511
ISBN-10: 1402037511
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: VIII, 215 p.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:2005
Editura: SPRINGER NETHERLANDS
Colecția Springer
Seria Law and Philosophy Library

Locul publicării:Dordrecht, Netherlands

Public țintă

Research

Cuprins

Defining the Rights to Physician-Assisted Suicide.- Glucksberg v. Compassion.- A Legal Right to Physician-Assisted Suicide.- A Moral Right to Physician-Assisted Suicide.- The Concept of Fetal Rights.- Maternal Duties and Fetal Rights.- The Scope of the Right to Procreational Autonomy.- Possessors of the Right to Procreational Autonomy.- Medical Futility and Moral Rights.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

Medical Law and Moral Rights discusses live issue arising in modern medical practice. Do patients undergoing intolerable irremediable suffering have a moral right to physician-assisted suicide? Ought they to have a comparable legal right? Do the moral duties of a mother to care for and not abuse her child also apply to her fetus? Ought fetuses to be given legal rights requiring pregnant women to submit to medical treatment without their consent? Ought single women, homosexual couples or persons carrying serious genetic defects to have a legal right to procreate? Ought a physician to perform an abortion requested for some frivolous reason? Ought physicians to be permitted to refuse to provide medically futile treatment demanded by their patients? An examination of relevant court cases shows how United States law answers these questions. The author then advocates improvements in the law to make it respect our moral rights more fully. To justify his conclusions, he proposes original conceptions of the human rights to life, procreational autonomy, privacy, equitable treatment and personal security. Thus, these essays test the usefulness of the theory of rights explained and defended in An Approach to Rights and elsewhere.

Caracteristici

Applies moral theory to actual court cases Shows how moral rights apply to problems arising in medical practice Defines the content and identifies the grounds of several important human rights Advocates specific moral reforms of current medical law