Class meets Monday, Wednesday and Friday·1:15-2:30 in DE 200.
Your host: Prof. Michael P. Wolf
Office: 201 Humphrey House
Phone: 7-7077
E-mail: wolf@kzoo.edu
Office Hours: Mondays and Wednesdays 9:00-11:00 and by appointment
Required Texts
Tom Beauchamp. Contemporary Issues in Bioethics.
(Some additional readings will be made available as reserves or photocopies in class.)
What Is This Course About?
It has been said that ethics and morality are the
social institutions that set out to protect us when we are at our most
vulnerable. Being in the hands of a doctor or other source of health care
certainly fits this description. Most of us lack the knowledge and expertise
to chart a course for ourselves, especially when our lives are quite literally
at stake. The profusion of new technologies to sustain life beyond what
we took to be its limits and to create life in ways we could never have
foreseen has generated a novel set of philosophical problems surrounding
the ethics of life, death and the medical care we receive between the ends
of our lives. In this class we will address some of these issues, including
euthanasia, genetic research and cloning and universal access to health
care.
Assessment
Class participation is an important issue to me,
especially in a small class like this. I expect you to come to class
with the readings done and ready to discuss them. In order to get
you involved in these ways and as an exercise in immersing yourself in
the debates that motivated different philosophers to adopt the views they
did, each student in this class will take part in a scheduled presentation.
The presentation will involve offering a position relevant to some topic
in the class, and defending it or challenging some opposing views.
You will be expected to provide notes on what you expect to present a week
in advance so that others who are presenting may see what is on the table.
The level of preparation expected here is roughly the same as a five-page
paper. Details of the format and topics will be made available as
we progress. This will count for 20% of your final grade.
Since the number of students in this class may mae it prohibitive to have
everyone make such a presentation, I will make provisions for some members
of the class to prepare a five page paper on a topic of interest in recent
medical news in lieu of such a presentation.
Details
are available online.
Over the course of the quarter, you will also have to write two papers of about 3000-3500 words, which works out to about 8-10 pages in Times 12-point double spaced with one-inch margins. The two assignments will correspond roughly with the two halves of the course. I will offer you a set of paper topics well in advance of the due date and you may choose from there. You may also suggest your own paper topic and write on it SO LONG AS YOU CLEAR THE TOPIC WITH ME FIRST. Each one of these papers will be worth 40% of your final grade. More information on the assignments and how to approach these papers will be available in class.
I should mention a few things in closing. First, you are of course bound by the honor code here and any form of plagiarism will be severely punished. (Speak to me or consult a student handbook if you are unsure what counts as plagiarism.) This does not mean that you cannot use another source, or discuss and consult with your classmates about your assignments. I permit you to do the former and strongly encourage you to do the latter, so long as all the sources and classmates in question are properly cited in your paper. Finally, be forewarned that I reserve the right to lower the grades of papers given to me whose grammar and spelling do not meet college-level standards.
A Tentative Syllabus
Class 1. (March 26): Introduction
Background Ideas
Class 2. (March 28): Core Concepts
- Utilitarianism
Read selections from Mill's Utilitarianism
(Chapters 1 and 2) and Beauchamp, pp. 1-34.
Class 3. (March 30): NO CLASS
Class 4. (April 2): Core Concepts -
Utilitarianism
Read selections from Mill's Utilitarianism
(Chapters 1 and 2)and Beauchamp, pp. 1-34.
Class 5. (April 4): Core Concepts -
Deontology
Read selections from Beauchamp, pp. 1-34.
(See the IEP on Duty
and Deontology and the Categorical
Imperative.)
(See the IEP site on Consequentialism
site and the UWW
site comparing Deontology and Consequentialism)
Class 6. (April 6): Core Concepts -
Deontology
Read selections from Beauchamp, pp. 1-34.
(See the IEP on Duty
and Deontology and the Categorical
Imperative.)
Class 7. (April 9): Core Concepts -
Virtue Theory
Read Beauchamp, pp. 1-34 and Book 1 of Aristotle's
Nicomachean
Ethics..
(See also the IEP site on Virtue
Theory)
Informed Consent
Class 8. (April 11): Informed Consent
Read Beauchamp, Chapter 3.
Class 9. (April 13): Informed Consent
Read Beauchamp, Chapter 3.
Class 10. (April 16): Disclosure
Read selections from Milgram, Obedience to Authority.
Class 11. (April 18): Disclosure
Read selections from Milgram, Obedience to Authority.
Class 12. (April 20): Presentations on Informed Consent and Disclosure
Genetics and Eugenics
Class 13. (April 23): Selecting
Genetic Characteristics
Read Beauchamp, chapter 9.
Class 14. (April 25): Selecting
Genetic Characteristics
Read Beauchamp, chapter 9.
Class 15. (April 27): Selecting Genetic
Characteristics
Read Beauchamp, chapter 9.
Class 16. (April 30): Cloning
Read Beauchamp, chapter 9 and reserved readings.
Class 17. (May 2): Cloning
Read Beauchamp, chapter 9 and reserve readings.
Class 18. (May 4): Presentations on Genetic Issues
Death and Euthanasia
Class 19. (May 7): A Right to Die?
Read Beauchamp, chapter 6.
First Paper Due May 7 - Click here for topics
Class 20. (May 9): A Right to Die?
Read Beauchamp, chapter 6.
Class 21. (May 11): Active
Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide
Read Beauchamp, chapter 7.
Class 22. (May 14):Active Euthanasia
and Assisted Suicide
Read Beauchamp, chapter 7.
Class 23. (May 16): Active Euthanasia
and Assisted Suicide
Read Beauchamp, chapter 7.
Class 24. (May 18): Presentations on Euthanasia
Is There a Right to Health Care?
Class 25. (May 21): Justice and Health
Care
Read Beauchamp, chapter 10.
Class 26. (May 23): Justice and Health
Care
Read Beauchamp, chapter 10.
Class 27. (May 25): The Ethics of Shifting
Costs
Read Beauchamp, chapter 10.
Class 28. (May 30): The
Ethics of Shifting Costs
Read Beauchamp, chapter 10.
Class 29. (June 1): Presentations on Justice Issues
Second Paper Due June 4 - Click here for topics