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E-raamat: Ethics at the Beginning of Life: A Phenomenological Critique [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Formerly University of Oxford)
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Many of the most controversial moral decisions we face hinge upon competing descriptions of life, and never is this truer than at the beginning of life. James Mumford draws upon phenomenology (a branch of continental philosophy) to question the descriptive adequacy, the essential "purchase upon reality," of many of the approaches, attitudes and arguments which make up beginning of life ethics today. He argues that many of the most prevalent positions and practices in our late modern culture have simply failed to take into account the reality of human emergence, the particular way that new members of our species first appear in the world.

Historically, phenomenologists have been far more interested in death than in birth. Mumford therefore first develops his own phenomenological investigation of human emergence, taking leads and developing approaches from phenomenologists both French and German, both living and dead. In the second half of the book phenomenology is finally applied to ethics, and acute moral questions are divided into two kinds: first those concerning "what" it is that we are dealing; and, secondly, the more contextual "where" questions relating to the situation in which the subject is found.

Finally, although this book primarily constitutes a philosophical rather than a religious critique of contemporary ethics, with the findings from continental philosophy being brought to bear upon core convictions of English-speaking 'liberal' moral and political philosophers, Mumford concludes by exploring an alternative theological basis for human rights which might fill the vacuum created.
Introduction ix
Part I
1 Phenomenology and Human Emergence
3(27)
What is phenomenology? An opening sketch
4(8)
One phenomenon among others
12(18)
2 Encounters Idealized
30(49)
`A strange longing awakens'---Buber's philosophy of dialogue
31(5)
`The world is twofold'---the essence of Buber's scheme
36(14)
`Silence which is communication'---Buber's reformulations
50(6)
`Where it lacks, humanity does not occur'---I-Thou philosophy in Barth
56(9)
The mother's experience
65(14)
3 Context Neglected
79(42)
A new world view in the West
80(10)
`Antonio shall be bound'---the contract model
90(5)
Context neglected---'being-in-the-world' as `being-with'
95(7)
The context which is kinship
102(13)
Forgetfulness of becoming
115(6)
Part II
4 Grounds for Recognition
121(33)
The problem of empathy
125(11)
The problem of the capacities approach
136(18)
5 Justifications of Force
154(29)
`Let me ask you to imagine this'---a famous analogy
157(6)
A clear and present danger---abortion and emergency cases
163(4)
Different circumstances? Abortion and unwanted pregnancy
167(16)
Part III
6 An Alternative Basis for Human Rights
183(9)
`Our brothers and sisters'---Gregory of Nazianzus's appeal to the imago Dei
185(7)
Concluding remarks 192(3)
Bibliography 195(14)
Index 209