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  1. Bioethics in the Language of the Law.Carl E. Schneider - 1994 - Hastings Center Report 24 (4):16-22.
    Law provides a rich language for thinking about bioethical issues and is a tool for action as well as talk. But the language of the law, often inapt, regularly fails to achieve its desired effect.
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  • The search for a global morality: Bioethics, the culture wars, and moral diversity.H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr - 2006 - In Hugo Tristram Engelhardt (ed.), Global bioethics: the collapse of consensus. Salem, MA: M & M Scrivener Press.
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  • Bioethics and Healthcare Reform: A Whig Response to Weak Consensus.Griffin Trotter - 2002 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (1):37-51.
    Contemporary bioethics begins with the perception that medical values are a matter of public, rather than merely professional, interest. Such was the message of delegates in Helsinki and of the New Jersey court that decided for Quinlan. It is a theme that lurks within almost every major bioethical treatise since the first edition of PrinciplesofBioethics. This perception also undergirds the increasingly popular suggestion that moral authority in the patient-physician relationship resides neither in the medical profession, nor in the singular will (...)
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  • Global bioethics: the collapse of consensus.Hugo Tristram Engelhardt (ed.) - 2006 - Salem, MA: M & M Scrivener Press.
    This collection of essays, Global Bioethics: The Collapse of Consensus, deals with the issue of the repeated failure of attempts to derive a universal set of ...
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