Switch to: References

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. Strategic Ambiguity: The Pragmatic Utopianism of Daniel Callahan’s “Bioethics as a Discipline”.Mathias Schütz - 2024 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 33 (2):167-173.
    This article highlights the continuing relevance of a classic bioethical text, “Bioethics as a Discipline,” published by the Hastings Center’s cofounder Daniel Callahan in 1973. Connecting the text’s programmatic recommendations with later reflections and interventions Callahan wrote about the development of bioethics illuminates how the vision Callahan established and the reality this vision helped create were interrelated—just not in the way Callahan had hoped for. Although this portrait relies on an individual perception of the development of bioethics, it might nevertheless, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • No Country for Old Laws: Why the Effort to Revise the UDDA Reveals the Social Weakness of Medicine in the US.Adam Omelianchuk - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (1):108-110.
    Arian Lewis provides a comprehensive overview of how the United Kingdom’s medicolegal context manages challenges to determining death by neurologic criteria (DNC) and suggests that a well-crafted s...
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Brain Death and Organ Donation: A Crisis of Public Trust.Melissa Moschella - 2018 - Christian Bioethics 24 (2):133-150.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • A Path Not Taken: Beecher, Brain Death, and the Aims of Medicine.Gary Belkin - 2018 - Hastings Center Report 48 (S4):10-13.
    It has been fifty years since a report by an ad hoc committee of Harvard Medical School ushered in the widespread adoption of brain death as a definition of death. Yet brain death remains disputed as an acceptable definition within bioethics. The continuous debate among bioethicists has had three key recurring features: first and foremost, argument over alleged flaws in the conceptual logic and consistency of the “whole‐brain” approach as a description of the meaning of death; second, efforts to fix (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation