In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 15.4 (2005) 397-399



[Access article in PDF]

Index to Volume 15 (2005)

By Author

ALLHOFF, Fritz. Germ-Line Genetic Enhancement and Rawlsian Primary Goods, 1: 39–56.

BUCHANAN, David; and MILLER, Franklin G. Principles of Early Stopping of Randomized Trials for Efficacy: A Critique of Equipoise and an Alternative Nonexploitation Ethical Framework, 2: 161–78.

COHEN, Cynthia B. Promises and Perils of Public Deliberation: Contrasting Two National Bioethics Commissions on Embryonic Stem Cell Research, 3: 269–88. Also see Karpowicz, Phillip.

DERENZO, Evan G. Conflict-of-Interest Policy at the National Institutes of Health: The Pendulum Swings Wildly, 2: 199–210.

FARRELLY, Colin. Justice in the Genetically Transformed Society, 1: 91–99.

GOLDSTEIN, Doris Mueller. Bioethics Library and Information Services: Good News in Paris, 4: 395–96.

GREEN, Ronald M. Last Word: Imagining the Future, 1: 101–6.

HANSON, Stephen. Engelhardt and Children: The Failure of Libertarian Bioethics in Pediatric Interactions, 2: 179–98.

ILTIS, Ana S. Third-Party Payers and the Costs of Biomedical Research, 2: 135–60.

JOFFE, Steven. See Little, Margaret O.

KARPOWICZ, Phillip; COHEN, Cynthia B.; and VAN DER KOOY, Derek. Developing Human-Nonhuman Chimeras in Human Stem Cell Research: Ethical Issues and Boundaries, 2: 107–34.

KASS, Leon R. Reflections on Public Bioethics: A View from the Trenches, 3: 221–50.

LEVINE, Carol. Acceptance, Avoidance, and Ambiguity: Conflicting Social Values about Childhood Disability, 4: 371–83.

LINDSAY, Ronald A. Enhancements and Justice: Problems in Determining the Requirements of Justice in a Genetically Transformed Society, 1: 1–38; Slaves, Embryos, and Nonhuman Animals: Moral Status and the Limitations of Common Morality Theory, 4: 323–46. [End Page 397]

LITTLE, Margaret O.; MOCZYNSKI, Walter V.; RICHARDSON, Paul G.; and JOFFE, Steven. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Ethics Rounds: Life-Threatening Illness and the Desire to Adopt, 4: 385–93.

LOFTIS, J. Robert. Germ-Line Enhancement of Humans and Nonhumans, 1: 57–76.

MAJUMDER, Mary Anderlik. Respecting Difference and Moving Beyond Regulation: Tasks for U.S. Bioethics Commissions in the Twenty-First Century, 3: 289–303.

MEHLMAN, Maxwell J. Genetic Enhancement: Plan Now to Act Later, 1: 77–82.

MILLER, Franklin G. See Buchanan, David.

MOCZYNSKI, Walter V. See Little, Margaret O.

MWASE, Isaac M. T. Genetic Enhancement and the Fate of the Worse Off, 1: 83–89.

NELSON, James Lindemann. The Baroness's Committee and the President's Council: Ambition and Alienation in Public Bioethics, 3: 251–67.

POLAND, Susan Cartier. Scope Note 45: Bioethics, Biolaw, and Western Legal Heritage, 2: 211–18.

POWERS, Madison. Bioethics as Politics: The Limits of Moral Expertise, 3: 305–22.

RICHARDSON, Paul G. See Little, Margaret O.

STREIFFER, Robert. At the Edge of Humanity: Human Stem Cells, Chimeras, and Moral Status, 4: 347–71.

VAN DER KOOY, Derek. See Karpowicz, Phillip.

By Issue

Issue 1

SPECIAL ISSUE: Justice and Genetic Enhancement

GUEST EDITOR: Ronald M. Green

Enhancements and Justice: Problems in Determining the Requirements of Justice in a Genetically Transformed Society, by Ronald A. Lindsay, 1–38.

Germ-Line Genetic Enhancement and Rawlsian Primary Goods, by Fritz Allhoff, 39–56.

Germ-Line Enhancement of Humans and Nonhumans, by J. Robert Loftis, 57–76.

Genetic Enhancement: Plan Now to Act Later, by Maxwell J. Mehlman, 77–82.

Genetic Enhancement and the Fate of the Worse Off, by Isaac M. T. Mwase, 83–89.

Justice in the Genetically Transformed Society, Colin Farrelly, 91–99.

Last Word: Imagining the Future, by Ronald M. Green, 101–6.

Issue 2

Developing Human-Nonhuman Chimeras in Human Stem Cell Research: [End Page 398] Ethical Issues and Boundaries, by Phillip Karpowicz, Cynthia B. Cohen, and Derek van der Kooy, 107–34.

Third-Party Payers and the Costs of Biomedical Research, by Ana S. Iltis, 135–60.

Principles of Early Stopping of Randomized Trials for Efficacy: A Critique of Equipoise and an Alternative Nonexploitation Ethical Framework, by David Buchanan and Franklin G. Miller, 161–78.

Engelhardt and Children: The Failure of Libertarian Bioethics in Pediatric Interactions, by Stephen Hanson, 179–98.

Conflict-of-Interest Policy at the National Institutes of Health: The Pendulum Swings Wildly, by Evan G. DeRenzo, 199–210...

pdf

Share