The Ethics of Killing: Problems at the Margins of LifeOxford University Press, 2002 M01 3 - 560 páginas This magisterial work is the first comprehensive study of the ethics of killing, where the moral status of the individual killed is uncertain. Drawing on philosophical notions of personal identity and the immorality of killing, McMahan looks carefully at a host of practical issues, including abortion, infanticide, the killing of animals, assisted suicide, and euthanasia. |
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Página 5
... normal cases, involved in our ceasing to exist is that there will no longer be anyone in the future who will be related to us in the relevant way. I should stress that, although these issues are generally discussed under the heading of ...
... normal cases, involved in our ceasing to exist is that there will no longer be anyone in the future who will be related to us in the relevant way. I should stress that, although these issues are generally discussed under the heading of ...
Página 13
... normal human brain.) But that is not the same as the capacity for rationality, which requires the actual presence of the structures causally involved in the exercise of rationality. Analogously, a newborn infant has the potential for ...
... normal human brain.) But that is not the same as the capacity for rationality, which requires the actual presence of the structures causally involved in the exercise of rationality. Analogously, a newborn infant has the potential for ...
Página 40
... normal number of psychological connections from day to day, but that there is strong psychological continuity if there are more than the normal number. I will later suggest an alternative understanding of psychological continuity that ...
... normal number of psychological connections from day to day, but that there is strong psychological continuity if there are more than the normal number. I will later suggest an alternative understanding of psychological continuity that ...
Página 41
... normal case is present both in P1's relation to P2 and in his relation to P3. Everything important that is normally present in a person's relation to himself in the future is present in P1's relations to both P2 and P3 except identity ...
... normal case is present both in P1's relation to P2 and in his relation to P3. Everything important that is normally present in a person's relation to himself in the future is present in P1's relations to both P2 and P3 except identity ...
Página 43
... normal person. Because we do not know how to count psychological connections, there is considerable vagueness about when the degree of connectedness within a mental life counts as strong. In cases involving gradual mental deterioration ...
... normal person. Because we do not know how to count psychological connections, there is considerable vagueness about when the degree of connectedness within a mental life counts as strong. In cases involving gradual mental deterioration ...
Contenido
3 | |
2 DEATH | 95 |
3 KILLING | 189 |
4 BEGINNINGS | 267 |
5 ENDINGS | 423 |
NOTES | 505 |
REFERENCES | 521 |
INDEX OF CASES | 531 |
GENERAL INDEX | 533 |
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Términos y frases comunes
abortion accept According Account actual allow animals argument assume basis become begin believe better body brain capacities cause cease child claim comparable conception condition consciousness consider considerations constitute continuing to live course death depends determine developed distinct earlier effect egoistic concern equal example exist explanation fact fetus function future give given harm human identity implies important individual individual’s infant Innocent intrinsic intuitions involving killing later least less letting live loss matter means mental merely mind misfortune moral nature necessary normal noted objection occur one’s organism Patient perhaps permissible person possible potential preference pregnant present problem psychological psychological capacities question rational reason relation relevant respect response retarded seems sense severely significant sort soul species status strong suffering sufficient suggested suppose things threat time-relative interest true unity victim well-being whole woman worse worth wrong
Pasajes populares
Página 82 - Whatever withdraws us from the power of our senses, whatever makes the past, the distant, or the future predominate over the present, advances us in the dignity of thinking beings.
Página 99 - In talking, they forget the common appellation of things, and the names of persons, even of those who are their nearest friends and relations. For the same reason, they can never amuse themselves with reading, because their memory will not serve to carry them from the beginning of a sentence to the end ; and by this defect they arc deprived of the only entertainment whereof they might otherwise be capable.
Página 99 - At ninety they lose their teeth and hair, they have at that age no distinction of taste, but eat and drink whatever they can get, without relish or appetite.
Página 10 - For if the identity of soul alone makes the same man, and there be nothing in the nature of matter why the same individual spirit may not be united to different bodies, it will be possible that those men living in distant ages, and of different tempers, may have been the same man: which way of speaking must be, from a very strange use of the word man, applied to an idea, out of which body and shape are excluded.
Página 137 - A single summer grant me, great powers, and A single autumn for fully ripened song That, sated with the sweetness of my Playing, my heart may more willingly die. The soul that, living, did not attain its divine Right cannot repose in the nether world. But once what I am bent on, what is Holy, my poetry, is accomplished, Be welcome then, stillness of the shadows
Página 101 - The lucid outline forming round thee; saw The dim curls kindle into sunny rings; Changed with thy mystic change, and felt my blood Glow with the glow that slowly...
Página 117 - ... containing the usual mixture of goods and evils that he has found so tolerable in the past. Having been gratuitously introduced to the world by a collection of natural, historical, and social accidents, he finds himself the subject of a life, with an indeterminate and not essentially limited future. Viewed in this way, death, no matter how inevitable, is an abrupt cancellation of indefinitely extensive possible goods.
Página 96 - Oh! do you know this dust, then ? Do you know what it is and what it can do ? Learn to know it before you despise it. This matter which now lies there as dust and ashes will soon, dissolved in water, form itself as a crystal, will shine as metal, will then emit electric sparks, will by means of its galvanic intensity manifest a force which, decomposing the closest combinations, reduces earths to metals; nay, it will, of its own...