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Birth and evolution of bioethics

Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur L
in: The Penn Center guide to bioethics by Ravitsky, Vardit; Fiester, Autumn; Caplan, Arthur L [Eds]
New York : Springer Pub., c2009
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0826115225
CID: 164522

Trafficking in organs, tissues and cells and trafficking in human beings for the purpose of the removal of organs

Caplan, Arthur L
France : Council of Europe/United Nations , c2009
Extent: 98 p. : ill. ; PDF document
ISBN: n/a
CID: 164535

Ist besser das Beste? Ein renommierter Ethiker pladiert fur Enhancement des Gehirns

Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur L
in: Enhancement : die ethische Debatte by Schöen-Seifert, Bettina [Eds]
Paderborn : Mentis, 2009
pp. 165-?
ISBN: 3897856042
CID: 336602

Good, better, best?

Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur L
in: Human enhancement by Savulescu, Julian; Bostrom, Nick [Eds]
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2009
pp. 199-210
ISBN: 0199299722
CID: 336562

Doesn't ethics require keeping all options open in the name of personal autonomy? [Letter]

Caplan, Arthur
ORIGINAL:0008141
ISSN: 0965-2140
CID: 336502

Disease eradication is possible and ethical -- a response [Letter]

Caplan, Arthur
ORIGINAL:0008237
ISSN: 0140-6736
CID: 349942

What no one knows cannot hurt you : the limits of informed consent in the emerging world of biobanking

Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur L
in: The ethics of research biobanking by Solbakk, Jan Helge; Holm, Soren; Hofmann, Bjorn [Eds]
Dordrecht ; London : Springer, 2009
pp. 25-32
ISBN: 0387938710
CID: 336612

Denying autonomy in order to create it: the paradox of forcing treatment upon addicts [Editorial]

Caplan, Arthur
PMID: 19469727
ISSN: 0965-2140
CID: 163959

Does the biomedical revolution spell the end of sport?

Caplan, A L
PMID: 18801771
ISSN: 0306-3674
CID: 165200

Extremism in the Pursuit of Organs is a Vice!

Caplan, Arthur; Hart, Robert
The shortage of vital organs available for transplant continues to worsen in the USA, UK, Germany and many other nations. At the same time the demand for organs continues to grow year after year as the population ages and undergoes organ failure, morepeople with co-morbidity are admitted to transplant centres and the number of transplant centres and surgeons continues to increase. The shortage has led many to call for changes in the traditional ethical framework that has governed organ donation in the USA and the UK—voluntary altruism on the part of donors and the 'dead donor rule' in term s of eligibility for contributing a vital organ. As these proposals are considered it is important to keep in mind the fragile basis of public support for organ and tissue transplantation. It is also important not to compromise the available supply of organs in the hope of pursuing a new policy that engenders significant public mistrust that may translate into opposition to donation
ORIGINAL:0008142
ISSN: 1469-056x
CID: 336512