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Description
To contain the Minotaur, the ancient artificer Daedalus crafted a maze so intricate that it bewildered even its maker. Contemporary medicine-"Hippocrates' Maze-is every bit as bewildering, so much so that a new and distinct field, bioethics, has been created to help professional caregivers, patients, and families navigate their way through it.
In Nelson's typically inviting and graceful style, the essays collected in Hippocrates' Maze explore the labyrinth of contemporary health care, and arrive at some unusual findings about death and decisionmaking, justice and families, cloning and kinship, and organ donation and intimacy. However, the book's most distinctive conclusions concern bioethics itself: the field is not best seen solely as a source of good advice to doctors, but rather as a way of better understanding our humanity.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2 The Meaning of the Act: Relationship, Meaning and Identity in Prenatal Genetic Screening
Chapter 3 Agency by Proxy
Chapter 4 Just Expectations: Family Caregivers, Practical Identities and Social Justice in the Provision of Health Care
Chapter 5 Death's Gender
Chapter 6 'Everything Includes Itself in Power:' Power, Theory and the Foundations of Bioethics
Chapter 7 A Duty to Donate? Selves, Societies and Organ Procurement
Chapter 8 Cloning, Families, and the Reproduction of Persons
Product details
| Published | 24 Dec 2002 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 176 |
| ISBN | 9781461704447 |
| Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
| Series | Explorations in Bioethics and the Medical Humanities |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Hippocrates' Maze is beautifully written and philosophically stunning. There is no philosopher better than Nelson at showing us the richness and depth of the moral problems surrounding medicine.
Carl Elliot, Center for Bioethics, University of Minnesota
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Hippocrates' Maze is not only a thoughtful examination of some of the hottest topics in medical ethics, but also a well-written argument for their contribution to philosophy as a whole. Nelson demonstrates that the field informs and refines mainstream considerations of selfhood and identity, biological connectedness, and even political philosophy.
Kathryn Montgomery, director, Medical Ethics and Humanities Program, Northwestern University
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Recommended.
Choice Reviews
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This impressive and concise book has a three-fold agenda contributing to its attempt to find, within the moral maze of complex issues facing the Hippocratic professions, 'a deeper understanding of human conditions' than is commonly found in bioethical debate. Nelson succeeds, within his self-imposed limits, in seeing his agenda through on all three counts. . . . I can only encourage Nelson to continue using his sophisticated grasp of philosophy (more narrowly) and humanity (more broadly) to illuminate and deepen our appreciation of issues in bioethics, thereby, perhaps, drawing others into a disaffection with simplistic quasi-legal arguments and a growing attentiveness to the delights of nuanced philosophical thinking engaged with some of the most pressing concerns about the human condition as they surface in the context of Hippocratic praxis.
Medical Humanities
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James Lindemann Nelson is one of our most original thinkers in bioethics. He takes on major subjects, subjects them to an analysis that is almost always different and provocative, and leads us down some very helpful and illuminating paths. Hippocrates' Maze is a wonderful example of his thinking, and will be a wonderful read not only for those in bioethics, but also for those who understand the importance of the issues.
Daniel Callahan, cofounder and President Emeritus, The Hastings Center





















