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Clinical Bioethics: A Search for the Foundations

David C. Thomasma ; David N. Weisstub ; Thomasine Kimbrough Kushner ; Corrado Viafora (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Theory of Medicine/Bioethics; Ethics

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-3592-0

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-3593-7

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer 2005

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Clinical Bioethics in a Post Modern Age

David C. Thomasma

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 1 - Clinical Bioethics: Comparing Theoretical Models | Pp. 3-20

The “Telos” of Medicine and the Good of the Patient

Edmund Pellegrino

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 1 - Clinical Bioethics: Comparing Theoretical Models | Pp. 21-32

The Foundation of Medical Ethics in the Democratic Evolution of Modern Society

Diego Gracia

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 1 - Clinical Bioethics: Comparing Theoretical Models | Pp. 33-40

A Communitarian Approach to Clinical Bioethics

Henk Ten Have

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 1 - Clinical Bioethics: Comparing Theoretical Models | Pp. 41-51

A Hermeneutical Approach to Clinical Bioethics

Bruno Cadoré

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 1 - Clinical Bioethics: Comparing Theoretical Models | Pp. 53-59

A Deliberative Approach to Clinical Bioethics

Michael Parker

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 1 - Clinical Bioethics: Comparing Theoretical Models | Pp. 61-71

“A Helping and Caring Profession”: Medicine as a Normative Practice

Henk Ten Have

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 2 - Toward Clinical Bioethics Integrating “Internalmorality” and “External Morality” | Pp. 75-97

Medicine as a Practice and the Ethics of Illness

Roberto Mordacci

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 2.1 - The Goals of Medicine in Relation to the Subjectivisation of Health and Rationalisation of Health Care Institutions | Pp. 101-113

The Right to Choose One’s Health

Paolo Zatti

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 2.1 - The Goals of Medicine in Relation to the Subjectivisation of Health and Rationalisation of Health Care Institutions | Pp. 115-129

The Tension Between Ethics and Evidence-Based Medicine

Paolo Vineis

Let () be a continuous, homothetic function defined in a connected cone . Assume that is strictly increasing along each ray in , i.e. for each ≠ in , () is a strictly increasing function of . Then there exist a homogeneous function and a strictly increasing function such that () = (()) for all in

Part 2.1 - The Goals of Medicine in Relation to the Subjectivisation of Health and Rationalisation of Health Care Institutions | Pp. 131-137