MARC Record
Leader
852
4
b| GBSG
c| GBSG
j| GBSG
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9923420270101501
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20140619114345.0
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020307s2002 xxu 000 0 eng c
020
a| 0-226-22261-6
c| hardback
020
a| 0-226-22262-4
c| paperback
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a| (BeLVLBS)002342027LBS01-Aleph
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a| LOC-2001026688
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a| (EXLNZ-32KUL_LIBIS_NETWORK)9923420270101471
245
0
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a| Playing God
b| human genetic engineering and the rationalization of public bioethical dabate.
260
a| Chicago
b| University of Chicago press,
c| 2002.
300
a| 304 p.
336
a| text
2| rdacontent
337
a| unmediated
2| rdamedia
338
a| volume
2| rdacarrier
490
1
a| Morality an society series
505
0
a| 1. Framework for understanding the thinning of a public debate
505
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a| 2. Setting the stage: the eugenicists and the challenge from the theologians
505
0
a| 3. Gene therapy, advisory commissions, and the birth of the bioethics profession
505
0
a| 4. The president's commission: the "neutral" triumph of formal rationality
505
0
a| 5. Regaining lost jurisdictional ground and the triumph of the bioethics profession
505
0
a| 6. "Reproduction" as the new jurisdictional metaphor: Autonomy and the internal threat to the bioethics/science jurisdiction
505
0
a| 7. Conclusion: the future of public bioethics and the HGE debate
520
3
a| Technology evolves at a dazzling speed, and nowhere more so than in the field of genetic engineering, where the possibility of directly changing the genes of one's children is quickly becoming a reality. The public is rightly concerned, but interestingly, they have not had much to say about the implications of recent advancements in human genetics. "Playing God?" asks why and explores the social forces that have led to the thinning out of public debate over human genetic engineering. John H. Evans contends that the problem lies in the structure of the debate itself. Disputes over human genetic engineering concern the means for achieving assumed ends, rather than being a healthy discussion about the ends themselves. According to Evans, this change in focus occurred as the jurisdiction over the debate shifted from scientists to bioethicists, a change which itself was caused by the rise of the bureaucratic state as the authority in such matters. The implications of this timely study are twofold. Evans not only explores how decisions about the ethics of human genetic engineering are made, but also shows how the structure of the debate has led to the technological choices we now face.
520
3
a| Technology evolves at a dazzling speed, particularly in the field of genetic engineering. But the public has not had much to say about the advancements in human genetics. This text asks why and explores the social forces that have led to the thinning out of public debate over genetic engineering.
650
0
a| Bioethics
650
0
a| Genetic engineering
x| Moral and ethical aspects
700
1
a| Evans, John H.
4| aut
856
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u| http://limo.libis.be/GSG:PHYS_ITEMS:32LIBIS_ALMA_DS71128866710001471
x| Limo permalink