Saving People from the Harm of Death

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Format: eBook
Pub. Date: 2019-03-19
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Author Biography


Espen Gamlund professor of philosophy, University of Bergen
Carl Tollef Solberg Researcher, University of Bergen
Espen Gamlund is professor of philosophy at the University of Bergen, Norway. He specializes in moral philosophy and bioethics, and has published work on forgiveness, moral status of animals, death, and resource allocation in health. In addition, he has published on the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza. Gamlund also runs a philosophy blog (in Norwegian), and in 2015 he won The Faculty of Humanities' prize for his research dissemination.

Carl Tollef Solberg is a philosopher and medical doctor at the University of Bergen and the University of Oslo. He specializes in bioethics and medical ethics and has published work on priority setting in health care, death, and medical ethics. Further, he has worked at several clinical levels of the health care system. His research interests stand at the intersection of medicine and philosophy.

Table of Contents


Foreword by Jeff McMahan
Introduction: Perspectives on Evaluating Deaths and their Relevance to Health Policy
Espen Gamlund & Carl Tollef Solberg

PART I Policy
1. Quantifying the Harm of Death
Erik Nord
2. The Badness of Death: Implications for Summary Measures and Fair Priority Setting in Health
Ole Frithjof Norheim
3. Life Years at Stake: Justifying and Modelling Acquisition of Life-Potential for DALYs
Andreas Mogensen
4. Putting a Number on the Harm of Death
Joseph Millum
5. Age, Death and the Allocation of Life-Saving Resources
Espen Gamlund

PART II Theory
6. Epicurean Challenges to the Disvalue of Death
Carl Tollef Solberg
7. The Badness of Dying Early
John Broome
8. Early Death and Later Suffering
Jeff McMahan
9. A Gradualist View About the Badness of Death
Ben Bradley
10. The Badness of Death and What to Do About It (if Anything)
F. M. Kamm
11. Deprivation and Identity
Jens Johansson
12. How Death is Bad for us as Agents
Susanne Burri

PART III Population Ethics
13. Against 'the Badness of Death' ?
Hilary Greaves
14. People Aren't Replaceable: Why it's Better to Extend Lives Than to Create New Ones
Michelle Hutchinson
15. The Worseness of Nonexistence
Theron Pummer

PART IV Critical Perspectives
16. The Badness of Death for Us, the Worth in Us, and Priorities in Saving Lives
Samuel J. Kerstein
17. How Much Better Than Death is Ordinary Survival
Ivar R. Labukt
18. Healthcare Rationing and the Badness of Death: Should Newborns Count for Less?
Timothy Campbell
19. A Defense of the Time-Relative Interest Account: A Response to Campbell
Jeff McMahan

Index

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