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    Jewish biomedical law : legal and extra-legal dimensions / Daniel B. Sinclair.

    • Title:Jewish biomedical law : legal and extra-legal dimensions / Daniel B. Sinclair.
    •    
    • Author/Creator:Sinclair, Daniel B.
    • Published/Created:Oxford ; Toronto : Oxford University Press, 2003.
    • Holdings

       
    • Library of Congress Subjects:Medical laws and legislation (Jewish law)
      Bioethics--Religious aspects--Judaism.
    • Medical Subjects: Bioethical Issues
      Judaism
      Legislation, Medical--ethics
      Morals
      Patient Rights
      Religion and Science
    • Subject(s):Bible.
    • Description:xi, 288 pages ; 25 cm.
    • Summary:Dealing with major issues in Jewish biomedical law, this book focuses upon the influence of morality, the rise of patient autonomy, and the role played by scientific progress in this area of Jewish Law. The book examines Jewish Law in comparison with canon, common, and modern Israeli law.
    • Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages [275]-284) and index.
    • ISBN:0198268270
    • Contents:1. Aim of the Present Work
      2. Three Features of Jewish Biomedical Law
      3. Methodology
      4. Brief Introductory Remarks on the Structure of Jewish Law
      5. Comparative Law
      6. Influence of Biomedical Halakhah on the Israeli Legal System
      1. Abortion
      1. Foetal Status and Abortion
      2. Foeticide and Abortion in Early Christian Writings, Canon Law, and the Common Law
      3. Relationship between Law and Morality in the Halakhah on Abortion
      4. Morality, the Noahide Laws, and a Limited Form of Natural Law in Abortion Halakhah
      5. Moral Element in the Responsa Literature on Abortion
      6. Future Trends in Abortion Halakhah
      7. Foetuses and Critically Ill Mothers in Jewish and Israeli Law
      2. Assisted Reproduction
      1. Morality, Naturalism, and Artificial Insemination Using the Husband's Sperm (AIH)
      2. Artificial Insemination using Donor Sperm (AID) and the Issues of Adultery and Mamzerut
      3. Other Halakhic Problems Associated with AID
      4. Moral Objections to AID
      5. In Vitro Fertilization (IVF)
      6. Halakhic Problems in Relation to IVF Using Donor Eggs or a Surrogate Mother
      7. Role of Aggadah in Determining Maternity
      8. Procreative Obligation and Procreative Autonomy in Jewish and Israeli Law
      3. Genetics
      1. Introductory Remarks
      2. Heredity and Genetics in the Halakhah
      3. Genetics and Abortion
      4. Genetic Testing
      5. Gene Therapy
      6. Patenting Genetic Material and Information
      7. Genetic Determinism
      8. Cloning
      4. Obligation to Heal and Patient Autonomy
      1. Introductory Remarks
      2. Divine Healing and Human Medicine in Jewish Theology and Bible Commentary
      3. Theology and Bible Commentary in the Halakhic Literature
      4. Nahmanides and Maimonides on the Legal Status of Medical Practice in Jewish Law
      5. Coercive Life-Saving Medical Therapy and Limited Patient Autonomy
      6. Patient Autonomy in Jewish and Common Law
      7. Halakhah and Democracy: Coercive Life-Saving Medical Therapy in Israeli Law
      5. Terminally Ill Patient
      1. Introduction to the Law of the Dying Person (Goses) in Halakhic Sources
      2. Applying the Law of the Goses to the Terminally Ill Patient in Modern Medicine
      3. Prevention of Suffering in the Dying Process
      4. Persistent Vegetative State (PVS)
      5. Criminal Liability for the Killing of a Fatally Ill Person (Terefah) in Jewish Law
      6. Exemption of the Killer of a Terefah from Capital Punishment, the Prerogative of Mercy, and the Defence of Necessity in the Common Law
      7. Goses, Terefah, and the Humanizing of the Dying Process in the Halakhah
      8. Treatment of the Terminally Ill in Modern Halakhah
      6. Science, Halakhah, and Public Health Policy: The Definition of Death, Heart Transplants, Organ Donation, and the Allocation of Scarce Medical Resources
      1. Definition of Death
      2. Heart Transplants
      3. Organ Donations
      4. Rationing of Scarce Medical Resources
      7. Conclusion
      1. Law, Morality, and Casuistry
      2. Law, Morality, and Rationality
      3. Medical Science and Halakhah
      4. Limited Patient Autonomy
      5. Legal and Extra-Legal Dimensions
      App. Israeli Draft Law: The Terminally Ill Patient, 5762-2002.
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