| Foreword |
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xiii | |
| Preface |
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xvii | |
| Acknowledgements |
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xix | |
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xxv | |
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xxxi | |
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1 | (23) |
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Steps 1 and 2 Sometimes Existing Tools Won't Do, and Dignity has to Step In |
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2 | (1) |
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Step 3 Usefulness in Hard Cases Suggests Usefulness in Easier Cases |
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3 | (1) |
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Step 4 (a) Dignity's Substantive Meaning, and (b) a Transactional Model of Deployment |
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4 | (15) |
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4 | (11) |
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(b) Deploying the Notion of Dignity: a Transactional Model |
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15 | (3) |
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(c) Looking Back at this Pair of Steps |
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18 | (1) |
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Step 5 Dignity is the Bioethical Theory of Everything |
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19 | (2) |
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Step 6 Being Reassured by our Intuitions |
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21 | (1) |
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Assumptions about the Role of Law |
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22 | (2) |
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2 A Short History of Dignity |
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24 | (19) |
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24 | (3) |
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27 | (1) |
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Made in the Image of God: Judaeo-Christian Understandings of Human Dignity |
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28 | (4) |
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Subsequent Christian Understandings of Dignity |
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32 | (1) |
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The Middle Ages and the Renaissance |
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33 | (1) |
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More Footnotes on Stoicism: Kant and the Enlightenment |
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34 | (5) |
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The Popularisation of Dignity |
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39 | (1) |
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Dignity Today: an Introduction |
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40 | (3) |
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3 Defining and Dissecting Dignity |
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43 | (15) |
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44 | (1) |
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45 | (1) |
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46 | (3) |
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49 | (1) |
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49 | (1) |
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50 | (3) |
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53 | (3) |
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56 | (1) |
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57 | (1) |
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58 | (10) |
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`Dignity is too Amorphous to be Useful' |
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58 | (4) |
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`Dignity is Intrinsically Religious, and Hence Suspect' |
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62 | (1) |
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62 | (4) |
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Can Rights do the Job of Dignity? |
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66 | (2) |
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5 What do Non-philosophers and Non-lawyers Mean by Dignity? |
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68 | (12) |
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The Royal College of Nursing (UK) |
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72 | (1) |
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The Social Care Institute for Excellence (UK) |
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72 | (1) |
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The American Association of Colleges of Nursing (USA) |
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73 | (1) |
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74 | (6) |
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6 Taking Stock of the View from the Academy and the Ward |
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80 | (5) |
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7 Dignity in the Courtroom: General Overview |
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85 | (26) |
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Dignity in National and International Instruments |
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85 | (2) |
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International Instruments Dealing Specifically with Healthcare and Bioethics |
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87 | (5) |
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(a) The Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Dignity of the Human Being with Regard to the Application of Biology and Medicine: Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine (the Oviedo Convention, 1997) |
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87 | (1) |
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(b) The Additional Protocol to the Oviedo Convention, concerning Biomedical Research |
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87 | (1) |
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(c) The Additional Protocol to the Oviedo Convention, on the Prohibition of Cloning Human Beings |
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88 | (1) |
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(d) The Additional Protocol to the Oviedo Convention, on Transplantation of Organs and Tissues of Human Origin |
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88 | (1) |
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(e) The Additional Protocol to the Oviedo Convention, on Genetic Testing for Health Purposes |
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88 | (1) |
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(f) The UNESCO Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights |
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88 | (1) |
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(g) The UNESCO Universal Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights |
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89 | (2) |
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(h) UNESCO International Declaration on Human Genetic Data |
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91 | (1) |
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(i) The World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki: Ethical Principles for Medical Research involving Human Subjects |
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91 | (1) |
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What is Meant by `Dignity' in these and other Instruments? |
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92 | (3) |
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Throwing Dwarfs in France |
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95 | (2) |
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Dignity as the Most Basic Legal Value |
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97 | (1) |
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Dignity in the Bioethics Context: Have the Courts said Definitively what they mean by Dignity? |
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98 | (13) |
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Airedale NHS Trust v Bland |
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99 | (2) |
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Munby J in R (Burke) v General Medical Council |
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101 | (10) |
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8 Consent, Confidentiality, Privacy, Medical Research and Resources |
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111 | (23) |
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112 | (15) |
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112 | (1) |
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112 | (1) |
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The Problems of Ethical and Legal Pluralism |
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113 | (1) |
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Does Dignity add Anything to the Conventional Ways of Looking at Consent? |
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114 | (13) |
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Confidentiality and Privacy |
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127 | (2) |
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129 | (1) |
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130 | (4) |
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9 Human Enhancement and Cloning Technologies |
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134 | (20) |
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135 | (10) |
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143 | (2) |
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145 | (9) |
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(a) We're all enhancers anyway |
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148 | (2) |
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(b) Some enhancements are dignity-enhancing |
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150 | (4) |
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10 Reproductive Choice and the Unborn |
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154 | (11) |
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Reproductive Choice Generally |
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154 | (2) |
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General Dignity Observations on the Use of Therapeutic Cloning and other Reproductive Technology |
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156 | (3) |
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General Dignity Observations on Abortion |
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159 | (6) |
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165 | (8) |
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12 The Use and Abuse of Body Parts |
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173 | (4) |
| Epilogue |
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177 | (2) |
| Index |
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179 | |