Encyclopedia of Bioethics, Volumen1Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1995 - 2950 páginas This is a interdisciplinary study of the ethical and moral dimensions of human conduct in the areas of the life sciences and health care. It contains 460 articles and re-examines and expands on the previous edition. |
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Página 2449
... death that were not really voluntary would be imposed on vul- nerable persons . Suicide in these circumstances would become a matter of social expectation or imperative . The counterargument for legalization replies that more open ...
... death that were not really voluntary would be imposed on vul- nerable persons . Suicide in these circumstances would become a matter of social expectation or imperative . The counterargument for legalization replies that more open ...
Página 2468
... death and the desirabil- ity of attaining a deathless state . A natural conclusion would be that " religious Taoism " focused upon those pas- sages , and set about devising practical methods of at- taining such a state . But while none ...
... death and the desirabil- ity of attaining a deathless state . A natural conclusion would be that " religious Taoism " focused upon those pas- sages , and set about devising practical methods of at- taining such a state . But while none ...
Página 2687
... DEATH AND ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION Japan Medical Association 1988 Traditional religious and cultural values surrounding death and dying inform the Japanese public's reluctance to accept brain - based criteria for determining death and the ...
... DEATH AND ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION Japan Medical Association 1988 Traditional religious and cultural values surrounding death and dying inform the Japanese public's reluctance to accept brain - based criteria for determining death and the ...
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