The Edge of Life, Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2005
Human Dignity and Contemporary Bioethics

Catholic Studies in Bioethics Series

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Language: English
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The Edge of Life
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155 p. · 16x24 cm · Paperback

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The edge of life human dignity and contemporary bioethics
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155 p. · 15.6x23.2 cm · Hardback
The Edge of Life: Human Dignity and Contemporary Bioethics treats a number of distinct moral questions and ?nds their answer in the dignity of the person, both as an agent and as a patient (in the sense of the recipient of action). Characteristically one?s view of the human being ultimately shapes one?s outlook on these matters. This book addresses questions that divide a culture of life from a culture of death as well as a number of questions debated within the Catholic tradition itself. The Edge of Life offers a critique of the new bio-ethic, represented by such notable authors as Peter Singer; it also attempts to shore up some of the dif?culties leveled by critics against the traditional ethic as well as to answer some questions disputed by those within the tradition. This book does not treat the basic principles of morality but rather many of their applications and suppositions. (For an account of contemporary debates within the Catholic tradition on these matters, see Kaczor 2002). Rather, The Edge of Life seeks to address a number of disputed contemporary questions touching upon human dignity at what has been called ?the margins of life. ? The ?rst section of the book treats the dignity of the human person as recipient of action and as agent. Chapter two examines various accounts of when a human being becomes a person.
Acknowledgements. 1. Introduction. 2. When Does a Human Being Become a Person? 3. All Human Beings Are Persons. 4. How Is the Dignity of the Person as Agent Realized? Distinguishing Intention from Foresight. 5. An Ethical Assessment of Bush's Guidelines for Stem Cell Research. 6. Moral Absolutism and Ectopic Pregnancy. 7. Could Artificial Wombs End the Abortion Debate? 8. Solomon's Dilemma: Should Conjoined Twins Jodie and Mary Have Been Separated? 9. Capital Punishment and the Catholic Tradition: Contradiction, Circumstantial Application, or Development of Doctrine?

Tackles some of the toughest practical questions of bioethics

Unifies the account concerning many disparate life issues