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Margaret Pabst Battin : Ending Life: Ethics and the Way We Die
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Author: Margaret Pabst Battin
Title: Ending Life: Ethics and the Way We Die
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 352
Date: 2005-05-05
ISBN: 0195140273
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Weight: 1.05 pounds
Size: 6.38 x 0.79 x 9.0 inches
Edition: 1
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Description: Product Description
Margaret Pabst Battin has established a reputation as one of the top philosophers working in bioethics today. This work is a sequel to Battin's 1994 volume The Least Worst Death. The last ten years have seen fast-moving developments in end-of-life issues, from the legalization of physician-assisted suicide in Oregon and the Netherlands, to a furor over proposed restrictions of scheduled drugs used for causing death, and the development of "NuTech" methods of assistance in dying. Battin's new collection covers a remarkably wide range of end-of-life topics, including suicide prevention, AIDS, suicide bombing, serpent-handling and other religious practices that pose a risk of death, genetic prognostication, suicide in old age, global justice and the "duty to die." It also examines suicide, physician-assisted suicide, and euthanasia in both American and international contexts.

As with the earlier volume, these new essays are theoretically adroit but draw richly from historical sources, fictional techniques, and ample factual material.
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