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Endings and Beginnings: Law, Medicine, and Society in Assisted Life and Death
 
 
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Endings and Beginnings: Law, Medicine, and Society in Assisted Life and Death [Hardcover]

Larry Palmer (Author)

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Book Description

027596681X 978-0275966812 May 30, 2000 1

As society struggles to cope with the many repercussions of assisted life and death, the evening news is filled with stories of legal battles over frozen embryos and the possible prosecution of doctors for their patients' suicide. Using an institutional approach as an alternative to the prevailing rights based analysis of problems in law and medicine, this study explains why society should resist the tendency to look to science and law for a resolution of intimate matters, such as how our children are born and how we die. Palmer's institutional approach demonstrates that legislative analysis is often more important than judicial analysis when it comes to issues raised by new reproductive technologies and physician-assisted suicide. A reliance on individual rights alone for answers to the complex ethical questions that result from society's faith in scientific progress and science's close alliance with medicine will be insufficient and ill-advised.

Palmer predicts that the key role of the family as a societal institution will mean that questions of assisted reproduction will be resolved more in response to market forces than through legal intervention. However, he does support a strong role for legislatures in decisions involving the physicians' role in our deaths. These findings are based on the differing views of the Supreme Court justices in these matters: a tendency to protect family formation from state interference (as in abortion decisions), but support of a legislative obligation to control medicine (assisted suicide). According to Palmer, recent Supreme Court decisions on physician assisted suicide usher in a new era in how legal institutions will resolve biomedical dilemmas.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Larry Palmer forces us to think in new ways about how law and medicine intersect at the beginning and end of life. He shows that decisions for newborns and people with terminal illnesses must not be permitted to rest solely on either medical judgement or legal imperatives, that they inevitably -- and rightly - entail religious convictions, individual values, and family circumstances. Endings and Beginnings is an important and provocative book."-Daniel J. Kevles Professor of The Humanities California Institute of Technology author of In the Name of Eugenics: Genetics and the Uses of Human Heredity, The Physicists: the History of A Scientific Community in Modern America, The Baltimore Case: A Trial of Politics, Science, and Character

About the Author

LARRY I. PALMER is Professor of Law at Cornell Law School in Ithaca, New York, where he has taught courses on law and medicine for many years. He is the author of Law, Medicine, and Social Justice (1989) and numerous journal articles dealing with law, medicine, and policy. He is executive producer and author of the study guide for the award-winning educational video, Susceptible to Kindness: Miss Evers' Boys and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1994).

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Americans share an ideology of the social functions of medicine: a belief about the necessity of linking the practice of medicine to modern science, with all the social benefits and risks inherent in this institutional alliance. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
surrogate parenting agreements, declining treatment, human radiation experiments, assisting suicide, planned death, assisted reproduction, assisted suicide
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United States, Supreme Court, Justice Rehnquist, Tuskegee Study, New England Journal of Medicine, American Medical Association, Hemlock Society, Missouri Department of Health, Professor Dworkin, Jack Kevorkian, Nancy Cruzan, Oregon Death With Dignity Act, Final Report of the Advisory Committee, Imperfect Alternatives, New Hampshire, Prescription Medicide, Reproductive Services, Ronald Dworkin, African American, Bad Blood, Code Ann, Derek Humphry, Justice Breyer, National Research Act
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