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The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly
Volume 9
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Displaying: 41-60 of 92 documents
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notes & abstracts
41.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 3
Christopher Kaczor, Ph.D.
Philosophy and Theology
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42.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Journals in Philosophy and Theology
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book reviews
43.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Michael E. Allsopp
Suffering and Dignity in the Twilight of Life edited by B. Ars and E. Montero
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44.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 3
Brendan Sweetman
Body-Self Dualism in Contemporary Ethics and Politics by Patrick Lee and Robert P. George
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45.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 3
Stephen Napier
Rethinking Informed Consent in Bioethics by Neil C. Manson and Onora O’Neill
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46.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 3
J. Brian Benestad
Human Dignity and Bioethics: Essays Commissioned by the President’s Council on Bioethics
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47.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 3
Jason T. Eberl
Artificial Nutrition and Hydration: The New Catholic Debate edited by Christopher Tollefsen
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48.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 3
Books Received
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49.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Colloquy
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50.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Edward J. Furton, M.A., Ph.D.
In This Issue
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51.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
William L. Saunders Jr.
Washington Insider
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essays
52.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
W. Malcolm Byrnes
Confessions of a “Pro-life” Obama Supporter
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53.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Rev. Nicanor Pier Giorgio Austriaco
Presumed Consent for Organ Procurement: A Violation of the Rule of Informed Consent?
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54.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Rev. John I. Fleming
Is Trade in Human Body Parts Intrinsically Wrong?
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55.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
William F. Murphy Jr.
Thomistic Action Theory Revisited: A Response to Steven A. Long
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articles
56.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Carolyn A. Laabs
What Does Justice Say about Euthanasia?: A Nursing Perspective
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Appeals to justice are made both to support and to refute the moral permissibility of euthanasia. This article provides a sketch of the major justice-basedarguments and proposes that a communitarian and virtue ethic underlies the ethos of nursing and leads to the conclusion that euthanasia is the opposite of justice. Justice says that nursing should reject euthanasia and remain true to the wisdom that has consistently informed the traditions and practices of the nursing community through history—practices inspired by charity, dependent on prudence, and strengthened and sustained by the practice of virtue. National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 9.2 (Summer 2009): 279–292.
57.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Alan Sanders
The Clinical Reality of Artificial Nutrition and Hydration for Patients at the End of Life
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58.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Richard J. Fehring, R.N.
The Catholic Physician and Natural Family Planning: Helping to Build a Culture of Life
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verbatim
59.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Pope Pius XII
The Prolongation of Life: An Address to an International Congress of Anesthesiologists November 24, 1957
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notes & abstracts
60.
The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly:
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Issue: 2
Rev. Nicanor Pier Giorgio Austriaco
Science
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