The Limits of Principle : Deciding Who Lives and What Dies

Koch, Tom

ISBN 10: 0275964078 ISBN 13: 9780275964078
Published by Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 1998
Used Hardcover

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Former library copy. Pages intact with possible writing/highlighting. Binding strong with minor wear. Dust jackets/supplements may not be included. Includes library markings. Stock photo provided. Product includes identifying sticker. Better World Books: Buy Books. Do Good. Seller Inventory # 4405695-6

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Synopsis:

As a society, we are faced with a series of dilemmas—abortion, euthanasia, genetic engineering, organ transplant allocation, support or non-support of the elderly and fragile—that seem to offer no resolution. How do we choose between the needy and the ailing? Choices must be made in both the world of law and the realm of medical ethics. What we need is what we do not have—a perspective in the larger sense of the word—a view that makes apparent the sweep of the issues at hand. The failure of perspective in bioethics and medical decision making is absolute. It results from the limits of an 18th century philosophy and philosophical method. Simply, current methods of examining these issues can not resolve them because the method itself is limited.

Answers are possible. They require, Koch argues, a new approach. In it, principle is the goal, not the mechanism of solution. Its parts must be defined and their application considered in context. This is demonstrated using two distinct contemporary problems. The first: Who gets available organ transplants? How do we decide between the equally needy when there are not enough organs for all? The second: The problem of Baby K, the care or non-care of brain stem, anencephalic babies. These problems are defined using multicriterion approach and resolved through a series of focus group discussions that involve medical and lay personnel. What results is a new, more inclusive view of medicine and a new, more complex understanding of what consensus may mean in an evolving, twenty-first century society. This is must reading for lay people, medical personal, and policymakers concerned with bioethics and medical philosophy issues.

About the Author: TOM KOCH is a researcher, writer, journalist, and the author of books on elder care, news and electronic information, cycling and transportation. Among his earlier works is a companion to this book, Mirrored Lives: Aging Children and Elderly Parents (Praeger, 1990). A Place in Time is the second in a projected four-volume series.

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Bibliographic Details

Title: The Limits of Principle : Deciding Who Lives...
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Publication Date: 1998
Binding: Hardcover
Condition: Very Good
Edition: 0th Edition.

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