Unit 1: Argument and the implications of enhancing lifespan
Introduction to the course, to bioethics and to the analysis of argument in the context of a discussion of the possibility of significantly increasing human lifespan.
- Would you like to live for 1000 years?
- Background
- Increased longevity and the individual
- Increased longevity and society
- The nature of argument
- Identifying, analysing and evaluating arguments
- Analysing and evaluating arguments activity
Unit 2: Reproductive ethics
The ethics of reproduction. Does everyone have the right to a family? Is reproductive cloning morally acceptable? How would you feel if you discovered your mother had been aborted at 24 weeks?
- A history of assisted reproduction
- The ‘right’ to reproduce
- Rights for all
- When rights conflict
- Donors and confidentiality
- A ready source of gametes?
- Cloning
- Reproductive cloning
Unit 3: Absolutism and relativism I
Is morality relative or absolute? This philosophical unit will discuss these deep issues, with an eye to using the thoughts stimulated to further our thoughts about bioethics.
- The nature of moral relativism
- Evaluating the arguments for moral relativism: the first argument
- Evaluating the arguments for moral relativism: the second argument
- Evaluating the arguments for moral relativism: the third argument
- Evaluating the arguments for moral relativism: the fourth argument
Unit 4: Absolutism and relativism II
- Arguments for moral absolutism
- First assignment
Unit 5: Genetics and human nature
Genetics and human nature. Could it be that by interfering with the human genome, either by enhancement or therapy we would be threatening the very nature of what it is to be a human being?
- Pinker’s dangerous idea
- Eugenics
- Positive and negative
- Elimination
- They would themselves rather not be born
- Positive interventions
Unit 6: Genetic modification
Does our new understanding of genetics make a new eugenics movement acceptable? Would we end up with the problems that we abhore in the Nazis’ programme, or could it be that the new technology will bring a new benign eugenics?
- Research and feedback on transgenic organisms
- Reading
- The natural and the good
Unit 7: Virtue ethics and deontological ethics
Another philosophical unit considering various ethical theories such as Virtue Theory and Kantianism.
- Kneejerk answers to our question
- Aristotle and virtue ethics
- Requirements for virtue
- Two points to note
- Aristotle’s answer to our question
- Immanuel Kant and deontological ethics
- Kantian decision procedures
- Three points to note
- Kant's answer to our question
Unit 8: Utilitarianism
Another philosophical unit considering various ethical theories such as Utilitarianism.
- The usefulness of the decision procedure
- Utilitarianism and rules
- Is there really a distinction between Act Utilitarianism and Rule Utilitarianism?
- Utilitarianism’s answer to our question
- Optional reading
- Choosing between theories
- Second assignment
Unit 9: Therapeutic cloning
Therapeutic cloning and the moral status of the embryo. Is it acceptable to use embryos as means to the ending of suffering?
- Therapeutic cloning
- What is it to be a person?
- Cloning, the moral law and the law of the land
- Euthanasia
Unit 10: Bioethics and the developing world
The ethics of biotechnology in the devloping world. Should there be a market in human organs? Should there be double standards in clinical trials given the very different conditions in the developing world and the developed world?
- A market in human organs
- Clinical trials and double standards
- Intellectual property rights and generic drugs
- Concluding questions
- Like to learn more?
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