Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Disability

Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Disability

Wasserman, David; Cureton, Adam

Oxford University Press Inc

08/2020

944

Dura

Inglês

9780190622879

15 a 20 dias

1504

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction
Adam Cureton and David Wasserman

Part I: Concepts, Models and Perspectives of Disability
Chapter 1: In Pursuit of Justice for Disability: Model Neutrality Revisited
Anita Silvers
Chapter 2: Theoretical Strategies to Define Disability
Jonas-Sebastien Beaudry
Chapter 3: Disability, Health, and Difference
Jerome Bickenbach
Chapter 4: Habilitative Health and Disability
Lawrence C. Becker
Chapter 5: Philosophy and the Apparatus of Disability
Shelley L. Tremain
Chapter 6: Disability Liberation Theology
Rosemarie Garland-Thomson

Part II: Well-Being, Adaptation, and Causing Disability
Chapter 7: Disabilities and Wellbeing: The Bad and the Neutral
Joshua Shepherd
Chapter 8: Causing Disability, Causing Non-Disability: What's the Moral Difference?
Joseph A. Stramondo and Stephen M. Campbell
Chapter 9: Why Inflicting Disability is Wrong: The Mere Difference View and The Causation Based Objection
Julia Mosquera
Chapter 10: Evaluative Diversity and the (Ir)Relevance of Well-Being
Sean Aas

Part III: Justice, Equality, and Inclusion
Chapter 11: Contractualism, Disability, and Inclusion
Christie Hartley
Chapter 12: Civic Republican Disability Justice
Tom O'Shea
Chapter 13: Disability and Disadvantage in the Capabilities Approach
Christopher A. Riddle
Chapter 14: Disability and Partial Compliance Theory
Leslie Francis
Chapter 15: Fair Difference of Opportunity
Adam Cureton and Alexander Kaufman
Chapter 16: The Disability Case against Assisted Dying
Danny Scoccia

Part IV: Knowledge and Embodiment
Chapter 17: Epistemic Exclusion, Injustice, and Disability
Jackie Leach Scully
Chapter 18: What's Wrong With "You Say You're Happy, But " Reasoning?
Jason Marsh
Chapter 19: Interactions with Delusional Others: Reflections on Epistemic Failures and Virtues
Josh Dohmen
Chapter 20: Disability, Rationality, and Justice: Disambiguating Adaptive Preferences
Jessica Begon

Part V: Respect, Appreciation, and Care
Chapter 21: Ideals of Appreciation and Expressions of Respect
Thomas E. Hill, Jr.
Chapter 22: The Limiting Role of Respect
Adam Cureton
Chapter 23: Respect, Identification, and Profound Cognitive Impairment
John Vorhaus
Chapter 24: Care and Disability: Friends or Foes
Eva Kittay
Chapter 25: A Dignitarian Approach to Disability: From Moral Status to Social Status
Linda Barclay

Part VI: Moral Status and Significant Mental Disabilities
Chapter 26: Cognitive Disability and Moral Status
Alice Crary
Chapter 27: Dignity, Respect, and Cognitive Disability
Suzy Killmister
Chapter 28: On Moral Status and Intellectual Disability: Challenging and Expanding the Debates
Licia Carlson

Part VI: Intellectual and Psychiatric Disability
Chapter 29: Neurodiversity, Autism, and Psychiatric Disability: The Harmful Dysfunction Perspective
Jerome C. Wakefield, David Wasserman, and Jordan A. Conrad
Chapter 30: Beyond Instrumental Value: Respecting the Will of Others and Deciding on Their Behalf
Dana Howard and David Wendler
Chapter 31: Educational Justice for People with Intellectual Disabilities
Lorella Terzi

Part VIII: Technology and Enhancement
Chapter 32: A Symmetrical View of Disability and Enhancement
Stephen M. Campbell and David Wasserman
Chapter 33: Cognitive Disability and Embodied, Extended Minds
Zoe Drayson and Andy Clark
Chapter 34: The Visible and the Invisible: Disability, Assistive Technology, and Stigma
Coreen McGuire and Havi Carel
Chapter 35: Neurotechnologies and Justice by, with, and for Disabled People
Sara Goering and Eran Klein
Chapter 36: Second Thoughts on Enhancement and Disability
Melinda C. Hall

Part IX: Healthcare Allocation and Assisted Death
Chapter 37: Cost-Effectiveness Analysis and Disability Discrimination
Greg Bognar
Chapter 38: Prioritisation and Parity. Which Disabled Newborn Infants Should be Candidates for Scarce Life-Saving Treatment?
Dominic JC Wilkinson and Julian Savulescu

Part X: Reproduction and Parenting
Chapter 39: Why People with Cognitive Disabilities are Justified in Feeling Disquieted by Prenatal Testing and Selective Termination
Chris Kaposy
Chapter 40: Reproductive Choice, in Context: Avoiding Excess and Deficiency?
Richard Hull and Tom Shakespeare
Chapter 41: Bioethics, Disability, and Selective Reproductive Technology: Taking Intersectionality Seriously
Christian Munthe
Chapter 42: Procreation and Intellectual Disability: A Kantian Approach
Samuel J. Kerstein
Chapter 43: Parental Autonomy, Children with Disabilities, and Horizontal Identities
Mary Crossley
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