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Responsible Genetics [electronic resource] : the Moral Responsibility of Geneticists for the Consequences of Human Genetics Research by Nordgren, Anders

Book Information

TitleResponsible Genetics [electronic resource] : the Moral Responsibility of Geneticists for the Consequences of Human Genetics Research
CreatorNordgren, Anders
Year2001
PPI600
PublisherDordrecht : Springer Netherlands
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
SubjectMedicine, Ethics, Medicine, Medical ethics, Ethics, Medical ethics, Medicine, Medicine
ISBN9789401597418, 9401597413
Collectionfolkscanomy_miscellaneous, folkscanomy, additional_collections
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Identifierspringer_10.1007-978-94-015-9741-8
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Responsible Genetics: The Moral Responsibility of Geneticists for the Consequences of Human Genetics ResearchAuthor: Anders Nordgren Published by Springer Netherlands ISBN: 978-90-481-5907-9 DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-9741-8Table of Contents:Moral Responsibility and Moral Imagination Moral Responsibility in Science The Human Genome Project: Justification, Promotion, and Access to Results Gene Hunting, Genetic Testing, and Genetically Tailor-Made Drugs Genetic Modification of Humans and Laboratory Animals Eugenics and the Long Term Goals of Reprogenetic Medicine, From the contents: Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1: Moral Responsibility and Moral Imagination -- 2: Moral Responsibility in Science -- 3: The Human Genome Project: Justification, Promotion, and Access to Results -- 4: Gene Hunting, Genetic Testing, and Genetically Tailor-Made Drugs -- 5: Genetic Modification of Humans and Laboratory Animals -- 6: Eugenics and the Long Term Goals of Reprogenetic Medicine -- Bibliography -- Index, The book addresses a number of well-known issues - the ethical, legal, and social implications of human genetics - but does so from a perspective that has received almost no attention: the perspective of the scientific community itself. The rhetoric of `scientific responsibility' is prominent in many discussions of genetic research ethics, but the concept is seldom defined. This book provides a more precise analysis of what it could mean. In distinction to what is common in the ELSI literature, the book also discusses bioethical method. A new kind of casuistry is developed on the basis of the empirical findings of cognitive semantics. The book will be of interest to philosophers, bioethicists, and geneticists. Because it addresses broad policy issues, it will also be of interest to science policymakers