Personal Identity as a Principle of Biomedical Ethics

Cham: Springer Verlag (2017)
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Abstract

This book brings together the debate concerning personal identity and central topics in biomedical ethics. Based on a metaphysical account of personal identity in the sense of persistence and conditions for human beings, conceptions for beginning of life, and death are developed. Based on a biographical account of personality, normative questions concerning autonomy, euthanasia, living wills and medical paternalism are dealt with. By these means the book shows that “personal identity” has different meanings which have to be distinguished so that human persistence and personality can be used to deal with central questions in biomedical ethics.

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Michael Quante
University of Münster

Citations of this work

Personal Identity and Ethics.David Shoemaker - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Ecological preferences and patient autonomy.Sabine Salloch - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.

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