03231cam a2200361 i 45000010011000000030007000110050017000180080041000350200015000760200018000910200015001090200018001240350022001420400092001640420008002560500023002641000036002872450097003232600012004202640074004323000018005063360026005243370028005503380027005785040050006055050988006555201067016435300038027106500064027486500014028126500019028266550024028451146551487US-DLC20210527101539.0200330s2021 onc b 001 0 eng  a1487506031 a9781487506032 a1487524056 a9781487524050 a(OCoLC)1146551487 aNLCbengerdacYDXdBDXdOCLCQdNLCdOCLCFdYDXdOCLCOdYDXdOCLCOdOCLCAdAU@dGWLdAU alac 4aRD129.5b.G55 20211 aGillespie, Ryan,d1982-eauthor10aOrgans for sale :bbioethics, neoliberalism, and public moral deliberation /cRyan Gillespie c©2021  1aToronto ;aBuffalo ;aLondon :bUniversity of Toronto Press,c©2021  a303 p:c24 cm atextbtxt2rdacontent aunmediatedbn2rdamedia avolumebnc2rdacarrier aIncludes bibliographical references and index0 aAcknowledgments -- Section One: Morals, Markets, and Medicine: 1. Organs for sale? Normative entanglements in the public sphere -- 2. Public morality: altruism, rhetoric, and bioethics -- Section Two: The Rhetorical Positions, Arguments, and Justifications in Human Organ Procurement: 3. The case for an altruistic supply system -- 4. The case for a market-based supply system -- Section Three: Morality, Neoliberalism, and the Prospects of Reasoning Together in a Democracy: 5. The neoliberal graft: medicine, morality, and markets in liberal-democratic regimes -- 6. Good reasons: Metanormativity and categoricity -- 7. Weighing reasons: Telic orientation, rhetorical force, and normative force -- Section Four: 8. The scope of the market: exploitation, coercion, paternalism, and legal consistency -- 9. What money cannot buy and what money ought not buy: dignity, motives, and markets -- Conclusion: What kind of policy for what kind of society? -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index a"[This book] is a study of the bioethical question of how to increase human organ supply. But it is also an inquiry into public moral deliberation and the relationship between economic worth and the value systems of a society. Looking closely at human organ procurement debates, the author offers a critique of neoliberalism in bioethics and asks what kind of society we truly want. While society is directly concerned with the practical question of organ procurement, a better understanding of the rhetoric of advocates and philosophical underpinnings of the debate might indeed improve our public moral deliberation in general and organ policy more specifically. Examining public arguments, this book uses a range of source material, from medical journals to congressional hearings to New York Times op-eds, to provide the most up-to-date and thorough analysis of the topic. [This book] posits that deciding together on the limits of markets, and on what is and ought to be for sale, sheds light on the moral fiber of our society and what it needs to thrive"-- aIssued also in electronic formats 0aDonation of organs, tissues, etcxMoral and ethical aspects 0aBioethics 0aMedical ethics 02localaPrint books.