Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 246
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-5000-1 • Hardback • March 2006 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7425-5001-8 • Paperback • March 2006 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-0-7425-7616-2 • eBook • March 2006 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
David Benatar is an associate professor and head of the philosophy department at the University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Introduction: The Ethics of Contested Surguries
Part 3 Part I: Male Circumcision and Female Genital Cutting
Chapter 4 1. Between Prophylaxis and Child Abuse: The Ethics of Neonatal Male Circumcision
Chapter 5 2. The Ethics of Neonatal Male Circumcision: Helping Parents to Decide
Chapter 6 3. Genital Alteration of Female Minors
Part 7 Part II: Sex Assignment and Reassignment Surgery
Chapter 8 4. The Ethics of Surgically Assigning Sex for Intersex Infants
Chapter 9 5. Transsexualism and Gender Reassignment Surgery
Part 10 Part III: Separating Conjoined Twins
Chapter 11 6. Separating Conjoined Twins: Disability, Ontology and Moral Status
Chapter 12 7. Conjunction and Separation: Viable Relationships, Equitable Partings
Part 13 Part IV: Limb and Face Transplantation
Chapter 14 8. Ethical Issues in Limb Transplants
Chapter 15 9. Changing faces: Ethics, identity and facial transplantation
Part 16 Part V: Cosmetic Surgery
Chapter 17 10. A Defence of Cosmetic Surgery
Chapter 18 11. Beauty under the Knife: A Feminist Appraisal of Cosmetic Surgery
Part 19 Part VI: Placebo Surgery
Chapter 20 12. The Emperor's New Scar: The Ethics of Placebo Surgery
Chapter 21 13. Sham Surgery and Reasonable Risks
Part 22 Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 23 Index
Part 24 About the Editor and Contributors
Cutting to the Core shows us how we need to think about some of the most disturbing forms of surgical intervention-interventions which are fervently desired by individuals, but which may do more harm than good. This compelling and highly accessible collection of essays establishes once and for all the importance of ethics for understanding the implications of medical practice.
— Kathy Davis, author of Dubious Equalities and Embodied Differences: Cultural Studies on Cosmetic Surgery
Several contributions stand out as exceptionally novel and insightful.
— The New England Journal Of Medicine
Prospective surgeons, along with other health professionals and the public, should read this book.
— Choice Reviews
Although the book was written primarily with surgeons in mind and is ideally suited to help them reflect on their own practices, its accessibility and openness to the contradictory realities of embodiment invite us all to think more critically about what we expect surgery to do for us and what the surgical elimination of embodied differences would mean for our sense of who we are, our interactions with one another, and the quality of our social lives.
— Hastings Center Report
Cutting to the Core is an interesting and enlightening book...I regard the book as a valuable addition to my bioethics library.
— Andrew Brei, St. Mary's University; Metapsychology Online
We can remake ourselves. Or can we? This is the definitive collection of what happens when our and our children's identity goes under the knife.
— Glenn McGee, Director, Alden March Bioethics Institute