1st Edition

Down the Slippery Slope Arguing in Applied Ethics

By David Lamb Copyright 1988
    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    A `slippery slope' argument in medical ethics is one that opposes itself to a new proposal on the grounds that it is not per se intolerable but will lead to a situation that is. Lamb evaluates such arguments, demonstrating their centrality to the subject.

    Chapter 1 The Slippery Slope Argument; Chapter 2 It Started from Small Beginnings; Chapter 3 The Sanctity of Life; Chapter 4 The Contagiousness of Killing; Chapter 5 Voluntary Euthanasia; Chapter 6 The Right to Refuse Treatment; Chapter 7 Beneficient Euthanasia; Chapter 8 Cost-Benefit Arguments; Chapter 9 In Vitro Fertilisation, Genetic Engineering, and the Slippery Slope; Chapter 10 Voluntary Termination of Pregnancy and the Slippery Slope; Chapter 11 Conclusion;

    Biography

    David Lamb

    `It has the one ingredient that I find essential to any new book - the ability to fire enthusiasm. After reading it one is eager to go on in the subject, reading more widely, thinking again about the issues it raises, and perhaps applying some of the principles to one's own practice' - British Medical Journal