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Technologies of Life and Death
Kelly Oliver
其他書名
From Cloning to Capital Punishment
出版
Fordham Univ Press
, 2013-06-03
主題
Medical / Ethics
Medical / Reproductive Medicine & Technology
Philosophy / General
Philosophy / Ethics & Moral Philosophy
Philosophy / Free Will & Determinism
Philosophy / Political
Social Science / Feminism & Feminist Theory
Social Science / Gender Studies
Technology & Engineering / Social Aspects
ISBN
082325108X
9780823251087
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=i6gYXONOBYAC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The central aim of this book is to approach contemporary problems raised by technologies of life and death as ethical issues that call for a more nuanced approach than mainstream philosophy can provide. To do so, it draws on the recently published seminars of Jacques Derrida to analyze the extremes of birth and dying insofar as they are mediated by technologies of life and death. With an eye to reproductive technologies, it shows how a deconstructive approach can change the very terms of contemporary debates over technologies of life and death, from cloning to surrogate motherhood to capital punishment, particularly insofar as most current discussions assume some notion of a liberal individual. The ethical stakes in these debates are never far from political concerns such as enfranchisement, citizenship, oppression, racism, sexism, and the public policies that normalize them. Technologies of Life and Death thus provides pointers for rethinking dominant philosophical and popular assumptions about nature and nurture, chance and necessity, masculine and feminine, human and animal, and what it means to be a mother or a father. In part, the book seeks to disarticulate a tension between ethics and politics that runs through these issues in order to suggest a more ethical politics by turning the force of sovereign violence back against itself. In the end, it proposes that deconstructive ethics with a psychoanalytic supplement can provide a corrective for moral codes and political cliches that turn us into mere answering machines.